- 3 weeks ago
The Issue with Elvis Full Movie
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00:00:00Even lost souls have a place.
00:01:00Satsang with Mooji
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00:08:09Eileen, I brought you a new friend, Rocco, Rocco, meet Eileen, hey Eileen, you're looking
00:08:37good. Alright, I'll leave you two, get to know each other a little bit.
00:09:07Alright.
00:09:37All right, let's go.
00:10:07so
00:10:10okay
00:10:23so
00:10:28Let's go.
00:11:28Looking glass has never been her friend
00:11:33Oh how she dances with a vengeance
00:11:36The kettle screams it's time
00:11:41No she prays the other side will make her come
00:11:58Hammer and a nail and a coat about yay long
00:12:15Hard west all they spoke about the weather
00:12:20Rocking chair has never been so still
00:12:27Oh how she yearns to taste the thrill
00:12:30Of taking her foot and stepping on
00:12:34No she prays the other side will make her come
00:12:48No she prays the other side will keep her warm
00:13:03Sit as serum
00:13:06Come and join us
00:13:10Sit as mommy
00:13:13Come, come, come
00:13:17No she prays the other side will make her run
00:13:41Let's go.
00:14:11Let's go.
00:14:41Let's go.
00:15:11Let's go.
00:15:41Let's go.
00:16:11Let's go.
00:16:41Let's go.
00:17:11Let's go.
00:17:41Let's go.
00:18:11Let's go.
00:18:41Let's go.
00:19:11I've been spending a little too much time in my own little world while you've been drying
00:19:17up, withering away in some dark corner of the universe.
00:19:21It's cold, cold, cold, I'm going to make it up to you.
00:19:29I'll make it up to you.
00:19:30I'll make it up to you.
00:19:39I'm going to make it up to you.
00:19:40I'm going to make it up to you.
00:19:49I'm going to make it up to you.
00:19:50I'm going to make it up to you.
00:19:51I'm going to make it up to you.
00:19:59I'm going to make it up to you.
00:20:00I'm going to make it up to you.
00:20:09I'm going to make it up to you.
00:20:16I'm going to make it up to you.
00:20:26I'm going to make it up to you.
00:20:27I'm going to make it up to you.
00:20:28I'm going to make it up to you.
00:20:29Hello?
00:20:30Hello?
00:20:31Dr. Mercer?
00:20:32Yes.
00:20:33It's Alicia Friedman.
00:20:34How are you doing?
00:20:35Dr. Freeman.
00:20:36It's nice to hear from you.
00:20:38It's been too long.
00:20:39How's your postdoc going?
00:20:40Not bad, all things considered.
00:20:42Cornell's not a rough place to do a postdoc from what I hear.
00:20:45My latest study got accepted into Nature, so that's something at least.
00:20:49Something?
00:20:50That's absolutely fantastic.
00:20:51What was the study?
00:20:52I looked at the impact of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi on nitrogen cycling in various ecosystems.
00:20:58Wow.
00:20:59You're going to be the lab's golden child.
00:21:01I'm sure Richard will get his R01 renewed a few times over with a Nature publication.
00:21:07Send me your paper.
00:21:08I'd love to read it.
00:21:09Hot off the press.
00:21:10Will do.
00:21:11Following in your footsteps.
00:21:12I wish you.
00:21:13You're leaving me in the dust.
00:21:14No way.
00:21:15You're a brilliant scientist.
00:21:16What can I do for you, Alicia?
00:21:17I know you prefer to avoid academia and all of its pretentious trappings these days.
00:21:21Can you write me a letter of recommendation for the K award?
00:21:24Well, normally I'd avoid any remnants of that whole grotesque world, but you're a fantastic student and you definitely deserve a K award more than anyone.
00:21:33So for you, this once, yes.
00:21:37I would be so grateful.
00:21:38Yes, I'll do it.
00:21:39Thank you so much.
00:21:40When's the deadline?
00:21:41In two weeks, I'll send you the form.
00:21:43Perfect.
00:21:44Send it over.
00:21:45Listen.
00:21:46Have a great day and congratulations.
00:21:47Have a great day.
00:21:48Bye.
00:21:49Thanks again.
00:21:50Hey, who's there?
00:21:51Hey.
00:21:52What are you doing here, kid?
00:21:53I don't mean any harm.
00:21:54I'm not arguing with you.
00:21:58What are you doing here?
00:21:59I brought you back your bowl, your fork too.
00:22:00Well, couldn't this wait till daylight?
00:22:01Probably.
00:22:02Probably.
00:22:03I'm not arguing with you.
00:22:04I brought you back your bowl, your fork too.
00:22:05Well, couldn't this wait till daylight?
00:22:06Probably.
00:22:07Hey, who's there? Hey, what are you doing here, kid?
00:22:14I don't mean any harm.
00:22:16I'm not arguing with you. What are you doing here?
00:22:19I brought you back your bowl, your fork, too.
00:22:22Well, couldn't this wait till daylight?
00:22:25Probably.
00:22:32I was wondering if you had any more of that food.
00:22:36Don't you have a home?
00:22:48Alright, come on in.
00:23:06What's your name?
00:23:12Elvis.
00:23:14After Elvis Presley?
00:23:18No, after Elvis Costello.
00:23:22Did Mama name you after Elvis Costello?
00:23:28Nope, she died the day I was born.
00:23:32I'm sorry to hear that.
00:23:34I never knew her.
00:23:36Well, why did you get named after Elvis Costello?
00:23:42My daddy.
00:23:43The night Mama died.
00:23:44He helped me in his arms in the hospital and he played at Elvis Costello song over and over while his tears fell down my baby face.
00:23:52What was the song?
00:23:54It was called I Want You from the album Blood and Chocolate.
00:23:58That's a really sad story.
00:24:02My daddy says the snow is falling outside the window and when the clock struck midnight he knew that my name was Elvis.
00:24:12Is your daddy still alive?
00:24:14Yes, but why do you want to know?
00:24:16Well, I must be wondering where you are.
00:24:20I'm not going home if that's what you're getting at for a whole series of reasons.
00:24:26I can't live in the woods now.
00:24:28Says who?
00:24:30Well, I got a spare bedroom.
00:24:34You can stay there tonight.
00:24:36But we got to get you to a real home tomorrow.
