- yesterday
FULL MOVIES ENGLISH SUB
Follow our telegram group to get the latest movie updates
https://t.me/dramakong
Follow our telegram group to get the latest movie updates
https://t.me/dramakong
Category
😹
FunTranscript
00:00Here's to Joe Starlin's next stroke.
00:09Tinkety-tongue.
00:14Who was he?
00:15Victor.
00:16Paul.
00:17Met him before an air raid.
00:18Forty-one.
00:19It is true.
00:20I switched the glasses.
00:21He drank the poison meant for one of us.
00:23Nafia and Ruhia.
00:25We'd be ever so grateful if you'd just keep an eye on them.
00:29This was the third attempt on our life since we left New York.
00:32The first thing you must do is arrest a cocktail waiter.
00:35And you must bring in any others on the staff.
00:38Do you have a reservation?
00:40No, my wife does.
00:42Your wife?
00:46Time for a little chat.
00:47What does Jack know?
00:49My wife and I have an arrangement, as I knew his late father.
00:53Nothing more.
00:54And should we trust you?
00:56Well, I suppose you'll find out.
00:59When the next assassin comes.
01:00Hello again.
01:01Hello.
01:02Fizz.
01:03For them, I presume.
01:04Who is it?
01:05It's me.
01:06Hello again.
01:07Hello.
01:08Fizz.
01:09For them, I presume.
01:10Who is it?
01:11It's me.
01:12Who is it?
01:13It's me.
01:14Who is it?
01:15It's me.
01:16Hello again.
01:17Hello.
01:18Hello.
01:19Fizz.
01:20For them, I presume.
01:21Who is it?
01:22It's me.
01:23Champagne?
01:25I could put a resolution
01:52I can put a seat, huh?
01:54We will.
01:58Through here.
02:01We did not order champagne.
02:07Through here.
02:08Oh, my face!
02:22You're here, I'm hit!
02:23Easy!
02:24Easy, it's your turn!
02:31I'm here, I'm here, I'm here, I'm here, I'm here, I'm here, I'm here.
02:38Well, let's all calm down, should we?
03:08GoalVets.
03:12I'm here, I'm here.
03:20I'm here.
03:28Rudy, my elbow hurts.
03:57You okay?
03:58You shot her.
03:59You bloody Carpathian lunatic.
04:01I thought you had the gun.
04:02It was a champagne bottle.
04:04Oh God.
04:07Am I gonna die?
04:09It's just the greys.
04:10Luckily for you, your royal highness.
04:12This is a very, very regrettable incident, miss.
04:15Edie Rattle.
04:16Miss Edie, we live under the constant threat of assassination.
04:20The black mantle of death hovers over us like the London fog.
04:23Sometimes we make mistakes out of fear.
04:26You must forgive us.
04:27Oh, you shouldn't forgive them.
04:28You should press charges.
04:29Don't tell me what to do, okay?
04:31I've had enough of it.
04:32I've simply had enough of it.
04:34We understand, dear.
04:35Do you?
04:36Because I've descended the ship that started with the pass and ended with me getting fired.
04:40Fired?
04:41You haven't handed my cards, haven't I?
04:43What?
04:44Why?
04:45What for?
04:46Because someone sabotaged the boilers, tipped linseed oil into them.
04:49Yeah, but why would they think that that's you?
04:51Because I have a motive.
04:52Mr. Klein gave me a mouthful for standing up to that bastard.
04:55And now I've been shot, really shot.
04:58What's that?
04:59Morphine tartrate.
05:00I'm not going to have you jabbing me like a bloody pincushion.
05:03It will ease your pain.
05:04Oh, Liv.
05:05And if you do think that I'm just going to hop on the night bus and say, oh, it must be
05:09beastly that your country hates your guts and you're forced to slum it out here in the
05:12walls.
05:13Well, think again, ladies.
05:14No wonder you're so nervous around the working classes.
05:17You've done a lot to be.
05:19I'll have that morphine now.
05:24Ow.
05:27So, dear Rattle, what do you suggest?
05:31I'll stay here tonight in the royal suite.
05:33There are only two beds.
05:35Then I'll have the biggest and I'll have breakfast in it.
05:37I think that's a very modest demand considering the bullets in the wall.
05:41I know the importance of the rules of hospitality in your country.
05:44I've been reading up on them.
