NATIONAL TREASURE 2: BOOK OF SECRETS -- SCREENPLAY

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NATIONAL TREASURE 2: BOOK OF SECRETS -- SCREENPLAY

Postby admin » Fri Jul 03, 2015 11:34 pm

PART 1 OF 2

NATIONAL TREASURE 2: BOOK OF SECRETS -- SCREENPLAY
directed by Jon Turteltaub
[transcribed by http://www.script-o-rama.com/movie_scri ... cript.html]

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[fireworks exploding]

[crowd clamoring]

[indistinct chatter]

[man] He's in the other room.

- Are you Thomas Gates?

- Yes.

We got something that we'd like you to take a look at. I hear you're quite good with puzzles and riddles.

- [man] It's a coded message.

- [Gates] It's a Playfair cipher.

- Playfair cipher?

- Can you decode it?

Cipher's impossible to decode without the key.

- What do you mean by "a key"?

- A keyword or phrase.

I believe what you need is right there. It'll take some time.

Go on. I'll take your diary. I'll meet up with you later.

- [horse grunts]

- Whoa.

[man]...calculate the distance and you're sure to hit the mark in about most things as well as shootin'.

[laughter]

...ready to pour out all over you like apple sass over roast pork.

[laughter]

[woman] I'll take care not to give up my hold on poor De Boots till I am quite sure of the American.

- [woman 2] Ah, that's my own girl.

- [laughter]

Augusta, dear, to your room.

[man]...to turn you inside out, old gal, you sockdologizing old man-trap.

- [audience laughs]

- [screaming]

Sic semper tyrannis!

- [grunts]

- [horse whinnies]

[indistinct chatter]

[Gates] Temples.

Gold. Cibola? This is a treasure map.

KGC? You're Knights of the Golden Circle. You're a traitor. You're all traitors.

- [man] President Lincoln's been shot!

- [man 2] Everybody, out! All of you!

[boy] Killer's on the loose!

I'd much appreciate it if you'd finish deciphering that code now.

- [glass shatters]

- [shouting]

[grunts]

- Dad!

- The war is over.

No!

- No!

- [gasping] No!

You're wrong about that. The war has only just begun!

[gasping] Charles.

The debt that all men... men pay. The debt that all men p... [stammers]

Dad! No, please!

[sobbing] Come back. It's not fair.

Help! Somebody help, please!

So recapping:

The Knights of the Golden Circle was a Southern extremist group, operating in the north to subvert Union forces.

Had Thomas not burned the legendary missing pages from the Booth diary, the killers may have found a vast treasure of gold, and the Union may well have lost the Civil War.

- Thank you.

- [applause]

[man] I'd like to thank Ben and Patrick Gates. Thank you. And say what a wonderful addition Thomas Gates is to our civilian heroes exhibit. Thank you. Thank you, Dr. Nichols. I only wish my grandfather had been here to see this wonderful day.

[man] Excuse me. I have a question I'd like to ask. What do you think happened to that Booth diary page

- that was pulled out of the fire?

- We may never know.

Perhaps.

- Perhaps not.

- [crowd murmuring]

You see, I have one of those great-great-granddaddies, like you, way up in my family tree, name of Silas Wilkinson. He used to tell a story about the night Lincoln was shot. As Silas tells it, Booth didn't seek out Thomas Gates regarding the treasure map that night. It was Thomas who called the meeting. A meeting to plan the assassination of Lincoln.

- How absurd.

- That's a lie!

[crowd murmuring]

Ladies and gentlemen, I present to you...one of the missing pages from the infamous diary of John Wilkes Booth with the name Thomas Gates written on a list along with all the other killers.

- And Latin?

- Booth was a student of Latin.

He shouted, "Sic semper tyrannis" after he shot Lincoln.

- "Thus always to..."

- "Thus always to tyrants." We know.

- "Surratt, copiae"?

- Military supplies.

Mary Surratt was convicted and hanged for supplying Booth with a rifle and field glasses.

- "Thomas Gates, artifex."

- "Designer"

- or "mastermind."

- I know what it means.

He must have, uh, planned the assassination.

- I see.

- Could mean mastermind of anything.

You see that? Burned out right there.

I can only imagine how difficult this must be for you.

- May I, Mr...?

- Wilkinson.

I'll see if this new page matches the Booth diary.

This is an outrage. You're calling my grandfather a liar.

With respect, now you're calling my great-great-granddaddy a liar.

Yes, sir, I am. This isn't some garbage from a history book.

My grandfather told me this story himself.

- I saw the truth of it in his eyes.

- I'm sorry, sir. I truly am.

We'll test this thoroughly, Patrick, to authenticate it.

It can't be.

Maps to presidents' houses.

Keys to locks that don't exist.

What's the point? What am I looking for?

Proof, proof, proof.

What proof?

Oh, wow. Is this a book about the Templar treasure?

Yes, it is about the Templar treasure, but it's also about other things.

Conspiracy theories, urban legends and other myths that are true.

- So the author's here signing copies?

- I'm the author.

- You are?

- Yeah. See, uh...

There's a picture of me right there.

I think it's a pretty good picture.

I thought that guy, Benjamin Gates, found the treasure.

Well, yes, Ben did, but I am the co-finder.

- Oh, I've never heard of you.

- Oh!

Oh, my gosh. Are you Ben Gates?

- Yes. Yes, I am.

- Do you own a red Ferrari?

- Yes, I do.

- Well, it's being towed.

Hm?

[laughs]

Wait! Wait! That's my car!

[wheels squeaking]

Where's the Ferrari?

- IRS impounded it.

- The IRS?

Funny story. My accountant set up a corporation on an island that didn't exist and assured me that that's how rich people do it. Then I got audited and slapped with a huge fine plus interest. Wanna know what taxes are on five million dollars? Six million dollars. But enough about me.

[sighs] What's new with you?

Well, my girlfriend kicked me out, I'm living with my dad,

- my family killed President Lincoln.

- All right.

I need your help.

[man] I can't believe you have to break into your own house.

[Ben] I need to get Abigail's ID. She has access to the Booth diary page.

Why don't you ask Abigail for her help?

She changed the alarm code, Riley. She's not going to talk to me.

All right.

We have 30 seconds after the alert starts to disable the alarm.

- Go.

- [beeping]

I'll probably regret asking this, but what happened with you and Abigail?

I don't know. I don't know. She started using the word "so" a lot.

"So?"

Yeah, like, "So, I guess my opinion doesn't matter." "So, you seem to always know what's best." "So, I guess I'm invisible." Now I've moved out, we're dividing furniture...

- [beeping]

- [Riley] Oh.

Women. Can't live with them, especially if they change the alarm codes.

You did that in 25 seconds.

That's why I tell people to get a dog.

- Got it.

- All right, let's go.

[car approaching]

[Ben] That's not Abigail's car.

[Ben] She was on a date.

Isn't that that guy? The White House guy?

The White House Easter Egg Roll is next Monday. Maybe if you're not...

He's weird!

[Abigail] What happens if kids don't find all the eggs?

[man] Wow. You work in a museum, and you live in one.

[Abigail] Pretty much.

What clever repartee. She must like him.

[Abigail] All right, let me give you a tour of the house.

- OK.

- That's actually kind of...

Oh, Abigail.

- What are you doing here?

- I just needed to get some things.

- Connor, good to see you again.

- Gates.

How did you get in, Ben?

Riley! Come out here!

What? [laughs]

Hey! What are you doing here? I mean, it's your house, but...

I sent you a copy of my book. Did you get a chance...?

- No, I haven't read it yet.

- Mm.

I know you. You're the White House curator.

- I'm Riley. We met, uh, back in...

- Right. You're, uh, Ben's assistant.

What?

Um, maybe I should go.

- Yeah, I'm really...

- Dinner tomorrow night?

I... I actually already have plans for tomorrow.

You do?

- Of course you do.

- But I'm free on Friday.

- Awkward.

- Oh, great. [laughs]

- Good night.

- Good night.

I cannot believe you broke in.

- What did you take?

- It's just my things.

Hand it over, Ben.

[sighs] I need to see the Booth diary page.

You saw the page yourself. There is no treasure map on it.

No, it's a cipher leading to a map. Anyone spectral-image the page?

No need to. The ink writing on the page is clearly visible.

It could have been erased or faded.

You're the director of document conservation. You know this.

Not up to me. It's not my department.

That department reports to your department.

Come on. One look under infrared.

You can have the Boston Tea Tables.

Both of them?

[beeping]

[Riley] We've been looking at this page for hours. There's nothing there.

Ben, I really don't think we're going to find anything on this page.

In a hundred years, no one's going to remember anyone involved in the Lincoln assassination besides Booth.

That's not true. Do you know the expression, "His name is mud"?

- Yes. Of course.

- You do?

- You know the origin of the expression?

- Does anyone but you?

Dr. Samuel Mudd was convicted of being a co-conspirator in the Lincoln assassination. The evidence was circumstantial. He was later pardoned, but it didn't matter. Mudd's name still lives in infamy. And I will not let Thomas Gates' name be mud.

