Scene 1
[wind]
[clop clop]
ARTHUR: Whoa there!
[clop clop]
GUARD #1: Halt! Who goes there?
ARTHUR: It is I, Arthur, son of Uther
Pendragon, from the castle
of Camelot. King of the Britons, defeator
of the Saxons,
sovereign of all England!
GUARD #1: Pull the other one! ARTHUR:
I am. And this my trusty servant Patsy. We
have
ridden the length and breadth of the land in
search of knights
who will join me in my court at Camelot.
I must speak with your
lord and master.
GUARD #1: What, ridden on a horse?
ARTHUR: Yes!
GUARD #1: You're using coconuts!
ARTHUR: What?
GUARD #1: You've got two empty halves
of coconut and you're
bangin' 'em together. ARTHUR: So?
We have ridden since the snows of winter covered
this land, through the kingdom of Mercea, through--
GUARD #1: Where'd you get the coconut?
ARTHUR: We found them.
GUARD #1: Found them? In Mercea?
The coconut's tropical!
ARTHUR: What do you mean?
GUARD #1: Well, this is a temperate
zone.
ARTHUR: The swallow may fly south
with the sun or the house
martin or the plumber may seek warmer climes
in winter yet these
are not strangers to our land.
GUARD #1: Are you suggesting coconuts
migrate? ARTHUR: Not at all, they could be carried.
GUARD #1: What -- a swallow carrying
a coconut?
ARTHUR: It could grip it by the husk!
GUARD #1: It's not a question of
where he grips it! It's a
simple question of weight ratios! A five
ounce bird could not
carry a 1 pound coconut. ARTHUR: Well,
it doesn't matter. Will you go and tell your
master that Arthur from the Court of Camelot
is here.
GUARD #1: Listen, in order to maintain
air-speed velocity, a
swallow needs to beat its wings 43 times every
second, right?
ARTHUR: Please!
GUARD #1: Am I right?
ARTHUR: I'm not interested!
GUARD #2: It could be carried by
an African swallow!
GUARD #1: Oh, yeah, an African swallow
maybe, but not a European
swallow, that's my point.
GUARD #2: Oh, yeah, I agree with
that...
ARTHUR: Will you ask your master
if he wants to join my court
at Camelot?!
GUARD #1: But then of course African
swallows are not migratory.
GUARD #2: Oh, yeah...
GUARD #1: So they couldn't bring
a coconut back anyway...
[clop clop]
GUARD #2: Wait a minute -- supposing
two swallows carried it
together?
GUARD #1: No, they'd have to have
it on a line.
GUARD #2: Well, simple! They'd
just use a standard creeper!
GUARD #1: What, held under the dorsal
guiding feathers?
GUARD #2: Well, why not?
Scene 2
MORTICIAN: Bring out your dead!
Bring out your
dead! [clang] Bring out your dead!
[clang] Bring out your
dead!
[clang] Bring out your
dead!
[clang] Bring out your
dead!
CUSTOMER: Here's one -- nine pence.
DEAD PERSON: I'm not dead!
MORTICIAN: What?
CUSTOMER: Nothing -- here's your
nine pence.
DEAD PERSON: I'm not dead! MORTICIAN:
Here -- he says he's not dead!
CUSTOMER: Yes, he is.
DEAD PERSON: I'm not!
MORTICIAN: He isn't.
CUSTOMER: Well, he will be soon,
he's very ill.
DEAD PERSON: I'm getting better!
CUSTOMER: No, you're not -- you'll
be stone dead in a moment. MORTICIAN: Oh, I can't take him like that
-- it's against
regulations.
DEAD PERSON: I don't want to go in
the cart!
CUSTOMER: Oh, don't be such a baby.
MORTICIAN: I can't take him...
DEAD PERSON: I feel fine!
CUSTOMER: Oh, do us a favor...
MORTICIAN: I can't.
CUSTOMER: Well, can you hang around
a couple of minutes? He
won't be long.
MORTICIAN: Naaah, I got to go on
to Robinson's -- they've lost
nine today.
CUSTOMER: Well, when is your next
round?
MORTICIAN: Thursday.
DEAD PERSON: I think I'll go for
a walk.
CUSTOMER: You're not fooling anyone
y'know. Look, isn't there
something you can do?
DEAD PERSON: I feel happy... I feel
happy. [whop]
CUSTOMER: Ah, thanks very much.
MORTICIAN: Not at all. See
you on Thursday.
CUSTOMER: Right.
[clop clop]
MORTICIAN: Who's that then?
CUSTOMER: I don't know.
MORTICIAN: Must be a king.
CUSTOMER: Why?
MORTICIAN: He hasn't got shit all
over him.
Scene 3
[clop clop]
ARTHUR: Old woman!
DENNIS: Man!
ARTHUR: Man, sorry. What knight
lives in that castle over there?
DENNIS: I'm thirty seven.
ARTHUR: What?
DENNIS: I'm thirty seven -- I'm not
old! ARTHUR: Well, I can't just call you `Man'.
DENNIS: Well, you could say `Dennis'.
ARTHUR: Well, I didn't know you were
called `Dennis.'
DENNIS: Well, you didn't bother to
find out, did you?
ARTHUR: I did say sorry about the
`old woman,' but from the
behind you looked--
DENNIS: What I object to is you automatically
treat me like an
inferior!
ARTHUR: Well, I AM king...
DENNIS: Oh king, eh, very nice.
An' how'd you get that, eh? By
exploitin' the workers -- by 'angin'
on to outdated imperialist
dogma which perpetuates the economic an' social
differences in our
society! ....If there's ever going to be any
progress--
WOMAN: Dennis, there's some lovely
filth down here. Oh -- how
d'you do?
ARTHUR: How do you do, good lady.
I am Arthur, King of the
Britons. Who's castle is that?
WOMAN: King of the who? ARTHUR:
The Britons.
WOMAN: Who are the Britons? ARTHUR:
Well, we all are. we're all Britons and I am your king.
WOMAN: I didn't know we had a king.
I thought we were an
autonomous collective. DENNIS: You're fooling
yourself. We're living in a dictatorship. A self-perpetuating
autocracy in which the working classes--
WOMAN: Oh there you go, bringing
class into it again.
DENNIS: That's what it's all about
if only people would--
ARTHUR: Please, please good people.
I am in haste. Who lives
in that castle?
WOMAN: No one lives there.
ARTHUR: Then who is your lord?
WOMAN: We don't have a lord. ARTHUR:
What?
DENNIS: I told you. We're an
anarcho-syndicalist commune. We
take it in turns to act as a sort of executive
officer for the
week.
ARTHUR: Yes.
DENNIS: But all the decisions of
that officer have to be ratified
at a special biweekly meeting. ARTHUR:
Yes, I see.
DENNIS: By a simple majority in the
case of purely internal
affairs,--
ARTHUR: Be quiet!
DENNIS: --but by a two-thirds majority
in the case of more--
ARTHUR: Be quiet! I order you
to be quiet! WOMAN: Order, eh -- who does he think he is?
ARTHUR: I am your king!
WOMAN: Well, I didn't vote for you.
ARTHUR: You don't vote for kings.
WOMAN: Well, 'ow did you become king
then? ARTHUR: The Lady of the Lake, [angels sing] her arm clad in
the
purest shimmering samite, held aloft Excalibur
from the bosom of
the water signifying by Divine Providence that
I, Arthur, was to
carry Excalibur. [singing stops] That is why
I am your king!
DENNIS: Listen -- strange women lying
in ponds distributing
swords is no basis for a system of government.