05:45That's right, Mr. Book.
05:47At home, we are obliged to take in those who need shelter.
05:50During the war, many British officers were parachuted into our territory.
05:54None were betrayed.
05:57I'll sleep on the sofa.
06:00Right.
06:01Now what you want to use, lend me your toothbrush.
06:11I'll get someone to come and have a look at this.
06:16It's good to see you, Jack.
06:30We lost him.
06:31We never really knew him.
06:33Of course, it was impossible to predict how he'd react.
06:36But I was hoping for...
06:37Sympathy.
06:38Understanding.
06:40That's just the way it is with some people.
06:43They get down on a thing when they don't know nothing about it.
06:47Huckleberry Finn?
06:48Top marks.
06:49You can sleep on the left.
06:51I like that, Edie.
06:53She's sharp.
06:54Sharp as her nibs.
06:55The princess.
06:58Busy day tomorrow.
06:59Bliss has arrested Ghazili.
07:02Oh?
07:03It's a mistake.
07:04So I suspect I'll spend the morning showing him why.
07:07Clever clogs.
07:08If the shoe fits.
07:10Oh, it's the Dynaric Alps, by the way.
07:12Eh?
07:13It's the Dynaric Alps, my love.
07:15Not the Carpathians.
07:16As I said.
07:18Clever clogs.
07:29Book.
07:30This way, Mr. Dilley.
07:31The inspector is ready to see you now.
07:32Oh, 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, no, no.
07:48Finish with that mug, Sergeant.
07:49Bagged and labeled, sir.
07:50We're ready to see you now.
07:51Oh, 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.
07:53Finish with that mug, Sergeant.
08:15Bagged and labeled, sir.
08:17We'll return it in due course.
08:19Take a seat.
08:23Are you gonna charge me?
08:26Oh, there's plenty of time for that.
08:28I've said it already.
08:30It's in my statement.
08:31Oh.
08:32Just one thing before we start.
08:34Uh, Mr. Book here will be joining us.
08:37He's a specialist.
08:38Mr. Gazzilli, it's very important that you use this interview to tell us the truth.
08:42Because if you don't, I can't be held accountable for the consequences.
08:47We know about your affair with Edie Rattle.
08:50She's given us a statement.
08:51And in doing so, has given us a possible motive.
08:54A reason for you to kill Captain Orr.
08:57Because he made a pass at Edie.
09:00It must happen like three times a day.
09:04What business are you in exactly?
09:06The antiquarian book business.
09:09I've read the Canoon of Scutari.
09:12Have you?
09:13I know it.
09:14Live by it?
09:16It was very important in my village.
09:20Let's start then.
09:22If I said we were going to give you the third degree, what would you expect?
09:26Kicking out by the bins?
09:27Snake in the grass.
09:28What did you say?
09:29Forget the third degree.
09:30Snake in the grass.
09:31Come on, I'm waiting.
09:36Vodka.
09:37At last.
09:40Creme de menthe.
09:41Lime juice.
09:42Lemonade.
09:43Where's my ice?
09:44It went in first.
09:45Are you shaking this drink?
09:48Come on, come on, Mr. Ghazili.
09:49This is the waltzing.
09:50Am I shaking this drink?
09:51I'm stirring it.
09:52I'm stirring it.
09:53Atta boy.
09:54Atta boy.
09:55I know that.
09:57French vermouth.
09:58Dry gin.
09:59Grenadine.
10:00Four dashes.
10:01Shaken.
10:02And what would you put in a pansy?
10:07Pansy pansy pansy.
10:08Um, uh, understood?
10:09No, no, no, Mr. Ghazili.
10:12Look, I'm still on probation.
10:13I'm not an expert.
10:14I'd say you're not.
10:16But nor are you a murderer.
10:18Well, what makes you say that?
10:20Because he left a dirty great fingerprint on the upper part of one of those glasses.
10:25And a good cocktail waiter, as well as knowing how to mix a third degree, always handles a rock glass lower down.
10:35You made the drink for the captain, which was when you left your fingerprint on his glass.
10:39But the drink was not deadly.
10:41I'm sorry if this sounds insulting, Mr. Ghazili.
10:44But you have yet to acquire the skill to poison anyone in a crowded bar in plain sight.
10:50Particularly with just a few seconds between the inciting incident and the crime.