- [Abigail] Ben.

- What?

Look at this.

- See that?

- Oh.

- That's quite something, isn't it?

- Yeah. It says "smudge."

It's nothing.

Residual ink from the facing page. Flip it.

The letters are backwards.

- It's a cipher.

- Yes. It is.

A cipher. See how the letters are coupled?

Playfair ciphers encode letters in pairs. This could prove his story.

Unless you decode the cipher, this does not prove a theory.

That's OK. We need a five-letter keyword.

- What's the keyword?

- I don't know yet.

- All right.

- Uh, can I get a printout of this?

[Riley] There's a billion words in the English language.

Got to be a logical... Let's start from the beginning.

A. Aardvark.

Don't want to rain on your parade here, but I don't think this is gonna stop Dr. Nichols from announcing the discovery of the page tomorrow.

No, now, wait. Can't you ask him to wait until I prove Thomas is innocent?

What if he isn't innocent?

[beeping]

Sir? Looks like our old friend Ben Gates is in the news again.

What did he find now? Atlantis?

A guy came forward with a missing Booth diary page.

That's not the best part. Listen to this. "On the page are the names of the conspirators in the Lincoln assassination, as well
as a previously unknown conspirator, Thomas Gates. Thomas Gates is said to be the great-great-grandfather of treasure hunter
Benjamin Franklin Gates."

- [woman] Thought my relatives were bad.

- What do we know about this Wilkinson?

- Sir?

- Guy claims he had this page for 140 years then just suddenly comes forward with it?

- Why?

- We'll find out.

Better. Better. Bacon.

[beeping]

- Keep going.

- That's stupid.

- How's he doing?

- Keep working.

[Nichols] We're grateful to the Wilkinson family for coming forth with the page. On the page is a name of a previously unknown conspirator, Thomas Gates.

- Nichols has bought into it. See?

- Would you stop watching that.

[Nichols continues talking]

It's on the internet!

- No stopping it now.

- Gates may have been the architect...

- They have no understanding.

- You know the truth.

That's all that matters. You heard the story from Grandpa.

The story? This guy's got evidence. He's got everything.

We have a story. We have nothing.

For one brief moment, the Gates family could hold its head up.

- Now we're a bunch of crazies.

- But we're not liars.

Wilkinson is saying that Thomas Gates was a mastermind to one of the darkest hours in U.S. history. And he burned the diary page
to cover that up.

You and I both know he burned the page to keep Booth's men from finding the treasure.

That's what we're going to prove.

- Only one way to prove it.

- Find the treasure.

You've got to find it. You're going to help me find it. So come on.

Let's hear the story again from Grandpa Charles.

Grandpa heard his father say, "Treasure map."

- Then there was a commotion.

- Got all that. Anything after that?

Anything he said, something he did? Anything at all?

- Wait a minute.

- What?

He took his son's hand.

He looked him in the eye, and he said, with his dying breath,

- "The debt that all men pay."

- "The debt that all men pay"?

The debt that Thomas paid.

That's five letters.

Oh!

Try "Death."

- What?

- It's the keycode.

The debt that all men pay is death.

All right.

[beeping]

[Riley] L-A-B-O-U-L...

It's Lab-ool...

Lab-ahl... La...

It's gibberish.

- Laboulaye!

- Laboulaye!

- What is that?

- It's a who. Édouard Laboulaye.

Where's the phone?

I don't know. Can't find anything in this mess.

- Temporary till I find a new place.

- Find the old one. I like her.

[indistinct chatter]

- Hi.

- Dr. Chase.

- Abigail, please.

- Abigail.

- Nice to meet you.

- Have a seat.

Thanks for agreeing to meet with me.

Of course. I was actually going to call you about the diary page.

- Any news?

- Well...

We actually found some latent letter fragments on it.

Take a look.

[Wilkinson] Random letters. A cipher?

- Maybe.

- Gates seen this?

He's the one that discovered it.

[cell phone rings]

- I'm sorry.

- Not a problem.

- I need one minute.

- Please, take your time.

Hey. What?

We cracked the cipher. It's "Laboulaye."

The cipher spells "Laboulaye. "

So? Laboulaye was well-known in France. It could be nothing.

Or maybe there was a treasure map like Thomas Gates said there was, and Laboulaye had it. We only got a partial on the next word.

L-A-D, lad... ladder...

- L-A-D.

- Aladdin! Aladdin?

- Lady!

- Thank you, Abigail!

Laboulaye Lady. Do you know what Laboulaye was planning right around the time Lincoln was assassinated?

OK, Ben, I've got to go.

There's a map or a clue to a map on the Statue...

- She hung up.

- She took your call. That was good.

- Dr. Gates?

- Yes.

Sounds like he cracked the cipher. I couldn't help but overhear.

Laboulaye? As in Édouard Laboulaye?

He seems to believe so, yes.

Man who had the idea for the Statue of Liberty.

You're saying there's a treasure map in the Statue of Liberty?

Laboulaye was a Mason. They built clues into everything.

Did you learn that from my book?

- Have an interest in history?

- Fascinated by it.

Civil War, especially. My family's descended from Confederate General Albert Pike. He was a remarkable man.

But, then again, what is history but a marker for the deeds of great men?

A man only has one lifetime, but history can remember you forever.

So the only question is, which Statue of Liberty?

Exactly.

Is there more than one?

There are three, actually, Riley.

One is in New York, one in the Luxembourg Garden.

But he only referred to one as his "lady."

This is like, impossible, what you're doing.

I'm glad you're enjoying it.

[Ben] Laboulaye had to leave a clue somewhere on here. Move in on the torch.

[Riley] Let me get there. It's not as easy as it looks.

No. Believe me, I understand.

[policeman speaks French]

Excuse me, officer. May I help you?

Ah, American, eh?

Of course you see no problem in disturbing everyone's pleasant morning

- with your buzzing there.

- Hey!

You know how much our constitution was influenced by your man, Montesquieu?

- You know Montesquieu?

- Got it.

[policeman speaks French]

Montesquieu, yeah. "A government should be set up so that..."

[both] "...no man need be afraid of another."

- That's very good.

- Thank you.

- I'm astonished.

- I got it, I got it.

- I hope you read French.

- May l?

[speaks French]

He's a cop.

Um... "Across the sea these twins stand determined..."

- Resolute.

- "Resolute," yeah.

"...to preserve what we are looking for.

- Uh... Laboulaye, 1876."

- Six.

- It's a clue.

- "These twins stand resolute."

Let's see. Resolute twins.

Resolute.

Resolute. And then twins.

Siamese twins? Siam? Trade routes between France and Thailand?

[laughs] That's ridiculous. HMS Resolute.

A British ship that got lost in the Arctic in the 1800s.

It was salvaged by American whalers, and then Congress sent it back to England.

When the ship was finally retired, Queen Victoria had two desks made from its timbers.

Voilà. Resolute twins.

- And where are those desks now?

- The closest one is in London.

How fast can we get to Buckingham Palace?

Don't know. Why don't you ask your new best friend?

[speaking French]

He's going to call you a cab.

- [speaks French]

- OK?

- Nice helicopter. Is that yours?

- Yes, actually. It is.

- OK, so you get the ticket.

- [laughs] Great.

Mitch Wilkinson studied history at Virginia Military Institute. Graduated 1978. Ran a private security company which had contracts in Iraq during the invasion, and in the Congo in the late '90s. These are trained mercenaries as well as being black-market antiquities dealers.

So why does a black market antiquities dealer...

...give up a rare Civil War artifact?

Something he could sell to a private collector for a good deal of money?

- [crickets chirping]

- [dog barking]

[alarm chirps]

[rustling]

[grunting]

[beeping]

[Riley] So the queen's office is here.

The elevator shaft gets you close, but the only direct access is through security.

- That should be exciting.

- We got to get you in that room.

[phone rings]

- Hi, Dad.

- [Patrick] Ben.

It's Patrick Gates' phone. He's calling Ben.

Give me that.

The house was broken into last night. I was attacked.

Call the police. I'm coming home.

- What?

- What good would that do?

They didn't take anything. And besides, I'm fine.

OK. We're in London. We're going to Buckingham Palace.

We have an appointment with the curator tomorrow afternoon.

- Son, just be careful. Goodbye.

- Bye.

Someone else is after the treasure.

Of course someone else is after the treasure.

- It's the axiom of treasure hunting.

- We have to hurry and see that desk.

We don't want to miss that appointment.

- Hi. Ben Gates.

- See security. They'll let you in.

[whistling]

Wow.

OK. It's teatime, chaps.

Looking for the curator's office. Which way was it again?

Follow the stairs round, then turn first left.

Thank you so much.

- Ben.

- Abigail.

- What's she doing here?

- What're you doing?

Your dad called me. Said your next clue was here.

- [Riley] She's really there?

- Ben...

- drop her. Lose her.

- I want to help.

That's very nice, but it's a bad time right now.

- A bad time, right now?