Supreme executive
power derives from a mandate from the masses,
not from some
farcical aquatic ceremony.
ARTHUR: Be quiet!
DENNIS: Well you can't expect to
wield supreme executive power
just 'cause some watery tart threw a sword
at you! ARTHUR: Shut up!
DENNIS: I mean, if I went around
sayin' I was an empereror just
because some moistened bink had
lobbed a scimitar at me they'd
put me away! ARTHUR: Shut
up! Will you shut up!
DENNIS: Ah, now we see the violence
inherent in the system. ARTHUR: Shut up!
DENNIS: Oh! Come and see the
violence inherent in the system! ---
HELP! HELP! I'm being repressed! ARTHUR:
Bloody peasant! DENNIS: Oh, what a give away. Did you here
that, did you here
that, eh? That's what I'm on about -- did
you see him repressing
me, you saw it didn't you?
Scene 4
[battle sounds]
[Black Knight defeats
another knight in a bloody battle as Arthur watches]
ARTHUR: You fight with the strength
of many men, Sir knight.
[pause]
I am Arthur, King of the Britons.
[pause]
I seek the finest and the bravest
knights in the land to
join me in my Court of Camelot.
[pause]
You have proved yourself worthy;
will you join me?
[pause]
You make me sad. So be it.
Come, Patsy.
BLACK KNIGHT: None shall pass. ARTHUR:
What?
BLACK KNIGHT: None shall pass. ARTHUR:
I have no quarrel with you, good Sir knight, but I must
cross this bridge.
BLACK KNIGHT: Then you shall die.
ARTHUR: I command you as King of
the Britons to stand aside!
BLACK KNIGHT: I move for no man.
ARTHUR: So be it!
[hah]
[parry thrust]
[ARTHUR chops the BLACK
KNIGHT's left arm off after a short battle]
ARTHUR: Now stand aside, worthy adversary.
BLACK KNIGHT: 'Tis but a scratch.
ARTHUR: A scratch? Your arm's
off!
BLACK KNIGHT: No, it isn't. ARTHUR:
Well, what's that then?
BLACK KNIGHT: I've had worse.
ARTHUR: You liar!
BLACK KNIGHT: Come on you pansy!
[hah]
[parry thrust]
[ARTHUR chops the BLACK
KNIGHT's right arm off]


Scene 5
[Monks chanting and hitting themselves over the
head, leading to........]
CROWD: A witch! A witch!
A witch! We've got a witch! A witch!
VILLAGER #1: We have found a witch,
might we burn her? CROWD: Burn her! Burn!
BEDEMIR: How do you know she is a
witch?
VILLAGER #2: She looks like one.
BEDEMIR: Bring her forward.
WITCH: I'm not a witch. I'm
not a witch. BEDEMIR: But you are dressed as one.
WITCH: They dressed me up like this.
CROWD: No, we didn't -- no.
WITCH: And this isn't my nose, it's
a false one.
BEDEMIR: Well?
VILLAGER #1: Well, we did do the
nose.
BEDEMIR: The nose?
VILLAGER #1: And the hat -- but she
is a witch!
CROWD: Burn her! Witch!
Witch! Burn her!
BEDEMIR: Did you dress her up like
this?
CROWD: No, no... no ... yes.
Yes, yes, a bit, a bit.
VILLAGER #1: She has got a wart.
BEDEMIR: What makes you think she
is a witch?
VILLAGER #3: Well, she turned me
into a newt.
BEDEMIR: A newt?
VILLAGER #3: I got better. VILLAGER
#2: Burn her anyway!
CROWD: Burn! Burn her!
BEDEMIR: Quiet, quiet. Quiet!
There are ways of telling whether
she is a witch.
CROWD: Are there? What are
they?
BEDEMIR: Tell me, what do you do
with witches?
VILLAGER #2: Burn!
CROWD: Burn, burn them up!
BEDEMIR: And what do you burn apart
from witches?
VILLAGER #1: More witches!
VILLAGER #2: Wood!
BEDEMIR: So, why do witches burn?
[pause]
VILLAGER #3: B--... 'cause they're
made of wood...?
BEDEMIR: Good!
CROWD: Oh yeah, yeah...
BEDEMIR: So, how do we tell whether
she is made of wood?
VILLAGER #1: Build a bridge out of
her.
BEDEMIR: Aah, but can you not also
build bridges out of stone?
VILLAGER #2: Oh, yeah.
BEDEMIR: Does wood sink in water?
VILLAGER #1: No, no.
VILLAGER #2: It floats! It
floats!
VILLAGER #1: Throw her into the pond!
CROWD: The pond!
BEDEMIR: What also floats in water?
VILLAGER #1: Bread!
VILLAGER #2: Apples!
VILLAGER #3: Very small rocks! VILLAGER
#1: Cider!
VILLAGER #2: Great gravy!
VILLAGER #1: Cherries!
VILLAGER #2: Mud!
VILLAGER #3: Churches -- churches!
VILLAGER #2: Lead -- lead!
ARTHUR: A duck.
CROWD: Oooh.
BEDEMIR: Exactly! So, logically...,
VILLAGER #1: If... she.. weighs the
same as a duck, she's made of
wood.
BEDEMIR: And therefore--?
VILLAGER #1: A witch!
CROWD: A witch! A witch! A witch!
BEDEMIR: We shall use my largest
scales!
[yelling]
BEDEMIR: Right, remove the supports!
[whop]
[creak]
CROWD: A witch! A witch!
WITCH: It's a fair cop.
CROWD: Burn her! Burn!
[yelling]
BEDEMIR: Who are you who are so wise
in the ways of science?
ARTHUR: I am Arthur, King of the
Britons.
BEDEMIR: My liege!
ARTHUR: Good Sir knight, will you
come with me to Camelot,
and join us at the Round Table?
BEDEMIR: My liege! I would
be honored.
ARTHUR: What is your name?
BEDEMIR: Bedemir, my leige.
ARTHUR: Then I dub you Sir Bedemir,
Knight of the Round Table.
[Narrative Interlude]
NARRATOR: The wise Sir Bedemir was
the first to join King
Arthur's knights, but other illustrious names
were soon to follow:
Sir Launcelot the Brave; Sir Galahad the Pure;
and Sir Robin the
Not-quite-so-brave-as-Sir-Launcelot who had nearly
fought the
Dragon of Angnor,who had nearly stood up to the
viscious Chicken of
Bristol and who had personally wet himself at
the Battle of Badon
Hill; and the aptly named Sir Not-appearing-in-this-film.
Together
they formed a band whose names and deeds were
to be retold
throughout the centuries, the Knights of the
Round Table.
Scene 6
BEDEMIR: And that, my liege, is
how we know the Earth to be
banana-shaped.
ARTHUR: This new learning amazes
me, Sir Bedemir. Explain again
how sheeps' bladders may be employed to prevent
earthquakes.
BEDEMIR: Oh, certainly, sir.
LAUNCELOT: Look, my liege!
ARTHUR: Camelot!
GALAHAD: Camelot!
LAUNCELOT: Camelot!
PATSY: It's only a model.
ARTHUR: Shhh! Knights, I bid
you welcome to your new home. Let
us ride... to Camelot.
[cut to knights
singing] We're knights of the round table
We dance when e'er we're
able
We do routines and parlour
scenes
With footwork impecc-Able.
We dine well here in
Camelot
We eat ham and jam and
spam a lot
[dancing]
We're knights of the
Round Table
Our shows are for-mid-able
But many times, we're
given thymes
That are quite unsing-able
We're opera mad in Camelot
We sing from the diaphragm
a lot
[tap-dancing]
Oh we're tough and able
Quite indefatigable
Between our quests we
sequin vests
And impersonate Clark
Gable
It's a busy life in
Camelot
I have to push the pram
a lot.
