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00:00:00The End
00:00:30The End
00:01:00The End
00:01:30I don't know if she's still alive or not.
00:01:43They've had her now for the past 24 hours.
00:01:46I'm equally uncertain as to the fate of her father, Professor Elliot.
00:01:49Both are probably dead.
00:01:51The odds are a hundred to one I, too, will be finished before another sun rises.
00:01:56But tonight I'm going to try to fight for my life and those larger issues so perilously at stake affecting all mankind.
00:02:05If I fail, it seems most likely the consequences to humanity defy the imagination.
00:02:14As the only trained reporter who has been in a position to observe the terror from its inception,
00:02:19and is one of the few living humans who has actually met face to face, a man from Planet X.
00:02:29I will try to set down the strangest story a newspaper man ever covered.
00:02:35It began prosaically enough in a college observatory not far from Los Angeles.
00:02:44What is it?
00:02:46A new planet.
00:02:48For want of another name, at present we identify it as Planet X.
00:02:51It was first spotted some weeks ago rushing out of space.
00:02:54Is, uh, this the reason Professor Elliot wired me to contact you?
00:02:59Have you known the Professor Long?
00:03:01Yeah, I was with the 8th Air Force in England.
00:03:03The professor was our chief meteorologist doping out weather for bomber raids.
00:03:07The British lent him to us.
00:03:09Good man, Elliot.
00:03:10Oh, the best.
00:03:11He and I became fast friends.
00:03:13He always said if he ever ran across anything of real importance, he'd give me a crack at it.
00:03:18He used to think he was kidding, but I guess not.
00:03:21No, I guess not.
00:03:24Well, what's it all about, Doctor?
00:03:26The world, Mr. Lawrence, is now experiencing strange astronomical phenomena.
00:03:30Reports have come in from all over the globe of inexplicable objects being sighted in the sky.
00:03:35Surely you're not telling me a scientist like yourself believes such nonsense.
00:03:39No, I'm not telling you that.
00:03:41Well, then on what evidence do you base your statement?
00:03:45Unquestionable reports of trained observers.
00:03:48First, this phenomenon seemed to have no particular focal point.
00:03:51It appeared at random here and there about the world.
00:03:57But about six weeks ago, tremendous concentration was detected over a certain section of the earth.
00:04:03In particular, it's barren and isolated area.
00:04:09Burry?
00:04:09Yes, what do you know about it?
00:04:12Well, nothing much except that this cablegram I got from Professor Elliot came from there.
00:04:18It says, if you remember my promise for exclusive story, see Dr. Robert Blaine at University Observatory.
00:04:24Signed, Elliot.
00:04:25Strange waves.
00:04:28Resembling, but still not radar waves have been bouncing off the earth.
00:04:32Coming from someplace outside like the moon or Mars, for instance?
00:04:35Originating on some sphere outside, but not the moon or Mars or any known planet.
00:04:42Well, where does this planet X fit in?
00:04:44What's it rushing towards?
00:04:45The earth.
00:04:47You mean, you mean it's likely to collide with us?
00:04:50No, at least not a headlong collision.
00:04:53Oh, well, we've had these things before, like Halley's Comet, for instance, to name one.
00:04:58None of which have come as close to our world as this one is expected to in the next three weeks, if our calculations are correct.
00:05:05You, uh, think something will happen?
00:05:09I wish I knew exactly.
00:05:10At the best, atmospheric disturbances, hurricanes, probably tidal waves.
00:05:15And at the worst?
00:05:21Where does Professor Elliot fit in?
00:05:23He discovered the planet.
00:05:24Oh, is that why he's in Burry?
00:05:25If he's correct in his deductions, this isolated island is that part of the world the new planet will come closest to.
00:05:32Gee, it sort of makes cold fingers run down my spine.
00:05:35How about you?
00:05:40Uh, this is not visible to the naked eye.
00:05:43Not yet.
00:05:46How do I get to Burry?
00:05:47Here you are, sir.
00:05:57This is Burry.
00:05:59Uh, do you know Professor Elliot?
00:06:01I have seen him once or twice.
00:06:04Where is he staying, do you know?
00:06:06Up at the barack.
00:06:07Good evening, dear, sir.
00:06:09Well, hey, wait a minute.
00:06:10Mr. Lawrence.
00:06:19Hello.
00:06:20Sorry I was late.
00:06:21I had a little motor trouble.
00:06:22Well, better late than never.
00:06:23Put your things in the back.
00:06:25All right, thanks.
00:06:32All set?
00:06:33Yeah, drive on, McDuff.
00:06:34Oh, it's getting thicker.
00:06:49It's always worse on the moors than it is in the village.
00:06:54You don't remember me, do you?
00:06:56Well, I...
00:06:57Isn't that a fine example of how unfaithful men are?
00:07:00The last time I saw you, I got your solemn promise that when I grew up, I could be your girl.
00:07:05Good heavens, heen it, Elliot.
00:07:07Well, I...
00:07:07It took you long enough to recognize me.
00:07:10No, the last time I saw you, you were crying because you had to go back to school.
00:07:14All gawky legs and butt teeth.
00:07:16I see you do remember me.
00:07:18Braces took care of the teeth.
00:07:19And, uh, nature took care of the legs.
00:07:22I hadn't thought you'd notice.
00:07:23The newspaper man in me.
00:07:25What a difference six years make.
00:07:27I don't think you've changed.
00:07:29Well, thank you kindly.
00:07:30Or should I thank you kindly?
00:07:50Thanks.
00:07:50Yeah.
00:07:53Hey.
00:07:55What did all this?
00:07:56Bombs?
00:07:57About the time.
00:07:58It's been this way for centuries.
00:08:00Whoever built this tower up here at the end of nowhere?
00:08:03They call these towers rocks.
00:08:05Originally built, local legend has it as a defense against the Viking raiders.
00:08:11Well, come on.
00:08:12As of midnight, the 13th of September, 1950, is as follows.
00:08:20John.
00:08:20Professor.
00:08:21It's good to see you.
00:08:22And you, my lad, and you.
00:08:24There's the cozy little place you have here.
00:08:25Serves its purpose.
00:08:26Oh, uh, you remember Dr. Mears, by any chance?
00:08:29Mr. Lawrence has forgotten.
00:08:32I forgive him.
00:08:33I doubt if he ever expected to see my face again.
00:08:37Frankly, I hadn't given it much thought.
00:08:40John and I are starved.
00:08:42I suppose you and Dr. Mears have already eaten.
00:08:44Yes, we had a bite.
