The Story: Stanley Kubrick once said that "The screenplay is the most uncommunicative form of writing ever devised.."
He could be provocative in his statements and this one is rather sweeping, but there's an undeniable kernel of truth to it.
Especially when you look at this script segment from Midnight Cowboy, written by Waldo Salt. There are major changes from what Salt put on the written page and what appeared in the film. For instance, there's a shift in emphasis: in Salt's script, the scene isn't about the squabbling couple of Joe Buck and Enrico Rizzo, it's about the comedy of trying to open a coconut, which both Joe and "Ratso" try to do unsuccessfully. The coconut is a visual metaphor and catalyst for Rizzo's frustration at being stuck in New York when his dream of success centers on Miami, Florida.
In the film, the coconut is relegated to a background player, a prop, that only shows up in the background (which Rizzo tries to open...with a can-opener!) and the focus is the bickering between the two psuedo-partners.
I saw an interview with Jon Voight (provided below), where he talked about filming with Hoffman where they ran lines and did work-shopping on the scenes during every break and every lunch trying to make it better, sharpening it and refocusing Salt's script. And so, the constant fidgeting with the coconut (ultimately to no avail) that the two characters do in the script is minimized, as it's a distraction from the conversation and beside the point. Joe Buck, in the film, never attempts to open the coconut, except in the final act, which—of course—ends in disaster.
You end a scene with a joke, a point, an exclamation. You move on.
The Set-up: (from Premiere Magazine, April, 1999) "The story centers on Joe Buck (Jon Voight), a Texas hick who comes to Manhattan with dreams of becoming a cowboy stud-for-hire to wealthy women. Instead he finds disillusionment and the tubercular Ratso Rizzo (Dustin Hoffman), who lives in a condemned East Village tenement. Like Buck, Rizzo also has dreams, and here, as the two sit in squalor, he lays out his relocation plan to his new and only friend."
Action!
The basic part of the screenplay stems from Salt's draft from 2/1/68. It went through some drastic revisions to the filmed transcript. Changes from the original appear in green text. Deleted sections are crossed out.
INT. X FLAT - DAY
Joe lies on his cot, watching Ratso struggle to penetrate the
fibrous husk of a coconut, experimenting with a variety of
rusty tools in an old cigar box.
JOE
This is an okay setup you got here,
but I'd say you ain't just exactly,
uh, flush, is that right or not?
RATSO
I been sick. Hold this, will ya?
RATSO (CONT'D)
In Florida, they come smooth, ready
to eat.
Down there, your only problem is,
diet-wise, you gotta lift an arm to
wipe warm milk off your chin.
Tough, hey? they got a terrific amount of coconut trees there. In fact, I think they even got 'em in the uh, gas stations over there.
JOE
I think finding you's the smartest
thing I ever did, for both of us.
You just the crooked kinda sneaky
little sidewinder I need to get me
hustling in this town. Hey!
RATSO
Miami Beach is the only place for a
real hustler. Florida has more rich
chicks per square yard than any
resort spot in the world. They lie
out in their pagodas and pergolas
waiting to grab the first jockstrap
that passes. And ladies? You know that in Miami you got, uh—
RATSO You got more ladies in Miami than any resort area in the country there. I mean, per capita on a given day, there's probably, uh, 300 of them on the beach.
RATSO In fact you can't even, uh, sctratch yourself without gettin' a belly button, uh, up the old kazoo there.
RATSO All right, startin' tomorrow, you cook your own goddamn dinner. RATSO Or you get one of your rich Park Avenue ladies to cook for you in her penthouse.
JOE Well, don't talk to me about clean. I ain't never seen you change your underwear once the whole time I been here in New York.
RATSO (CONT'D)
... the cowboy bit's out, except
among fags of a certain type, which
take a certain, type hustler to
exploit. Like I could handle it --
being a stealing operation
basically -- but take your average
fag, very few of them want a
cripple. I know enough yo know that great big, dumb cowboy crap...
JOE
Well, I am dumb, that's for sure. I
don't talk right. I can't think too
good. John Wayne! You wanna tell me he's a fag?
JOE
Ratso, hell: Crazy Annie.
Had to send her away. So I don't
cash in on that, what am I? I'm
shee-it. May's well flush me down
that hole with the dishwater.
Words by Waldo Salt
Pictures by Adam Holender and John Schlesinger
Midnight Cowboy is available on DVD from M-G-M Home Entertainment and Blu-Ray from The Criterion Collection.