00:24:38What does real home even mean?
00:24:44I've been around children or family for a long time.
00:24:48It's been about 40 or 50 years since I was ever part of them.
00:24:52So you're not really the best one to ask, are you?
00:25:00You had a lot of weird stuff in your kitchen. I mean, compared to other people's kitchens. No offense.
00:25:14I have no idea what other people have in their kitchen.
00:25:18So what do you do with all those mushrooms I saw you hunting?
00:25:22I use them for my old mayonnaise.
00:25:24Are you like a wizard or something?
00:25:26Exactly. More specifically, a retired botanist with rheumatoid arthritis.
00:25:32Sounds spooky.
00:25:34I studied fungi in my lab for many years, extracting various components to treat diseases.
00:25:40What kinds of diseases?
00:25:43Viruses, cancer, diabetes, for starters.
00:25:48So you put the mushrooms in their culture and then you don't get cancer?
00:25:52I study medicinal chemistry methods, extracting certain molecules that reduce the inflammation of my joints.
00:26:00Does it work?
00:26:02It helps, but my methods are rudimentary.
00:26:06I mean, I think it was a lot better off when I had all that fancy machinery back in my lab.
00:26:11I think it's reducing the swelling over time.
00:26:16Why don't you just go to the doctor?
00:26:20I do when I have to, but I hate modern medicine.
00:26:26Every time they give me advice, my rheumatoid arthritis gets better, but then I got 20 other problems.
00:26:32You sound like my dad.
00:26:35What's wrong with your dad?
00:26:37He becomes one with the alien sometimes.
00:26:39One with the alien?
00:26:42Well, it's like an alien takes over his earthly body to alert the world of impending doom, something like that.
00:26:54Sounds like he's got schizophrenia.
00:26:57That's what the doctors call it.
00:27:00I say the alien isn't real and that my daddy needs a lot of medicine.
00:27:04Hmm.
00:27:05Well, maybe they're just trying to protect him and you.
00:27:10Or maybe they're worried that the alien is going to make him do something...
00:27:13Crazy.
00:27:14Can I come washroom hunting with you?
00:27:26Today?
00:27:27Well, aren't you going?
00:27:29Yeah, I'm going.
00:27:31You want to come?
00:27:32You can come along.
00:27:33You want to come?
00:27:34You can come along.
00:27:36Yeah, I can see it.
00:28:03Right there?
00:28:04Uh-huh.
00:28:07Hey, see this?
00:28:09Looks like charcoal, right?
00:28:11It's called Innotus oblicus, otherwise known as chaga.
00:28:15It looks ugly but it's been used for hundreds, maybe even thousands of years by different cultures.
00:28:20They say it has medicinal qualities that it can heal a sick birch tree where it lives.
00:28:25Take a look at the inside of it.
00:28:29It's almost orange.
00:28:30Yeah.
00:28:31I mean you could use it as a dye but I think that's wasteful.
00:28:36You know, when you harvest these things you have to make sure that you only take half of it off the tree.
00:28:40Otherwise you can hurt the tree and you can come back from war in a couple of years.
00:28:44The earth has all these amazing organisms.
00:28:47If we take care of them, they'll take care of us.
00:28:51How does this one take care of us?
00:28:53Well, it might fight certain kinds of cancer.
00:28:57There's plenty of evidence that what chaga actually does is upregulate the expression of pro-apoptotic proteins in cancer cells.
00:29:05Basically, it stops the growth of tumors.
00:29:07Russians have known this for years and other therapeutic reasons as well.
00:29:11I care about it because of its anti-inflammatory medicine.
00:29:16My joints, they swell up and after a while they can get damaged.
00:29:20So, my immune system is a piece of crap.
00:29:23Pardon my Latin.
00:29:24So you eat it like an apple?
00:29:26I don't.
00:29:27Others might.
00:29:28I use a double extraction tincture method.
00:29:31What I do is I grind up the chaga into a powder.
00:29:34I add some alcohol and I shake it up a couple of times a day for a couple of months and then I do a bunch of other steps, but I'm not going to bore you with those.
00:29:44Plants are pretty cool, huh?
00:29:47Yeah.
00:29:48Fungie actually aren't plants.
00:29:50They were classified that way because they didn't move.
00:29:54Back in the late 60s, early 70s, a guy named Robert Whittaker, he proposed to get their own kingdom.
00:30:00They're actually more like us than they are plants, by the way.
00:30:04They don't look much like us.
00:30:06Well, nothing much looks like me.
00:30:09You know, when I was your age, I used to gather up mushrooms and bring them to the back porch for my mother.
00:30:14I used to think they were one of the most bizarre, beautiful structures I'd ever seen.
00:30:19She would cook them up and serve them to my dad after he came home from working long hours in the coal mines.
00:30:24One of his favorites was lettuce porous sulfurous, better known as chicken of the woods.
00:30:31So it tastes like chicken?
00:30:33Well, kind of.
00:30:35But there's also hen of the woods.
00:30:36That tastes a lot better.
00:30:37Mushrooms are badass little organisms, he asked me.
00:30:40I knew you had some cool backstory to you.
00:30:42When you left me that lunch on the rock a few days ago, I knew that you were solid.
00:30:45Well, I don't know how solid I am, but I try to follow my internal compass.
00:30:50What's that?
00:30:52Just try to do the right thing.
00:30:55I thought you might need some help.
00:31:04What do you normally eat at your house?
00:31:06It depends.
00:31:07If my dad's home, he'll make me one of those dinners from the freezer.
00:31:11TV dinner?
00:31:13Hmm.
00:31:14Like Salisbury steak with potatoes on the side.
00:31:18What does your dad do for a living?
00:31:21He works in a factory stacking lumber, but that's not his passion.
00:31:25What's his passion?
00:31:27Music.
00:31:28He plays the guitar and he's good at it too.
00:31:30But every time he doesn't take his medicine, he can't go to work or play the guitar.
00:31:35I always end up in some foster home and the last one I was in real bad.
00:31:40Do you have any aunts or uncles?
00:31:42Yeah, but they're in jail.
00:31:44What for?
00:31:45I don't know, drugs maybe?
00:31:48That's really sad.
00:31:50Sounds like you had a rough go of it.