- It's a bad time.

[scoffs] OK, I just flew all the way to London to offer my help...

- Remember the plan.

- You don't need it?

You're the one making a scene.

- I... I'm not making a scene right now.

- We want to make a scene.

Well then, fine! If that's what you want, let's have it out now!

- So subtle.

- Let me guess? It's the wrong time.

It's the wrong place. I'm wrong again!

Wrong about us, wrong about Thomas Gates, wrong that you'd like the Queen Anne chair!

You're wrong to assume I'd like the chair.

You see? Everybody, listen to this. This is more interesting than that.

She thinks that even when I'm right, I'm wrong! Isn't that right?

Abigail, just because I answer a question quickly doesn't make it wrong.

Not if the answer's something we need to figure out as a couple.

- That's what couples do!

- Sir.

You and your missis, take it outside.

Now look what you've done. You've brought the little bobbies down on us!

You take the missis outside. I'm staying right here.

- Ben!

- Whee!

- Good afternoon, sir.

- [English accent] Hello.

- Been drinking, have we?

- Just a nip.

Popped down to the pub for a pint! Bit of all right!

Going to arrest a man for that?

Going to detain a blighter for enjoying his whiskey?

- Enough.

- Bangers and mash.

Bubbles and squeak. Smoked eel pie.

- Sir!

- Haggis!

- That's it! Dismount the banister!

- I've got a lovely bunch of coconuts!

Here they are, standing in a row!

Small ones, big ones, some as big as your head!

That was brilliant.

- What's wrong with being right?

- Nothing. You should try it sometime.

- You're saying that I'm never right?

- I did not say that.

Hoo! So I'm wrong again.

- Now, see, there you are correct.

- Capital. Topper.

- Your mother told me about you.

- [continued arguing]

- [man] In here, please.

- Why don't you just make a list of what's OK for me to say or not write something...

- What's right or wrong...

- You two, stay.

- Right?

- No! No, no, man.

- Don't leave me in here!

- That's great. Wow.

What is going on?

I'm sorry for getting you roped into this, but you were excellent.

- Thank you. So were you.

- When did you figure out

- it was a fake argument?

- When'd you figure out I was

- arguing during the fake argument?

- The middle.

Where "I assume I'm right." Get us out. Which I don't get.

If I'm right, after I assume I'm right, then I'm correct.

When you get to a conclusion without asking, and you happen to be right, you got lucky.

I get lucky a lot.

So where does that leave me, Ben?

You guys are so great together.

- Want to know why I'm here?

- Uh-huh.

Think there may be a clue on the Resolute desk in the queen's study.

Does that help?

Don't understand why it's difficult for you to include others in your decisions.

Just because you may know what my answer is going to be doesn't mean you don't have to ask me.

- [Riley] door number one, opening.

- [buzzing]

OK. Let me try this out.

Abigail, would you like to come with me, please?

Yes. Thank you.

Ridiculous. You're staying.

- It's too dangerous.

- I am so coming.

- Door number two.

- Door two, coming up.

[buzzing]

- You're not coming.

- Call security.

[Riley] You should be near a service elevator.

What are you doing? Are those for the queen?

Queen's not here. There's no flag flying. Queen's at Windsor.

- What are you doing?

- See the desk, without you.

- No.

- Don't let her go.

- Abigail...

- [clicking]

All right. Get in. Get in. Get in!

Hold this.

Will you give me the flowers back, please?

Yeah.

- What?

- Wearing the perfume I bought you.

So?

So I think it smells kind of pretty.

- It's the flowers, Ben.

- No, it's not.

Let's go.

[Riley] OK, now turn left.

- Dead end.

- [Riley] I mean right. Go right.

- The flowers... petals... stamens.

- Good. Good.

Go, go.

[Ben] That's it.

[Abigail] The Resolute desk.

We're looking for...

...writing, patterns in the carvings. Could be anything.

Hey, look at this.

- "Malcolm Gilvary, 1880."

- Hold on one second.

Here we go. Malcolm Gilvary. He didn't make furniture.

He made Chinese puzzle boxes.

- Oh...

- What?

I think these drawers work like tumblers in a safe.

OK, four drawers... Four-digit combination?

What about a year?

Uh, let me see. Queen Victoria, born 1819.

So you go one...

Eight.

One.

Nine.

- Any luck?

- OK... 1876 was on the inscription on the statue in Paris. Let's try that.

One.

Eight.

Seven.

Six.

[Ben] Uh-oh.

New rules.

These markings, like Incan or Aztec.

I have never seen any symbols like this.

I mean, this looks centuries older than Civil War.

What do you think it means?

I doubt it has anything to do with the plot to assassinate Lincoln.

[beeping]

Uh-oh.

Mayday. Mayday. Ben, get out of there.

- Oi! Where are my detainees?

- OK, let's make some noise.

- [beeping]

- [alarm wailing]

The fire alarm's gone off.

Uh-oh. God save the queen.

[man] All units, go to action zebra.

- What's going on?

- Haven't the foggiest.

- [indistinct chatter]

- [alarm blaring]

Someone or something is causing this.

- Check your primary stations.

- This doesn't make any sense.

Find the source terminal and check public areas four and eight.

[man] This way, ladies and gentlemen. Thank you very much. Keep moving.

Keep walking until you're on the other side of the fountain.

- Excuse me, excuse me. Coming through.

- I got them. They're at the main gate.

[siren wailing]

- Oi! Sparkle. Come on.

- OK. Here we go.

I'm a little bit allergic.

- Riley.

- Thank you. OK.

- See you later. Thank you. Bye-bye.

- Sit! Sorry!

Thanks for waiting for me. Can I see the thing?

Daniel, hold it.

What is that?

Went to Buckingham Palace, all I got was this wood?

Look at the symbols. Never seen anything like this.

It's an incredible discovery.

- Wilkinson.

- Stop them. Go, go, go!

- He's the one after the treasure.

- I'll drive.

We're in England.

[Ben] It's a gun! Get down!

- We're trapped!

- Hang on! Keep your heads down.

Hey, who are you?

[Abigail] Sorry.

- Hey!

- Oi!

- Ben, they're getting closer.

- What is their problem?

Whoa!

- Go left! Go left!

- Hold on.

Turn, turn!

Watch out!

Everybody OK?

- Come on, come on.

- Danny, I want them stopped.

Look out!

Ah!

Ah!

Go. Go, go, go, go!

Did you see where he went?

[phone rings]

- What is that? Someone's phone.

- It's him.

- Have his number in your speed dial?

- Oh, shu...

This has to end before someone gets hurt.

Give me what you got at Buckingham, it won't be necessary.

Tell that to my father.

- [man] Moron!

- [honking]

Why are they standing in the middle of the street?

- [honking]

- [screaming]

- Where are these people going?

- Why's everyone running?

- He's right there! Go!

- Move!

- Get out of the way!

- [honking]

- Did I just run over a man's foot?

- [Abigail] Watch the people!

Go! Go! Faster!

- Right over there.

- I got them.

- They're still behind us.

- This phone have a camera?

- No. No, it's broken.

- All right. Give me the plank.

Hang on. We're going to run a red light.

- [honking]

- Ah! Ah!

Hack into the London Police database and get a picture from that traffic cam.

- Okey-dokey.

- You can't do it?

No, I can. I just don't like that you assume that I can.

[laughs] Why, thank you, Riley.

Get it!

Stop! Stop!

- He's got it.

- What is it?

I don't know, but it's ours. Let's go.

- Abigail!

- Hey, Patrick.

Nice to see you two together again.

- Yeah, well, we're not.

- Yeah.

Oh, I was hoping to get some of these boxes out of the house.

I can't read the whole thing, but I can tell you that these are definitely pre-colonial Native American markings.

- Easily 500 years old.

- Easily.

I can identify one symbol.

Look at this. Do you know what that is?

Sacred calendrical? I don't know.

That symbol is Cibola.

That's Cibola.

The City of Gold.

The City of Gold.

[Ben] "In 1527, a Spanish ship wrecked on the Florida coast. There were only four survivors. One was a slave named Estebán who saved a local tribe's dying chief. As a reward, he was taken to their sacred city, a city built from solid gold. Later, when Estebán tried to find the city again, he never could. But the legend grew, and every explorer came to the New World in search of it. When General Custer's search for gold ended with his last stand at Little Bighorn, it became clear none would ever find it."

Ben, can you imagine if the Confederates got their hands on the City of Gold...

My God.

I'm going to go talk to her.

- You're coming with me.

- No!

- Hey. No one else can translate it.

- There are others.

There are several others.

For ancient Native American? No one better.

- Who?

- Look, Ben, I can't go with you.

- It's been, what? Twenty-five years.

- Thirty-two.

That long?

There's a reason why we haven't spoken in 32 years.

- We have nothing in common.

- Me?

Yes, of course. And I'm sure she's just as proud of you as I am.

- Who?

- His mom.

- Will you relax? It's gonna be fine.

- Sure. Should look at the bright side.

