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  • 15/5/2025

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00:00Música
00:30Música
00:32Música
00:34Música
00:36Música
00:38Ah, brigadier. Doctor.
00:40You've come to see Colonel Lawson. This way, sir.
00:42How is he? Oh, he's fine. Just fine.
00:44Fine?
00:46What place is he still doing here?
00:53Well, we've done all the physical tests,
00:55and I think most of the lab results are back in.
00:58It's a matter of where we go from here.
01:00Damn it, man. I came to see the boy, not the paperwork.
01:07But you did read the report, sir.
01:09Looked at it, old boy. Couldn't understand a blethering word of it.
01:12Poppycock.
01:19Colonel Lawson.
01:23What's the problem?
01:24It's locked.
01:26Locked.
01:27Yes, it's quite a right.
01:28Nurse.
01:30Quite all right.
01:31Good God, man, you haven't been locking him up, have you?
01:33Damn it, he's an officer.
01:39Colonel.
01:40Excuse me, sir.
01:41Colonel.
01:42He's gone.
01:43Gone? What do you mean?
01:57Nobody?
01:58Holy shit.
01:59What?
02:00Things are changed.
02:01They ain't able nothing to do.
02:02I always believe this.
02:03I never knew or do it.
02:07For sure.
02:08AEG.
02:12No?
02:12¡Gracias!
02:42¡Gracias!
02:54Bill, I'll tell you what I'll do.
02:56I'll go through this stuff you've given me.
02:58I couldn't make head or tail of it myself.
03:01And I'll send a couple of boys down to have a look around.
03:03I would appreciate that.
03:05Tell me, Lawson's only close relative is his mother.
03:08Yes, Lavinia.
03:10A great woman.
03:12She hasn't been told anything yet.
03:14No, she thinks he's still in Germany.
03:16I called her last night on some pretext or other to see if he'd contacted her.
03:23There is one thing I would ask of you.
03:26Yes?
03:28If there's any nasty news that I should be the one to tell her.
03:32Of course.
03:33I was with her husband, Lawson's father, when he was killed in Malaya.
03:37I had to break the news to her then.
03:39The great family of the Lawsons.
03:41They've given their life for their country.
03:44Generations of them.
03:46Lieutenant Colonel Peter Lawson, Royal Tank Regiment, disappeared.
03:47I don't get it.
03:48He was in military hospital, huh?
03:49Correct.
03:50And he just walked out.
03:51We don't know that he walked out.
03:52But he wasn't locked up.
03:53No.
03:54So he discharged himself.
03:55Not necessarily.
03:56What then?
03:57What then?
03:58If he had discharged himself, he would be locked up.
03:59He was locked up.
04:00No.
04:01No.
04:02No.
04:03No.
04:04No.
04:05No.
04:06No.
04:07No.
04:08No.
04:09No.
04:10He exposed him.
04:11No.
04:12No.
04:13No.
04:14No.
04:15I don't get it.
04:16He was in military hospital, huh?
04:17Correct.
04:18And he just walked out.
04:19We don't know that he walked out.
04:20But he wasn't locked up.
04:21No.
04:22So he discharged himself.
04:23Not necessarily.
04:24What then?
04:25If he had discharged himself, he would presumably have returned to his regiment.
04:29Which he hasn't.
04:30That's brilliant.
04:31So when did he vanish?
04:35Two days ago.
04:37So he's absent without leave then?
04:39Technically yes.
04:40He was posted to the army hospital
04:42where he was undergoing a series of checkups.
04:44What checkups?
04:46Something happened during a recent military exercise in Europe
04:48under Lawson's command.
04:50The army isn't telling exactly what.
04:53What we do know is that he was flown home immediately
04:55and was being put through the most exhaustive
04:57physical and psychiatric tests.
04:59Then he disappeared.
05:00You want us to find him?
05:03Lawson's regiment plays a vital role
05:05in NATO's first line of defence against land attack
05:07from Warsaw Pact countries.
05:09He himself has a crucial role in those battle plans.
05:13He had access at the highest level
05:15to military secrets in that particular theatre.