ARTHUR: Well, on second thought,
let's not go to Camelot -- it is
a silly place. Right.
Scene 7
GOD: Arthur! Arthur, King of
the Britons! Oh, don't grovel! If
there's one thing I can't stand, it's people
groveling.
ARTHUR: Sorry!!
GOD: And don't apologize. Every time
I try to talk to someone
it's "sorry this" and "forgive me that" and "I'm
not worthy". What
are you doing now!?
ARTHUR: I'm averting my eyes, oh
Lord.
GOD: Well, don't. It's like
those miserable Psalms -- they're so
depressing. Now knock it off!
ARTHUR: Yes, Lord.
GOD: Right! Arthur, King of
the Britons -- you're Knights of the
Round Table shall have a task to make them an
example in these dark
times.
ARTHUR: Good idea, oh Lord!
GOD: 'Course it's a good idea!
Behold! Arthur, this is the Holy
Grail. Look well, Arthur,
for it is your sacred task to seek
this Grail. That is your purpose, Arthur
-- the Quest for the
Holy Grail.
ARTHUR: A blessing!
LAUNCELOT: A blessing from the Lord!
GALAHAD: God be praised!
Scene 8
[clop clop]
ARTHUR: Halt! Hello!
Hello!
GUARD: 'Allo! Who is zis?
ARTHUR: It is King Arthur, and these
are my Knights of the Round
Table. Who's castle is this?
GUARD: This is the castle of my master,
Guido Wommer!
ARTHUR: Go and tell your master that
we have been charged by God
with a sacred quest. If he
will give us food and shelter for
the night he can join us in our quest for the
Holy Grail.
GUARD: Well, I'll ask him, but I
don't think he'll be very
keen... Uh, he's already got one, you see?
ARTHUR: What?
GALAHAD: He says they've already
got one!
ARTHUR: Are you sure he's got one?
GUARD: Oh, yes, it's very nice-a
(I told him we already got one)

Scene 9
Pictures for Schools, take
8.
DIRECTOR: Action!
NARRATOR: Defeat at the castle seems
to have utterly disheartened
King Arthur. The ferocity of the French
taunting took him
completely by surprise, and Arthur became convinced
that a new
strategy was required if the quest for the Holy
Grail were to be
brought to a successful conclusion. Arthur,
having consulted his
closest knights, decided that they should separate,
and search for
the Grail individually. Now, this is what
they did--
[clop clop]
[An unknown knight rides
in and kills the narrator]
WOMAN: Greg!
Scene 10
NARRATOR: The Tale of Sir Robin....
So each of the knights
went their separate ways. Sir Robin rode
north, through the dark
forest of Ewing, accompanied by his favorite
minstrels.
MINSTREL (singing): Bravely bold
Sir Robin, rode forth from Camelot.
He was not afraid to die, o Brave Sir
Robin.
He was not at all afraid to be killed in nasty
ways.
Brave, brave, brave, brave Sir Robin!
He was not in the least bit scared to
be mashed into a pulp,
Or to have his eyes gouged out, and his
elbows broken.
To have his kneecaps split, and his body
burned away,
And his limbs all hacked and mangled,
brave Sir Robin!
His head smashed in and his heart cut
out,
And his liver removed and his bowels unplugged,
And his nostrils ripped and his bottom
burned off,
And his balls...
ROBIN: That's -- that's, uh, that's
enough music for now, lads.
Looks like there's dirty work afoot.
DENNIS: Anarcho-syndicalism is a way of preserving freedom.
WOMAN: Oh, Dennis, forget about freedom.
Now I've dropped my
mud.
[encounter 3-headed knight]
ALL HEADS: Halt! Who art thou?
MINSTREL (singing): He is brave Sir
Robin, brave Sir Robin, who--
ROBIN: Shut up! Um, n-n-nobody
really, I'm j-just um, just
passing through.
ALL HEADS: What do you want?
MINSTREL (singing): To fight, and--
ROBIN: Shut up! Um, oo, n-nothing,
nothing really -- I, uh,
j-j-ust to um, just to p-pass through good Sir
knight.
ALL HEADS: I'm afraid not!
ROBIN: Ah. W-well, actually
I am a Knight of the Round Table.
ALL HEADS: You're a Knight of the
Round Table?
ROBIN: I am. LEFT HEAD: In
that case I shall have to kill you.
MIDDLE HEAD: Shall I?
RIGHT HEAD: Oh, I don't think so.
MIDDLE HEAD: Well, what do I think?
LEFT HEAD: I think kill him.
RIGHT HEAD: Well let's be nice to
him.
MIDDLE HEAD: Oh shut up.
LEFT HEAD: Perhaps-
MIDDLE HEAD: And you.
LEFT HEAD: Oh quick get the sword
out I want to cut his head off! RIGHT HEAD: Oh, cut your own head
off!
MIDDLE HEAD: Yes, do us all a favor!
LEFT HEAD: What?
RIGHT HEAD: Yapping on all the time.
MIDDLE HEAD: You're lucky, you're
not next to him.
LEFT HEAD: What do you mean?
MIDDLE HEAD: You snore.
LEFT HEAD: Oh I don't -- anyway,
you've got bad breath.
MIDDLE HEAD: Well its only because
you don't brush my teeth.
RIGHT HEAD: Oh stop bitching and
let's go have tea.
LEFT HEAD: All right all right all
right we'll kill him first
and then have tea and biscuits. MIDDLE
HEAD: Yes.
RIGHT HEAD: Oh, but not biscuits.
LEFT HEAD: All right all right not
biscuits, but lets kill him
anyway.
ALL HEADS: Right!
LEFT HEAD: He buggered off.
RIGHT HEAD: So he has, he's scarpered.
MINSTREL (singing): Brave Sir Robin ran
away
ROBIN: No!
MINSTREL (singing): Bravely ran away
away
ROBIN: I didn't!
MINSTREL (singing): When danger reared
its ugly head,
He
bravely turned his tail and fled
ROBIN: No!
MINSTREL (singing): Yes Brave Sir
Robin turned about
ROBIN: I didn't!
MINSTREL (singing): And gallantly
he chickened out
Bravely
taking to his feet
ROBIN: I never did!
MINSTREL (singing): He beat a very
brave retreat
ROBIN: Oh, lie!
MINSTREL (singing): Bravest of the
brave Sir Robin
ROBIN: I never!
Scene 11
[Cartoon monks]
NARRATOR: The Tale of Sir Galahad
[Thunder, lightning,
rain and wind]
[angels singing
and Galahad spots the Grail]
[pound pound pound]
GALAHAD: Open the door!
Open the door!
[pound pound pound]
In the name of King
Arthur, open the door!
[squeak thump]
[Galahad falls]
ALL: Hello!
ZOOT: Welcome gentle Sir knight,
welcome to the Castle Anthrax.
GALAHAD: The Castle Anthrax?
ZOOT: Yes... oh, it's not a very
good name is it? Oh! but we are
nice and we shall attend to your
every, every need!
GALAHAD: You are the keepers of the
Holy Grail?
ZOOT: The what?
GALAHAD: The Grail -- it is here?
ZOOT: Oh, but you are tired, and
you must rest awhile. Midget!
Crepper!
MIDGET and CREPPER: Yes, oh Zoot!
ZOOT: Prepare a bed for our guest.