Been a long time. Maybe she lost her memory, won't recognize me.

I hate her!

We're in the right place.

I'm gonna take myself out of the line of fire for this one.

- [Ben] Hi, Mom.

- [woman] Benjamin!

Abigail! What a surprise!

Hello, sweetheart.

Hi.

Oh.

You see? One syllable, a knife in the heart.

- Oh, no.

- She can do that.

I can also track the whereabouts of my toothbrush.

I was not the one that left the toothbrushes in Marrakech.

I stowed them both in the travel case, as instructed.

Yes, and you also insisted on loading the luggage into the taxi.

- Didn't insist. I loaded the luggage.

- Not the travel case.

Travel case is not luggage.

The case goes into the luggage.

- Who was in charge of packing?

- I couldn't get the case into the luggage. It was full with that stupid rug you bought.

You thought it had secret stitching.

- How stupid was that?

- Did have stitching.

- Six phony green leather suitcases...

- Mom.

I need you to take a look at this.

- What is that a picture of?

- It's interesting.

- We think it might be Olmec.

- It is.

Yes, yes, definitely proto-Zoquean.

We were hoping that you could translate it.

Yes, of course you were.

Oh, this doesn't involve another treasure hunt, does it?

Mom, this is actually very important.

All right. What have we got here?

This... this glyph here, that means "bird." And that means...

Uh, "noble bird."

"Find the noble bird, let him take you by the hand and give you passage to the sacred temple."

[laughs]

Oh, you think this is a treasure map for Cibola, don't you?

Well, that is exactly what it is.

No, this glyph doesn't mean "Cibola." It means "the center of the world."

You know, you used to like it. She fell in love with me on a treasure hunt.

That was not love. That was excitement, adrenaline and tequila.

- [Ben] Mom...

- I was trying to get course credit.

Treasure hunting paid off, in case you haven't read the papers.

Had nothing to do with you. That was Ben.

Ben found the treasure. You did nothing.

Patrick, Emily, please. Can we just figure out what's on the page?

Well, that's it, I'm afraid.

These glyphs are only partials. So you only have half a treasure map.

I'm sorry.

Not that I'm surprised.

[Ben] At least we know where the rest of the map is.

What?

You know where it is? Why didn't you tell me?

Obviously you have a tendency to overreact!

- I'm sorry.

- So am l.

So where is it?

Inscription on the statue in Paris said, "These twins stand resolute."

We think the map's divided between the two Resolute desks.

The Resolute desk.

The Resolute desk?

President's desk?

The president. What president?

- Our president?

- Unfortunately, yes.

But that means...

Wait, so we have to...

The White House?

The Oval Office... to be exact.

9/11 was carried out primarily by a US-centered rogue network or invisible government faction, but it was not carried out alone. The foreign intelligence service which contributed the most indirect support to 9/11 was unquestionably the British MI-6. The cooperation and interpenetration of the Anglo-American intelligence agencies is so overwhelming and so thoroughly institutionalized that it is hardly noticed by US commentators. The CIA and MI-6 are virtually Siamese twins sharing a number of vital organs. This fact is much deplored by those of us who believe that the British Crown, the City of London, the UK Foreign and Commonwealth Office, and Oxford Circus (the London home of MI-6) are among the most baneful factors influencing American national life, but it is by now a well-established and entrenched fact. Whatever is known to the US National Security Agency at Fort Meade, Maryland, is known simultaneously to the British GCHQ at Cheltenham, by virtue of bilateral intelligence sharing agreements. Some light has been thrown on this phenomenon by Claire Short, when she reported that the red boxes sent to her by the UK intelligence service contained texts of private conversations of Kofi Annan which had been bugged by the Anglo-Americans. GCHQ has also had a recent whistle-blower who has fleshed out other parts of this picture. Many of these arrangements go back to World War II, and they have never been abrogated. The British functioned as the junior partners of the US invisible government during the Iran-contra affair, and they continue to do so today. In addition, although the British may be the junior partners in terms of military assets and disposable resources, they are often very much the senior partner when it comes to developing strategies and plans. Who could know the Arab and Moslem worlds better than the British orientalists? The overall Anglo-American plan for the balkanization of the Middle East, the Bernard Lewis plan, is really a distillation of two centuries of historical experience by the British Arab Bureau and the British India Office. The extraordinarily close US-UK alliance lets the British side do what it wants within institutional channels, discretely, and silently. If we were to detail the extent of British participation in the history of NATO state- sponsored terrorism, in the Afghan guerilla movement against the Soviets, in the foundation of al Qaeda, in the development of the figure of Bin Laden (who once reportedly kept a pied-a-terre in the London suburb of Wembley) in the role of London as the premier world center of Islamic fundamentalism and of other terrorism, and a host of other subjects, we would essentially have to re-write almost this entire book from a slightly different point of view. There can be in short no doubt that the main supporting role in 9/11 was played by British intelligence and British assets generally.

-- 9-11 Synthetic Terrorism Made in USA, by Webster Griffin Tarpley


Why would I overreact to that?

- That's not what I signed on for.

- Could we focus on the issue at hand?

Thank you.

[Nichols] It's early, pre-Columbian.

- Can you translate it?

- Are you kidding?

This is an extinct, exceedingly rare language.

Only a handful of people study these languages.

Where are we to find them?

Universities, I suppose. But you don't have the whole thing.

What do you mean?

These glyphs here... they're cut off.

There's more to the map? How are we going to find that?

We won't have to. Gates will get it somehow.

The Resolute desk is near the south wall in the Oval Office.

Look at this. Look.

Small door on the front of the desk.

[Patrick] FDR had that put in so guests couldn't see his wheelchair.

- But...

- Guys, take a look at this.

[Abigail] This could work.

I believe it's time for you to make a date with your new boyfriend.

I think you're right.

[man] We hope you're enjoying the White House Easter Egg Roll.

Face painting continues at 2:near the south fountain.

- [Ben] That Connor in the bunny suit?

- Thank you.

I've never been to an Easter Egg Roll.

It's kind of sweet.

Yeah, I love it.

I know you. Your great-great-grandfather killed President Lincoln.

No. That would be John Wilkes Booth.

Eisenschiml says that Booth was a tool in a greater conspiracy that involved men in Lincoln's Cabinet.

Absurd. Eisenschiml's book is filled with

- spotty research and false assumptions.

- Oh, yeah?

Explain why Lincoln's bodyguard left his post that night?

Because President Lincoln was never accompanied by guards when attending the theater. Listening? Especially on Good Friday.

Explain why all the bridges out of Washington were closed except one, the one Booth needed to escape?

OK, run along now, you impossible child. Run along.

What is going on with the education in America?

- Hey! Hey!

- Connor!

- I'm so glad you decided to come...

- Hey.

-...with Gates.

- Connor.

- We just ran into each other.

- Oh.

Aren't you going to ask him?

- Ask me what?

- Nothing.

- No, really. What?

- I really wouldn't want to impose.

Well, what she means is she doesn't think you can.

- Doesn't think I can what?

- She wants to see the Oval Office.

- No. That is way too much to ask.

- No, it's, uh...

- I can do that.

- Really?

You see?

- You can?

- Yeah.

That is so cool, Connor. I have always wanted to see the Oval Office.

Connor rocks.

Well... here we are.

- Mm.

- Wow.

Empire furnishings and crenellated molding. Love it.

Hm.

Amazing feeling, isn't it, standing in here?

- Yes. Amazing, huh?

- Oh, could...

Oh. Sorry.

Oh, that's, uh... The Resolute desk.

Might recognize it from the photo of young JFK Junior playing underneath while his father was working.

- Wonderful.

- Yeah.

But many people don't know that this desk has a twin that sits in Buckingham Palace.

- Isn't that something?

- Who knew?

Every president since Rutherford B. Hayes has used that desk, except, uh, Johnson and Nixon. And Ford, of course.

- Uh, no.

- Uh, yes.

- No.

- Yes.

Abigail! Did you lose an earring?

Oh! I... I did, yes.

Connor, these were given to me by my grandmother.

I suppose we should look for it. Wouldn't want anyone finding an earring that doesn't belong to the first lady in the Oval Office.

- Yes.

- Excellent point, considering we're not supposed to be here.

- Yeah.

- Why don't we, um, go over here and check it out?

I'll check over here.

- Do you think it fell down here?

- Yes.

- Maybe here.

- Probably.

Oh, no.

- You did sit on the sofa.

- Oh, the bunnies.

Connor!

- You found it.

- I did.

Thank you so much!

Uh...

You're just the best. Mm.

Mm!

Mm!

Mm!

- [clears throat]

- [moaning]

[panting] Thank you.

OK.

OK.

- [Ben] Empty.

- [Abigail] Someone must've taken it.

Brightest men in our country sat at that desk for over a hundred years.

- Look.

- Course one of 'em found the map.

- A symbol stamped into the wood.

- The presidential seal.

It's not the presidential seal.

The eagle's holding a scroll instead of olive branches.

- [Ben] I'm not sure what this is.