05:18If he's been kidnapped or has defected
05:21then many of those plans will have to be changed.
05:24Well, if the Russians outgrabbed him
05:25he'd be back in Moscow in 24 hours.
05:27And we'd have heard about it from MI6.
05:29But we haven't.
05:30Yeah, so it's a fair bet the Russians haven't got it
05:33otherwise we wouldn't be standing here, would we?
05:34Until we hear or learn otherwise
05:36we must assume that Lawson is still in this country
05:38and that others are equally as eager as we are
05:41to learn of his whereabouts
05:42or possibly his state of mind.
05:44In other words, find him before the Russians do.
05:46Correct. And remember, this is a low-key operation.
05:51He's not listed as a missing person
05:52and he'll not be reported AWOL.
05:56We want to keep it in the family as long as we can.
06:00I'll tell you what.
06:02He's got amnesia.
06:03Maybe he's forgotten his military secrets as well.
06:05Doesn't look like the forgetful type to me, mate.
06:07It's all right.
06:08It's all right.
06:08Come on.
06:09Come on.
06:11Come on.
06:19Come on.
06:25Commission to the 60s, rifle saw action,
06:27Aiden and the Far East.
06:28Oh, here we are.
06:29Volunteered for the SAS,
06:31three tours of duty in Northern Ireland.
06:332 commendations.
06:35He was captain at Staff College, G2 Ops.
06:38Promoted to major, transferred to BAOR.
06:42He was a lieutenant colonel at 37.
06:45He was made battalion commander of the 31st Tank Regiment.
06:48He wasn't an outsider on the promotion stakes, was he?
06:50No, he's gone through these ranks like food through a goose.
06:53That's downwards.
06:56Horizontal.
06:57It's fast, anyways.
06:58It's fast.
06:59Right, let's get off the glittering career and get on with the juicy bits, then.
07:03Oh, psychiatric?
07:04Yeah.
07:06Okay, what heading do you want?
07:08Psychomorphological or psychopathological?
07:13Got anything on the girlfriend?
07:29Colonel Lawson.
07:45Tissue, sir, isn't it?
07:47What are you doing here?
07:50Len, I need two good men.
07:53What for?
07:54What for?
07:55A mission.
07:59What sort of mission?
08:01Top secret.
08:02Is this, er...
08:16official?
08:18Undercover.
08:23But it's army, is it?
08:26Higher than army.
08:32Higher than army.
08:35Like, er... secret service.
08:38Higher.
08:40Higher.
08:42And there is a great deal of money involved.
08:48What do we have to do?
08:54You have to show courage.
08:56Loyalty.
08:58And determination.
09:02Are you with me?
09:06You know I am.
09:16What's up?
09:17Dr. Lowe?
09:18I don't know how do you do.
09:19I'll see if I...
09:20Right on.
09:21Still follow me.
09:23Ah, Major.
09:24We've looked over the psychiatric reports.
09:27My colleague found it a little heavy going.
09:30So we thought you might give us something a little more concise
09:32to get our teeth into.
09:34Preferably in a nutshell, Doctor.
09:37Colonel Lawson was posted here for examination
09:39because apparently he suffered some form of nervous breakdown
09:42during military manoeuvres.
09:44How exactly that manifested itself, we weren't told.
09:48You weren't told?
09:49No.
09:53Well, this was his room.
09:54There was a chair underneath the door handle.
09:57Oh, this one?
09:58Yes.
10:05To swear he went out?
10:06Yes.
10:09Didn't anybody see him from outside?
10:10No, I'm afraid not.
10:13How was he when he first arrived?
10:15Oh, he's clearly disturbed.
10:16In what way?
10:18Nothing at all obvious.
10:20In fact, quite the opposite.
10:21He's too calm.
10:23Too relaxed.
10:24Did he cooperate?
10:26He had to.
10:27It was his duty.
10:29His career was at stake.
10:33Look.
10:34This doesn't have to go beyond us three,
10:37but leaving aside the technicalities,
10:38what do you actually think of him?
