01x13 - Perestroika

Episode transcripts for the 2014 TV show "Manhattan". Aired July 27, 2014 – December 15, 2015.*
Watch/Buy Amazon


"Manhattan", set in 1943 at the time of the Manhattan Project, focuses on Los Alamos, New Mexico, a town the outside world knows nothing about. The federal government tells the scientists only what they need to know, while the scientists keep secrets from their families.
Post Reply

01x13 - Perestroika

Post by bunniefuu »

Previously on "Manhattan"...

(g*nsh*t)


Whatever we're doing here, please tell me it's worth it.

Abby: My cousins in Europe...

I can't do anything about what's happening over there.

But you can.

The man inside Heisenberg's project, they ex*cuted him.

Magpie?

You didn't tell anyone else about him, did you?

Frank's been sending money?

Tell him he has nothing to feel guilty about.

Why would Frank feel guilty?

It's true, you've been listening to Akley.

I am not gonna be the last casualty of Frank Winter's ego.

I'm going home, Charlie.

The army won't allow it.

They will if we're divorced.

Thin man is dead.

This project won't survive without us.

You'd work with me?

Frank: You did the best you could, Reed.

(g*nsh*t)

Reed!

(Chatter)

(Woman speaking Russian)


They told us one day.

That was five days ago.

See that red stamp?

(Speaks Russian)

That means there are contingencies.

Some men from the government have taken an interest in your case.

What men? I don't understand.

I'm afraid it's out of my hands.

You'll just have to wait.


I filled out the forms. I paid the entry fee.

You tell me we need to pay $50 to enter the country.

We have $50,000.

Man: Every refugee I know has a rich uncle.

(Speaking Russian)

(Speaking Russian)

Ma'am.

(Speaking Russian)

(Speaking Russian) Perlman.

(Speaks Russian)

I understand that these nice people have an American sponsor.

Yes, this is the one.

She says his name is Charles Isaacs.

He is a very important man.

Tell me about Mr. Isaacs.

(Speaking Russian)

(Speaking Russian)

Manhattan 1x13
Perestroika

Liza: I guess it's always a mystery... su1c1de.

But Reed Akley?

How did he seem when you saw him last?

I don't know.

The same.

I guess I never realized.

Hard as it is having secrets kept from you...

(Kettle whistling) keeping them must be harder.

(Grunts)

- (Knocks on door)

Liza: Callie, can you get that?

(Knocking)

Callie: Mom, there's someone at the door.

(Knocking)

Liza: Callie!

Callie: Mom, I'm half naked!

(Knocking)

Is anyone planning on getting that?

(Banging)

All right, already.


Hold your fire.

Um, dad?

Dad!

Frank: How's his wife holding up?

Does it matter?

Frank: At least he didn't have children.

Success has many fathers, but failure is an orphan.

Reed Akley was the father of the most expensive failure in the history of w*r.

I was his father.

There's a... there's a problem with Thin man?

Reed Akley is dead.

So is Thin man, as you well know.

That doesn't mean the project is dead.

The implosion b*mb works.

Babbit told me. I'll need a written briefing by day's end.

I can do that.

It's for the w*r Department. Use small words.

We have to reassure them there's continuity of leadership.

I need to know that you're ready.

Ready? Ready for...

24 hours, you'll be sitting in a room with the Secretary of w*r.

If I could choose anyone else, I would, but you're the only man who knows implosion well enough to run the program.

Whatever messes you've made, clean them up.

Can't have you tracking mud onto the carpet of the Oval Office.

I'll need Glen back as my number two.

Dr. Babbit will be retiring from the project.

Robert...

He abused the power of my office.

Betrayed my trust. That was his choice.

Friends of Frank Winter don't have a long shelf life on this Hill, do they?

It's not the way I wanted it.

That makes two of us.

Oh, and, Frank, buy a comb.

Nice of you to drop in.

Should I wake your son or are you just here to change your clothes?

Abby, please.

You can't just hibernate in your office or wherever you've spent the last two nights.

- Akley's gone.

Where?


He, um...

Put a g*n in his mouth and, um...

A...

Reed Akley? My God.

It's my fault, Abby.

What?