- [Patrick] What do we do?

Did none of you read my book?

The eagle clutching the scroll.

- Do you know what it means?

- Yeah.

But it's not something I could tell you.
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Re: NATIONAL TREASURE 2: BOOK OF SECRETS -- SCREENPLAY

Postby admin » Fri Jul 03, 2015 11:34 pm

PART 2 OF 2

It's something that I have to show you... in my book.

- You didn't even open it?

- I was moving.

Chapter 13.

- "The President's Secret Book"?

- "The President's Secret Book."

It happens to be a collection of documents for presidents by presidents, and for presidents' eyes only.

And I'm not just talking about JFK here, guys.

The 18 and a half missing minutes of the Watergate tapes.

Did the Apollo really land on the moon? Did it? Did it?

And the coup de grâce... Area 51.

Come on, Riley. That's... that's an urban legend.

Is it, Abigail? Is it?

It's just totally...

- Crazy?

- Yeah.

Hm. 'Cause last time I checked, we pretty much make our living on crazy.

- He's got a point.

- I guess so.

Same symbol.

Released in '66 under the Freedom of Information Act.

The eagle and the scroll, the secret symbol in the President's Book.

So you're saying that whatever was on that plank is now in the President's Secret Book?

[Riley] Ben.

If it was you trying to convince me...

...you'd have less evidence, and I'd already believe you by now.

The eagle with the scroll?

Conspiracy theorists like to believe that it's the symbol for the President's Secret Book.

You bought Riley's book.

[laughs] Your friend writes a book about government conspiracies.

- You don't think we know about it?

- But is it true?

Does the president have a secret book?

Do you like ducks?

[quacking]

There is a book.

Why are you telling me out here?

Because inside, I'm a federal agent.

Out here, I'm talking to you as a friend.

- Where's the President's Book kept?

- Only the current president knows.

The book is passed from president to president, and each one chooses his own hiding place.

You're the FBI. Can't you get it for me?

Only way you'll ever see that book is if you get elected president.

Well, you never know.

All I need is a few minutes with him.

A few minutes? Really?

Even if you were married to the president, you wouldn't be able to get a few minutes.

Not when he's surrounded by handlers. If I get him alone...

How do you expect to get the president alone?

Before the Civil War, the states were all separate.

People used to say, "The United States are." are

Wasn't until the war ended people started saying, "The United States is."

Under Lincoln... we became one nation.

And Lincoln paid for it with his life.

- So did Thomas Gates.

- Right.

With his life.

So how am I gonna get him alone?

I'm gonna kidnap him.

I'm gonna kidnap the president of the United States.

[laughs]

- That's not funny.

- I'm your father.

How do you expect me to respond? I can't let you ruin your life.

Are you out of your mind?

Read my book, and you'd know you can't get to that book.

Exactly how do you plan on doing this?

- I was thinking Mount Vernon.

- Oh.

- What?

- I'm in.

[man] Sir, we have to move the party.

Some historian claims the Spencer Landmark Hotel was used for Klan meetings in the late 1800s.

- Anyone know if this is true?

- I've got the Washington Gazette.

They want a quote on, "Is the president being insensitive to minority issues?"

- Doesn't matter.

- Get a list of approved alternates.

- What do you have?

- Yeah, I know it's short notice.

The pipe burst in the hotel that we previously booked.

- I... There is water everywhere.

- A retirement party for 200 people.

- Gunston Hall.

- Monticello is booked.

So is Gunston Hall and Tudor Place.

The Denby Hotel is available, and so is Mount Vernon.

- Oh, wow. You are a lifesaver.

- The Denby is great.

Strike that. The Denby was booked. Mount Vernon's all we got.

Book it before someone else does.

[cheering, applause]

And let me say what an honor it is to be here and add my happy birthday to you, Mr. President.

[? Randy Travis:
Better Class of Losers]

[singing]

[siren wails]

- Good evening, sir.

- Good evening.

Are you aware that you are in a restricted area?

Yeah, but this is where the fish are, son.

That may be, but I'm gonna need to have you move upriver.

Are you aware that according to article one, section of the Maryland constitution, I'm allowed to fish in public water?

Are you aware I have the right to detain you for the next 48 hours without cause?

I am going to go back where I came from just as fast as possible.

Maybe one day I'll wear this thing to a party I was actually invited to.

[? Randy Travis: Is It Still Over]

[singing]

Twenty hundred time check. Station 11.

- [man] All clear. Perimeter secure.

- Hey.

You didn't happen to see a cute brunette wandering around?

- Went to get a drink, she disappeared.

- No, sir.

I've got no game tonight.

Good evening, Your Excellency. Hello.

Prime Minister, it's a delight to have you back in the States.

Spread the word, contribution limits not enforced on the president's birth...

- Happy birthday.

- Thank you.

- Ben Gates. The Templar treasure?

- Oh, right, Ben Gates. Yeah.

- We won't keep you.

- Thanks so much. Always a pleasure.

I can't tell you what a thrill it is for me to be invited here tonight, sir.

Yeah, you must have the Secret Service hopping about now.

Sir?

Considering your discovered lineage.

- Oh, yeah. Oh, that...

- Carry on.

I beg your pardon, sir, but I know what a huge admirer you are of George Washington. I thought you might want to take a look at this.

Have a look at that.

This is a map of Mount Vernon drawn by George Washington himself.

Mr. President, that is exactly what it is.

- Architectural history major, Yale.

- I did not know that.

It belonged to my great uncle.

Got it from the granddaughter of a slave, Charlotte.

- Happy birthday.

- Always a pleasure. Thank you so much.

Charlotte, who lived here and worked here at Mount Vernon.

- Yeah.

- And we're standing right here, sir.

This line is an underground tunnel, an escape route that was never found.

I wonder... I wonder if it's still there.

- Well...

- [laughs]

- Only one way to find out, sir.

- Maybe we should take a look.

Are we allowed to do that?

I mean, I know you're allowed to do that. You're the president.

Can I come with you?

- You guys are just everywhere.

- Yes, sir.

- Give my friend your flashlight.

- Thank you.

According to this map, it should be...

It's one... two. In here.

Yeah, should be in here.

- May I?

- Absolutely.

All right.

You know, Craig, I appreciate you doing your job,but I have no enemies down here.

In the cellar. In this tiny little room.

I'll just wait here, then.

[Ben] Over here.

- That's the mark of George Washington.

- Only it's slightly different.

- How?

- These axes, the angle's off.

For it to correspond with the ones on the map, it should form a perfect V.

[clanking]

OK, what else?

The arrowhead...

...is sideways.

[rumbling]

[gasps]

[president] We're all right. Don't worry.

Look at that.

Come on.

Mr. President?

We have a breach in zone nine! There's...

- Inform Fairfax, SecTac Channel One!

- Perimeter detail, lock down all exits!

- Gates, what are you doing?

- I'm sorry, Mr. President.

I need to ask you a question, which I know you can't answer

- unless we're alone.

- Two coming in!

I want a sledgehammer, I want a crowbar, I want a jackhammer, now!

Tom, alert the vice president.

Mr. President, sometime between 1880, when the Resolute desk was placed in the Oval Office, and now, one of our presidents found
a secret compartment in the desk.

Hidden inside was a plank with Native American writing on it.

A treasure map to Cibola, the legendary City of Gold, sir.

All this just to ask me about a treasure map?

That map is a key to proving Thomas Gates' innocence.

I know for a fact that the plank is no longer in the Resolute desk.

You've been in my desk too?

I believe the whereabouts of that plank is now hidden...

...in the President's Book, sir.

The book known only to our presidents.

It contains all of our nation's secrets.

[laughs]

That's the most ridiculous thing I've ever heard.

I saw the seal in the desk, sir. I know the map exists.

You're not going to tell me how to get out of here

- unless you get what you want.

- The way out is that direction,

and I'll show you.

You don't negotiate very well, do you?

No, sir.

Mr. President!

Where are my sledgehammers?

I don't get you, Gates.

You do all this, you're willing to go to prison, just to clear your ancestor's name.

The way out is just down those stairs.

Everything I am is because of my ancestors, sir.

Thomas Gates gave his last full measure of devotion to his country to stop the KGC.

When someone dies for their country, I believe they should be honored.

"Last full measure of devotion"?

Lincoln is my favorite president, sir. No offense.

None taken. He's my favorite too.

Sir, I know the book exists, and my question is, "Will you agree to let me see it?"

Even if something like that really did exist, why do you think I would actually just give it to you?

Because it will probably lead us to the discovery of the greatest Native American treasure of all time.

A huge piece of culture lost.

You can give that history back to its descendants.

And because you're the president of the United States, sir.

Whether by innate character, or the oath you took to defend the Constitution, or the weight of history that falls upon you. I believe you to be an honorable man, sir.

People don't believe that stuff anymore.

They want to believe it.

[grunting]

[owl hooting]

Nearest highway is that direction. You'll understand if we part ways here.

- Gates.

- Sir?

The following conversation never happened.

The book exists.

- Where is it?