00:08:45Take him down into the kitchen, my dear, and fix yourself something.
00:08:48It's just a tiny place right underneath here, but home is where the pantry is.
00:08:52Isn't that so?
00:08:53That's right.
00:08:53Come along.
00:08:58Here, let us continue.
00:09:031950, is as follows.
00:09:07What I like and talent for cookery I make up in speed.
00:09:11But I really do brew a fine cup of tea.
00:09:13Well, I hope so.
00:09:15How many of these rooms are there?
00:09:17This one's mine.
00:09:19And there's another one under this.
00:09:20Dr. Mears occupies it.
00:09:21No thanks.
00:09:22You have some.
00:09:22Mm-hmm.
00:09:24Hey, uh, how on earth does he happen to be here?
00:09:27Oh, you know, Father, soft-hearted as a sponge.
00:09:30Mears dropped in on us, uh, two weeks ago.
00:09:32Pleaded he was ill and broke, and jolly well looked it, too.
00:09:35And because he was one of Father's old students.
00:09:38So he's here.
00:09:39Hmm.
00:09:40Just, uh, dropped in?
00:09:42Mm-hmm.
00:09:44People don't just drop in here, a place on the edge of the world.
00:09:47I heard he was somewhere in Scotland.
00:09:50He's been in seclusion since that trouble he got into.
00:09:52I feel sort of sorry for him.
00:09:54No, you needn't.
00:09:55He should have gotten 20 years.
00:09:57He did go to prison for a while, didn't he?
00:09:59I was just a kid then.
00:10:02I trust I'm not disturbing you, Mr. Lawrence.
00:10:05Professor Elliott would like to see you upstairs.
00:10:08You go ahead, John.
00:10:08I'll be up in a minute, soon as I put away these dishes.
00:10:11All right.
00:10:11I didn't interrupt you before you'd finished, did I?
00:10:29No, I was just having some tea.
00:10:30Where's Mears?
00:10:31Well, I thought he was behind me.
00:10:33Oh, must have gone to his room.
00:10:35I called you to take a look at our mysterious visitor
00:10:39before we lose her for the night.
00:10:40Good.
00:10:41Fog's rolling in off the moors.
00:10:45Go ahead, John.
00:10:57It's tripled in size.
00:11:00Grows larger, nightly.
00:11:01Well, what do you think, Professor?
00:11:10I think I'll just have to wait and see on the 17th.
00:11:29Stray dog.
00:11:31Here he plays these moors.
00:11:33They're wet, too.
00:11:35Yet they have a grim beauty of their own.
00:11:38That hot tea you drank should have warmed you nicely.
00:11:40Is that why the British drink so much of it?
00:11:42The climate?
00:11:43And because we like it.
00:11:45Hello, lightning.
00:11:46Storm brewing.
00:11:48I've heard that one may tell how distant a storm is
00:11:50by the number of seconds between the lightning and the thunder.
00:11:53True?
00:11:54Well, let's see.
00:11:55One, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight.
00:12:05Must be in Chicago.
00:12:06No thunder.
00:12:08No static electricity, maybe.
00:12:09This time of view?
00:12:11Say, how's the view from the top of the rise?
00:12:13Pretty, if there's anything to be seen.
00:12:15Well, I'm sure of that.
00:12:16The village is over there, but the fog's too thick.
00:12:28You'll have to take my word for the view.
00:12:30And I'll do that.
00:12:31And add three of my own.
00:12:34I like it.
00:12:37We'd better be getting back.
00:12:38Dad'll worry.
00:12:39I'll bet right now he doesn't know we're alive.
00:12:42And it's getting cold.
00:12:44I hadn't noticed.
00:12:46Well, which way?
00:12:48This.
00:12:49I think it's closer this way.
00:12:53Take it easy.
00:12:54What on earth is that?
00:13:02I don't know.
00:13:04If I were mechanically minded, I could probably tell you.
00:13:08What could it be?
00:13:11That, as we say back in the States, is the $64 question.
00:13:15Well, careful.
00:13:16It might explode or something.
00:13:17Oh, it's not a bomb.
00:13:19At least I don't think it is.
00:13:21Besides, what would a bomb be doing up here?
00:13:24Fell out of a plane?
00:13:26Do any ever fly across here?
00:13:29The only one that's been anywhere near here in the past six months
00:13:32must have been the one that set you off the breakwater this afternoon.
00:13:35Well, your father will probably be able to tell us what it is.
00:13:37Oh, you could never carry that back to the rock.
00:13:39It must...
00:13:40Nothing to it.
00:13:46The measurements are singularly precise.
00:13:49What is it?
00:13:51How does it operate if it does or has?
00:13:52Well, you ask more than I am prepared to answer.
00:13:56The theory might suggest that the inside is hollow.
00:13:58And it might have contained a propulsive element of some kind,
00:14:01a gas, perhaps.
00:14:02Look here.
00:14:04The metal is discolored, possibly from the generation of some terrific heat.
00:14:08It's fantastic.
00:14:10Professor, look.
00:14:13Interesting.
00:14:14That should work out at about one-fifth the specific gravity of steel.
00:14:17I mean, I could mean millions, millions, if that formula could be reproduced.
00:14:22Wait a minute.
00:14:23I don't know if I follow you.
00:14:24What do you mean if that formula could be reproduced?
00:14:26Where do you assume this came from?
00:14:28Well, my assumption may sound fantastic, may be fantastic for all I can say,
00:14:32but this object comes out of space?
00:14:36I could not deny the possibility.
00:14:39Do you realize what this metal could mean?
00:14:42It's harder than steel.
00:14:43It has tremendous tensile strength.
00:14:45And it weighs only a fifth as much as steel.
00:14:48The man who controls this formula controls the industry of the world.
00:14:54Before you start spending those millions, Doctor, consider a slight problem.
00:14:59What's that?
00:15:01If a professor's theory bears any fact,
00:15:04you're going to have a little difficulty mining that metal, don't you think?
00:15:07I was speaking metaphorically, of course.
00:15:10Now, you reassure me.
00:15:11Let us concentrate on this remarkable object.
00:15:14Father, it's quite late.
00:15:16The scale is delicate.
00:15:17It responds to a breath upon it.
00:15:19How long has it been since you're going to be here?
00:15:40How long has it been since you're going to be here?
00:15:45How long has it been since you slept?
00:15:47About 36 hours and 6,000 miles ago, I guess.
00:15:49Would you object to sharing a bed with Dr. Mears?
00:15:51Oh, no need to inflict myself on him.