MIDGET and CREPPER: Oh thank you
thank you thank you--
ZOOT: Away away vile peasents!
The beds here are warm and soft
- -- and very, very big.
GALAHAD: Well, look, I-I-uh--
ZOOT: What is your name, handsome
knight?
GALAHAD: Sir Galahad... the Chaste.
ZOOT: Mine is Zoot... just Zoot.
Oh, but come!
GALAHAD: Look, please! In God's
name, show me the Grail!
ZOOT: Oh, you have suffered much!
You are delirious!
GALAHAD: L-look, I have seen it!
It is here, in the--
ZOOT: Sir Galahad! You would
not be so ungallant as to refuse
our hospitality.
GALAHAD: Well, I-I-uh--
ZOOT: Oh, I am afraid our life must
seem very dull and quiet
compared to yours. We are but eight score
young blondes and
brunettes, all between sixteen and nineteen and
a half, cut off in
this castle with no one to protect us!
Oh, it is a lonely life --
bathing, dressing, undressing, making exciting
underwear.... We
are just not used to handsome knights. Nay, nay,
come, come, you
may lie here. Oh, but you are wounded!
GALAHAD: No, no -- i-it's nothing!
ZOOT: Oh, but you must see the doctors
immediately! No, no,
please, lie down.
[clap clap]
PIGLET: Ah. What seems to be
the trouble?
GALAHAD: They're doctors?!
ZOOT: Uh, they've had a basic medical
training, yes.
GALAHAD: B-but--
ZOOT: Oh, come come, you must try
to rest! Doctor Piglet,
Doctor Winston, practice your art.
PIGLET: Try to relax.
GALAHAD: Are you sure that's absolutely
necessary?
PIGLET: We must examine you.
GALAHAD: There's nothing wrong with
that!
PIGLET: Please -- we are doctors.
GALAHAD: Get off the bed! I am sworn to chastity!
PIGLET: Back to your bed!
GALAHAD: Torment me no longer!
I have seen the Grail!
PIGLET: There's no grail here.
GALAHAD: I have seen it, I have seen
it. I have seen--
GIRLS: Hello.
GALAHAD: Oh--
VARIOUS GIRLS: Hello.
Hello. Hello. Hello.
Hello.
Hello. Hello.
Hello. Hello. Hello.
Hello.
Hello.
GALAHAD: Zoot!
DINGO: No, I am Zoot's identical
twin sister, Dingo.
GALAHAD: Oh, well, excuse me, I--
DINGO: Where are you going?
GALAHAD: I seek the Grail!
I have seen it, here in this castle!
DINGO: No! Oh, no! Bad,
bad Zoot!
GALAHAD: What is it?
DINGO: Oh, wicked, bad, naughty Zoot!
She has been setting
alight to our beacon, which, I just remembered,
is grail-shaped.
It's not the first time we've had this problem.
GALAHAD: It's not the real Grail?
DINGO: Oh, wicked, bad, naughty,
evil Zoot! Oh, she is a naughty
person, and she must pay the penalty
-- and here in Castle
Anthrax, we have but one punishment for setting
alight the
grail-shaped beacon. You must tie her down
on a bed and spank her! GIRLS: A spanking! A spanking!
DINGO: You must spank her well.
And after you have spanked her,
you may deal with her as you like. And
then, spank me.
VARIOUS GIRLS: And spank me.
And me. And me.
DINGO: Yes, yes, you must give us
all a good spanking! GIRLS: A spanking! A spanking!
DINGO: And after the spanking, the
oral sex.
GIRLS: Oral sex! Oral sex!
GALAHAD: Well, I could stay a BIT
longer. LAUNCELOT: Sir Galahad!
GALAHAD: Oh, hello.
LAUNCELOT: Quick!
GALAHAD: What?
LAUNCELOT: Quick!
GALAHAD: Why?
LAUNCELOT: You're in great peril!
ZOOT:No he isn't
LAUNCELOT: Silence, foul temptress!
GALAHAD: Now look, it's not important.
LAUNCELOT: Quick! Come on and
we'll cover your escape!
GALAHAD: Look, I'm fine!
LAUNCELOT: Come on!
GALAHAD: Now look, I can tackle this
lot single-handed!
DINGO: Yes! Let him tackle
us single-handed!
GIRLS: Yes! Tackle us single-handed!
LAUNCELOT: No, Sir Galahad, come
on!
GALAHAD: No, really, honestly, I
can go back and handle this lot
easily!
DINGO: Oh, yes, let him handle us
easily.
GIRLS: Yes, yes!
GALAHAD: Wait! I can defeat
them! There's only a hundred and
fifty of them! DINGO: Yes, yes, he'll beat
us easily, we haven't a chance.
GIRLS: Yes, yes.
[boom]
DINGO: Oh, shit.
[outside]
LAUNCELOT: We were in the nick of
time, you were in great peril.
GALAHAD: I don't think I was.
LAUNCELOT: Yes you were, you were
in terrible peril. GALAHAD: Look, let me go back in there and face
the peril.
LAUNCELOT: No, it's too perilous.
GALAHAD: Look, it's my duty as a knight to sample as much
peril as I can
LAUNCELOT: No, we've got to find
the Holy Grail. Come on!
GALAHAD: Well, let me have just a
little bit of peril?
LAUNCELOT: No, it's unhealthy.
GALAHAD: Bet you're gay!
LAUNCELOT: No, I'm not.
NARRATOR: Sir Launcelot had saved
Sir Galahad from almost certain
temptation, but they were still
no nearer the Grail. Meanwhile,
King Arthur and Sir Bedemir, not
more than a swallow's flight
away, had discovered something. Oh,
that's an unladen swallow's
flight, obviously. I mean, they were more than
two laden swallow's
flights away -- four, really, if they hadn't
a cord of line between
them. I mean, if the birds were walking and dragging--
CROWD: Get on with it! NARRATOR:
Oh, anyway, on to scene twenty-four, which is a
smashing scene with some lovely acting, in which
Arthur discovers
a vital clue, in which there aren't any swallows,
although I think
you can hear a starling -oolp!
Scene 12
OLD MAN: Ah, hee he he ha!
ARTHUR: And this enchanter of whom
you speak, he has seen the
grail?
OLD MAN: Ha ha he he he he!
ARTHUR: Where does he live?
Old man, where does he live?
OLD MAN: He knows of a cave, a cave
which no man has entered.
ARTHUR: And the Grail... The Grail
is there?
OLD MAN: Very much danger, for beyond
the cave lies the Gorge
of Eternal Peril, which no man has ever
crossed.
ARTHUR: But the Grail! Where
is the Grail!?
OLD MAN: Seek you the Bridge of Death.
ARTHUR: The Bridge of Death, which
leads to the Grail?
OLD MAN: Hee hee ha ha!
[Old man disappears]
Scene 13
[clop clop clop clop]
[eerie music]
HEAD KNIGHT: Nee!
Nee! Nee! Nee!
ARTHUR: Who are you?
HEAD KNIGHT: We are the Knights Who
Say... Nee! ARTHUR: No! Not the Knights Who Say Nee!
HEAD KNIGHT: The same!
BEDEMIR: Who are they?
HEAD KNIGHT: We are the keepers of
the sacred words: Nee, Ping,
and Nuu-wom!
RANDOM: Nuu-wom!
ARTHUR: Those who hear them seldom
live to tell the tale!
HEAD KNIGHT: The Knights Who Say
Nee demand a sacrifice!
ARTHUR: Knights of Nee, we are but
simple travellers who seek the
enchanter who lives beyond these
woods.