00:31:52Well, I'm having a picnic with a retired botanist and I'm learning new things.
00:31:56I can't complain at this very second.
00:31:59Don't you think your school will be missing you and come looking for you?
00:32:02I don't know, maybe.
00:32:04Missing school is not a great idea, Elvis, I'm just saying.
00:32:09Education is the key.
00:32:11To what?
00:32:14You know, a lot of people drop out of school because they don't have a choice.
00:32:20They struggle to pay their bills.
00:32:22They end up taking jobs that endanger their lives.
00:32:25Or they turn to crime and end up in jail.
00:32:27I mean, I'm not trying to sound like a public service announcement, but that's the way it happens.
00:32:32It's a cycle.
00:32:34You know, then their kids have nothing to look up to and they have no hope.
00:32:38You have to be the one to break the cycle.
00:32:40Did you break the cycle?
00:32:44My dad died of lung disease from working in the mines for many years.
00:32:49My mom and I stood over his grave when I was 17.
00:32:55She told me, you can't die like your daddy did.
00:32:58You're all I got left.
00:33:01So you have a PhD and that's when you're not dead right now?
00:33:04No, it's not that simple.
00:33:06Yeah, I got a PhD in botany and I ran a good lab for many years.
00:33:13But you still have some weird disease.
00:33:15Your PhD can't do anything about that.
00:33:17True.
00:33:18But my disease is not based on my life choices.
00:33:20At least not that I know of.
00:33:23You can't live in an abandoned school bus.
00:33:25You know, that's, that's not a great solution.
00:33:27What do you know about that bus?
00:33:32I started running into it a couple of days ago when you were following me through the woods.
00:33:39You know the history of that park?
00:33:41Of what park?
00:33:42Lake Shawnee.
00:33:43You know the history of Lake Shawnee?
00:33:45Well, it's an abandoned amusement park.
00:33:49It was built in the 1920s over what they think is Native American burial grounds.
00:33:55A little girl was playing on the swings and she died in the 60s.
00:34:00So they shut the whole place down.
00:34:02Why would they take that land from the Native Americans in the first place?
00:34:07Well, the English settlers, they took it from the Native Americans.
00:34:12And lore has it that there was a turf war in that area in the 1700s.
00:34:18Eh.
00:34:19They shouldn't have fought over that land.
00:34:21They should have come up with something peaceful.
00:34:23Agreed.
00:34:24Violence in and of itself is not the answer to anything.
00:34:27That's my whole point.
00:34:28Two wrongs don't make a right.
00:34:32Well.
00:34:34How do you like the picnic?
00:34:37Yes?
00:34:38Jack?
00:34:39Who's this?
00:34:40Uh, this is Michael Mercer.
00:34:41How are ya?
00:34:42Dr. Mercer.
00:34:43How are things?
00:34:44Long time no speak.
00:34:45All is going well.
00:34:46Uh, you still working at that same lab you told me about the last time we spoke?
00:34:50New lab.
00:34:51Uh, C. elegans.
00:34:52Yes.
00:34:53Uh, C. elegans.
00:34:54Yes.
00:34:55Pretty good model organism.
00:34:56Well, I'm pouring plates every day, so nothing too exciting.
00:34:58Smelly yellow jello, I call it.
00:34:59Oh, that's something to be proud of.
00:35:00The scientists like me, though.
00:35:01I have a question for you.
00:35:02Shoot.
00:35:03Is your brother still working at the police department?
00:35:04Yeah, he's still a cop.
00:35:05Can you ask him to look into something for me?
00:35:06Sure.
00:35:07Sure, what is it?
00:35:08A runaway kid has been living in the woods near my house.
00:35:12He needed food and he needed shelter, so I took him in and I gave him some food.
00:35:15But, uh, he was perfectly ready to ask me.
00:35:18Uh, and who would look through thisô?
00:35:20still working at the police department? Yeah, he's still a cop. Can you ask him to look into something
00:35:25for me? Sure, what is it? A runaway kid has been living in the woods near my house. He needed food
00:35:32and he needed shelter, so I took him in and I gave him some food, but he refuses to go home and he
00:35:38won't give me his last name. Tough one. Apparently he keeps ending up in foster care. His dad is ill.
00:35:45Look, I want to help him, but I don't want him missing school and I definitely don't want his
00:35:49father being worried about him. And on the other hand, I don't want to turn him into the police
00:35:54station because it sounds like he's been through hell and back. I don't know what I would do either.
00:35:58Look, can you ask your brother if there's been a missing kid with the first name Elvis in Morgantown?
00:36:05I'll call my brother to budge you back. You know, maybe give him a little of this backstory.
00:36:09No problem. Will do. Terrific. Thanks, Jack.
00:36:19Rise and shine.
00:36:29What time is it? Time for school.
00:36:32Is that a joke? Kind of.
00:36:34Go brush your teeth. We're taking a drive.
00:36:38Come on.
00:36:39When you think of West Virginia, what do you think of it?
00:37:07Mountains, drugs, and blue skies.
00:37:10What else?
00:37:11Mountaineers are always free. That's the motto.
00:37:14Yep. Montani Semper Libre. Did you learn that at school?
00:37:18Yeah, but don't ask me which because I ain't going back there right now.
00:37:23If you could learn anything, what would you want to learn?
00:37:26How to build bubble houses.
00:37:28Bubble houses?
00:37:28You know those igloo-looking houses without windows?
00:37:32They're the safest places you can live.
00:37:34If a hurricane or tornado hits you in your bubble house, you'll be fine.
00:37:38I didn't know that.
00:37:39It doesn't really make sense why people live in other kinds of houses.
00:37:43Well, maybe they like windows or sunshine.
00:37:45Maybe they don't like the way those things look.
00:37:48Well, I think that's shallow.
00:37:50Why would people choose looks over safety?
00:37:52That's really a good point. People are really into what things look like.
00:37:59That's just gross, if you ask me.
00:38:01What are we doing here?
00:38:10You need some clothes. You can't wear the same thing every day.
00:38:13Who says?
00:38:15I don't know. The clothes police? Who cares?
00:38:17Here's the deal.
00:38:18I don't know anything about kids, much less kids' clothes.
00:38:21So, I'm going to let you figure out what you want, and then I'm going to pay for it.
00:38:26What if I just want some candy? Can I keep the rest of the money?