00:15:53I noticed Nina at the village.
00:15:55Well, just for tonight.
00:15:57Tomorrow I'll make Dad get rid of Mears.
00:15:59Not on my account, please.
00:16:01On my own?
00:16:03Well, he upsets me.
00:16:05We can't have you getting upset.
00:16:07Can we?
00:16:09Where are you going?
00:16:11I'll drive you.
00:16:13See you tomorrow.
00:16:15Well, good night.
00:16:17Thanks a lot for everything.
00:16:19Drive carefully.
00:16:21Oh, I know every stone on the road.
00:16:23John.
00:16:25Yeah?
00:16:27It's nice having you here.
00:16:29Thanks.
00:16:31Good night.
00:16:33Good night.
00:16:35Good night.
00:16:37Good night.
00:16:39Good night.
00:16:41Good night.
00:16:43Good night.
00:16:45Good night.
00:16:47Good night.
00:16:49Good night.
00:16:51Good night.
00:16:53Good night.
00:16:55Good night.
00:16:57Good night.
00:16:59Good night.
00:17:01Good night.
00:17:03Good night.
00:17:05Good night.
00:17:07Good night.
00:17:09Good night.
00:17:10Confound the luck.
00:17:40THE END
00:18:10THE END
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00:20:18Yes, and I ran, really frightened, I guess,
00:20:24for the first time in my life.
00:20:30You're not going out there.
00:20:31I'd better take a look.
00:20:32You have a hot drink and get some sleep.
00:20:34I'll guide you.
00:20:35Now, my dear.
00:20:36Now, don't argue.
00:20:37I'm quite all right.
00:20:38It was just the first shock.
00:20:39Now, you've got me wondering just what I did see.
00:20:41I'm going with you.
00:20:42All right.
00:20:48This way.
00:21:07Where?
00:21:08Over the next drive.
00:21:18I don't see anything.
00:21:21I think it's straight ahead.
00:21:27Look.
00:21:34Quietly now.
00:21:48Goodbye.
00:21:50Oh, my God.
00:21:51Do it again...
00:21:52No!
00:21:53Let's take a look at it.
00:21:54Oh, who is the sky?
00:21:55Oh, my God.
00:21:56Oh, my God.
00:21:57I'm sorry.
00:21:58I'll do it again.
00:21:59You are right.
00:22:00I'm sorry.
00:22:01You're away there.
00:22:02No!
00:22:03To a point where I'm going from,
00:22:05on,لى.
00:22:06Oh, my God.
00:22:07Oh, my God.
00:22:08Oh, my God.
00:22:09I'm not!
00:22:11Oh, my God.
00:22:12Oh, my God.
00:22:13Oh, my God.
00:22:14Oh, my God.
00:22:15Oh, my God.
00:22:16Oh, my God.
00:22:47I can't see much.
00:23:11No face at least certain of that.
00:23:14What is it?
00:23:15Well, obviously a creation of science.
00:23:18That's beyond question.
00:23:20But manufactured by whom?
00:23:22And for what purpose?
00:23:23Careful, Bobby.
00:23:24Look, the light went out.
00:23:26The light went out.
00:23:33The light went out.
00:23:48Let's get away from here.
00:23:55We should have waited until daylight.
00:23:57It was senseless coming out here in the dark.
00:23:59I'm uncanny.
00:24:00Come on, Father.
00:24:01Get up, Father.
00:24:02Is anything the matter?
00:24:06Father, do you hear me?
00:24:07Hurry.
00:24:08Come on, hurry.
00:24:09Come on, hurry.
00:24:10Come on, hurry.
00:24:11Come on.
00:24:12It's uncanny. Come on, Father. Get up, Father. Is anything the matter?
00:24:21Father, do you hear me?
00:24:26Hurry. Come on. Hurry.
00:24:42Come on.
00:24:51Please, wait. Father, stop.
00:24:56Father?
00:25:00Don't stare at me.
00:25:07Come with me. Slowly.
00:25:12All I was capable of was obedience when I heard a command.
00:25:29It was a complete paralysis of the faculties other than blind slavish movement.
00:25:36Well, we seem to be confronted by a concrete menace.
00:25:39Willful. Hostile.
00:25:43Do you think...
00:25:44Could it possibly have something to do with that planet?
00:26:09Oh, I'm glad to see you.
00:26:13What's doing? I saw your car on the road. Is anything the matter?
00:26:14We've had a bad case of the jitters.
00:26:15But I shouldn't keep you out here on the doorstep. Come on in.
00:26:20Well, your theory, Professor, is that these singular occurrences are in some way connected with Planet X.
00:26:25Have you a better theory to offer?
00:26:26No, but, uh...
00:26:27You'll have to pardon me if it takes me a moment to get my bearings.
00:26:28What's going on?
00:26:29I'm glad to see you.
00:26:30I'm glad to see you.
00:26:31I'm glad to see you.
00:26:32I'm glad to see you.
00:26:33I'm glad to see you.
00:26:34What's doing? I saw your car on the road. Is anything the matter?
00:26:35We've had a bad case of the jitters.
00:26:36But I shouldn't keep you out here on the doorstep. Come on in.
00:26:39Well, your theory, Professor, is that these singular occurrences are in some way connected with Planet X.
00:26:45Have you a better theory to offer?
00:26:48No, but, uh...
00:26:50You'll have to pardon me if it takes me a moment to get my bearings.
00:26:54What do you think this is building up to?
00:26:56Well, I must confess I'm beyond my depth.
00:26:59We have but one theory to work on.
00:27:01In approximately 60 hours, the planet's orbit will bring it into its closest position to this world.
00:27:06And Burry will be the nearest spot on the Earth to the planet and whatever and whomever is upon it.
00:27:1360 hours.
00:27:16Don't you think we'd better notify the police?
00:27:18Well, what should we notify them all?
00:27:19Well, that ball out there, this gadget Enid and I found.
00:27:22And defeat everything that we've spent all these weeks in this forsaken spot to achieve, being overrun by the curious?
00:27:28Somebody's liable to run onto that thing out there.
00:27:31Oh, it isn't likely.
00:27:33This area of the Moors is checkered with marshes.
00:27:35Many a straying farm animal has been swallowed up.
00:27:38That place has a bad name.
00:27:40The natives keep their distance.
00:27:42Where's this ball now?
00:27:44I'll take you.
00:27:45You can see it from the edge of this rock.
00:27:50Look.
00:27:56No sign of glass.
00:27:58You know what that looks like to me?