HEAD KNIGHT: Nee! Nee!
Nee! Nee!
ARTHUR and PARTY: Oh, ow!
HEAD KNIGHT: We shall say 'nee' again
to you if you do not
appease us. ARTHUR: Well, what is it you
want?
HEAD KNIGHT: We want... a shrubbery!
[dramatic chord]
ARTHUR: A what?
HEAD KNIGHT: Nee! Nee!
ARTHUR and PARTY: Oh, ow!
ARTHUR: Please, please! No
more! We will find a shrubbery.
HEAD KNIGHT: You must return here
with a shrubbery or else you
will never pass through this wood alive!
ARTHUR: O Knights of Nee, you are
just and fair, and we will
return with a shrubbery.
HEAD KNIGHT: One that looks nice.
ARTHUR: Of course.
HEAD KNIGHT: And not too expensive.
ARTHUR: Yes.
HEAD KNIGHTS: Now... go!
Scene 14
NARRATOR: The Tale of Sir Launcelot.
FATHER: One day, lad, all this will
be yours!
HERBERT: What, the curtains?
FATHER: No, not the curtains, lad.
All that you can see!
Stretched out over the hills and valleys of this
land! This'll be
your kingdom, lad!
HERBERT: But, Mother--
FATHER: Father, lad, Father. HERBERT:
But Father, I don't want any of that. FATHER: Listen, lad.
I've built this kingdom up from nothing.
When I started here, all there was was swamp.
The king said I was
daft to build a castle in a swamp, but I built
it all the same,
just to show 'em. It sank into the swamp.
So, I built a second
one. That sank into the swamp. So I built
a third one. That
burned down, fell over, then sank into the swamp.
But the fourth
one stayed up. An' that's what your gonna get,
lad -- the strongest
castle in these islands. HERBERT: But I
don't want any of that -- I'd rather--
FATHER: Rather what?!
HERBERT: I'd rather... just...
[music] ...sing!
FATHER: Stop that, stop that!
You're not going to do a song
while I'm here. Now listen lad, in twenty
minutes you're getting
married to a girl whose father owns the biggest
tracts of open land
in Britain.
HERBERT: But I don't want land.
FATHER: Listen, Alice...
HERBERT: Herbert.
FATHER: Herbert. We live in
a bloody swamp. We need all the
land we can get.
HERBERT: But I don't like her.
FATHER: Don't like her?! What's
wrong with her? She's
beautiful, she's rich, she's got huge... tracts
of land. HERBERT: I know, but I want the girl that I marry to have...
a certain... special... [music]
...something...
FATHER: Cut that out, cut that out.
Look, you're marryin'
Princess Looky, so you'd better get used to the
idea. [smack]
Guards! Make sure the Prince doesn't leave
this room until I come
and get 'im.
GUARD #1: Not to leave the room even
if you come and get him.
GUARD #2: Hic!
FATHER: No, no. Until I come
and get 'im.
GUARD #1: Until you come and get
him, we're not to enter the
room.
FATHER: No, no, no. You stay
in the room and make sure he
doesn't leave.
GUARD #1: And you'll come and get
him.
GUARD #2: Hic!
FATHER: Right.
GUARD #1: We don't need to do anything,
apart from just stop him
entering the room.
FATHER: No, no. Leaving the
room.
GUARD #1: Leaving the room, yes.
FATHER: All right?
GUARD #1: Right. Oh, if-if-if,
uh, if-if-if, uh, if-if-if we...
FATHER: Yes, what is it?
GUARD #1: Oh, if-if, oh--
FATHER: Look, it's quite simple.
GUARD #1: Uh...
FATHER: You just stay here, and make
sure 'e doesn't leave the
room. All right?
GUARD #2: Hic!
FATHER: Right.
GUARD #1: Oh, I remember. Uh,
can he leave the room with us?
FATHER: N- No no no. You just
keep him in here, and make sure--
GUARD #1: Oh, yes, we'll keep him
in here, obviously. But if he
had to leave and we were with him--
FATHER: No, no, just keep him in
here--
GUARD #1: Until you, or anyone else,--
FATHER: No, not anyone else, just
me--
GUARD #1: Just you.
GUARD #2: Hic!
FATHER: Get back.
GUARD #1: Get back.
FATHER: Right?
GUARD #1: Right, we'll stay here
until you get back.
FATHER: And, uh, make sure he doesn't
leave.
GUARD #1: What?
FATHER: Make sure 'e doesn't leave.
GUARD #1: The Prince?
FATHER: Yes, make sure 'e doesn't
leave.
GUARD #1: Oh, yes, of course.
I thought you meant him. Y'know,
it seemed a bit daft, me havin' to guard him
when he's a guard.
FATHER: Is that clear?
GUARD #2: Hic!
GUARD #1: Oh, quite clear, no problems.
FATHER: Right.
[starts to leave]
Where are you going?
GUARD #1: We're coming with you.
FATHER: No no, I want you to stay
'ere and make sure 'e doesn't
leave.
GUARD #1: Oh, I see. Right.
HERBERT: But, Father!
FATHER: Shut your noise, you!
And get that suit on! [music] And no
singing!
GUARD #2: Hic!
FATHER: Oh, go get a glass of water.
Scene 15
LAUNCELOT: Well taken, Concorde!
CONCORDE: Thank you, sir! Most
kind.
LAUNCELOT: And again... Over we go!
Good. Steady! And now, the
big one...Ooof! Come on, Concorde!
[thwonk]
CONCORDE: Message for you, sir.
[fwump]
LAUNCELOT: Concorde! Concorde,
speak to me! "To whoever finds
this note, I have been imprisoned by my father,
who wishes me to
marry against my will. Please, please,
please come and rescue me.
I am in the tall tower of Swamp Castle."
At last! A call, a cry
of distress! This could be the sign that
leads us to the Holy
Grail! Brave, brave Concorde! You shall
not have died in vain!
CONCORDE: Uh, I'm-I'm not quite dead,
sir.
LAUNCELOT: Well, you shall not have
been mortally wounded in
vain!
CONCORDE: Uh, I-I think uh, I could
pull through, sir.
LAUNCELOT: Oh, I see.
CONCORDE: Actually, I think I'm all
right to come with you--
LAUNCELOT: No, no, sweet Concorde!
Stay here! I will send help
as soon as I have accomplished a daring and heroic
rescue in my own
particular... (sigh)
CONCORDE: Idiom, sir?
LAUNCELOT: Idiom! CONCORDE:
No, I feel fine, actually, sir.
LAUNCELOT: Farewell, sweet Concorde!
CONCORDE: I'll-uh, I'll just stay
here, then, shall I, sir? Yeah.
Scene 16
[Launcelot charges the castle]
LAUNCELOT: Ha-ha! etc.
[Carnage and mayhem]
GUARD #1: Now, you're not allowed
to come in here, and we're-ugh!
LAUNCELOT: O fair one, behold your
humble servant Sir Launcelot
of Camelot. I have come to
take -- oh, I'm terribly sorry.
HERBERT: You got my note!
LAUNCELOT: Uh, well, I got A note.
HERBERT: You've come to rescue me!
LAUNCELOT: Uh, well, no, you see--
HERBERT: I knew that someone would,
I knew that somewhere out
there... there must be...
[music] ...someone...
FATHER: Stop that, stop that, stop
it! Stop it! Who are you?
HERBERT: I'm your son!
FATHER: No, not you.
LAUNCELOT: I'm Sir Launcelot, sir.
HERBERT: He's come to rescue me,
father.
LAUNCELOT: Well, let's not jump to
conclusions.