- Where else do you keep a book?

In the Library of Congress.

X, Y, two, three, four, seven, eight, six.

Thank you, sir.

You'll also need to know three, seven, nine, four.

Got it.

- And, Gates...

- Sir?

Two hundred people know you held me against my will. I can't tell them why. Unless you find what you're looking for, you'll be charged with kidnapping the president.

- You know what that means.

- Yes, sir. Very much so, sir.

- I want you to do something for me.

- It would be a privilege, sir.

Page 47. Just have a look at that.

[dialing phone]

Riley, meet me at the Library of Congress in 20 minutes.

OK.

[phone rings]

Sadusky.

The president's been what?

Gates.

X-Y-two-three-four-seven-eight-six. X-Y-two-three-four-seven-eight-six. X-Y-two-three-four-seven-eight-six.

- Hey.

- Hey.

We're close.

- Where do we start?

- XY is the book classification code.

Stands for special collections, which means very special books.

- Where are they?

- This way. We'll sneak in.

This will be good.

Here we go. XA... XM...

Look. Do you have a code?

Three-seven-nine-four.

What did the president say the number was?

Two-three-four-seven-eight-six.

Two-three-six-seven...

X-Y-two-three-three, two-three-seven-eight... Here.

Two-three-four-seven-nine-one.

- Two-three-four-seven-nine...

- Seventy-six, seventy-eight...

It's not there.

[Riley] Maybe someone checked it out.

- Why send us here if there's no book?

- He probably wanted us to get caught.

- [siren wailing]

- [tires squealing]

Here.

- What is that?

- It's a six-dial combination lock.

The location is the combination.

[laughs]

[Riley] Yes. I was right.

Well done, Mr. Poole.

Eagle and the scroll.

- Area 51!

- Shh!

- Kennedy assassination.

- Shh! We don't have time.

Yeah, it's true. [clears throat]

[sirens wailing]

Here. Wait.

"April 1865. Queen Victoria sends Pike two coded missives. The first is received. Contains information regarding New World treasure. The City of Gold."

Wait. The queen wanted to help the Confederacy?

- A divided America'd have been weaker.

- Needed cotton from the South.

"The second missive was thought to contain a Playfair cipher suggesting contact with Laboulaye, who'll hide clues before his death."

The cipher written into the Booth diary page that Thomas tried to burn.

- The one we have.

- Exactly. "1880."

Resolute desk arrives in Washington, sent by queen to President Hayes."

Look at that.

Missing plank from the White House. Wow.

Here's the final entry by President Coolidge.

"1924. I found a plank in secret desk compartment.

Plank photographed and then destroyed.

Borglum commissioned to destroy landmarks in sacred Black Hills mountains."

Borglum. Mount Rushmore?

He carved Mount Rushmore to erase the map's landmarks in order to protect the City of Gold.

Mount Rushmore was a cover-up.

Image

Image

Up for grabs is Fourth Prize from Disney's National Treasure 2 Sweepstakes. The sweepstakes had an ARV of $75 for the medallion. The Scottish Rite is currently selling the medallion in their online store for $100. I have seen it selling for less elsewhere online.

The bronze medallion commemorates the 190th Anniversary of the Supreme Council, 33rd Degree, of the Ancient & Accepted Scottish Rite, Southern Jurisdiction, U.S.A., in 1991. It was minted by Medallic Art Co of Danbury, CT. The front of the medallion has a portrait of Albert Pike (1809 - 1891) in high relief. Albert Pike was elected Sovereign Grand Commander of the Scottish Rite's Southern Jurisdiction in 1859 and served the Freemasons in that capacity until his death.

The reverse side of the medallion commemorates the 50th Anniversary of Mount Rushmore by Sculptor Gutzon Borglum, 32nd Degree.

-- http://forums.online-sweepstakes.com/sh ... p?t=793810


Last night on the History Channel′s ′Brad Meltzer′s Decoded′, the team investigated rumors that Mount Rushmore may be a symbol of white supremacy. That the sculptor, Gutzon Borglum was a racist. So Scott, Mac and Buddy begin in Texas visiting Borglum′s granddaughter. She tells the team that after her father′s death, she became custodian of her grandfather′s papers and letters. That she found some of what she found disturbing concerning his intolerance of immigrants and of African-Americans. She also mentions how the Lakota Tribe was opposed, and still is, to the monument, as it is located on the sacred lands of the Sioux Nation.

The team then headed for South Dakota and talked with the last living workman, Don Clifford. Don had nothing but high praise to say about Borglum. He was obviously very proud to have worked on the monument. Brad then injects some additional background info. Mt. Rushmore was ′discovered′ by a New York lawyer, Charles Rushmore, in 1885. As part of the Badlands, the US government had ceded it to the Sioux Nation in the Treaty of 1868. When gold was discovered in the Badlands, the area was opened up and prospectors were defended by Custer and the 7th Cavalry, until Little Big Horn. Later, the courts awarded the Sioux $106 million dollars for the site of the monument, but the Sioux Nation refused the settlement.

The Decoded Team next spoke with long-time resident, Martin Luschei, who grew up watching the monument′s construction. Started in 1927, it took 14 years to complete. Luschei raised the issue of Borglum being Anti-Semitic, as well as a member of the Klu Klux Klan. Borglum had previously worked on another major scuplture project, Stone Mountain, celebrating the Confederacy with the likenesses of Gen. Robert E. Lee, Gen. Stonewall Jackson and President Jefferson Davis carved into the side of the Georgia mountain. The KKK were major financial backers of this monument.

At a local saloon, the team meets a man who mentions rumors of a secret ′Hall of Records′ behind Mount Rushmore. Brad arranges for his team to meet with an official of the KKK for answers. They meet with Thomas Robb, who likens the Klu Klux Klan to any other group dedicated to preserving their racial/ethnic culture. Robb acknowledges that he has ′heard′ that copies of letters between Borglum and KKK leaders of the time are stored at the Hall of Records, located in a small valley behind Lincoln′s head.

Borglum′s original plan for the Hall of Records was impressive. Two massive 40-foot doors with a giant golden eagle above them. Each door would be flanked by a torch emitting a towering flame. But Congress wouldn′t pay for that. Instead, the Hall of Records is a 70-foot tunnel housing a time capsule. A titanium vault holds 16 porcelain tablets. The US Constitution, the Declaration of Independence, and biographies of each of the four presidents, as well as one of Gutzon Borglum himself are stored in the vault. Borglum′s vision was that the Mount Rushmore monument would last some 10,000 years. That its true meaning may become lost at some point, so the Hall of Records would guarantee that distant future generations would understand the meaning of the monument, America’s Manifest Destiny.

Brad Meltzer′s Decoded team′s last stop on their investigation of Mount Rushmore is with Ruth Ziolkowski, granddaughter of Korczak Ziolkowski, whom was fired by Gutzon Borglum. Ziolkowski was then hired by the Lakota Sioux to carve a monument of Crazy Horse. This massive monument is many times larger than Mount Rushmore, a deliberate move to show contempt for Borglum and his monument. The team considers all they have learned. Both Scott and Buddy do not believe that Mount Rushmore is a symbol of white supremacy, but Mac does. All three agree that their views of the monument have changed forever.

-- http://www.theapricity.com/forum/showth ... -supremacy


Season 2, Episode 3 of Brad Meltzer's Decoded on the History Channel covered this exact topic in depth. Of course, just as they were getting to the good stuff - they brought up Albert Pike's involvement in the Hall of Records - they simply chose to call it "racist" due to Pike's ties to the KKK and left it at that. ZERO MENTION of the Illuminati tie-in with Albert Pike, which is well-documented.

***

The saddest thing that few know about Black Hills/rushmore is that the heads were placed there as a reminder to the Lakota (Nakota, Dakota, Blackfoot/Sihisapa, etc.) that these men were to be worshipped as the new "gods" of the people/oyate... these men were given credit as the ones who conquered there most sacred of mountains/territory... the Lakota call that spot the "heart of the earth" and was most likely a gateway when our ancestors originally came "here"... when the american cavalry found a little bit of gold in the hills, all that was over...

Another interesting that few know... The Hunkpapa and Sihisapa Lakota were the most troublesome for the american cavalry when the reservation round ups started happening... most went "easily" as they believed the treaties they were signing were valid (HA!!!)... these "poor savages" gave the "drunk puritans" fits for years and actually humiliated many a commander... when the final round ups/exterminations were completed, genocide was prescribed with pestilence and starvation (diseased blankets and refined flour and sugar... or in other parts, they just marched them through unusable land at the harshest times of the year with no food... many times they just shot a whole tribe due to the rumor of a troublesome medicine man stirring emotions against the captors)... it was decided to build a rushmore to let the natives know that the white men were "larger, above them and always watching"... this was the concept of placing a flag over people who do not understand the concept of "colors" or "state sovereignty" and who usually would rather die than be conquered...

Now, I know I may be reaching but this is a summary of the story that was shared with me by my Lakota teachers.