00:28:03A big diving bell.
00:28:05Well, the only difference between water and space is a matter of density.
00:28:09Hmm.
00:28:10Yeah.
00:28:12It's pretty quiet now.
00:28:13Let's go down and take a look.
00:28:14Hmm.
00:28:15Let's go down and take a look.
00:28:16Hmm.
00:28:17Let's go down and get a look.
00:28:18No sign of milk.
00:28:19Let's go down and see it.
00:28:20Let's go down and see it.
00:28:21Let's go down and see it.
00:28:22Let's go down.
00:28:23Yeah, that everlasting fog, the mistake will slam it around here.
00:28:26Come on.
00:28:27Ah, that everlasting fog, the mistake put the climate around here.
00:28:40Come on.
00:28:57Glass?
00:29:12I wonder.
00:29:14Where's my wife's?
00:29:18Diamonds cut glass.
00:29:21Not a scratch.
00:29:23Glass and practically any other substance on earth.
00:29:26This must be tremendously resistant.
00:29:28I can't think of anything known to man equally so.
00:29:37And this you believe from out of space?
00:29:41What else?
00:29:51Well, what's the next step, Professor?
00:29:54Keep it carefully under observation until the 17th and find out whether it has any connection with what may or may not happen then.
00:30:01We better be getting back. We don't want to worry any too much.
00:30:04Quite right.
00:30:05The thing he's holding. Watch it. Don't move.
00:30:18If he doesn't take the idea and make a move for me, you run. Run as hard and as fast as you can and come back with help. Lots of it.
00:30:26Ever tried out running the speed of light? Well, here goes. This is a universal gesture. Maybe it'll work.
00:30:56What's the matter with him?
00:31:00Hear that hissing noise?
00:31:02Sounds like it's coming from that tank on his back.
00:31:05Probably filled with gas. Something like oxygen.
00:31:08Whatever it is, he's trying to regulate it.
00:31:11Seems as if he's trying to turn that knob to the right, but he doesn't have the strength or coordination.
00:31:15...
00:31:26...
00:31:31...
00:31:35...
00:31:36...
00:31:38...
00:31:39...
00:31:40Must have decided we're friendly natives.
00:31:48We've got to find some means of communication.
00:31:50He's capable of sound.
00:31:52It may be an attempt to communicate.
00:31:54It seems hopeless, though.
00:31:56Looks as if we're up against a blank wall.
00:31:59Well, let's beat it back to the brock.
00:32:00What, and leave him?
00:32:01The question is, will he let us?
00:32:04It's maddening.
00:32:05Here we have this astounding creature with his vast potential for fabulous knowledge to be given us.
00:32:10And we may only stand and stare at each other.
00:32:14Lawrence!
00:32:16Elliot!
00:32:17Oh, I'm getting primitive in my excitement.
00:32:21It's foolish of me.
00:32:22What about sign language?
00:32:24Shall I try it?
00:32:25Just don't alarm him.
00:32:34It's no use.
00:32:36Start backing up.
00:32:37If he makes a move for that thing in his holster, stop.
00:32:42All right.
00:32:43Back up.
00:32:57All right, now.
00:32:59On the double.
00:33:00What's the matter?
00:33:11Father!
00:33:12I'm all right.
00:33:14John, where have you been?
00:33:15I've been so...
00:33:20I've been too...
00:33:21I've been too...
00:33:22I've been too...
00:33:23I've been too...
00:33:23Any luck?
00:33:53Nothing works.
00:33:56He just keeps making that sound to everything we try to do.
00:33:59How is he in it?
00:34:00Did this sedative work?
00:34:01Yeah, she's asleep now.
00:34:03Good.
00:34:04We've got to reach him.
00:34:10You have found a means of communication, Doctor?
00:34:12Yes.
00:34:13What?
00:34:14The common denominator, Professor.
00:34:17The basic and universal language.
00:34:19Geometry.
00:34:20By George, Doctor.
00:34:21You've hit it.
00:34:22If anything should warrant success, this should.
00:34:24Excuse me, Professor.
00:34:26You've lost me.
00:34:28I'm the shadowy figure in the left background with a stupid expression on his face.
00:34:31I don't get this mathematics.
00:34:33Well, there may be no scientific achievement without mathematics.
00:34:36In itself, it's the purest language of science.
00:34:38Now, this creature represents an obviously superior race of beings where science is concerned.
00:34:44To be able to land on the Earth from a planet whose existence was previously unsuspected.
00:34:48Well, I'm up to you now.
00:34:50If there's anything our friend here should be able to understand, we might use as a bridge
00:34:54to reach him, it's this same basic language, geometry.
00:34:57Precisely.
00:34:58Professor, this is not an easy formula to devise.
00:35:01I understand, Doctor.
00:35:02You need undisturbed concentration.
00:35:04Let us know when you're ready.
00:35:05Come along, John.
00:35:06If you're leaving him alone, I presume your concern arises from fears for my safety, Mr.
00:35:12Lawrence.
00:35:13Spare yourself any anxiety.
00:35:16This creature is as intelligent as we.
00:35:19He knows that we are trying to find a mutual basis for understanding.
00:35:24I am quite safe.
00:35:25Mears is right.
00:35:26Come, John.
00:35:47I'll have the world in my pocket, with your help.
00:36:17Now, don't start fussing about me like that, my dear.
00:36:36Well, I have a little touch of the flu.
00:36:38It's nothing to get so overwrought about.
00:36:39Well, you're going to stay in bed.
00:36:41Look, now, here's a compromise.
00:36:42Suppose I pedal into the village to the drugstore and get some medicine that will, well, at least
00:36:46to alleviate the...
00:36:47Chemist in England.
00:36:48Chemist or drugstore.
00:36:49Anyway, I'll get something that'll knock this out.
00:36:51You stay in bed till I get back.
00:36:53Now, that creature downstairs...
00:36:56Oh, don't worry about him.
00:36:57I'll take a look at him.
00:36:58Well, I don't like leaving you here with...
00:37:00Well, I'll get back as fast as I can.
00:37:02Oh, wait.
00:37:03Here are the keys to the car.
00:37:04If you fix that tire, it'll save you a lot of time.
00:37:06Fine.
00:37:07And what's over here now?
00:37:18Oh.
00:37:19Morning, Constable.
00:37:20Isn't that Miss Elliot's car?
00:37:21Yes.
00:37:22Vesting her father.
00:37:23Ah.
00:37:24So you're the man from America.
00:37:25Yep.
00:37:26Folks be saying none's our way left with the brook.