FATHER: Did you kill all the guards?
LAUNCELOT: Uh..., oh, yes.
Sorry. FATHER: They cost fifty pounds each.
LAUNCELOT: Well, I'm awfully sorry,
I'm -- I really can explain
everything.
HERBERT: Don't be afraid of him,
Sir Launcelot, I've got a rope
all ready!
FATHER: You killed eight wedding
guests in all!
LAUNCELOT: Well, you see, the thing
is, I thought your son was a
lady.
FATHER: I can understand that.
HERBERT: Hurry, Sir Launcelot!
Hurry!
FATHER: Shut up! You only killed
the bride's father, that's all!
LAUNCELOT: Well, I really didn't
mean to...
FATHER: Didn't mean to?! You
put your sword right through his
head!
LAUNCELOT: Oh, dear. Is he
all right? FATHER: You even kicked the bride in the chest!
This is going to
cost me a fortune!
LAUNCELOT: Well, I can explain.
I was in the forest, um, riding
north from Camelot, when I got this note, you
see--
FATHER: Camelot? Are you from,
uh, Camelot?
HERBERT: Hurry, Sir Launcelot!
LAUNCELOT: Uh, I am a Knight of King
Arthur, sir.
FATHER: Pretty nice castle, Camelot.
Uh, pretty good pig
country....
LAUNCELOT: Yes.
HERBERT: Hurry, I'm ready!
FATHER: Would you, uh, like to come
and have a drink?
LAUNCELOT: Well, that's, uh, awfully
nice of you.
HERBERT: I am ready!
[start to leave]
LAUNCELOT: --I mean to be, so understanding.
[Father unties rope]
[thonk]
HERBERT: Oooh!
LAUNCELOT: Um, I think when I'm in
this idiom, I sometimes get a
bit, uh, sort of carried away.
FATHER: Oh, don't worry about that.
HERBERT: Oooh!
[splat]
Scene 17
[wailing]
FATHER: Well, this is the main hall.
We're going to have all
this knocked through, and made into one big,
uh, living room.
RANDOM: There he is!
FATHER: Oh, bloody hell. LAUNCELOT:
Ha-ha! etc.
[more carnage
and mayhem]
FATHER: Hold it, hold it! Please!
LAUNCELOT: Sorry, sorry. See
what I mean, I just get carried
away. I really must -- sorry, sorry! Sorry,
everyone.
RANDOM: He's killed the best man!
[yelling]
FATHER: Hold it, please! Hold
it! This is Sir Launcelot from
the court of Camelot -- a very brave and influential
knight, and my
special guest here today.
LAUNCELOT: Hello.
RANDOM: He killed my auntie!
[yelling]
FATHER: Please, please! This
is supposed to be a happy occasion!
Let's not bicker and argue about
who killed who. We are here
today to witness the union of two young people
in the joyful bond
of the holy wedlock. Unfortunately, one
of them, my son Herbert,
has just fallen to his death. But I don't
want to think I've lost a son, so
much as... gained a daughter! For, since
the tragic death of her
father--
RANDOM: He's not quite dead!
FATHER: Since the near fatal wounding
of her father--
RANDOM: He's getting better!
FATHER: For, since her own father...
who, when he seemed about to
recover, suddenly felt the icy hand
of death upon him,--
[guards kill her father]
[ugh]
RANDOM: Oh, he's died! FATHER:
And I want his only daughter to look upon me... as her
own dad -- in a very real, and legally binding
sense. [clapping]
And I feel sure that
the merger -- uh, the union -- between
the Princess and the brave, but dangerous, Sir
Launcelot of
Camelot--
LAUNCELOT: What?
RANDOM: Look! The dead Prince!
CONCORDE: He's not quite dead!
HERBERT: Oh, I feel much better.
FATHER: You fell out of the cold
tower, you creep!
HERBERT: No, I was saved at the last
minute.
FATHER: How?!
HERBERT: Well, I'll tell you...
[music]
FATHER: Not like that! Not
like that! No, stop it!
SINGING: He's going to tell!
He's going to tell!
FATHER: Shut up!
SINGING: He's going to tell!
He's going to tell!
He's going to tell!
He's going to tell!
He's going to tell!
He's going to tell!
He's going to tell!
He's going to tell!
CONCORDE: Quickly, sir! Come
this way!!!
LAUNCELOT: No, it's not right for
my idiom. I must escape more..........[sigh]
CONCORDE: Dramatically sir?
LAUNCELOT: Dramatically!!!!
[crash]
[Launcelot hovers on
chandelier]
Excuse me, could, uh,
could somebody give me a push,please...?
Scene 18
[clop clop]
ARTHUR: Old crone! Is there
anywhere in this town where we could
buy a shrubbery!
[dramatic chord]
CRONE: Who sent you?
ARTHUR: The Knights Who Say Nee.
CRONE: Agh! No! Never!
We have no shrubberies here.
ARTHUR: If you do not tell us where
we can buy a shrubbery, my
friend and I will say... we will say... `nee'.
CRONE: Agh! Do your worst!
ARTHUR: Very well! If you will
not assist us voluntarily,...
nee!
CRONE: No! Never! No
shrubberies!
ARTHUR: Nee!
BEDEMIR: Noo! Noo!
ARTHUR: No, no, no, no -- it's not
that, it's 'nee'.
BEDEMIR: Noo! ARTHUR: No, no
-- 'nee'. You're not doing it properly.
BEDEMIR: Noo! Nee!
ARTHUR: That's it, that's it, you've
got it.
ARTHUR and BEDEMIR: Nee! Nee!
ROGER: Are you saying 'nee' to that
old woman?
ARTHUR: Um, yes.
ROGER: Oh, what sad times are these
when passing ruffians can say
`nee' at will to old ladies. There is a
pestilence upon this land,nothing is sacred. Even those who arrange
and design shrubberies
are under considerable economic stress at this
period in history.
ARTHUR: Did you say `shrubberies'?
ROGER: Yes, shrubberies are my trade
-- I am a shrubber. My name
is Roger the Shrubber. I arrange,
design, and sell shrubberies. BEDEMIR: Nee!
ARTHUR: No! No, no, no!
No!
Scene 19
ARTHUR: O, Knights of Nee, we have
brought you your shrubbery.
May we go now?
HEAD KNIGHT: It is a good shrubbery.
I like the laurels
particularly. But there is one small problem.

Narrative Interlude
NARRATOR: And so Arthur and Bedemir
and Sir Robin set out on
their search to find the enchanter of whom the
old man had spoken
in Scene 24. Beyond the
forest they met Launcelot and Galahad,
and there was much rejoicing.
ALL: Yay! Yay!
NARRATOR: In the frozen land of Nador
they were forced to eat
Robin's minstrels. And there was much rejoicing.
ALL: Yay! NARRATOR: A year
passed. Winter changed into Spring. Spring
changed into Summer. Summer changed back
into Winter. And Winter
gave Spring and Summer a miss and went straight
on into Autumn.
Until one day...
Scene 20
ARTHUR: Knights! Forward!
[boom boom boom boom
BOOM boom boom boom boom]
[various pyrotechnics]
What manner of man are
you that can summon up fire without
flint or tinder?
TIM: I... am an enchanter.
ARTHUR: By what name are you known?
TIM: There are some who call me...
Tim?
ARTHUR: Greetings, Tim the Enchanter.
TIM: Greetings, King Arthur!
ARTHUR: You know my name?
TIM: I do.
[whoosh]
You seek the Holy Grail!
ARTHUR: That is our quest. You know much that is hidden, O
Tim.