I let him paint himself into a corner.

I should have walked into his office two months ago.

Man: Go all the way to the back.

Man 2: Right away, sir.

Man 3: Ma'am, we're gonna have to borrow your husband.


(Men shouting)

Yes, sir.

Charlie. No.

Abby, everything's gonna be okay.

Charlie. Charlie!

It's gonna be fine, Abby.

I need to speak to my husband, sir.

Charlie: It's just a misunderstanding, Abby.

Joey, you stay out of there.

Do not go in there!

(Men shouting)

Man: Let's go!

Fritz: I'll have to get a new suit.

Meeks: We're really taking over?

Frank: Helen, you will run the model and design group.

Meeks, the electric division. Fritz, metallurgy.

I had a jacket, but I lost the pants and it doesn't match my other trousers.

The end of the w*r could be decided by the five people in this group.

I know what my decision is.

Helen, where the hell is Crosley?

I don't know.

What about Charlie Isaacs?

There have been violations of compartmentalization over at Thin man.

The army is wiping its leadership slate clean.

(Door closes)

Dr. Isaacs.

Have a seat.

I've been sitting for the last eight months.

Quite a rookie season you've had.

Two months ago you were a towel boy.

Now you're Reed Akley's secret w*apon.

Well, you and the r*fle.

I'm sorry to hear the news.

So was I.

- Why did he do it?

I have no clue.

Don't you?


I understand there was a technical problem with Thin man.

What kind of problem?

The kind that loses a w*r.

Akley knew?

We're auditing Thin man's files to find out.

There are some irregularities.

In Akley's files?

In yours, actually.

The calculations you've been assigning your staff, it's almost as if they have no bearing on Thin man whatsoever.

They may look irregular to an untrained eye.

But your former colleague, Dr. Lancefield, he's trained, isn't he?

- Tom Lancefield?

He told me a fascinating story.


Said you'd hotwired the project and were driving it over a cliff.

They found stolen files under his floorboards.

He's probably fingered Dwight Eisenhower by now.

The timing is curious, though, isn't it?

Reed Akley knights you.

Two months later, he's lying on an autopsy table and so is his b*mb, and no one can make heads or tails out of the paper trail coming out of your office.

I was exploring alternate theories out of an excess of caution.

Funny how to an untrained eye caution looks like sabotage.

I... I was trying to save the project.

So you were aware of a problem in Thin man.

Let's talk about Herr Doktor Schlimmer. Magpie.

Our man inside Werner Heisenberg's lab.

Till somebody talked and he lost his head.

I'm sorry, what agency do you represent?

Justice, Treasury, w*r, Immigration.

When did you become aware of the existence of an allied spy in the n*zi's b*mb project?

(Clock chiming)

Hello?

Rose?

Rose?

(Footsteps)

Liza.

I thought you were the driver.

I couldn't spend another night here alone.

I'm taking Reed back to Chicago.

Rose, I'm so sorry.

Is there anything I can do?

You won. The town council.

It was a landslide.

None of that really matters.

They're wrong, you know?

Reed didn't...

Must have been an accident.

He had the world on a string.


He was almost ready to deliver the peace.

Liza...

Did Frank say anything to you?

About Reed?

He said that Reed was the most... brilliant man he'd ever met.

(Knocks) Ma'am, the car's out front.

Take care of Frank.

He's on the throne now.

That's what really k*lled Reed, you know?

The gadget.

I don't know how many different ways I can say this.

Even if I had known about an inside man in Werner Heisenberg's staff...

- Which you didn't. which I didn't.

I wouldn't have told a soul, least of all the Nazis.

- I have family in Europe.

In Minsk.


Not a particularly hospitable corner of the map for Jews.

The thing about secrets, once the genie's loose, you can never put it back in the bottle.

First two people know, then four, then eight, then 16.

It's a chain reaction. You tell some Russian apparatchik, somewhere in Berlin a physicist winds up in a coffin with extra headroom.

But why would I talk to the Russians?

'Cause family is everything.

And you had family in Minsk.

Yuri, the husband, he's still there and probably dead.

But Malka and the little girl, they're in New York City.

And they're very eager to meet you...

Their American benefactor.