00:37:29and nuns are away left with the problem.
00:37:32You're absolutely right.
00:37:33Mr. Ayn's doings at all time of the night.
00:37:36Naturally.
00:37:37Excuse me.
00:37:38Aye.
00:37:39Naturally, you say, Mon.
00:37:41Yeah.
00:37:42Professor Elliott hasn't touched the flu.
00:37:43Oh, I thought it was true.
00:37:45As a matter of fact, on the way in now to the chemist
00:37:48to get him some medicine.
00:37:49Aye.
00:37:50So, if you'll excuse me.
00:37:51This shall be my secret.
00:38:21To think a fantastic gnome like you had a hurdle
00:38:29out of space to put this power into my hands.
00:38:32Well, now that we've made contact, I'm going to tear out
00:38:42every secret you've got.
00:38:51We're going to ration this.
00:39:13And you're going to start earning it.
00:39:15Dr. Mears.
00:39:16Dr. Mears.
00:39:18What is it?
00:39:19My father would like to see you.
00:39:20What is it?
00:39:21My father would like to see you.
00:39:48He's resting.
00:40:00Were you able to communicate with him?
00:40:02No.
00:40:07It was a futile attempt.
00:40:09I couldn't make him understand me at all.
00:40:11I'm most disappointed.
00:40:13I had high hopes.
00:40:15Oh, I felt sure you were on the right track.
00:40:19Well, we'll have to try another method.
00:40:23How are you feeling?
00:40:26Everybody's so concerned about me.
00:40:30May I trouble you for a glass of water, please?
00:40:32Yes.
00:40:33I had.
00:40:37Let's go.
00:41:07Got the stuff.
00:41:16Should have you up and around in no time.
00:41:18Where's Enid?
00:41:19In the kitchen.
00:41:26Enid.
00:41:37Enid was gone.
00:41:47Had I sacrificed her just for a newspaper story?
00:41:50That was the thought which tormented me.
00:42:01She's nowhere around.
00:42:02The dungeon's empty.
00:42:03Empty?
00:42:04What happened after I left?
00:42:05Enid.
00:42:06He must have taken her with him.
00:42:07Come on.
00:42:08Where to?
00:42:09The sphere out on the moor.
00:42:10Where else would he take her?
00:42:11You got a gun, Professor?
00:42:12I have one.
00:42:13Well, bring it.
00:42:14Be careful, for heaven's sake.
00:42:15I'll go along with it.
00:42:16Now, wait a minute, Professor.
00:42:16Be sensible, please.
00:42:18You better stay in bed.
00:42:19We'll go out and reconnoiter and be back as soon as we can.
00:42:22Let's go.
00:42:23Well, the gun's in my room.
00:42:24I'll meet you out front.
00:42:27What did he do to him?
00:42:29Well, he was trying to establish communication.
00:42:31How?
00:42:32Well, yes, I know geometrically, but how else?
00:42:34Well, what do you mean?
00:42:35Well, did he abuse him, provoke him in any way?
00:42:37Well, there certainly wouldn't have been any sense in doing so.
00:42:40Well, I don't consider Mears a sensible man.
00:42:42He's an ambitious man, a brilliant man, an unscrupulous man, but certainly not a sensible one.
00:42:46But why should he be so foolish as to try to jeopardize him?
00:42:49Well, he may have to answer for that one of these days.
00:42:52Here.
00:42:53Directions are on the bottle.
00:42:54You better take it and stay in bed.
00:42:56You better take it and stay in bed.
00:43:05Anything?
00:43:06Not a sign.
00:43:07Nothing.
00:43:08We can't risk a move.
00:43:10Enid might be in there.
00:43:11What did you do to him back there in the dungeon?
00:43:14Do to him?
00:43:15Didn't do anything.
00:43:16Nothing at all.
00:43:17He showed a definite disposition toward friendliness when I left.
00:43:19Well, how can you talk of him as if he were a human being?
00:43:22How do we know what thought processes run through his head?
00:43:25How can we even assume that he thinks like we do?
00:43:28How can you anticipate what a fantastic organism like that might do or might not do?
00:43:32All right, all right.
00:43:33Stay here and I'll be back as soon as I can.
00:43:35If anything should happen to Enid, I'll never forgive myself.
00:43:47I should never have exposed it to this danger.
00:43:51I should never have exposed it.
00:44:05The night was haunted by terror and the sickening conviction that the man from Planet X had Enid powerless in his grasp.
00:44:17If she was to be saved, I had to think calmly.
00:44:21I checked off my resources.
00:44:23Help from the village?
00:44:25I dared not risk it with Enid a captive.
00:44:27The professor?
00:44:29Ill, helpless.
00:44:30Dr. Mears?
00:44:32Unstable, unpredictable.
00:44:33If I only were not so helpless before the voiceless threat of the unknown.
00:45:03Where was Enid and where was the man from Planet X?
00:45:33Good evening to you, sir.
00:45:40Good heavens, man.
00:45:41Don't you knock?
00:45:42I thought you heard us coming up the stairs.
00:45:43No, I didn't.
00:45:45I didn't mean to fright you, sir.
00:45:46What brings you here?
00:45:48They would like to speak with the professor.
00:45:50Well, he's sick.
00:45:51He's under a sedative.
00:45:52What do you want with him?
00:45:53It is a matter of considerable importance.
00:45:55Aye, Sandy Burns and Mike Lang have gone.
00:45:58Gone?
00:45:58Where?
00:45:59Why?
00:45:59Clarence vanished.
00:46:00And none can tell where.
00:46:02I don't get you.
00:46:04Gordy and me, we've been out to the moor searching for them.
00:46:07We dropped by here to look in on you.
00:46:09Well, you don't think I have your two villagers up here, do you?
00:46:12Each night they drove the sheep in from the moors.
00:46:15Last night they didn't come home.
00:46:17There are two of them.
00:46:18And what we want to know,
00:46:20is it any of your doing here at the barack?
00:46:22Up here?
00:46:23You'll never deny there's something very strange going on here.
00:46:27No.
00:46:29I won't deny it.
00:46:31Something strange has been going on.
00:46:32I was right.
00:46:33Boogie-doings.
00:46:35Aye, aye.
00:46:36No.
00:46:37What exactly is the nature of this?
00:46:40Miss Elliot has disappeared.
00:46:41I'm...
00:46:42No, she has no.
00:46:45Are you any idea as to where she could be?
00:46:46Yes, I have.
00:46:48But I can't tell you.
00:46:50Then do I know?