10:54But I'm sure you'll get there.
10:56In fact, I'd go so far as to say you were already a model employee.
11:01You're going to write me a reference now, are you?
11:03Why not?
11:05How long have the princesses been in the hotel?
11:07Four days.
11:08And you'd already noticed they always reject the first drink.
11:11So you made it out of tap water.
11:15Yes, some employers would promote a member of staff so concerned about wastage.
11:25Well, Mr. Ghazili.
11:28Seems like you can go and collect your things.
11:32Our friend here is checking out.
11:34Sergeant Morris.
11:35Very good, sir.
11:38Well, now what?
11:48Anyone could have got that hydrochloric acid into the drink.
11:51And Ghazili was too clumsy to have done it.
11:55As I discovered late last night, the Canoon of Scutari has very strict rules about hospitality.
12:00It's taboo to harm anyone you consider your guest.
12:04Captain Orr was Ghazili's guest, strictly speaking, and the Canoon is very strict.
12:10Did it tell you anything else useful?
12:12Oh, yes.
12:13Insult my wife in front of the headmen of the village and you owe me a sheep.
12:19If my wife insults you, I owe you five.
12:22Are you five?
12:26Well, I find it's usually best if people are just wanting to look nice to each other.
12:30molecular medications.
12:31Huh, no, no.
12:32No, no.
12:33No, no, no.
12:34It's actually a few years old.
12:35I am injured.
12:36I am injured.
12:37I am injured in the woods.
12:38It's really a few years old.
12:40What's the problem?
12:41I think you can look back on the road.
12:43You can't look back on the road, but I love that.
12:45But in the world, I think I am소리�
12:54You were not in the army, were you?
13:14You know where I was.
13:15Well, no matter. Straight in your spine, perhaps?
13:18Eh, at the palace a line of soldiers could salute us just on our way into breakfast.
13:23Oh, look at you. How the mighty have fallen.
13:26And back then we weren't always looking over our shoulders.
13:30We were at home with our own people.
13:32You, boy. You must fetch the inspector.
13:35Why? What's happened?
13:35Another threatening letter.
13:43No, no.
13:44They are always here.
13:48Well, you've done all right.
13:49They ordered in. No less than I deserve.
13:52Sure enough.
13:54Balkan mix, apparently.
13:56Nice.
13:57See those little girl rings at the end there?
13:59I'm a capstan man myself.
14:01Weren't you supposed to bring me for that Bovril?
14:04Well, I thought you had everything you needed here.
14:08It's a bit rich for my blood.
14:10So where was Miss E.D. Rattle when the murder took place?
14:20Uh, having a woodbine outside, according to her state.
14:22Having already administered the poison?
14:24Meant for the princesses.
14:26According to my intelligence sources, she's a fully paid-up party member.
14:31Communist.
14:32Red as Lenin's combinations.
14:33What? So she might have wanted them dead?
14:36On behalf of the new ruling class of Scutari.
14:40Then there's the other sister, of course.
14:43Other sister?
14:44Oh, yes.
14:45There are three of them, Inspector.
14:48Three sisters.
14:49The kingdom divided.
14:54Exiled monarchs, I wonder.
14:58Anyway, Princess Sunia went over to the other side.
15:02So it could be her striking the blow for the work.
15:04It's by assassinating her siblings.
15:06This is where we should be looking.
15:08In my opinion.
15:10Sir.
15:15Oh, yes.
15:16Like the ladies, didn't he, Captain Hall?
15:20That's not how I would have put it.
15:23Still, at least we have his home number now.
15:27No?
15:27No.
15:28Yes, this must be his wife, Sylvia.
15:30What do you know?
15:31She's the only one without a star rating.
15:35Oh.
15:35Yeah, well, there's another familiar name in there, too.
15:40Oh.
15:41As you say, sir.
15:42Oh.
15:43And Barberini, 2nd of May, 1940.
15:46Ascot Racecourse.
15:47Four stars, passionate Italian.
15:49So it's crossed out.
15:50It's still legible.
15:53What do you mean?
15:54Obvious, isn't it?
15:55Captain Hall didn't just like the ladies.
15:57He was a bit...
15:58queer.
16:00What?
16:01You mean...
16:02He travelled, as it were, on the 38 bus and the 43.
16:06He met that Italian barman at the races and had relations.