TIM: Quite.
[pweeng boom]
[applause]
ARTHUR: Yes, we're, we're looking
for the Grail. Our quest is to
find the Holy Grail.
KNIGHTS: It is, yes, yup, yes, yeah.
ARTHUR: And so we're, we're, we're,
we're looking for it.
KNIGHTS: Yes we are we are.
BEDEMIR: We have been for some time.
ROBIN: Ages.
ARTHUR: Uh, so, uh, anything you
can do to, uh, to help, would
be... very... helpful...
GALAHAD: Look, can you tell us wh-
[boom]
ARTHUR: Fine, um, I don't want to
waste anymore of your time,
but, uh I don't suppose you could, uh, tell us
where we might find
a, um, find a, uh, a, um, a uh--
TIM: A what...?
ARTHUR: A g--, a g--
TIM: A Grail?! ARTHUR: Yes,
I think so.
KNIGHTS: Yes, that's it. Yes.
TIM: Yes!
KNIGHTS: Oh, thank you, splendid,
fine.
[boom pweeng boom boom]
ARTHUR: Look, you're a busy man,
uh--
TIM: Yes, I can help you find the
Holy Grail.
KNIGHTS: Oh, thank you.
TIM: To the north there lies a cave
-- the cave of Kyre Banorg --
wherein, carved in mystic runes
upon the very living rock, the
last words of Ulfin Bedweer of Regett [boom]
proclaim the last
resting place of the most Holy Grail.
ARTHUR: Where could we find this
cave, O Tim?
TIM: Follow! But! follow only
if ye be men of valor, for the
entrance to this cave is guarded by a creature
so foul, so cruel
that no man yet has fought with it and lived!
Bones of four fifty
men lie strewn about its lair. So, brave knights,
if you do doubt
your courage or your strength, come no further,
for death awaits
you all with nasty big pointy teeth. ARTHUR:
What an eccentric performance.
Scene 21
[clop clop whinny]
GALAHAD: They're nervous sire
ARTHUR: Then we'd best leave them
here and carry on on foot.
Dis-mount!
TIM: Behold the cave of Kyre Banorg!
ARTHUR: Right! Keep me covered.
GALAHAD: What with?
ARTHUR: Just keep me covered.
TIM: Too late!
[chord]
ARTHUR: What?
TIM: There he is!
ARTHUR: Where?
TIM: There!
ARTHUR: What, behind the rabbit?
TIM: It is the rabbit!
ARTHUR: You silly sod! You
got us all worked up!
TIM: Well, that's no ordinary rabbit.
That's the most foul,
cruel, and bad-tempered rodent you ever set eyes
on. ROBIN: You tit! I soiled my armor I was so scared!
TIM: Look, that rabbit's got a vicious
streak a mile wide, it's
a killer!
GALAHAD: Get stuffed!!!
TIM: It'll do you a trick, mate!
GALAHAD: Oh yeah??
ROBIN: You monkey's scot's get!
TIM: I'm warning you!
ROBIN: What's he do, nibble your
bum? TIM: He's got huge, sharp-- he can leap about-- look at the
bones!
ARTHUR: Go on, Bors. Chop his
head off!
BORS: Right! Silly little bleeder.
One rabbit stew comin'
right up!
TIM: Look!
[squeak]
BORS: Aaaugh!
[chord]
ARTHUR: Jesus Christ! TIM:
I warned you!
ROBIN: I peed again!
TIM: I warned you! But did
you listen to me? Oh, no, you knew
it all, didn't you? Oh, it's just a harmless
little bunny, isn't
it? Well, it's always the same, I
always--
ARTHUR: Oh, shut up!
TIM: --But do they listen to me?--
ARTHUR: Right!
TIM: -Oh, no--
KNIGHTS: Charge!
[squeak squeak]
KNIGHTS: Aaaaugh! Aaaugh! etc.
KNIGHTS: Run away! Run away!
TIM: Haw haw haw. Haw haw haw. Haw haw.
ARTHUR: Right. How many did
we lose?
LAUNCELOT: Gawain...
GALAHAD: Ector
ARTHUR: And Bors . That's five.
GALAHAD: Three, sir.
ARTHUR: Three. Three.
And we'd better not risk another frontal
assault, that rabbit's dynamite.
ROBIN: Would it help to confuse it
if we run away more?
ARTHUR: Oh, shut up and go and change
your armor. GALAHAD: Let us taunt it! It may become so cross
that it will
make a mistake.
ARTHUR: Like what?
GALAHAD: Well,....
LAUNCELOT: Have we got bows?
ARTHUR: No
LAUNCELOT: We have the Holy Hand
Grenade. ARTHUR: Yes, of course! The Holy Hand Grenade of Antioch!
'Tis
one of the sacred relics Brother Maynard carries
with him! Brother
Maynard! Bring up the Holy Hand Grenade!
[singing]
How does it, uh... how
does it work
LAUNCELOT: I know not my liege.
ARTHUR: Consult the book of armaments.
MAYNARD: Armaments, Chapter Two, Verses Nine to Twenty-One.
BROTHER: "And Saint Atila raised
the hand grenade up on high,
saying, 'Oh, Lord, bless this thy hand grenade
that with it thou
mayest blow thy enemies to tiny bits, in thy
mercy.' And the Lord
did grin, and people did feast upon the lambs,
and sloths, and
carp, and anchovies, and orangutans, and breakfast
cereals, and
fruit bats, and large --"
MAYNARD: Skip a bit, Brother.
BROTHER: "And the Lord spake, saying,
'First shalt thou take out
the Holy Pin. Then, shalt thou count to
three, no more, no less.
Three shalt be the number thou shalt count, and
the number of the
counting shalt be three. Four shalt thou
not count, nor either
count thou two, excepting that thou then proceed
to three. Five is
right out. Once the number three, being
the third number, be
reached, then lobbest thou thy Holy Hand Grenade
of Antioch towards
thou foe, who being naughty in my sight, shall
snuff it.'"
MAYNARD: Amen.
ALL: Amen.
ARTHUR: Right! One... two...
five!
GALAHAD: Three sir.
ARTHUR: Three!
[boom]
Scene 22
ARTHUR: There!! Look!!
LAUNCELOT: What does it say?
GALAHAD: What language is that?
ARTHUR: Brother Maynard, you're our
scholar!
MAYNARD: It's Aramaic!
GALAHAD: Of course! Joseph
of Aramathea!
LAUNCELOT: Course!
ARTHUR: What does it say?
MAYNARD: It reads, 'Here may be found
the last words of Joseph of
Aramathea. He who is valiant
and pure of spirit may find the
Holy Grail in the Castle of uuggggggh'.
ARTHUR: What?
MAYNARD: '... the Castle of uuggggggh'.
BEDEMIR: What is that?
MAYNARD: He must have died while
carving it.
LAUNCELOT: Oh, come on!
MAYNARD: Well, that's what it says.
ARTHUR: Look, if he was dying, he
wouldn't bother to carve
'aaggggh'. He'd just say it!
MAYNARD: Well, that's what's carved
in the rock!
GALAHAD: Perhaps he was dictating.
ARTHUR: Oh, shut up. Well,
does it say anything else?
MAYNARD: No. Just, 'uuggggggh'.
LAUNCELOT: Aauuggghhh.
ARTHUR: Aaauuuuuugggghhhhhh
BEDEMIR: You don't suppose he meant
the Camauuuugh?
GALAHAD: Where's that?
BEDEMIR: France, I think.
LAUNCELOT: Isn't there a Saint Aauuuves
in Cornwall?
