The wave

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Treatment for “The Wave” (a feature length film) © 2003 David Crimmins, 2933 Denbeigh Dr., Hatfield, PA 19440 215-362-5497 davidcrimmins@comcast.net and Robert Crimmins, 5012 Killens Pond Rd., Felton, DE 19943 302-284-0200 robcrimmins@comcast.net

I Dr. Richard Kendrick, a brilliant but unfulfilled and ageing scientist is an important although thoroughly obscure member of a team working on the human genome project (HGP). One of his research assistants, Prakash, describes HGP as more accounting than science and has obtained grants for a few experiments loosely related to his sequencing assignments that he finds more interesting. Prakash e-mails Kendrick about a combination of genetic treatments and natural mutations in a population of mice that promises to achieve the affect heʼs been seeking. He hopes similar treatments in humans will cure or at least arrest the affects of Alzheimer Disease and several other maladies of the brain and nervous system. Kendrick has worked in advanced research for forty years and the sort of breakthrough his young assistant is suggesting rarely occur, and theyʼre never the result of minor grants administered by young graduate assistants from the University of Pune, India. Despite his certainty that subsequent work will prove Prakash wrong, Dr. Kendrick allows Prakash to describe his latest results over lunch the day after Kendrick received the e-mail. The explanation takes place in a break room at their laboratory and as Prakash excitedly, and to Kendrickʼs eye, naively, offers details about the mice, their treatments and the states of the mutations of their mitochondrial DNA, a television in a corner of the room is playing a series of commercials, among them an unusually compelling public service announcement about conserving natural resources. The production value is extremely high. Kendrick can easily concentrate on Prakash and the television at once and the p.s.a. is more interesting then his Indian friend pacing and gesturing in front of it. Prakash continues and Kendrick politely offers an occasional response or question until a news break comes on and a woman in the segment completely distracts the older man. Prakash stops too and turns to the television, annoyed at the interruption. Kendrick is suddenly more interested in Prakash than heʼd been, and puzzled. After a moment, in which he seems to realize something, he asks Prakash about a detail of the mitochondria. Prakash answers him and Kendrick continues the line of questioning but then remembers an appointment, tells Pakash he has to leave and orders him to compile a report on a certain aspect of his data and to have it ready by the following day. But Prakash doesnʼt return the next day and twenty-four hours after his only absence from work in thirty months he is reported missing. Another two days pass before he calls Dr. Kendrick, apologizes for scaring everyone and explains there is a family crisis and he must return to India. II In Vatican City, on the plaza between the Vila of Pius the IV and The Academy of Sciences, Father Alexander Gott, Ph.D.. is on a cell phone. He is speaking to a New York Times reporter about the work he is doing to authenticate relics, restore

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