They made it out?

The Soviets are a funny bunch.

They'll put a b*llet through your head and send your wife the bill for the amm*nit*on.

And yet they tend to keep their promises tit for tat.

They got an inside line to the Manhattan project and you... you got your wife's family out of Europe.

Reed Akley got them out.

I, um... I...

I asked him if there was anything he could do.

Well, let's bring him down here so he can confirm your story.

I would never disclose m*llitary secrets.

Prove it.

No.

No, I can't. I can't prove it.

I can't prove that I'm not the Tooth Fairy either.

You can't prove a negative.

You scientists do it all the time.

What do you call it? A null hypothesis?

If you can't prove your theory is valid, you examine the opposite theory and try to refute it.

Let's look at all the data, you and I.

Charles Isaacs is not a spy. That's our null hypothesis.

If it were true, we'd expect him to be loyal to his country.

That's why I'm here.

And yet since the day you arrived, you've questioned the ethics of a project undertaken to protect your country from annihilation.

- If Charles Isaacs were not a spy...

Listen to me...


I would expect him to associate with law-abiding citizens.

Your father is Oscar Isaacs, former member of the Socialist Party of America, current resident of the Missouri state penitentiary.

My father and I haven't spoken in years.

You also are acquainted with a professor Richard Lavro who traded his office at Harvard for one in Stalin's atomic research division, an association you misrepresented the last time we met.

If Charles Isaacs is not a spy, we'd expect him to be forthcoming and cooperative, and yet you have lied since the moment you set foot into this room.

So I'm your unified theory, is that right, genius?

That every scientific failure, every intelligence slip up, I'm singlehandedly responsible?

I'm not so sure it was singlehanded.

The Perlmans are your wife's cousins?

What role did Abby play in all of this?

(Chatter)

Paul.

Didn't think you had the first idea where I lived.

I didn't. Helen told me.

So you told Akley we were siphoning resources from Thin man?

No, I didn't.

He just pieced it together on his own?

We weren't siphoning anything, Frank.

You and Isaacs were. And Helen.

I just gave Akley what you declined to give me, the benefit of the truth.

It wasn't too much of a benefit, was it?

Don't you dare lay his death at my feet.

It doesn't matter now.

As of today, all the eyes within these fences will be trained on our group.

You're afraid I'll talk, Frank.

That's what you're doing here.

To make sure I don't tell any inconvenient tales in the schoolyard.

We need to stand together.

My father was a blacksmith, Frank.

He spent his whole life hammering iron.

That was supposed to be my life, too.

And then one day, I read about Lord Rutherford changing nitrogen into oxygen.

And I thought, "that's the life for me.

I can turn my stock into a nobler metal."

But all those years at Oxford surrounded by boy kings... I never belonged.

Of course I didn't.

But in your group, Frank, with the lads, with Helen...

You belong in the implosion group, Paul.

With us.

No. I thought I did.

I was mistaken.

You get my silence.

But not me.

(Door opens)

Abby.

What the hell are you... You shouldn't be here.

They said you needed to see me.

They wouldn't even let me clean myself up.

What is going on?

He brought you in here to spook me.

He thinks I'll, um... cr*ck under the pressure.

Who?

Are you in over your head? Should I call my father, because...

Abby, trust me, this is outside of the hat king's jurisdiction.

Yes, well, my father may be in Massachusetts, but he's on a first-name basis with half of Washington.

Charlie, Senator Weeks was at our wedding.

You need to go home.

MPs are tearing the place apart.

It's a miracle the walls are still standing.

No. I mean home. Massachusetts.

Is this about the Lancefields?

Your family is safe.

What?

Your cousins in Europe.

The Perlmans.


They're dead, Charlie.

No, no.

They're in New York.

Probably bunked up in some fleabag hotel, but they're fine.

Safer than we are.

Now, some men from the government are asking questions.

They...

They think that you're a spy.

Well, that I traded m*llitary secrets.

But you didn't.

No, I didn't. Of course not.

Whatever they think you did, Frank Winter made you do it.

You tell them that.

Abby, you'd be implicated, too.

Frank knows.

He knows that you helped me make an unmonitored call to Site X.