-- http://lunaticoutpost.com/showthread.ph ... 359&page=2


Albert Pike was an avid, eminent and highly respected Freemason. In addition he has fought admirably for the USA in the Mexican War of 1848 and an avowed abolitionist. He abhorred slavery. After the civil war he preached reconciliation of the former combatants and soon thereafter moved to Washington DC where he devoted his life to the Scottish Rite of Freemasonry. He was a prolific writer and lawyer, a respected man of society. His statue is in Judiciary today, BUT he was a Grand Dragon of the Ku Klux Klan.

Thus there were now two prominent Freemasons involved in the Klan and at the very highest level. The sculptor of the Presidents’ heads on Mount Rushmore Gutzon Borglum, another prominent Freemason, was also a klansman.

The KKK reign of terror ran from 1868 to 1871.

-- Masonic Mysteries & Enigmas, by Keith Stockley


M
ount Rushmore is controversial among Native Americans because the United States seized the area from the Lakota tribe after the Great Sioux War of 1876. The Treaty of Fort Laramie from 1868 had previously granted the Black Hills to the Lakota in perpetuity. Members of the American Indian Movement led an occupation of the monument in 1971, naming it "Mount Crazy Horse". Among the participants were young activists, grandparents, children and Lakota holy man John Fire Lame Deer, who planted a prayer staff atop the mountain. Lame Deer said the staff formed a symbolic shroud over the presidents' faces "which shall remain dirty until the treaties concerning the Black Hills are fulfilled."

In 2004, the first Native American superintendent of the park was appointed. Gerard Baker has stated that he will open up more "avenues of interpretation", and that the four presidents are "only one avenue and only one focus."

The Crazy Horse Memorial is being constructed elsewhere in the Black Hills to commemorate the famous Native American leader and as a response to Mount Rushmore. It is intended to be larger than Mount Rushmore and has the support of Lakota chiefs; the Crazy Horse Memorial Foundation has rejected offers of federal funds. However, this memorial is likewise the subject of controversy, even within the Native American community.

-- Mount Rushmore, by Wikipedia


- [police siren blares]

- What is it?

There's my tax dollars at work, coming to arrest me.

Not coming for you, they're for me. Go to the car.

- No!

- Go! I'll meet up with you.

This way.

[clicks]

[indistinct chattering]

So Gates abducts the president, lets him go and heads to the Library of Congress?

- Why?

- Maybe he wants to check out a book.

[clicks]

[shouting]

This way.

[indistinct chatter]

[man on police radio] All agents...

[dialing phone]

- Dad.

- Ben.

Get out of there. I had to move the car.

FBI, Secret Service all over the place.

Calm down. I sent a picture of the plank to your cell.

- You can do that?

- Yes, I can do that. Did you get it?

- I got it.

- [Ben] Look.

- Take it to Mom for translation.

- Why me?

He say his mom could translate the plank?

Find out who she is.

- How are we going to find Ben?

- I don't know.

- Hold it! Who are you?

- We work here.

- IDs.

- Here. We were told to evacuate.

[Riley] I don't know what's going on.

- My car's parked...

- One second I'm reading...

- Special section for...a book, then we're rushed out...

- Go ahead.

- OK. Thank you.

- Thank you for your help, officer.

- Best of luck.

- [alarm chirps]

- Have a good night.

[man] Hey, go to the northeast sectors...

[Riley] Start the car.

[engine starts]

Put it in gear.

- Uh-oh.

- What's the problem?

It's clear. Let's go!

We're going to jail.

[man] I want to run a check...

[grunts]

Get in! Hang on!

Mercedes SUV...

- He's in! Go!

- Hang on!

[Abigail] Whoa!

OK. We can do this.

Close the barricade, lock it down!

Lock it down!

- Drive, drive, drive!

- OK.

I don't think so!

Whoa, whoa!

[man] Go, go, go, go, go!

Let's go! Let's go!

[engine hissing]

That did not turn out the way it was supposed to!

- How'd they find us so quick?

- I'll tell you how.

- The president is a tattletale!

- Sadusky. He was there.

He knows more about the book than I thought.

How'd the president feel about being kidnapped?

He was OK.

- Dr. Appleton.

- This office is closed. I'm sorry.

I do apologize for the lateness of the hour.

My name is Mitch Wilkinson.

I've got something I want you to take a look at. Just take a minute.

- You're a treasure hunter.

- No, ma'am.

I'm just a man trying to make his mark on history.

Can you help me?

Um... No, I don't know that language. I'm sorry. I can't help you.

- [phone rings]

- Oh, excuse me.

Yes.

Got it.

Your ex-husband's on his way up. He wants the translation.

Tell him anything but the truth. Get rid of him. His life depends on it.

Emily?

I know I'm the last person you want to see, and I'm not comfortable either, but we need you to translate something.

- Ben sent me. He needs your help.

- Yes, of course.

If it's for Ben, of course. What is it?

Oh. Uh...

It's in the cell phone. I'm not sure how to...

- Give it to me.

-...bring it out.

[beeping]

We know it leads to Mount Rushmore.

Yes. "Islands... Islands of stone in a sea of grass."

That's what the Lakota used to call the Black Hills in South Dakota.

Right.

"Find where the moon touches the earth and release the hummingbird."

That's it?

Did it ever occur to you...? I can't believe I'm saying this. Did it ever occur to you that I did the things I did to impress you?

No, you did it because you wanted to, and I would've done the same thing, except one of us had to grow up and stay home and look after Ben. Certainly wasn't going to be you.

Did it ever occur to you that I made sacrifices for us that you never did?

No, of course not.

So just go away.

Lousy tequila.

Don't feel bad. You did good.

Patrick believed every word you said.

Besides, your son would have never found the treasure anyway.

You don't know Benjamin.

Perhaps not. But then again, I have this.

A letter from Queen Victoria to the Confederate General Albert Pike?

Seems the dear old queen was partial to the Confederate cause.

This has been handed down by my family for 140 years.

Contains a vital piece of information. The final clue, as it were.

This piece of information is worthless without your translation of the planks.

It's ironic, isn't it?

This all began with the burning of pages, and now it ends with the burning of this, the final clue.

Making me the only one...

...who can find Cibola.

...who can find Cibola.

Get your coat.

Her translation on the second half of the planks says

- we need to find an island of stone.

- Ben would have found it by now.

I don't think so.

[whistles]

How do I get to, um, this...

Hello, Mitch.

Mom...

- Wait for me.

- No way. You're too slow.

I knew you'd figure out the message I gave your father.

The hummingbird was good. Let her go.

We're the ones with the firepower, and you're giving me orders.

I kidnapped the president. The FBI is on their way right now to arrest me, and I'm sure they'll love to meet you.

They'll find us both and arrest us both.

That path doesn't lead to the City of Gold, does it?

This man has information you need. He's got a letter.

From Queen Victoria to General Albert Pike.

- How do you know that?

- I read about it, in a book.

I'm afraid he's burned it.

All right... You've had me do all the work so far, why stop now?

You tell me what you know, I'll find the City of Gold, prove Thomas Gates' innocence, you can have the treasure.

- What?

- I'm going with you.

But if anyone's gonna be credited for discovering the City of Gold, it's going to be me.

But your partners stay here, and all the guns.

What makes you think I'd agree?

Because you need that treasure. Believe me, I know.

All right, Gates. We'll do it your way.

But believe me... I don't need the guns.

- Which president? The president?

- I thought it best not to tell you.

[Abigail] I still don't see anything that looks like a noble bird.

All right. Let's have it.

What did the letter say? What's the clue from Queen Victoria's letter?

"The entrance shall only be revealed under a cloudless rain."

Figure that one out.

So we come back when it's raining?

"Cloudless." Could simply mean the sun.

You need a sunny day... and rain.

We need water.

Water.

Abigail.

Everybody, the water makes the rocks darker. Use the water.

Em? Water?

- What's this in my hand? Are you blind?

- Good, good, good.

This is ridiculous. Are we going to water the whole thing?

That's it.

Oh! That's it. I found it. Over here! Found it! Over here!

Look at this!

It's an eagle.

- Look at that. It's an eagle.

- There it is.

- "The noble bird..."

- "Will give you passage."

- Uh-huh. Now what?

- We need to join hands, and in a noble manner, pass over the bird.

- [Patrick] It indicates direction...

- [Riley] Somehow that bird...

...will rise from the rock and kind of caw...

You can stand around guessing for a while, or I can give you the next clue.

"Surrender your hand to the heart of the warrior."

And the eagle is a symbol of the warrior.

Ben, no. Wait, wait! No.

That's probably a horrible trap. Tell him!

It's a horrible trap.

It would be a pity to come this far and not even try, now, wouldn't it?

I'll do it, Ben.

It's OK.

Surrender your hand.

[screaming]

[laughing]

- I am sorry. I... I couldn't resist.

- You!

It, uh... feels like a latch.

[crackling]

Look at this.

All right, good. Let's go.

[Emily] Oh!

Ben, look at this.

Oh, that's beautiful!