00:46:52You wouldn't believe me.
00:46:53I'll have to show you.
00:46:54Oh, show me, is it?
00:46:57I'll try to explain on the way
00:46:59if your friend will stay with the professor while we're gone.
00:47:03Well, all right.
00:47:06But there'd best be no monkey business of a foreign nature.
00:47:10I'll go with you.
00:47:12And Gordy?
00:47:13Aye, Tommy.
00:47:14If I'm not back in a reasonable time,
00:47:17call out the village.
00:47:18Aye.
00:47:18Boogie's work.
00:47:44Why are you neighboring such clapper, Clawen?
00:47:55That's why I'm going to show you.
00:47:56It's that sphere which brought him out of space.
00:47:59Go quietly now.
00:47:59It's just over the next rise.
00:48:01Aye, it's daft.
00:48:02You are completely flummoxed.
00:48:04Or it is some American joke.
00:48:06Look, I don't enjoy walking out on these cold moors.
00:48:08Professor Elliot hasn't been living in that boldy brock
00:48:10because he likes it.
00:48:11And his daughter hasn't disappeared.
00:48:12It's a joke.
00:48:14Aye.
00:48:15You make it sound very sober.
00:48:19It's a sorry part of the moors
00:48:20for honest men to be in.
00:48:22Come on, easy.
00:48:27Straight ahead now.
00:48:28Aye.
00:48:32I didn't see a thing.
00:48:33But this is the spot where I left Mears just a few hours ago.
00:48:36You'll tell me he's got a white, too.
00:48:39Mears.
00:48:42Mears.
00:48:50Give me a light.
00:48:51Aye.
00:48:55I didn't see a thing.
00:48:57There.
00:48:58There.
00:48:58You see where the brush is flattened?
00:49:00What's this?
00:49:02Mears' binoculars.
00:49:04Ah, come on.
00:49:05It must be I've been sampling too much of our good Scott whiskey.
00:49:08Finally, a pair of glasses and I mean all much.
00:49:10What about your two villagers have disappeared?
00:49:12Miss Elliot.
00:49:13And now Mears.
00:49:14Believe me, man, we're in trouble.
00:49:16We'll go back to the station house.
00:49:18I'll get out a search party.
00:49:20In the meanwhile, I'll keep me eyes on you.
00:49:21I don't care where you keep your eyes,
00:49:23provided you do something.
00:49:24Now, we'll go along with you.
00:49:27Tammy.
00:49:28How'd you found my mom?
00:49:30Was out on the morgue.
00:49:31Gave you any clue, constable.
00:49:33Nay, not.
00:49:37We're going to found a thing.
00:49:40But two more persons are missing.
00:49:43One is the old professor's daughter.
00:49:46The other is one of the men staying up to the block.
00:49:49But don't you worry.
00:49:51We'll find them for you.
00:49:53Nando.
00:49:53Aye.
00:49:54You go up one side of the village, knock on the doors.
00:49:57Andre.
00:49:57Aye.
00:49:57You go up to the other side.
00:49:59We'll have to search the more thorough.
00:50:01It'll take every man and body.
00:50:02Tell the men to bring what arms they have.
00:50:03Aye.
00:50:04Andre, Donald, you hear that?
00:50:05Aye.
00:50:05Get on with you, then.
00:50:08Gordy.
00:50:09What ails you, man?
00:50:11Act like you've seen a ghost or something.
00:50:12A ghost?
00:50:13No.
00:50:14Something of flesh and blood.
00:50:16Yet of neither.
00:50:18A horrible, monstrous creature
00:50:19with a hat as big as two men put together.
00:50:21A skin with the shine of a new shillin.
00:50:24And eyes that are no better than a dead codfish.
00:50:26Wait a minute.
00:50:27Where'd you see him?
00:50:27Why'd you leave the professor?
00:50:28I didn't leave him.
00:50:29He up and left me.
00:50:30What are you saying?
00:50:31I went to fill the water jug at the well.
00:50:33By the time I was coming back,
00:50:34the professor was walking into the fog
00:50:36with that friend of his who's been stopping with him.
00:50:37Dr. Mears?
00:50:38Aye, that's him.
00:50:39I heard him called by name.
00:50:40What happened?
00:50:41The professor's ill.
00:50:41The other one was helping them.
00:50:43They looked no better than a dead man himself
00:50:44with his glassy eyes.
00:50:46I was afraid.
00:50:47And I followed them.
00:50:50Then, then twas I saw it.
00:50:53It, it was, man.
00:50:54The boogie.
00:50:56Boogie.
00:50:57With the big head and the peculiar hump on his back,
00:51:00he stepped out of the fog a wee bit
00:51:02before the professor and his friend.
00:51:04And I didn't wait to see what else happened.
00:51:05I ran until I thought my heart would burst from my chest.
00:51:09All right, get back now.
00:51:09Get back.
00:51:11Well, Mr. Lawrence.
00:51:16What do you make of that?
00:51:18It's that creature from out of space.
00:51:20He's got Mears in his clutches
00:51:21and used him to get the professor into his hands.
00:51:23Chances are that's where you'll find the men
00:51:25from the village, too.
00:51:26Man from space?
00:51:28What clapper-claw is this?
00:51:29It is a fearsome visitor from another world.
00:51:37Is it complete depth, you are, constable?
00:51:49It is why the professor has been living up to the block
00:51:51to see what would happen
00:51:54when an unknown planet
00:51:56came close to the Earth
00:51:58on the night of the 17th.
00:52:00That's a few days from now.
00:52:02But why here on battery?
00:52:03Because the professor's calculations told him
00:52:05this would be the area of closest contact with the planet.
00:52:07But the boogie.
00:52:10Does any of them?
00:52:11We have every reason to believe it is.
00:52:12We've got to jump here.
00:52:14Here, here, here.
00:52:15Wait, Joe.
00:52:16Don't give way to Paris.
00:52:17The monsters and the children
00:52:19stay behind locked doors.
00:52:21You men!
00:52:27We'll be all over town in no time.
00:52:29We've got to get out on the moors.
00:52:31Man, you cannot get a loan out there tonight.
00:52:32Then we'll have to get help from the outside.
00:52:34Have you got a radio?
00:52:34Uh, I mean a wireless?
00:52:36Not for outside contact.
00:52:42Call London.
00:52:46Tell them what's happened here.
00:52:47And ask for help at once.
00:52:49Hello?
00:52:51Are you there?
00:52:53Hello?
00:52:54Hello there.
00:52:55It's dead.