He knows that you put the papers in Lancefield's apartment.

He knows.

You can have the divorce.

I won't fight it.

You and Joey need to get as far away from this place...

Charlie, I... as you can.

Abby...

(Sniffles) Yes.

I am so sorry.

It's all right.

You know, maybe if we never came here...

(Door opens)

Maybe if we stayed in Brookline, things would be different.

Hey. Abby. Abby. Come on...

Charlie. Charlie.

Please don't take him. Please don't hurt him!

It's gonna be fine.

(Crying) No.

Please don't hurt him.

N...

Glen.

(Chuckles) Figured you'd be trying to teach basic calculus to the group formerly known as Thin man.

God knows how I'll do that without you.

Oh, you'll manage.

I doubt I'm gonna make it up to the house before I go.

They want me off the Hill.

But, uh, tell my goddaughter she'll have the rest of her life for drinking and smoking cigarettes.

I imagine the lions will be happy to have their chairman back.

(Chuckles) Emeritus.

Of practically everything these days.

Anyway, while we've been playing in the sandbox, Columbia has fallen in love with experimental physics.

Then where? Chicago? Yale?

Moscow?

I don't know.

I hear a lot of old bachelors are heading west.

You deserve to be happy.

Yeah.

Glen, if there's anything I could do...

20 years ago, I thought I was a pretty good physicist, then you walked into my office.

g*dd*mn college sophomore.

I didn't know what was missing from my work until I saw it in yours.

This project needs you a lot more than it needs me.

I need you.

Honestly, I'm relieved.

I suppose somebody has to build it, but I'm glad it's not gonna be on my tombstone.

I'll call you as soon as it's over.

Don't.

Glen, I wish there was something that I could do...

Stop trying to have it both ways, Frank.

It doesn't matter if you're a good man.

Maybe a good man couldn't have made implosion work.

All that matters is that you are the man to end this w*r.

Let God do the accounting when it's over.

Yeah.

Oh...

Huh.

Yesterday nobody on this Hill even knew who we were.

Anyway, I do support Jeannie's work, I just don't think it's right for the new head of the plutonium division to be unmarried.

We're all gonna get tiny, little pay bumps and I'm sure I'll have enough for a ring in a month or so.

Hey, mazel tov.

(Chuckles) Watch out.

The ladies are gonna be b*ating a path to your door in no time.

Mr. Meeks?

Oh.

You mean division head Meeks?

This guy's rising faster than rail road stock, darling.

(Meeks laughs)

There was a call at the switchboard.

I'm sorry.

(Knocks)

Wow, this is a step up.

You know, I've learned not to grow too attached to offices one way or the other.

Well, I'm just looking forward to having a door.

Wait till people start knocking on it.

My mother d*ed yesterday.

Well, it was after midnight, so maybe it was today.

The nurses at Bangor General didn't know which.

Jesus, Jim, I'm sorry.

Was it unexpected?

Well, she made it into her 50s with polio, so that's something, right?

Well, your new office will be waiting for you when you get back.

Oh, well, I can't leave now.

Not with everything that's going on.

Anyway, the army would never grant me a pass on such short notice.

You'll have one by sunset.

Turns out this office comes with a few privileges.

Thanks, Frank.

I won't be gone long. I swear.

Is your mother still alive, Frank?

I don't know.

She told me everything.

Where's Abby?

Women are always quick to protect their children.

Husbands tend not to get the same treatment.

Your wife is sitting in the next room.

She told me everything you've done and why.

That's bullshit.

No one can blame a man for trying to save his wife's family from the Nazis and his marriage all in one fell swoop.

Abby would not have told you anything.

Betrayal gets easier and easier and easier.

After all, she has been betraying you for months with your neighbor.

Making love in Lancefield's bed.

In your bed.

Well, now I know that you're lying.

She hated Lancefield.

She wouldn't go anywhere near him.

Yes, well, of course you're right.

But you see, that foreign wife of his, she had an interesting story, too.

One about romancing your wife while you were at work.

Your wife is a complicated woman, Dr. Isaacs.

But as soon as she realized that she might very well lose her son, getting her to admit what you've done was simple.

I don't believe you.

But you do.