10:41Well, from the little I saw of him,
10:44my guess is that he'd had a profound shock.
10:47Now, that shock could have been shock at his own actions,
10:51or as a result of those actions.
10:53In either case, it seemed to me
10:55that he was fighting a desperate battle inside himself
10:58to maintain his own clarity.
11:00So, if he ran off, how would you interpret that?
11:06Well, he may have felt that he had to get away,
11:10but he could work it all out better on his own.
11:13Do you feel that's unreasonable?
11:15No, but if he'd wanted to discharge himself,
11:18he should have told us.
11:20He had to request it.
11:21The condition that you felt you was in,
11:24could you recommend that?
11:26Well, I couldn't have. Only a superior officer...
11:28I mean, no, as a doctor,
11:30would you have let him go?
11:32No.
11:34No, definitely not.
11:35That's him.
11:49I like the look of him.
11:51Ah.
12:03Daddy, you tug.
12:11Willis?
12:13Tug.
12:15Len's told you who I am?
12:17Yeah.
12:19I'm led to believe, Tug, that you have military experience.
12:23Paris, 12 years.
12:24Rank?
12:25Corporal.
12:26Action.
12:27Borneo, Aden, Cyprus, Sudan, Northern Ireland.
12:31And some others.
12:33Undercover?
12:34Yes, sir.
12:35I'm looking for a volunteer.
12:44Sir.
12:45Stand past the non-commissioned officers.
12:48This thing that happened in Germany.
12:50Yes.
12:52I thought you'd come to that.
12:54What happened then?
12:56Well, there was to be a very large, fully coordinated NATO exercise last month.
13:00This would give Lawson the opportunity of putting forward some newfangled battle plans that he'd been proposing for some time.
13:10The eyes of the top brass worldwide were on him.
13:14To cut a long story short, the whole thing went wildly wrong. Absolute disaster.
13:21Well, that's it?
13:23Sadly, no.
13:25Well, what then?
13:27You're both aware of how these military operations are run?
13:31Yes, we've been on a few.
13:32They have umpires all over the place.
13:35Telling what you've done.
13:37Whether you're alive or dead, how many tanks that you've got left.
13:42Well, when Lawson's whole battalion had been wiped out, 800 men, instead of accepting it gracefully, or ungracefully for that matter,
13:50he took his last remaining troops, some of whom should have been dead in any event,
13:57and launched an attack on his own HQ.
14:03The way that it was described to me, he persisted in justifying it as the logic of total warfare.
14:10The minimum, ultimate casualties, or whatever.
14:17I can't understand it.
14:18He was destined for the very top.
14:21So has it affected his career?
14:23Absolutely.
14:27All right.
14:31They were.
14:33Shall I show you what's wrong with this country?
14:36Shall I?
14:37Shall I?
14:38Shall I show you what you're doing?
14:41God save our gracious queen
14:46Long live our noble queen
14:50God save the queen
14:54Send her victorious
14:59Happy and glorious
15:04Long to reign over us
15:09God save the queen
15:14There you are
15:18You see what's wrong?
15:20They don't stand
15:21It's their own national anthem
15:24And not one of them stood
15:26What we're going to fight for
15:33Is this country's soul
15:36James never mentioned you in his letters from Malaya
15:54Were you there when he died?
15:56No I was transferred shortly before
15:59And how is young Peter is it?
16:02Yes
16:02He must be how old now?
16:05Nearly 40
16:06Really?
16:07How time flies
16:08Isn't it quite ridiculous?
16:11He's in Germany at the moment
16:12With his own regiment
16:13As a matter of fact
16:14He called me only last week
16:16Oh
16:16Wanted to trace some old corporal
16:19Who used to be under his command once
16:21The man had written a letter at Christmas
16:24Wanted advice on whether to get married
16:26Isn't it funny?
16:29These tough men
16:30Just like children
16:31Look to their officers for anything
16:33Even after they've left the army
16:34Yes
16:34Do you still have that letter to Peter?