00:52:56Now, let me try.
00:52:58Hello, operator?
00:53:00Operator.
00:53:00Hello, hello, hello.
00:53:02Have you had this trouble before?
00:53:04Only during climate disturbances and the like.
00:53:06There's no local exchange here, huh?
00:53:08It's over in the mainland.
00:53:08The wire goes across the bottom of the sea.
00:53:10Well, except for the fog,
00:53:11the weather isn't too bad.
00:53:13I can't understand it.
00:53:15Look, lend me your bicycle
00:53:16and I'll go back to the Brock.
00:53:18Maybe there I'll find something that,
00:53:19well, who knows.
00:53:20Just a fine risk you'd be running.
00:53:22It's better than hanging around here,
00:53:23just waiting.
00:53:25The bicycle's outside.
00:53:26Thanks.
00:53:27I'll be back in a few hours.
00:53:29You hang on that phone.
00:53:30Hey.
00:53:33Hello?
00:53:42You hang on that phone.
00:54:07These two must have undergone the same treatment.
00:54:18You mean they were often independent of their own inclinations and will?
00:54:21They were acting just like slaves, and seeking other villagers to be enslaved with them.
00:54:24But for what purpose?
00:54:25Can't you see, man? He's building an army.
00:54:27An army?
00:54:28And if he hasn't stopped, he'll have every man in this village to carry out his orders.
00:54:33Man, you take the taste of the tea right out of my mouth.
00:54:36You have any luck with the phone?
00:54:37Nothing but jangling and clangling and buzzing.
00:54:40Isn't there any way at all we can get word off this island?
00:54:42No, no, no.
00:54:44Except...
00:54:46What?
00:54:47What? Well, talk man!
00:54:48I was thinking perhaps heliograph.
00:54:51Well, try it at once.
00:54:53There's not enough sunlight to get to the nearest place.
00:54:56Well, there's enough to reach that boat out there.
00:54:59Hey, right there!
00:55:00Fast, fast, before it sails by.
00:55:01Right there.
00:55:06Hurry up.
00:55:07She'll be nosing into that fog bank in a few minutes.
00:55:09Aye.
00:55:15Emergency.
00:55:19Village.
00:55:21Terror stricken.
00:55:25Contact.
00:55:27Scotland Yard.
00:55:29There she's gone.
00:55:30Aye.
00:55:30Fog bank swallowed her up.
00:55:35Think they saw us?
00:55:37I cannot tell.
00:55:38And why did he let you know this time as well?
00:55:42Oh, look here, lad.
00:55:44Lam'em l'o.
00:55:45Lib'an l'o.
00:55:46There's no time for frags.
00:55:49Alad!
00:55:50North or wrong, Presti?
00:55:51What a boy need to hear.
00:55:52Let me lose!
00:55:53Oh, look here lad, let me go, this is no time for pranks.
00:55:57Oh lad, what's wrong with me?
00:56:01What a boy into ya! Let me lose!
00:56:23And I found it at the new location where he had moved it. It was being fortified.
00:56:51And I have no doubt that the men doing the job were the same ones who disappeared from the village.
00:56:55But I was too far away to recognize them.
00:56:58And I have some news for you two. Two more of the men of the village have been taken.
00:57:03How'd that happen?
00:57:04Young Wilkie and Bobby Harris. Young Wilkie went down to look at his cows.
00:57:08They hadn't been milked for two days. His sister said he left a little before sunrise.
00:57:12He didn't return. Bobby went down to look at his boat to see if it were up above the midnight tideline.
00:57:18He didn't return that.
00:57:20If the men left don't buckle down at the job, this is going to be a village of zombies.
00:57:23Oh, come on, you cannot get them off. It is the fear of the unknown that has frightened them.
00:57:27Even if they were willing to take to rest, their lasses would not let them.
00:57:30What are we going to do? Stand around here and let him send for us, too?
00:57:35Come. Come in.
00:57:39Gentlemen.
00:57:42Who are you?
00:57:43Are you in charge of this station, Constable?
00:57:45Aye.
00:57:46I am Inspector Porter.
00:57:47Inspector?
00:57:48This is Sergeant Ferris.
00:57:49Battle on Yard?
00:57:50Yes.
00:57:51Gentlemen, pardon me.
00:57:54Come in, Inspector. Come in. Sit, sit down.
00:57:58We were in Edinburgh. We received word from London.
00:58:01Our message did get through the ship's sauce.
00:58:03I...
00:58:04I understand a freight ship relayed to London by a wireless.
00:58:07A message she picked up while passing that was flashed by Heliobroff.
00:58:10I'm John Lawrence.
00:58:11Oh?
00:58:12American?
00:58:13Newspaper man. Affiliated press.
00:58:14How'd you get here?
00:58:15Small plane.
00:58:16Landed south of the village.
00:58:18Only field without boulders.
00:58:19Took us an hour to trudge here.
00:58:21You're a long way from home, Mr. Lawrence.
00:58:25What are you doing here in Burry?
00:58:27Sit down, Inspector. I'll try to tell you.
00:58:29Hey.
00:58:30Sit down.
00:58:36Just how do you expect to cope with this situation, Inspector?
00:58:39Well, from what I've been told, I see only one way.
00:58:43A detachment of the military.
00:58:45That creature won't be taken.
00:58:47He'll fight.
00:58:48And all those people he's captured will die with him.
00:58:50Besides, how'll you get the soldiers here? The telephone's out.
00:58:53Our plane has a wireless.
00:58:55There just might be another way.
00:58:58Oh?
00:58:59What's that?
00:59:00It's now 9.30.
00:59:02I'll give you one till 11 o'clock to try what you can.
00:59:05If you're not back by that time, we'll open fire.
00:59:09But you've got to at least give us time.
00:59:11By that time, your job must be finished.
00:59:13If it isn't, 11 o'clock, Mr. Lawrence.
00:59:18But everyone out there might be annihilated.
00:59:20Enid, the professor, the people from the village, Dr. Mears, everyone.
00:59:23Professor Elliot told you that planet would be within the Earth's gravitational orbit by midnight.
00:59:28The consequences of such an unparalleled proximity could be anything.
00:59:35None of us know what that enigma out on the moors might be planning.
00:59:40Aye, you're right.
00:59:41The professor's theory was invasion.
00:59:44We can't risk determining whether it has any fact.
00:59:47A planet of such size coming so close to ours might cause a disastrous atmospheric upheaval as well.
00:59:54Therefore, Mr. Lawrence, 11 o'clock.