00:38:29No. This is your big moment to be responsible.
00:38:32Sounds stressful.
00:38:34I'll be waiting right here. Don't worry. I'm not going anywhere.
00:38:47What'd you get?
00:38:51Some shoes, shorts, socks, pants, pajamas.
00:38:56That was fast.
00:38:57It was scary you were going to drive away.
00:38:58Well, I'm still here. Put on your seatbelt.
00:39:10You're all mad.
00:39:12You're all mad.
00:39:14I don't know.
00:39:14I'm still here.
00:39:14No.
00:39:15I'm so mad.
00:39:16You're all mad.
00:39:17I'm so mad.
00:39:18I'm a baby.
00:39:18I'm so mad.
00:39:22I'm so mad.
00:39:23I don't know.
00:39:53my father died 40 years ago today you think he's with God right now I don't really know
00:40:16I never much believed in God believing in God doesn't have anything to do with God you know
00:40:21what do you mean believing in God helps us if you don't have anyone to pray to you how can you have
00:40:27any hope I believe in science science won't comfort you in the night when you're cold and alone
00:40:34maybe you're right my father was a good man he worked hard help people you'll see him again
00:40:51you
00:40:54you
00:40:58you
00:41:00you
00:41:02you
00:41:10you
00:41:12No.
00:41:42You a fan of ice cream?
00:42:12Do you always eat ice cream after you go to the graveyard?
00:42:16No, but I might start.
00:42:22You know, death doesn't scare me.
00:42:24Oh really? What does scare you?
00:42:29Going crazy.
00:42:31Yeah, that would be a lot worse.
00:42:35Your body just sees what it wants to see and hears what it wants to hear and does what it wants to do. It's not fair.
00:42:42Well, illness isn't fair.
00:42:49Are you a fan of strawberry ice cream?
00:42:52Not really.
00:42:54Miss Davis brought it to me from down the road.
00:42:57She had some extra frozen strawberries she needed to do something with.
00:43:02Chocolate is way better.
00:43:06I'll let her know.
00:43:12Have you read The Hobbit?
00:43:26Never even heard of it.
00:43:28Oh, you should give it a shot.
00:43:31I have another book as well. It's pretty good. It's more of a kid's book.
00:43:35It's about a guy who lives in a mushroom house. My grad students gave it to me for a birthday gift.
00:43:42Hey, did you, um, did you brush your teeth?
00:43:46Mm-hmm. Yeah.
00:43:48Two minutes?
00:43:49Five minutes.
00:43:50Really?
00:43:52All right. Well.
00:43:54Good night.
00:43:55Mr. Mercer?
00:44:06Yes, Elvis.
00:44:08I-I can't read very well.
00:44:11It's okay. It's not a requirement. You can just leave them on the nightstand and I'll put them back tomorrow.
00:44:16Can you read to me? Can't sleep.
00:44:22Sure.
00:44:27You might not like The Hobbit. It was written a long time ago.
00:44:31I'm gonna read you the one about the guy who lives in the mushroom house.
00:44:34My students thought it was hilarious when they gave it to me.
00:44:38Jasper Jenkins was a small, slim man with big feet and long, skinny fingers.
00:44:50He was jolly most of the time and had a wide grin that brightened up the neighborhood whenever he would smile.
00:44:57Jasper was the only man in town who lived inside a mushroom.
00:45:02It had tiny windows and he would sit beside them on rainy days and watch the drops fall from the sky and hit the mud.
00:45:12Ping. Ping. Ping.
00:45:17The mushroom house on the outskirts of town had everything Jasper needed.
00:45:23He liked to bake cookies in the big round oven and pass them out to the city kids on Saturday evenings.
00:45:31He was everyone's favorite guy.
00:45:34He...
00:45:35premium.
00:45:58Michael Mercer here.
00:46:00Hi, Dr. Mercer. It's Jack.
00:46:02Jack, hi. Did you find out anything?
00:46:04Are you sure his name's Elvis?
00:46:06I guess I'm not that sure.
00:46:08Any kids reported missing in the last couple of weeks?
00:46:10Unfortunately not.
00:46:12No kids, Doc.
00:46:14That's helpful. Thanks, Jack.
00:46:16No, I'll have to think about what to do next.
00:46:18Maybe you can get him to tell you his last name.
00:46:20I'll give it a shot and I'll give you a call back.
00:46:22Our brother says you can call him directly next time.
00:46:24Thanks, Jack.
00:46:26I'll text you his number.
00:46:28You like the book?
00:46:30Yeah, I like what parts of it I can understand.
00:46:34The more you read, the easier it gets.
00:46:36I'm also not that good at school.
00:46:38You're very smart. Maybe just not applying yourself.
00:46:42It also helps you to go.
00:46:44I've got to write a recommendation letter for a friend,
00:46:48so you can either keep reading that book
00:46:50or I can put you to work doing some chores for me.
00:46:52What kinds of chores?
00:46:54You can either do some mushrooming
00:46:56or you can rake the leaves.
00:46:58Raking leaves isn't my thing.
00:47:00I'd rather go mushrooming.
00:47:02Okay.
00:47:04I'll give you $5 for every chug a chunk you bring to me.
00:47:06But, no cheating.
00:47:08You can't take the whole batch from the tree.
00:47:10Deal?
00:47:12Deal?
00:47:14Sure.
00:47:16Okay.
00:47:20So what you're going to look for, remember,
00:47:22like the last time,
00:47:24is the charcoal.
00:47:25It looks like charcoal.
00:47:26It'll be on the side of the tree.
00:47:28Okay? So you can look up
00:47:30and you can look around the tree.
00:47:32Sometimes it'll be at the roots as well.
00:47:34Okay?
00:47:35Good luck.
00:47:36Hmm.
00:48:02hmm
00:48:32Hello?
00:48:54Officer Bradley?
00:48:55It's Michael Mercer, Jack's old employer.
00:48:59I ran the lab where he worked.
00:49:01Ah, hi, Dr. Mercer.
00:49:03I've heard great things about you.
00:49:05Yeah, same to you.
00:49:07Listen, thank you so much for looking into the situation with the child.
00:49:11I just found a math test with the boy's name on it.
00:49:15His name is Jacob Faulkner.