- Patrick. Patrick!

- [Abigail] Ben, what is that?

[Ben] Appears to be a counterweight to hold the door open.

- [Riley] What is that sound?

- [groaning]

[Emily] Fascinating.

[Riley shouting]

- [gasping]

- Ah!

Ben!

[Riley] Sorry.

- You OK?

- No.

Get up.

It's locked.

- Patrick, what have you done?

- Some kind of a bolt. I didn't do it.

Only one way out of here now.

Forward.

[Emily gasps] Oh!

Never seen so many relics.

So beautifully preserved.

Looks like we're going to be moving some rocks.

- There's a tunnel back in through here.

- Guys, look at this.

It's a little golden man.

Look. It's got a tiny little torso. Look at that. It looks like...

[shouting]

- Ben!

- Ben!

Move back! Move back! All of you! Other side!

Back up! Back up!

Ah!

Riley, move forward! Move forward!

No, back up, back up.

- What you want me to do?

- Stop! Stop!

We have to balance our weight to even this thing out.

- We'll find 'em.

- What are we gonna do?

Figure something out. Tell you what we're going to do.

- No, I'll tell you.

- No. I'll tell you!

No, I'll tell you! There's that passageway.

You go, pull those stones out, because that leads somewhere.

That is a good idea.

[Wilkinson] There's nothing. Just a big old black hole.

[Abigail] Ben, look! There's a ladder.

- I mean, what's left of a ladder.

- Toss me the light.

Riley. Move slowly to that corner. No! Wait. Just...

- As I move to this corner.

- OK.

One step at a time. Good.

If we can raise this corner, I think I'll reach it.

[shouting]

- Stop! Red light!

- You're not helping!

I can get up there just as easy as you.

Just stop.

- Guys!

- It's three against one here.

I ain't going last, and if I'm not going last, I might as well go first.

Look!

What's it gonna be?

We'll do this your way.

[creaking, rumbling]

The rest of us, on my count of three, all move together.

One step at a time.

One, two, three.

- You ready?

- Go.

[grunting]

Ah!

[Ben] Mitch, what do you see?

Is there a way out?

What's up there, Mitch?

[both grunting]

Em?

- Are you all right?

- Just promise me he's gonna be OK.

All right.

Let's go.

Mitch! Come on!

- I've been doing the math here, and...

- I know.

We're gonna have to leave one person behind.

[Riley] Promise you'll come back for me.

I can do the math too.

- That makes you next.

- I'll go last.

"No, we'll figure something else out."

"We need you there. Please, Riley."

[laughs]

I'm just kidding. Go.

OK...

[rumbling, creaking]

- One... two... three!

- Go!

Oh!

- What are you doing?

- Nothing.

Uh!

I can't get it.

Just go! Go now! Go!

- All right, ready?

- Now!

Ah!

Riley! Hang on!

OK. Mitch, the idol. OK, Ben. We found a gold idol here!

We can roll it over to offset your weight!

Then roll it!

[Abigail] Here it comes!

[Riley] Come on, Ben!

Here! Give me your hand!

[Abigail] Ben!

Thanks, Riley.

Why couldn't a girl see me do that?

- You all right?

- You're OK. You're OK. You're OK.

So... forward.

- What is this?

- [running water]

Oh! Oh! Oh!

Oh!

Put your light over there.

What are you doing?

[grunts]

[grunts]

[Riley] I can't see anything! Is this it?

It's oil!

It's a dead end! There's no way out!

We have to turn back!

OK.

No. No, Patrick, this is crazy.

OK.

I got it!

I got you! I got you!

[both shouting]

[gasping]

[laughing]

[Abigail] There's no forward!

It's not forward, it's down!

All this water has to go out somewhere. Otherwise, it'd be filled up.

Help me turn this wheel!

[Wilkinson] The water's going down.

It is... Em.

Em. Em.

Ben! Hey!

Dad! We found it!

- Thomas was right!

- No, you were right!

Sorry I smeared your great-great granddaddy's good name.

Seemed like the only way to get you in on the hunt.

But this was a chance for the Wilkinson family to make its mark on history, to find the City of Gold, to be remembered.

[gurgling, bubbling]

What happened to you? Your father was worried sick about you.

She was frantic. She was frantic.

Dad, coming through, did you happen to see...?

Stop it. Coming through, did you see any branches that could lead out?

No, it's all blocked. You can't even get back to the big, round stone door.

Where's your mother going?

[Emily gasps]

Sweetheart. Sweetheart. Have a look at this.

- What?

- Look.

This is gonna unlock the Olmec language.

It's gonna give us incredible insight into pre-Columbian history.

Oh! [laughs]

[Patrick] Em?

- You happy?

- Oh, yeah.

- Ben! Look at this! Look!

- Oh, yeah.

That's where they slit the throat, cut the heart out.

[laughs]

[banging]

- What was that?

- Listen.

[banging]

Ah!

I tried to find a way out. All those portals are blocked off!

I'm telling you, all this water goes out somewhere. We'll find it.

Ben, there's a current!

Follow it! There's got to be a central drain!

It's under us. Right here!

Come on!

Let's go! Get in there!

The water's rising too fast!

Let's get that door open so we don't all drown!

Ben, it slopes down! It's a drainage tunnel.

It fills with water when you open the door!

We need to find something to stick under it to keep it open!

No, if it's open, this tunnel will stay flooded.

We've got to get to the other side and close the door.

Patrick, Emily, go!

- No.

- No!

No!

Mitch, we got to be on the other side of that door!

Nobody leaves unless I say so.

That door is not gonna stay open by itself.

We both know what has to happen here.

One of us keeps the door open and stays behind.

I vote Mitch.

This isn't a democracy.

[grunting, shouting]

Stop! I'll stay! I'm staying. Look. Look!

See? I'm right here! I'm staying!

I'll tell everybody how this is going to go.

You and me are going to open that door. Anybody tries to leave before me, I drop the door, we start this all over again!

Try any funny business, I guarantee you people are going to get hurt!

I won't! You have my word. Just let her go.

Ben, no, we're not leaving without you.

[Ben] Abigail.

You make my parents leave.

- No!

- Let's go!

Let's go, please! Patrick, Emily, he's trying to save our lives.

Please, come on.

Push, Ben!

The current's too strong!

- I'm ready!

- It's all yours!

Ah!

Mom!

- [straining]

- Hang on!

Hold your breath!

Ah!

We got to get Ben out of there!

If I'm stuck in the door, it stays open, both rooms fill up, and we all drown!

- Open the door! I'll get you out!

- The current's too strong!

I open the door, you'll be washed down!

I'll get you out!

I found the City of Gold! I found it!

And no one will ever know?

We can figure this out! We can all get out!

It's not a puzzle! No more puzzles, Ben!

We're all going to die, or it could just be me!

- Tell them I found it!

- Don't quit!

- [straining]

- Mitch!

Ah!

Thank you.

- We haven't officially met. I'm Riley.

- [Emily] Oh, hi.

Sir! It's for you.

Sadusky.

- I have my proof.

- Ben!

We were just talking about you. Ready to turn yourself in?

Not quite. We found the City of Gold.

Doesn't matter. You still committed a federal crime.

Stop. Stop it.

- Mr. President?

- Craig, give us a minute.

Sir, for your information, this is the man who kidnapped you.

As I recall, we were exploring a hidden tunnel, and a door closed accidentally, and this man saved my life.

Yes, sir.

- Gates.

- Sir.

For the record, after centuries of exploration, on this day, you have brought honor to your country and your family. You've done this country a great service. I thank you.

- Thank you.

- Craig.

I thought you might want to take a look at tomorrow's headlines.

Tomorrow?

Thank you, sir.

All of you, along with Emily and Patrick Gates will get credit for this discovery.

And Mitch Wilkinson, sir.

- Is that right?

- It's true, sir.

Ben, I am curious about that favor I asked you.

Any report regarding what's on page 47?

I believe I can help with that, sir.

- So it's good.

- Life-altering, sir.

What's on page 47?

Are you talking about the Book?

What book?

[Emily] Be very careful with that. Is that distilled water you're using?

- Yes.

- Have you catalogued all of this?

- No, ma'am.

- You haven't?

Excuse me? Excuse me, sir? Are you cataloguing this?

You should've been there when we picked out our first couch.

Excuse me.

Hey, you're that guy... The treasure hunter guy, right?

No, actually, the guy you're thinking of is somewhere over there.

No. You're him. Riley Poole. I recognize you from your book.

- Will you sign it?

- [crashing]

OK.

Thank you.

So, um, the tea tables...

Yes, I'm going to have the movers bring them to you next week.

I was going to say you can keep them.

And maybe you could...

...come and move back in with me.

- No. You used the word "so."

- So?

So, when you say "so," it means you're angry.

Sometimes. And then sometimes it doesn't.

It's sort of like a puzzle.

And you're so good at puzzles. I'm sure you'll figure it out.

So...

[sighs]

[engine starts]

I love this car.

- [tires screech]

- [crashing]
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