16:38Oh yes
16:39Alpha one to control
16:45Come in alpha one
16:47Message for 3745
16:48Target may have contacted
16:51Former army colleague Len Clark
16:53At Batford Forge
16:54Is Len in love?
17:02No
17:03Where is he then?
17:04Working or what?
17:05Working
17:05He's off playing games
17:07What sort of games?
17:15Not the kind of games I like to play
17:16Come on love
17:18Where is he?
17:20He's off with that mad colonel
17:22Where?
17:23I don't know
17:24By the golf course I think
17:26Yeah
17:27We might be back
17:31Terrific
17:32Terrific
18:01Four five to control over
18:28Come in four five
18:30Relay me to alpha one please
18:32Relay through
18:34Alpha one
18:36Four five
18:37Your lead was correct
18:39We found him
18:40How is he?
18:42Well
18:42He hasn't been kidnapped
18:43And I don't think
18:45There's much danger of him
18:45Defecting either
18:46From the look of him
18:47I don't think the Russians
18:48Would want him
18:48Four five three seven
18:51Could you be a little more specific?
18:52What do you like?
18:55It's three seven
18:56The colonel's gone bananas
18:58Repeat
18:59He's gone soft and head sir
19:02Off his rocker
19:03Four five
19:05It's four five here
19:07I think he's harmless
19:09Right
19:09Give his position to control
19:10And I'll have the brigadier advised immediately
19:13Alpha out
19:13I'll be there
19:24We're against the wall
19:26You there
19:26All of you
19:26Open it
19:33Fill it
19:43I said nobody move
19:57Fire
20:03Nobody move
20:09Well
20:10Yes
20:11That's them all right
20:12No question
20:13What specifically is it
20:15That you recognise
20:16The harmlessness
20:17We thought they were crazy
20:19That I'm not so sure about
20:22Fill it
20:23Ah
20:24It's the latest on the bank to them
20:27He may lose an arm
20:29How much did they get away with?
20:35About eighteen thousand
20:36My flaws are so rich
20:39What do you want to rob a bank for?
20:40Just phone up his broker
20:42Sell a few shares
20:43Cowley
20:45Oh yes inspector
20:47Oh well thank you
20:49The Essex police have found Clark's car
20:52It was abandoned near Chelmsford
20:54The licence plate tallied with eyewitness reports
20:57What about the third guy?
20:59According to police interrogation of Clark's girlfriend
21:01His name is Willis
21:02Ex-paras
21:04Worked as a bouncer at a caravan camp
21:07If it's the same Willis as on our computer
21:09He won a military medal in Aden
21:11For wiping out an entire guerrilla platoon single-handed
21:14Well if they go into the banking business in that way
21:17I think they'll have a very successful firm
21:19He's saying goodbye to a military career
21:21Isn't he?
21:22I don't know mate
21:23Sounds like he started a new one from scratch
21:25Item
21:26Barracks facilities temporary 100 pounds
21:28Check
21:29Item
21:30Communications equipment
21:31RT shortwave radio and television
21:33Extra batteries 900 pounds
21:34Check
21:35Item
21:36Food, drink, essential supplies
21:37Do you have the receipts?
21:38125 pounds
21:39Check
21:40Item
21:41Clothing, specialist clothing
21:42250 pounds
21:43Check
21:44Co-corporal, what do you make that?
21:455,875 pounds
21:46Check
21:47And the balance of income after expenditure?
21:4912,048 pounds
21:51Very good
21:52You may divide that between you both
21:53Yes
21:54Sir
22:03What's that sir?
22:04This length?
22:05It's a receipt
22:06Signed by me
22:07For a requisition on behalf of her majesty's land forces
22:09I shall post it to the headquarters of the bank
22:14Sir
22:15Yes, Corporal
22:16We were wondering
22:17If it, er
22:19Might not be a good idea
22:21Military wise that is
22:23To split up for a bit
22:25Split up?
22:27Yes sir
22:28But our mission has only just begun
22:30Oh, not you two again
22:31Yeah, have you seen him, love?
22:32I told you I don't know anything
22:33Yeah, well you must have heard him talking, didn't they mention any names or places?