00:49:18F-A-U-L-K-N-E-R.
00:49:21Jacob Faulkner?
00:49:23I don't know if he made up the name, Elvis, or he just doesn't want to go by any other name.
00:49:29Jacob Faulkner?
00:49:31Yeah, or he just doesn't want to go home.
00:49:33I can look into it.
00:49:35Give me a day or two.
00:49:36Yes, can you look into this?
00:49:38I want to help the boy, but I also don't want his family to be worried about him.
00:49:44And I'm, I'm just, I'm not sure what to do here.
00:49:48Is the situation stable with the boy right now?
00:49:52Yes, no, no, he seems to be doing well, all things considered.
00:49:55Yeah, I can look into it.
00:49:57Well, thank you for your help, officer.
00:49:59I really appreciate it.
00:50:01Happy to help out.
00:50:02I'll be in touch.
00:50:04Have a great day.
00:50:11Hey.
00:50:12Hey, I left you those mushrooms on the front porch.
00:50:14You can check them out later.
00:50:15Oh great, yeah, I will.
00:50:17Maybe you can make a career of this.
00:50:19Yeah, it's relaxing roaming the woods alone.
00:50:22Did you come across any black bears?
00:50:24No, and I sure hope I don't.
00:50:25Have you ever come across any?
00:50:27I have.
00:50:28You just have to back away slowly.
00:50:30They won't bother you.
00:50:32So, this is what I want from those mushrooms.
00:50:35It's ergosterol peroxide.
00:50:38It's a steroid derivative that you can isolate.
00:50:41It keeps your immune system from getting too active.
00:50:43See?
00:50:46Looks like hieroglyphics, actually.
00:50:48Well, if you ever take organic chemistry, you'll have fun working problems where you
00:50:53move different functional groups around depending on various conditions like heat or pressure.
00:51:01If you're anything like I was, I used to throw my chemistry books around on Saturday nights
00:51:06and I'd scream.
00:51:09Well, that doesn't sound like a good time at all.
00:51:12I used to have dreams about reactions.
00:51:14I'd wake up sweating.
00:51:16Then one day, it just clicked.
00:51:19So why did you retire?
00:51:21You don't seem old enough.
00:51:23Couldn't get any grants anymore.
00:51:25I mean, the university expected you to find these funding sources from all these different places.
00:51:31And you know what?
00:51:32If your grants expire and you don't get others, that's it.
00:51:36You know?
00:51:37You have to sell yourself out and study topics that don't interest you.
00:51:41That's what the entities are funding at any given time.
00:51:44You know, I ended up feeling like a used car salesman.
00:51:47Science shouldn't be like that.
00:51:48That's not why I got into it.
00:51:51Do you miss it?
00:51:52I miss it all the time.
00:51:53I miss my students.
00:51:54Well, you do have a lab up there in the mountains.
00:52:09I mean, you're not that old.
00:52:10You could always just go back.
00:52:12Yeah, who knows?
00:52:13Anyway, I'm gonna turn in a little early tonight.
00:52:16My old man bone aches are heating up a little bit.
00:52:24Hey, wait.
00:52:25You still owe me 20 bucks.
00:52:26For what?
00:52:27For those four chaga chunks that I brought you.
00:52:30They look nasty, but they sure make me a little bit.
00:52:34Okay.
00:52:35Deal's the deal.
00:52:36Yeah.
00:52:3720 bucks it is.
00:52:43Thanks.
00:52:53Mr. Mercer?
00:52:54Yeah.
00:52:55I mean it.
00:52:57You're welcome.
00:53:03I'm just gonna lay down and take a little rest for a bit.
00:53:05I'll feel better.
00:53:13I can draw a little back here.
00:53:16Mhm.
00:53:18Mhm.
00:53:24Mhm.
00:53:25Mhm.
00:53:28Mhm.
00:53:30Mhm.
00:53:31Mhm.
00:53:34Mhm.
00:53:35Mhm.
00:53:36Mhm.
00:53:40Mhm.
00:53:41Mhm.
00:53:42Mhm.
00:53:43Albus?
00:53:56Albus?
00:54:13Albus?
00:54:43Albus?
00:54:50Albus?
00:54:55Albus?
00:54:59Albus?
00:55:03Albus?
00:55:07Albus?
00:55:09Albus?
00:55:24Albus?
00:55:29Albus?
00:55:31Albus?
00:55:33Albus?
00:55:35Albus?
00:55:37I don't know.
00:56:07I don't know.
00:56:37I don't know.
00:57:07I don't know.
00:57:37You stole my father's rings.
00:57:53You called the police on me.
00:57:55I'm trying to help you.
00:57:56I heard you talking to that officer on the phone.
00:57:58You told him my name and everything.
00:57:59I trusted you.
00:58:00I trusted you.
00:58:01I don't care about the money.
00:58:02Give me the goddamn rings back, kid.
00:58:07Good luck.
00:58:08Please.
00:58:09Come on.
00:58:12I don't want to go back to another foster home.
00:58:14You were going to have them take me away.
00:58:16You lied to me about your name.
00:58:17No, I didn't lie.
00:58:18Yes, you did.
00:58:19My name is Jacob.
00:58:20My dad just calls me Elvis.
00:58:23If you're not going to take care of me, then at least bring me to my dad.
00:58:27He may be crazy, but he loves me.
00:58:28Come on.
00:58:41Come on.
00:58:53Come on.
00:58:55Come on.
00:58:55Come on.
00:59:25Is this your house?
00:59:38It was.
00:59:42I'm sorry, Elvis.
00:59:46I wonder if Daddy is dead.
00:59:53We're going to find out.
00:59:55Middle of September, it's 4th of July.
01:00:23Automatic pistol sprinkle
01:00:29Cemetery pipes
01:00:3223rd and raw
01:00:36Blue lights a-flashing
01:00:41Grandsons a-dashing
01:00:45For covered behind neon signs
01:00:51Suburbia
01:00:53Pink hotels and wedding bells
01:00:59Suburbia
01:01:02Lions at the bank, not upon your mirror
01:01:08Suburbia
01:01:11I long for you
01:01:15There's nothing wrong with you
01:01:18What are we doing here?
01:01:21We need to do something Jurassic
01:01:23What do you mean Jurassic?