You're thinking back to every bridge game, every Martini.

Every time your wife...

Every time your wife told you she was going over there to borrow another cup of flour from that woman.

So you might as well start admitting what I already know fact by fact!

We're done here, assh*le.

(Sighs)

You know, our businesses are not so different.

A secret trapped inside a man is just like the energy trapped in an atom.

It wants to be released.

Of course, I don't nearly have the resources you do.

Myself, I've only had a few dedicated patriots, but they... they have developed some very advanced techniques to convince a man to talk.

What, you're gonna t*rture me?

The Geneva Convention of 1929...

Where you're going, people don't concern themselves with convention.

Man on radio: It is feared that the other members of the crew have been drowned.

With the view of the established presence of German submarines in this vicinity, there can be no reasonable doubt as to the identity of the flag...


(Coughs, gags)

(Toilet flushes)

Hi. You must be Abby.

Yes.

Is your husband here?

I'm Helen Prins. I work with him.

I know who you are.

Did Dr. Isaacs stay home today?

We've been looking for him in the tech area.

We?

It's urgent.

Business or pleasure?

(Knocking on door)

Abby: I'm sorry, sweetie, all the doors are locked.

I'm coming.

(Door unlocks, opens)


Hello, my life! Come here. Oh!

(Abby laughs) How high did you get on the swings this time?

I get...

So high.

Could you excuse us just for a minute?

I get super high.

So high! You run on in there. I cleaned your room up.

I get super high on the swings.

I think you should leave.

I really need to see him.

Well, you're a little late.

MPs came for Charlie this morning.

Why?

Because they think that a Jew from East St. Louis is passing m*llitary secrets to people who want to exterminate us.

And you are not the only person on this Hill who's trying to take my husband away from his family.

Which book did you pick?

(Gasps) That looks like a good one.

Frank!

You know, Akley derived a new space-time geometry when he was still in college?

Um, it's Charlie.

You heard me earlier.

There is no place for him here.

They're shipping him off the Hill.

He knew the risks.

He came to me with eyes wide open.

What do you want, Helen?

Do you want all three of us to go down for breaking compartmentalization?

You don't understand. They think he's a traitor.

(Distant shouting)

(Knocks)

Never thought I'd say it, but I'm gonna miss this sh*thole.

You're gonna miss it, too. Just watch.

You'll have an army of PhD's at your beck and call, a desk the size of a studebaker.

You'll wish you were back in this closet with six guys and a theory written on the back of an envelope.

You don't owe me anything, Frank.

You didn't force me to take those papers.

If you hadn't turned me over, the project would be dead in the water.

(Echoing) Chances are the army would have caught up with me anyway and I'd be sitting in the same place.

You don't owe Isaacs anything either.

- (Sighs)

You know how many American soldiers were k*lled in action this month?


4,343.

Nearly four times as many as the same month last year.

Add another 503 who d*ed later from injuries sustained on the b*ttlefield,
plus 61 missing and reported dead... friendly fire, accidents, disease...

that's another 1,817.

All together, that's, what?

6,724 lives.

Add the Brits, the number doubles.


Throw in the Soviets... they're overachievers...

190,254.

Germans, 41,200.

Japan, Australia, Poland, France.


Conservatively, let's say 10 million deaths in a year.

833,000 a month.

27,700 a day.

1,157 an hour.

What do you want me to do?

Exactly.

What's one more?

(Pills rattle)

I love you.

I love you, too.

What's wrong?

We're building an atomic b*mb.

It'll set off a chain reaction that will explode with the power of 20,000 tons of TNT.

20,000 tons?

Powerful enough to wipe cities off the map.

Cities full of people.

Children.

No, the army will detonate it someplace where it can't hurt anyone.

And when the axis sees what we're capable of, they'll have no choice.

They will have to surrender.

And then there will never be another w*r.

That's what we're doing behind those fences.

We're writing the prologue to a new era.

- Man: You see that?

Man 2: Not sure.

Bring it around.

Man: Run a check-up.


Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa.

- Man 3: Tolvin.

We need ID from every passenger.


You need ID from Henry Stimson?

Another egghead?

The Secretary of w*r.

Okay, let's go.