00:59:57We dare not delay beyond that time.
01:00:00Do you understand?
01:00:01Yeah.
01:00:02Even then, we may be risking too much.
01:00:06All right.
01:00:0711 o'clock.
01:00:09The hour is near, and the man from planet X is waiting.
01:00:3211 o'clock.
01:00:56Be sure who's coming out of this fog before you start blasting, Inspector.
01:00:58I'll make certain.
01:00:59I, uh, I've written a story of what's happened here up to this minute.
01:01:03Can it depend on you to get into the right hands when security seems fit?
01:01:06I'll see that it reaches the proper hands.
01:01:08Thanks.
01:01:09Well.
01:01:10Good luck.
01:01:11Look out for yourself, Lonnie.
01:01:12Yeah, thanks.
01:01:28good luck.
01:01:29Sit.
01:01:31Look, what's going on Bill?
01:01:33I'm asking you.
01:01:38Are you all right?
01:01:41Oh, I'm sorry.
01:01:43I'm sorry.
01:01:44I'm sorry.
01:01:45What's wrong with you?
01:01:46I'm not a wrong person.
01:01:47I had to ask you all the time.
01:01:48I'm sorry.
01:01:49You're not a wrong person.
01:01:50I'm sorry.
01:01:51You're a wrong person.
01:01:52You're a wrong person.
01:01:53You're a wrong person.
01:01:54You're a wrong person.
01:01:55I'm sorry.
01:01:56I'm sorry.
01:01:57Where's Enid?
01:01:59Where's Enid?
01:02:01Inside.
01:02:03What did Mears tell you when he came back to the brock?
01:02:05He told me Enid had escaped and sent for me.
01:02:09Listen to me, professor.
01:02:11Climb over this embankment.
01:02:13Very quietly.
01:02:15And walk straight ahead.
01:02:17Climb over this embankment.
01:02:21Walk.
01:02:23Straight ahead.
01:02:27Mears.
01:02:31Talk to Mears.
01:02:33Come here.
01:02:39Neil.
01:02:41You're able to communicate with the creature, isn't that right?
01:02:53Yes.
01:02:54You found out how to do it in the dungeon bag at the brock.
01:02:56That's all?
01:02:58Yes.
01:02:59What's he doing now?
01:03:00What's his appearance here mean?
01:03:02He's establishing a wireless directional beam to his planet.
01:03:06At midnight, when the planet is at its closest approach to Earth, an invasion will be launched.
01:03:12Why?
01:03:13Why?
01:03:14Why?
01:03:15It comes from a planet that's dying.
01:03:16It's turning to ice.
01:03:18If his people do not escape from the planet before it swings back along its route through space, they will be doomed.
01:03:24How'd they get so close to Earth?
01:03:26They managed to make the planet deviate from its natural orbit by scientific degravitation.
01:03:32What was that object Enid and I found on the moors?
01:03:36It was a magnetically powered range finder used to determine the composition of the Earth's atmosphere.
01:03:42It was sent out in advance of the spaceship for experimental purposes.
01:03:46And how does he keep you a slave to his will?
01:03:50By exposing us to a ray.
01:03:53He exposes us to it every few hours.
01:03:56Wait here.
01:04:04Men, stop at work.
01:04:07Walk straight ahead.
01:04:08Walk.
01:04:09Walk.
01:04:37Walk.
01:04:38Walk.
01:04:39Walk.
01:04:40Walk.
01:04:41Walk.
01:04:42Walk.
01:04:43Walk.
01:04:44Walk.
01:04:45Walk.
01:04:46Walk.
01:04:47Walk.
01:04:48Walk.
01:04:49Walk.
01:04:50Walk.
01:04:51Walk.
01:04:52Walk.
01:04:53Walk.
01:04:54Walk.
01:04:55Walk.
01:04:56Walk.
01:04:57Walk.
01:04:58Walk.
01:04:59Walk.
01:05:00Walk.
01:05:01Walk.
01:05:02Walk.
01:05:03Walk.
01:05:04Walk.
01:05:05Walk.
01:05:06Let's go.
01:05:36Enid, Enid, come out of there, mirrors, stand up, up, run, over this wall, come down.
01:06:04Darling, it's me, John.
01:06:08Come on, we must hurry.
01:06:15There's something out there.
01:06:17It's the professor.
01:06:21Oh, it's glad I am to see you, sir.
01:06:24Glad I am indeed.
01:06:26Where are you going?
01:06:27Stop now.
01:06:28Gladys, help him sit down.
01:06:32Come along, professor.
01:06:34Come along.
01:06:39That's it, man.
01:06:40Sit down here.
01:06:44That's right, professor.
01:06:45That's right.
01:06:45Let's go.
01:07:15Ten-fifty-nine.
01:07:39Get going!
01:07:40No, they can't destroy him.
01:07:46They mustn't.
01:07:51Mears, come back!
01:07:54Fire!
01:07:59Fire!
01:08:00Fire!
01:08:00Fire!
01:08:01Fire!
01:08:02Fire!
01:08:03Fire!
01:08:04Fire!
01:08:05Force!
01:08:06Fire!
01:08:13Fire!
01:08:17Fire!
01:08:24Force!
01:08:29Fire!
01:08:31The planet.
01:09:01You're going back with Inspector Porter and his plane?
01:09:23Yep.
01:09:24Well, this time tomorrow afternoon, we'll be far out over the ocean, going home.
01:09:29Mm-hmm.
01:09:32I'll miss you.
01:09:35Your father tells me you're coming to California, so he can confer with Dr. Blaine.
01:09:38Mm-hmm.
01:09:39Soon.
01:09:40Of course.
01:09:42Is it true that no one will ever know what happened here?
01:09:47Knowledge would only bring more fear in a world already filled with it.
01:09:50Can such a thing be kept a secret?
01:09:52No.
01:09:53No, but it can be reduced to gossip.
01:09:57You know, I think that creature was friendly.
01:10:01I wonder what would have happened if Dr. Mears hadn't frightened him.
01:10:06Who knows?
01:10:08Perhaps the greatest curse to ever befall the world, or perhaps the greatest blessing.
01:10:15Nothing but the greatest curse to ever be.
01:10:16No.
01:10:17No.
01:10:18No.
01:10:19No.
01:10:20No.
01:10:21No.
01:10:22No.
01:10:23No.
01:10:24No.
01:10:25No.
01:10:26No.
01:10:27No.
01:10:28No.
01:10:29No.
01:10:30No.
01:10:31No.
01:10:32No.
01:10:33No.

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