01:01:25We're going to buy some chocolate ice cream
01:01:27A lot of it
01:01:29We're going to take that ice cream
01:01:31We're going to drive to the top of a mountain
01:01:32And as we look down at the world beneath us
01:01:35And we see those tiny dots of rocks, creeks
01:01:39And trees
01:01:41We're going to eat that ice cream
01:01:43We're going to eat it until we can't move
01:01:46And they will have to send a helicopter
01:01:48To airlift us out with our big bellies out of the forest
01:01:51We will hear the sounds of the chopper blades
01:01:54As they fly through the sky
01:01:57With God's breath
01:01:58And our chocolate-covered faces
01:02:01I thought you didn't believe in God
01:02:03I believe in God's breath
01:02:05And chocolate ice cream
01:02:07I hope my dad is okay
01:02:15I hope so too, we'll find out
01:02:17I'm sorry I took your money and your rings
01:02:19I don't care about the money, the rings are important
01:02:21Will you forgive me?
01:02:23Will you forgive me?
01:02:25Yep
01:02:26If my dad is dead, will you take care of me?
01:02:29Let's see if we can find your daddy first
01:02:32If we can't, will you take care of me?
01:02:35I don't even know if I'm qualified
01:02:37What does that mean?
01:02:39Well, I told you before
01:02:41I mean, I don't know anything about kids
01:02:43I had some college students, but that's been a while
01:02:45I probably wouldn't be all that hard
01:02:49I mean, if you know how to make meals
01:02:51And don't do drugs, you're probably a better guardian than I've ever had
01:02:55Let's see if we can find your daddy first
01:02:57My daddy was going crazy when I ran away
01:03:01He said the house was filled with rival aliens who wanted to capture him and take him back to some planet
01:03:07I tried to hand him his medicine, but he knocked that out of my hand and said I was one of them
01:03:11I got real scared and ran into the woods
01:03:14No kid should have to deal with that
01:03:17Hmm
01:03:19It's like my daddy isn't my daddy sometimes
01:03:23Like he's some monster in a bad dream and I can't wake up
01:03:25Bad dreams are no fun, that's for sure
01:03:27Especially when you can't wake up or change anything
01:03:31What kind of dreams do you have?
01:03:33I dream about chemical reactions and old girlfriends from decades ago
01:03:39You know, boring stuff
01:03:41What kind of dreams do you have about things you want to do with your life?
01:03:45You mean daydreams like aspirations?
01:03:49Yeah, that kind
01:03:51I don't know
01:03:53I've done everything I had in mind
01:03:57I presented scientific findings around the world
01:03:59I took my mom to Easter Island before she died
01:04:03I spent my life moving science forward and now I guess I just want to feel less physical pain
01:04:11That's not a dream
01:04:13What do you daydream?
01:04:15I told you
01:04:17I want to build a bubble house like Wallace Neff
01:04:19But better
01:04:21His bubble houses got torn down after a while
01:04:23So I want mine to be indestructible
01:04:25Bubble houses won't even be able to go through them
01:04:27I also want to plant a garden
01:04:29With lots of potatoes, black eyed Susans
01:04:31Everything you would need if things go horribly wrong in the world
01:04:35What do you think is going to go horribly wrong in the world?
01:04:37I don't know but I want to be ready whatever it is
01:04:41I like your idea of a bubble house
01:04:43To protect you when things go wrong in the world
01:04:47You know, you could come live there with me
01:04:49You could be old and need some shelter
01:04:51I appreciate the invitation
01:04:57We could have a laboratory to make your mushroom medicine
01:05:00I'd have to teach you how to make everything
01:05:02That's fine, I don't mind learning now
01:05:05We could be two mushroom scientists living in a bubble house
01:05:09Or a mushroom house
01:05:11Like that book you were reading me?
01:05:13Yeah, that you swiped
01:05:15I'll give it back
01:05:20You know, if my daddy is dead, I will be sad
01:05:23But I'll also be a little relieved
01:05:24Because then I could live with you
01:05:25And I wouldn't be so worried all the time about everything
01:05:28I will love him
01:05:31I will always love him
01:05:33But being worried all the time is not much fun
01:05:38I used to worry about my dad all the time too
01:05:41He used to cough all night most nights
01:05:43Can we go home?
01:05:45Yeah
01:05:58I think I had too much
01:06:02Well you can have some more
01:06:04No
01:06:05Done
01:06:11Just give me a minute
01:06:15Hello
01:06:16Dr. Mercer
01:06:17Yes
01:06:18This is Officer Bradley
01:06:19Hi Officer
01:06:20So I have some information for you on Jacob Faulkner
01:06:24Please go ahead
01:06:25Jacob Faulkner is the son of Davis Faulkner
01:06:28Originally from Wheeling, West Virginia
01:06:31The father is a 34 year old man
01:06:34And he's been in and out of mental institutions for the last 15 years
01:06:38He's now in the West Virginia State Hospital
01:06:41After burning down their house on West Sycamore two weeks ago
01:06:45Jacob was presumed to be dead
01:06:47So I'm relieved to find out that's not the case
01:06:52He's safe at the moment
01:06:54I'm so glad to hear it
01:06:55You can bring the boy into custody
01:06:57And we'll work with child services to find him a home
01:07:00The child's mother died during his childbirth
01:07:03And there are no relatives that don't have criminal records
01:07:07Is there any way I could foster the boy for now?
01:07:10That's awful kind of you to want to help that child
01:07:12Sounds like it's been a hard life for him
01:07:14And I'll need to send an officer there as well
01:07:17I understand, can we start that process?
01:07:20Is the boy close by so that I can speak with him to put in my report?
01:07:23Yes, he's right next to me
01:07:26Alvis?
01:07:33Hello?
01:07:34Jacob
01:07:36Yes sir?
01:07:37So your father's okay, but he's in the hospital right now
01:07:40He's sick
01:07:42He's sick a lot
01:07:44We're glad you're okay
01:07:46Do you want to stay with Dr. Mercer right now?
01:07:50I would like that
01:07:51We will need to send someone to speak with you and visit Dr. Mercer's home
01:07:56We will need to fill out some paperwork while we sort things out
01:07:59There is a process
01:08:00I understand
01:08:02Okay
01:08:04What school do you go to?