22:49Oh, it was that colonel
22:50He had a kind of power over there ever since he arrived
22:53How did he arrive?
22:54On foot
22:55He was a right mess
22:56I had to clean the mud off his clothes
22:57How did the mud get on his clothes?
22:58From all that walking
22:59How do you think?
23:00What walking?
23:01The walking it took to get here
23:02Len said
23:03It took him two days in a straight line
23:05Straight line from where?
23:06From where he came from
23:07I don't know
23:08I'm glad for one thing
23:09I'm glad he's gone
23:10I aged the sight of him
23:11We had a nice little pace there
23:13Until that crazy man came along and spoiled it all
23:15Sir, what is this mission?
23:21Uh, yes sir
23:22What exactly did you have in mind?
23:26Very well
23:29I shall tell you all you need to know for the moment
23:33We are at present engaged in Operation Britannica
23:38Operation Britannica is divided into three clear and distinct stages
23:41Stage one is what I might call a funding operation that is already complete
23:46And you both performed extremely well
23:49Stage two will be a further operation of requisition
23:52And then in stage three
23:54Which will follow immediately afterwards
23:58We shall go for the big one
24:00So, are there any questions?
24:02Yeah
24:03This big one
24:06How big is that gonna be?
24:08Bigger tug than anything you could possibly imagine
24:12Sixty miles as the crow flies
24:15He packs his case
24:17He walks out of the hospital
24:19He marches for two days
24:20He arrives in this nothing town
24:21And he does a bank job
24:23Probably less than he's got in his current account
24:25And puts the finishing touches the rest of his career
24:39Colonel Manning in
24:41Who shall I say sir?
24:42Colonel Lawson
24:43Just a minute
24:47Hello sir, Colonel Lawson to see you
24:49This is the gatehouse
24:51Thin-faced, fair
24:53Yes
24:54Yes sir
25:00Would you mind identifying yourself on the phone sir?
25:02Yes, of course
25:08Hello Tony
25:12Hello Tony
25:14Yes
25:15I was just passing
25:16I thought I'd drop in for a sniffer
25:18Of course
25:24Very good sir
25:25Very good sir
25:38Peter, old chap
25:42I thought you were on the Rhine
25:45What a simply splendid surprise
25:47You know, I was trying to decide whether or not to have a nightcap
25:49So what'll he have? Brandy? Scotch?
25:52I've got a really rather splendid Armagnac
25:53Who'd care for some of that?
25:54No, no, no, no
25:55Scotch will be fine
25:56Right, Scotch it is
25:58So
25:59Just between the two of us
26:00Do tell me what all this is about you on the grapevine
26:03Of course
26:04I knew it was a load of bloody lies
26:06Mess got it
26:10Hello Bill
26:11How bad is it?
26:1220 pounds of plastic explosive
26:142 boxes of detonated
26:154 cases of hand grenades
26:162 cases of stun grenades
26:186 cases of 9mm ammunition
26:206 cases of 7.62 ammunition
26:221 case of 3 inch mortar smoke bombs
26:241 dozen mortar bombs
26:26How's Colonel Manning?
26:27Well I've spoken to him at the hospital
26:28He's conscious
26:29I think he'll recover all right
26:30He doesn't seem to remember much
26:32Which way do they head when they left?
26:33They turn right through the main gate
26:35And straight through the town
26:38We'll see infrared telescopic image detectors
26:41Three nine 90 sub-machine guns
26:42And one 3 inch mortar
26:46Well?
26:47We've got one sighted
26:48About 20 miles away
26:49Little chocolate
26:50And a police car
26:51I remember seeing them
26:52Heading west
26:53That's all we got
26:54Right
26:56Well they've certainly got
26:57Enough equipment
26:58To rob a few more
26:59Small local banks
27:00¿Colonel Manning se identificó a Lawson?
27:05Creo que sí.
27:30¿Colonel Manning se identificó a Lawson?
28:00Si este ataque es sucesivo, y yo estoy seguro que lo haré,
28:05podríamos dar un ultimátum para el enemigo,
28:09pero tendremos una alternativa para aceptar.