ARTHUR: No, that's Saint Ives.
LAUNCELOT: Oh, yes. Saint Iiiives.
SEVERAL: Iiiiives.
BEDEMIR: Oooohoohohooo!
LAUNCELOT: No, no, aauuuuugh, at
the back of the throat.
Aauuugh.
BEDEMIR: No, no, no, oooooooh, in
surprise and alarm.
LAUNCELOT: Oh, you mean sort of a
aaaagh!
BEDEMIR: Yes, but I-- Aaaaagh!
ARTHUR: Ooooh!!
GALAHAD: My God!!
[roar]
MAYNARD: It's the legendary Black
Beast of aaauuugh!
[Brother Maynard gets
eaten]
ARTHUR: Run away!
ALL: Run away! Run away!
[roar]
NARRATOR: As the horrendous Black
Beast lunged forward, escape
for Arthur and his knights seemed hopeless.
When, suddenly, the
animator suffered a fatal heart
attack. [ulk] The cartoon
peril was no more. The Quest for Holy Grail
could continue.
Scene 23
ARTHUR: There it is! The Bridge
of Death! ROBIN: Oh, great.
ARTHUR: Look!! There's the old man
from Scene 24!
BEDEMIR: What is he doing here?
ARTHUR: He is the keeper of the Bridge
of Death. He asks each
traveller five questions--
GALAHAD: Three questions
ARTHUR: Three questions. He
who answers the five questions--
GALAHAD: Three Questions
ARTHUR: Three questions may cross
in safety.
ROBIN: What if you get a question
wrong?
ARTHUR: Then you are cast into the
Gorge of Eternal Peril.
ROBIN: Oh, I won't go.
GALAHAD: Who's going to answer the questions?
ARTHUR: Sir Robin!
ROBIN: Yes?
ARTHUR: Brave Sir Robin, you go.
ROBIN: Hey! I've got a great
idea. Why doesn't Launcelot go?
LAUNCELOT: Yes, let me go, my liege.
I will take him
single-handed. I shall make a feint to the north-east--
ARTHUR: No, no, hang on hang on hang
on! Just answer the five
questions--
GALAHAD: Three questions
ARTHUR: Three questions as best you
can. And we shall watch...
and pray.
LAUNCELOT: I understand, my liege.
ARTHUR: Good luck, brave Sir Launcelot.
God be with you.
KEEPER: Stop! Who would cross
the Bridge of Death must answer me
these questions three, 'ere the
other side he see. LAUNCELOT: Ask me the questions, bridge-keeper.
I'm not afraid. KEEPER: What is your name?
LAUNCELOT: My name is Sir Launcelot
of Camelot.
KEEPER: What is your quest?
LAUNCELOT: To seek the Holy Grail.
KEEPER: What is your favorite color?
LAUNCELOT: Blue.
KEEPER: Right. Off you go.
LAUNCELOT: Oh, thank you. Thank
you very much.
ROBIN: That's easy!
KEEPER: Stop! Who approaches
the Bridge of Death must answer me
these questions three, 'ere the
other side he see.
ROBIN: Ask me the questions, bridge-keeper.
I'm not afraid.
KEEPER: What is your name?
ROBIN: Sir Robin of Camelot.
KEEPER: What is your quest?
ROBIN: To seek the Holy Grail.
KEEPER: What is the capital of Assyria?
ROBIN: I don't know that! Auuuuuuuugh!
KEEPER: Stop! What is your
name?
GALAHAD: Sir Galahad of Camelot.
KEEPER: What is your quest?
GALAHAD: I seek the Grail.
KEEPER: What is your favorite color?
GALAHAD: Blue. No yel-- Auuuuuuuugh!
KEEPER: Heh heh. Stop!
What is your name?
ARTHUR: It is Arthur, King of the
Britons.
KEEPER: What is your quest?
ARTHUR: To seek the Holy Grail.
KEEPER: What is the air-speed velocity
of an unladen swallow? ARTHUR: What do you mean? An African
or European swallow? KEEPER: What? I don't know that!
Auuuuuuuugh!
BEDEMIR: How do know so much about
swallows?
ARTHUR: Well, you have to know these
things when you're a king
you know.
Scene 24
ARTHUR: Launcelot! Launcelot!
Launcelot!
BEDEMIR: Launcelot! Launcelot!
ARTHUR: Launcelot! Launcelot!
BEDEMIR: Launcelot! Launcelot!
[angels singing]
ARTHUR: The Castle Aggh. Our
quest is at an end! God be
praised! Almighty God, we thank Thee that Thou
hast vouchsafed to
us the most holy-
[twong baaaa]
Jesus Christ!
GUARD: 'Allo, daffy English kniggets
and Monsieur Arthur-King,
who is afraid of a duck, you know! So,
we French fellows out-wit
you a second time!
ARTHUR: How dare you profane this
place with your presence!? I
command you, in the name of the Knights of Camelot,
to open the
doors of this sacred castle, to which God himself
has guided us!
GUARD: How you English say, I one
more time-a unclog my nose in
your direction, sons of a window-dresser!
So, you think you could
out-clever us French folk with your silly knees-bent
running about
in dancing behavior! I wave my private parts
at your aunties, you
heaving lot of second hand electric donkey bottom
biters.
ARTHUR: In the name of the Lord,
we demand entrance to this
sacred castle!
GUARD: No chance, English bedwetting
types. I burst my pimples
at you and call your door opening request a silly
thing. You
tiny-brained wipers of other people's bottoms!
ARTHUR: If you do not open this door, we shall take this castle
by force!
[splat]
In the name of God and
the glory of our--
[splat]
Right! That settles
it!
GUARD: Yes, this time and [something]
any more or we fire arrows
at the tops of your heads and make castanets
out of your testicles
already! Ha ha! ARTHUR: Walk away.
Just ignore them.
GUARD: No, remain ??? illegitimate
faced buggerfuls! And, if you
think you got nasty taunting this time, you ain't
heard nothing
yet! Daffy English kniggets! Thpppt!
ARTHUR: We shall attack at once!
BEDEMIR: Yes, my liege!
ARTHUR: Stand by for attack!
[troops gather from out of nowhere]
ARTHUR: French persons! Today the blood
of many a valiant knight shall be avenged. In the name of God we shall
not stop our fight until each one of you lies dead, and the Holy Grail
returns to those whom God has chosen. Charge!!!!
TROOPS: Charge!!!!!!!!!
[police arrive]
HISTORIAN'S WIFE: Yes. They're
the ones. I'm sure.
INSPECTOR: Come on. Anybody armed
must go too.
OFFICER #1: All right. Come on.
Back.
HISTORIAN'S WIFE: Get that one.
OFFICER #1: Back. Right away.
Just... pull it off. Come on. Come along.
INSPECTOR: Put this man in the van.
OFFICER #1: Clear off. Come on.
BEDEVERE: With whom?
INSPECTOR: Which one?
OFFICER #1: Oh-- this one.
INSPECTOR: Come on. Put him in the
van.
OFFICER #2: Get a blanket.
OFFICER #1: We have no hospital.
RANDOM: Ahh.
[squeak]
RANDOM: Ooh.
OFFICER #1: Come on. Back.
Riiight back. Come on!
OFFICER #2: Run along! Run along!
OFFICER #1: Pull that off. My, that's
an offensive weapon, that is.
OFFICER #2: Come on. Back with 'em.
Back. Right. Come along.
INSPECTOR: Everything?
[squeak]
OFFICER #1: All right, sonny. That's
enough. Just pack that in.
[crash]
CAMERAMAN: Christ!
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