01:08:06Lincoln Heights Elementary, I haven't been in for a while though
01:08:10Okay, thank you for sharing that with me
01:08:13We'll figure out what to do next
01:08:15Go get some ice cream
01:08:17I already did
01:08:20Thank you for your help officer
01:08:22Anytime, we will be reaching out shortly
01:08:25Let's go
01:08:31What's that you're drinking?
01:08:54Philonus Lentius and Innotus Obliquus
01:08:56Is that doing anything for you, be honest?
01:09:02I don't know
01:09:04My knee is feeling a little better, but my eyes are acting up
01:09:09What do you mean?
01:09:11My immune system attacks whatever it wants sometimes
01:09:15I get this thing called uveitis, which
01:09:19Parts of your eyes get blurred
01:09:23Inflamed
01:09:24Sunlight gives me a headache and I can't read
01:09:28It's a lot of fun
01:09:30Sorry I've caused you so much stress, you know
01:09:33It's not your fault, kid
01:09:37I used to get stressed out
01:09:39When I had a grant due
01:09:41You know what?
01:09:43Coping with stress is probably one of the hardest things to do in life
01:09:46Some people, they go right through it
01:09:49But not me
01:09:50My body has a huge tantrum
01:09:53I'm just not that good at it
01:09:57Look, I'm going to take a little rest and I'm going to feel a lot better
01:10:02Help yourself do whatever you want, okay?
01:10:04I'm going to try to keep moving on
01:10:05I'm going to try to keep moving on
01:10:06Okay?
01:10:07You're just going to try to keep moving on
01:10:08You know what?
01:10:09I'm going to try to keep moving on
01:10:11When you keep moving on
01:10:12You know what?
01:10:14Give a little bit of your budget
01:10:16To get rid of the money
01:10:18You know what, getting ready to do
01:10:20is it?
01:10:22You know what?
01:10:24It's better
01:10:26I'm not going to be able to keep moving on
01:10:28At least I think you're not going to read
01:11:59Mr. Mercer, here's some water.
01:12:28I'm not feeling good, Elvis.
01:12:30Could you get the juice from the refrigerator?
01:12:32That stuff's not helping you.
01:12:34You need real medicine.
01:12:39Come on.
01:12:40Take.
01:12:42Your mushroom juice isn't helping you.
01:12:57See?
01:12:57It wasn't that hard.
01:12:59You're going to feel a lot better now.
01:13:00You're a good kid, you know that, Elvis?
01:13:04Yeah.
01:13:04Someone's got to keep you in shape.
01:13:07Good kid.
01:13:08All right.
01:13:08Rest up a little and that should kick in it a bit.
01:13:10See?
01:13:11This is the third day you've been taking your medicine.
01:13:14You're already looking a lot better.
01:13:15Thanks for taking care of me, Elvis.
01:13:19Well, someone has to keep you in check.
01:13:28Anyway.
01:13:29Listen, you need to go to the doctor.
01:13:31There we can get you a real prescription.
01:13:35Hey, if you go to the doctor, I'll go to school.
01:13:36Really?
01:13:37Yeah.
01:13:38You have to go.
01:13:39Okay.
01:13:40Deal.
01:13:41All right.
01:13:42Have a nice dinner.
01:13:43Thanks for taking care of me, Elvis.
01:13:44Thanks for taking care of me, Elvis.
01:13:45Well, someone has to keep you in check.
01:13:47Anyway.
01:13:48Listen, you need to go to the doctor.
01:13:49There we can get you a real prescription.
01:13:52No.
01:13:53Hey, if you go to the doctor, I'll go to school.
01:13:57Really?
01:13:58Yeah.
01:14:00You have to go.
01:14:05Okay.
01:14:06Deal.
01:14:07All right.
01:14:08Have a nice dinner.
01:14:40Yeah, I'm no expert, but you need to try new things.
01:14:52Hear a walking contradiction.
01:14:54What do you mean?
01:14:56You say you believe in science, but you don't like doctors.
01:14:59Doctors believe in science.
01:15:00You say that you're not good with kids, but as it turns out, you're actually pretty good with kids.
01:15:04Well, and I'm one.
01:15:06Fine, and I'm one.
01:15:07But listen to me.
01:15:08There's sun over your head.
01:15:09That sun's going to go past your face, past your messy hair, and deep into your bones.
01:15:13It's going to warm you up and stop you to be such a stubborn troll.
01:15:17You're the worst wizard in the state of West Virginia.
01:15:22Maybe that sun can warm you up and get you to stop stealing.
01:15:25Quiet!
01:15:27Listen.
01:15:27Sun over your head.
01:15:29Now lie down.
01:15:29It's going to give you the strength to go to the doctor.
01:15:31It's a beautiful day outside.
01:15:35Birds are singing.
01:15:35Flowers are blooming.
01:15:36You know, it's okay to be afraid of going to the doctor.
01:15:53I guess I'm just afraid of what they might tell me.
01:15:55Well, what I try to do is make myself okay with the worst thing that can possibly happen.
01:16:02Then, the thing that's going to happen doesn't seem as bad.
01:16:04Like by dad being dead.
01:16:06If I can be okay with that, then the worst thing doesn't seem as bad.
01:16:09What's the worst thing they can tell you?
01:16:12I guess that I'm going to die.
01:16:13If anything, the doctor's going to stop you from dying so quickly.
01:16:18We're all going to die, you know.
01:16:19We're all going to die.
01:16:49So, what's the verdict?
01:16:53Are you going to die anytime soon?
01:16:54Nope.
01:16:57Did they tell you anything groundbreaking?
01:17:00Just, uh, told me to take my meds and gave me a checkup.
01:17:06See, I told you it wouldn't be so bad.
01:17:09Aren't you glad you won't?
01:17:12I think so.
01:17:16Well, since the deal's a deal, I want to start going back to school.
01:17:19Do you think you can get me there every day?
01:17:23Absolutely.
01:17:23I'd be happy to take you to school every day.
01:17:25I was glad you wouldn't mind.
01:17:28Anyway, since my dad burned down our house,
01:17:32I don't have...
01:17:34Don't think I'll be seeing him for a while.
01:17:37You might be right about that.
01:17:38Well, you want to go fishing?
01:17:43When?
01:17:44Right now.
01:17:45You don't seem beat up like you did before.