28:13Y incluidos en esos términos, por supuesto,
28:15ser remuneración y compensación para ambos.
28:18Ahora, antes de hablar sobre los detalles,
28:22me remindo de la una facta que pervades
28:26y que overrides cada fase de esta operación.
28:30Estamos en posesión de la eternidad militar.
28:35¿Surprise?
28:37No, no.
28:38No, no.
28:39No, no, no.
28:40No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
28:42¿Pongé?
28:43Si, lo está listo.
28:44Brigadier Tenant, es for you.
28:49Thank you.
28:50Calde.
28:51Brigadier, this maneuver of Lawson is the one that went wrong in Germany.
28:56What exactly happened?
28:57I've already told you.
28:59His battalion was wiped out.
29:00He then turned on his own HQ.
29:01Thank you.
29:03All power plants, nuclear stations, major security installations have been alerted.
29:07Excuse me, sir.
29:08But how exactly was the battalion wiped out?
29:12It must have been a nuclear device, wasn't it?
29:14No.
29:16It was gas, actually.
29:20Gas? What type of gas?
29:22I'm not sure that I should tell you this.
29:27C-29.
29:29Nerve gas?
29:30Yes.
29:31I thought we'd renounce the use of that weapon.
29:33We have to know how to defend ourselves against it.
29:36So one of the sides was obviously using or pretending to use C-29 gas.
29:41Which we say we don't use.
29:42And to which Lawson presumably objected.
29:46Brigadier, if, you know, if we had C-29 gas, where would we keep it?
29:53Where it was made.
29:54And where is that?
29:56Where would that be?
29:59Marston.
30:00Marston Dale.
30:01Marston Dale.
30:01Chemical Research Establishment.
30:03Marston Dale.
30:04Marston Dale.
30:04Marston Dale.
30:04Marston Dale.
30:05Marston Dale.
30:05Marston Dale.
30:06Marston Dale.
30:06Marston Dale.
30:07Marston Dale.
30:07Marston Dale.
30:08Marston Dale.
30:08Marston Dale.
30:09Marston Dale.
30:09Marston Dale.
30:10Marston Dale.
30:10Marston Dale.
30:11Marston Dale.
30:12Marston Dale.
30:13Marston Dale.
30:14Marston Dale.
30:15Marston Dale.
30:16Marston Dale.
30:17Marston Dale.
30:18Marston Dale.
30:19Marston Dale.
30:20Marston Dale.
30:21Marston Dale.
30:22Marston Dale.
30:23Marston Dale.
30:24Marston Dale.
30:25Marston Dale.
30:26Marston Dale.
30:27Marston Dale.
30:28Marston Dale.
30:29¡Suscríbete al canal!
30:59¡Suscríbete al canal!
31:29¡Suscríbete al canal!
31:59¡Suscríbete al canal!
32:29¡Suscríbete al canal!
32:59¡Suscríbete al canal!
33:29¡Suscríbete al canal!
33:59¡Suscríbete al canal!
34:29¡Suscríbete al canal!
34:59¡Suscríbete al canal!
35:01¡Suscríbete al canal!
35:05¡Suscríbete al canal!
35:29¡Gracias!
35:41¡Professor!
35:42¡Ci-5! ¿Qué le dieron?
35:44¡Ci-29!
35:46¿Qué es C-29? ¿Nerve gas?
35:49¡Es el más toxic satisfecho en este planeta!
35:59¡It shouldn't have happened!
36:01You were both obeying orders.
36:03No, Colonel.
36:05I was... ¡Tug!
36:09His death won't have been in vain.
36:18The jeep was found in the motorway.
36:21No, no. We can only assume they were heading for London.
36:25Yes.
36:26Yes, right.
36:29The minister has been informed.
36:30He's in cabinet conference and he'll advise the PM as and when necessary.
36:35Continue, please, Professor.
36:37Well, as I said, two canisters have been taken.
36:40Each one contains three litres of liquefied C-29.
36:43The canisters don't require refrigeration.