Let 'em through. Let's go.

Man 4: Clear!

Dr. Oppenheimer.

Mr. Fisher.

I'd say you spoiled my appetite, but Reed Akley b*at you to it.

There's a personnel issue we need to discuss.

Right now.

Get up.

Frank's voice: When the axis sees what we're capable of, they'll have no choice.

They will have to surrender.

And then there will never be another w*r.

That's what we're doing behind those fences.

We're writing the prologue to a new era.

The history of peace.


Mr. Secretary.

Dr. Oppenheimer.

The last time anybody kept me waiting this long, there was a coup d'état.

And not a bloodless one.

My apologies.

We had to dot a few t's and cross a few i's.

Mm.

How was your flight?

It didn't crash.

Well, to small mercies.

I wish it had.

I wouldn't have to tell Roosevelt that he mortgaged the White House for a handful of magic beans.

I grant you this is a disappointment.

You sold the president of the United States a "Buck Rogers" fantasy.

You shook his hand and told him the design was entrusted to one of the best minds in the country.

And now that mind is getting sponged off the dashboard of a Chrysler.

Secretary Stimson, if I may...

There is a backup plan.

We kept a second design team alive for circumstances just like these!

The implosion group?

That's your g*dd*mn panacea?

You told me yourself it's science fiction.

Not anymore.

The director of the implosion group is one of the brightest lights on this Hill.

He solved the physics almost singlehandedly.

I'll let him walk you through the details himself.

This is Dr. Charles Isaacs.

Stimson: What happened to Frank Winter?

Frank's voice: When the axis sees what we're capable of, they'll have no choice.

They will have to surrender.

And then there will never be another w*r.

That's what we're doing behind those fences.

We're writing the prologue to a new era.


The history of peace.

I've made mistakes.

I've done things I'm not proud of, but I swear, I did all of it with you and Callie in mind.

A few months ago, a physicist from another design group came to me and he told me that his model wasn't going to work.

I revealed information that I'd been sworn to keep secret, that we haspy inside the German atomic project and that Werner Heisenberg was months ahead of us.

I knew the army and the White House would never right the ship on their own, so Reed Akley and I engaged in a secret conspiracy to co-op the resources of his group for implosion.

- (Crying)

♪ I'm a soldier in the world ♪
♪ but we'll leave it all someday ♪
♪ what's the use in trying to hide ♪
♪ where we came from anyway? ♪
♪ We are born to this world ♪
♪ out alone from the beyond ♪
♪ when it's time to return ♪
♪ I won't be looking in the mirror ♪
♪ Future primitive ♪
♪ the ones you left behind ♪
♪ are still with you, my dear... ♪

Frank's voice: Akley promoted Charlie Isaacs to cover our tracks.

Set him up in case we ever got caught.

The irony is the only way we were able to cr*ck implosion is by stealing the theory from a paper he wrote.

Now that Akley's dead, G-2s got that poor kid locked up.

They think he is a spy, but he had no idea.


There's nothing I can do but stay the course for the good of the project, for the sake of the future.

We sacrifice the few to save the many.

♪ Well, we crossed the river once ♪
♪ and we'll do it once again ♪
♪ the valley, it will open ♪
♪ and the mountains fall to their knees ♪
♪ take the good from the past ♪
♪ and leave the rest behind ♪
♪ what you wanted was your life ♪
♪ but you'll get something more... ♪


No, you gotta write down what he tells you.

He's the doctor.

Well, that's, uh...

That's what happens if you don't keep it elevated.

Yeah. Oh, listen, listen.

I gotta... I have to go, but I... I will call you again soon, okay?

Yeah. I love you, too, Mom.

Excuse me.

(Muttering)

As Charles Darwin so ably said...

Gone but not forgotten.

They said I wouldn't have to meet in person.

Only under extraordinary conditions.

Things have changed.

They're changing everywhere.

Implosion is taking center stage.

♪ Future primitive ♪
♪ the ones you left behind ♪
♪ are still with you, my dear ♪
♪ alive ♪
♪ and half dead ♪
♪ we are here and we're gone ♪
♪ it's our work that marches on ♪

(Vocalizing)
Post Reply