01:17:48Sure.
01:17:49We just, um...
01:17:50We just have to grab the poles from home.
01:17:53I'm fine with that.
01:17:54You got anywhere else to be?
01:17:55Nope.
01:17:58I have absolutely nowhere else to be except being with you.
01:18:02Perfect.
01:18:03That makes do of us.
01:18:05Mr. Mercer, come get your prescription.
01:18:12Okay, that's enough.
01:18:14Elvis, that's enough.
01:18:16Now reel it in a little bit.
01:18:19Oh.
01:18:20How bad is this?
01:18:21Here, you take this one.
01:18:22This one's already set.
01:18:23It's already in the water.
01:18:25Just hold it.
01:18:25Oh, it is?
01:18:26Yeah.
01:18:31Put your finger here like this,
01:18:33and then put it back like that.
01:18:38That's it.
01:18:39Good.
01:18:39Now just hold it.
01:18:45The castle goes on the ends, right?
01:18:48This.
01:18:48Okay?
01:18:49So you put your castle.
01:18:51On the ends.
01:18:53That's it.
01:18:54Okay?
01:18:54And the knight.
01:18:55Your knight.
01:18:57The horse.
01:18:58Okay?
01:18:59Goes on the next square.
01:19:01And then you have your bishop.
01:19:03Goes on the next square.
01:19:05Okay?
01:19:07And then you do queen on own color.
01:19:11Okay?
01:19:11This is the queen.
01:19:12Okay.
01:19:13And the king.
01:19:14Okay?
01:19:15So this is the queen?
01:19:17That's the queen.
01:19:18That's right.
01:19:18The king is the tallest piece.
01:19:21Technically they're almost the same size.
01:19:23And these are called pawns.
01:19:25And you just put those in front.
01:19:27Okay?
01:19:28Amazing grace, how sweet the sound that saved a wretch like me.
01:19:54I once was lost, but now I'm found, was blind, but now I see.
01:20:25Dear daddy, I know that you are still in the hospital.
01:20:28The nice policeman told me that you burned down our house on West Sycamore.
01:20:32I actually drove by it and saw it with my own two eyes.
01:20:35It was burned to the ground, but I know you must have had a real good reason.
01:20:38Like those creatures coming for us.
01:20:40You must have been so scared and I feel bad for having left you alone with them.
01:20:44I hope you can forgive me one day.
01:20:47They said that they don't think that you will be getting out of there for a long time.
01:20:51I do think that they will take real good care of you, though, and that's what you deserve.
01:20:55As for me, I'm doing pretty well, considering how much has happened in the last year.
01:21:01I ended up finding this retired botanist in the mountains, and he was nice enough to take me in.
01:21:06He studies mushrooms. Isn't that funny?
01:21:09He gathers them from the forest and then brings them back to his house.
01:21:12He used to do lots of his experiments with them, and that's what he's teaching me about now.
01:21:17I'm learning all about science.
01:21:20At school, they even put me in gifted and talented class.
01:21:23Isn't that hard to believe?
01:21:25Remember how I was so slow before?
01:21:27I couldn't even read very well back then.
01:21:30I'm getting a lot better, though, Daddy.
01:21:32A lot better.
01:21:34Anyway, Mr. Mercer takes me to school every day and picks me up afterwards.
01:21:38He says he's going to get me a volunteering job at a science laboratory when I get a little older.
01:21:44Maybe I will even go to college one day.
01:21:46Mr. Mercer is also working on the papers to adopt me.
01:21:50He's almost finished with the process, but I just want you to know, nobody could ever take your place.
01:21:55You may be sick, but you're my one and only Daddy, and I will always love you no matter what.
01:22:00I just want you to know that.
01:22:01Oh, also, by the way, guess what?
01:22:04We were building a bubble house, Daddy.
01:22:06Remember how you and I talked about that a few times?
01:22:08Those houses that would keep us safe from hurricanes and aliens?
01:22:11Well, Mr. Mercer and I are actually making one ourselves.
01:22:14He calls it a mushroom house, but I call it a bubble house.
01:22:18When it's all done, we are going to move into it and live there forever.
01:22:22It'll even be big enough for you to come stay if you ever get out of the hospital.
01:22:26I also want you to know, Daddy, I am okay.
01:22:29Everything is going to be just fine for you and me.
01:22:32I hope they are letting you play your guitar in the hospital.
01:22:35I'm sure the other people there would like it.
01:22:37Also, both me and Mama are there with you in spirit.
01:22:40Much love, Elvis.
01:22:41Thanks for having down on my own.
01:22:42Thanks a lot.
01:22:47Thanks.
01:22:48Goodbye.
01:22:49Thanks a lot.
01:22:49Bye.
01:22:51See you.
01:22:51Bye.
01:22:52Bye.
01:22:54Bye.
01:22:56Bye.
01:22:57Bye.
01:23:02Bye.
01:23:02Bye.
01:23:06Bye.
01:23:09Bye.
01:23:10Bye.
01:23:10Bye.
01:23:11Ever heard the American train
01:23:17Read about it and I could sing
01:23:21But my crazy mother's brother's wife
01:23:24And stuff left in the dark
01:23:26Talked about a picket fountain
01:23:33Seven ballin' up with friends
01:23:37Sit around and wax their bones
01:23:41There's a reason we lie naked in the storm
01:23:51Thinking someone must have asked
01:23:58The center for
01:24:00Wondering what they said
01:24:06Everybody needs somebody like you
01:24:14Material as you wanna be
01:24:33Ask yourself is there a place you may or may be
01:24:38If there's no honesty left in your eyes
01:24:46Time's made more skeptical
01:24:48Skeptical again
01:24:50Cause I've yet to call on them
01:24:54I have power to save me
01:24:56From demise
01:24:58There's a reason we lie naked in the storm
01:25:08Thinking someone must have asked
01:25:14This info
01:25:16Wondering what they said
01:25:22Everybody needs somebody
01:25:28Want somebody like you
01:25:32Do you think they'll let us bring a cake into the hospital?
01:25:39Not sure I can't hurt to try
01:25:42I just do a place you
01:25:55I don't know
01:25:56I don't know
01:25:58You can't wait
01:25:59I can't wait
01:26:00You can't wait
01:26:01You can't wait
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