36:46No, they're in a pressurised vacuum.
36:48And when the contents are released?
36:49Well, the liquid rapidly becomes gas.
36:50Under normal atmospheric conditions.
36:52And then?
36:53Well, then it disperses.
36:55Extremely quickly.
36:56How quickly?
36:57Well, it can cover miles within minutes.
36:59Depending on wind levels, within seconds.
37:01And just how toxic is it?
37:03One part in a million can be lethal.
37:07One part?
37:08You mean anybody who breathes it within miles, within seconds?
37:10It doesn't have to be breathed.
37:13You see, the molecules on contact with animal tissue, like your skin or lungs, for example,
37:18produce a chain reaction within the central nervous system.
37:20Now, once this happens, death occurs in a relatively short space of time.
37:23Okay, so it can spread in seconds.
37:26But how far could it expand to and still remain deadly?
37:30Well, its molecular weight is about the same as that of air.
37:33Now, when the atmospheric pressure is heavy, like today, for example, it tends to spread further sideways.
37:39The weight of the air preventing it from dissipating upwards.
37:42Well, what would you say was the maximum lethal area?
37:47It's impossible to say.
37:48I mean, it could be miles.
37:52They've got two canisters.
37:54It's impossible to say.
37:55It's impossible to say.
38:00Stand easy, Tug.
38:03What's the weather report?
38:05Light winds, 1,028 millibars, sir.
38:09Perfect.
38:11Let's have a look at that.
38:15Yes, then feels about right.
38:19Permission to smoke, sir?
38:20Granted.
38:21Thank you, sir.
38:25Now, where's the parcel you have to deliver?
38:33Excellent.
38:35Well, Tug, how do you feel?
38:37Quite confident?
38:42Ah.
38:43I know what's bothering you.
38:47These letters are on behalf of you and Len's next of kin.
38:50They contain instructions to my bank in Geneva.
38:52You will each be paid one half of the balance of my numbered account.
38:56The cheques are signed in there for and or one million pounds, whichever is the greater amount.
39:01And don't worry. The account is quite healthy.
39:02So that even if this final stage of our mission should not succeed, your cheque will still be very substantial.
39:12Your envelope also contains a signed statement from me that you at all times acted under orders.
39:18My orders.
39:19And it also records your promotion, Willis, as of this moment, to colour sergeant.
39:27Thank you, sir.
39:28Then let us wish each other the best of luck.
39:30Sir.
39:31We have military anti-nerve gas units positioned at four corners of the greater London area.
39:36Every available man and CI-5 stationed on maximum alert.
39:39In direct communication with us on PM emergency frequency.
39:43Yes.
39:45Yes, of course.
39:50Well, Professor.
39:52For the moment, I think we've done all we can.
40:14No, you have to wait, sir.
40:27Hey!
40:28You!
40:29You're a bit dangerous, sir!
40:45I mean it!
40:46I'm gonna throw!
41:14Excuse me.
41:15Oh, excuse me.
41:16And do me a favour.
41:17Otherwise I'll blow your head off.
41:19Take this parcel and give it to that policeman over there.
41:22Understand?
41:23Just give it to him.
41:24I'll be standing here watching you.
41:26You do one thing different, you'll be dead.
41:30Go on.
41:35I've just been given this.
41:36He's got a gun.
41:37Patrick one to Patrick leader.
41:44Patrick leader.
41:45Patrick one.
41:46Message delivered.
41:47Over.
41:48Roger.
41:49Message delivered.
41:50Out.
41:51We've got all the ports closed.
41:52There's no point.
41:53The airport...
41:54Yes?
41:55Yes?
41:56Lawson has made contact.
41:57No, you'd better give them to me, sir.
41:58I'm sorry.
41:59I'm sorry.
42:00I'm sorry.
42:01I'm sorry.
42:02I'm sorry.
42:03I'm sorry.
42:04I'm sorry.
42:05I'm sorry.
42:06No, you'd better give them to me now, over the phone.
42:10Yes?
42:13Yes.
42:14Yes.
42:36He has given us one hour in which to blow up the entire chemical warfare research establishments
42:45of three separate locations.
42:47¡Gracias!
43:17I can't wait a moment, sir.
43:19I'll just go back to the crew,
43:22on the hour, every hour, forever.
43:35Right to step back, please.
43:37Right to step back, sir.
43:444-5 on target.
43:45¡Gracias por ver el sitio!
43:47¡Vamos conmigo conmigo!
43:49¡Vamos!
43:53¡Vamos!
44:15¡Vamos!
44:35¿How do you need it?
44:37Drops his arm.
44:39Pin will be pulled. We've got about four seconds.
44:41There's not a much chance of a bullet getting that wire.
44:45If it misses the shockwave, we'd pull the pin out.
44:47It could use a laser, sir, but he'd see us setting it up.
44:50Tell him to send one up.
44:52Professor, is there any chance that canister could survive a close grenade explosion?
44:57Well, we'd have to test one, but, I mean, they're very strong.
45:00We've got about an hour.
45:02I don't even know that. We might get cramped.
45:11Colonel Lawson, this is Cowley, CI5.
45:15We're setting up ENG surveillance now at the establishment you requested.
45:19But the government hasn't yet given us approval of your main demand.
45:23If you wish to negotiate for further time, please wave your free arm.
45:27Major.
45:28We thought, maybe, if anything does go wrong, we could cover a good deal of it.
45:30Contain possibly half.
45:31No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
45:34But the government hasn't yet given us approval of your main demand.
45:37If you wish to negotiate for further time, please wave your free arm.
45:51Major.
45:52We thought, maybe, if anything does go wrong, we could cover a good deal of it.
45:55Contain possibly half.
45:56Depends how much the canister was destroyed in the blast.
45:59And how fast you can get there.
46:01These NBC suits are not exactly designed for the 100-yard dash.
46:04And that's not a Formula One.
46:09I've confirmed with the Chief Constable,
46:10any attempt of mass evacuation would cause incredible jams,
46:13especially as we're coming to the peak period.
46:15I agree.
46:16There's no time.
46:19No time for anything.
46:22He's got it, you know.
46:25He's got every angle covered with those mirrors.
46:27There's just no way you can approach him, even from behind.
46:31And that's the most accessible point there, what, 75 yards?
46:34What's happening?
46:36Now, you try running that in an NBC suit, it'd see you before you get halfway.
46:43I mean, even if you tried stripping the NBC suit off to make yourself lighter,
46:46what then? You've got a suicide run. I can't see any way.
46:49I can.
46:50What?
46:51You've got ourselves a blind spot.
46:53You're kidding.
46:57He's armed.
46:58Yeah.
46:59I reckon I can get within about ten feet of him.
47:03Is that Fox NBC proof?
47:05Off with the grenade?
47:06Yeah, yeah.
47:07Brilliant.
47:08Driver's sealed off the lot perfect.
47:10I'll never get close enough to him.
47:11You only need to get within 20 feet.
47:12I can lobber to you if you're on the turret.
47:13Bingo, straighten the hole.
47:14And how long's the fuse?
47:15Four seconds.
47:16Four seconds.
47:17What if I drop it?
47:18You don't.
47:21Sir?
47:25Do it.
47:28Listen, mate, when I come out of that blind spot, you give it all you've got.
47:32You've got a spike, haven't you?
47:33Sir?
47:34Yeah, listen, do us a favour.
47:35Yeah.
47:36You just stick it in that patch of grass there, right in line with him.
47:37Yeah.
47:38OK.
47:39Make sure he doesn't see you.
47:40Go!
47:41Go!
48:02Remember, we take all our cues from Bodhi until he starts his run.
48:33In your own time, 3-7.
48:35We're with you all the way.
48:36OK.
48:37I'm on my way.
48:56Right, I'm gonna go on three, OK?
48:58One, two, three.
49:07Oh!
49:29Oh, that's all right.
49:30He's dead.
49:34You're out of breath, 3-7.
49:36Yes, sir.
49:37Soft, you might say.

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