16:10It's all there in black and white.
16:12Met at the races, eh?
16:13Ascot Racecourse.
16:14There is entry after entry.
16:16What motive?
16:17Blackmail.
16:18Obviously.
16:19Captain Hall threatened to expose Barberini.
16:21Captain Hall's a married man.
16:23It's all a bit...
16:25It's a bit far-fetched.
16:26You never know with married men, sir.
16:28What's your great theory, then?
16:33That we'll be telling, Sergeant.
16:36But speaking of Mrs. Orr, I do think someone should talk to her soon.
16:41I'll ask Trotty, if I may.
16:43Wives always know.
16:45Whatever husbands think.
16:47Message from that lad, Jack, sir.
16:49Princesses are requesting another audience.
16:59A Winston Churchill mask.
17:01No.
17:02An Auria flying helmet.
17:04A piccadilly jar filled entirely with toenail clippings.
17:08Oh.
17:09Yeah.
17:10It's not for the faint of heart.
17:12The life of a chambermaid.
17:14But my dad ran a pub in Bala, so...
17:17I've seen it all.
17:21And what about the murder?
17:23I know.
17:24I was outside, you see.
17:26You can't pin Victor or on me.
17:28I know.
17:28I wasn't trying to.
17:29Honest.
17:31Pity I wasn't there, though.
17:33I would have liked to see that one go down.
17:35As you were saying, you got out of the clink, and then you went to work in a bookshop.
17:43Yeah.
17:44For Mr. Book.
17:46Yeah.
17:47And now you're working for the Scatari royal family.
17:51Not for much longer, I don't reckon.
17:54I ain't much cop as a bodyguard.
17:58Got anything by marks?
18:00Eh?
18:01In your bookshop.
18:02Das Kapital.
18:07Volume 4.
18:08Now you're talking.
18:09Hmm.
18:11So why'd you leave?
18:12I just don't think they're my sort of people.
18:15No?
18:16Takes all sorts, you know.
18:19As I say.
18:20The things I've seen in the Welsingham.
18:24Maybe it's time you expanded your horizons a bit, Sunshine.
18:28Let me know if you fancy that, Bob Rale, sometime, yeah?
18:30Yeah.
18:32So-called princesses.
18:55My gourd rises as I see you in the newspaper.
19:01Decadent bones draped in Madame de Baviers, which will soon drip with your filthy blood.
19:09Yes, I can see why you might feel discomfited.
19:11So, what will you do about it?
19:15My dear lady, why-
19:16You will address me by my proper title.
19:18Do forgive the inspector, your royal highness.
19:20The policeman is often a blunt tool rather than a diplomat.
19:24Perhaps I might-
19:24As I have said, this is the latest of many, dripping with venom.
19:31Our enemies, they're a legion.
19:33Can they not let us rest?
19:34Is it not enough that we are forced to drag our weary bones around the world like phantoms?
19:40You speak of the canoe, of hospitality, but what are we to make of yours?
19:47What welcome do we receive in your famous London?
19:51Wretched food, wretched cold, a bodyguard who fails to guard.
19:55And now, this.
19:56I'll do what I can, given my limited resources.
20:26I'll do what I can, given my limited resources.
20:56Yes, of course, and we're terribly sorry.
21:06Well, if that's the best you can do.
21:11Oh, Miss Raffle.
21:13Yes, Mr. Kind?
21:15I heard about the unfortunate incident.
21:18That's one way of describing it.
21:20I'm okay, but I think I might indulge myself a bit more in the cream of society.
21:28As I've been fired, I can use the hotel as a guest instead.
21:31Meaning?
21:33Their Royal Highnesses.
21:34I'm to put everything in their account.
21:36Oh, don't spend too much.
21:38What?
21:39Nothing.
21:39Um, Miss Rattle.
21:40Yes?
21:41Would you kindly come and see me after you've indulged yourself?
21:45Okay, Mr. Kind.
21:55E.D., can we talk?
21:59I do want to apologize for the quality of the service today.
22:03The heating is off, the menu is cold.
22:06I'm deeply sorry.
22:07Ismail, none of that is your fault.
22:11Yeah, I'm afraid it is.
22:13It was caused by the three bottles of linseed oil that I stole from your cupboard.
22:18But linseed oil is for polishing.
22:21I use it for my new old posts and my dados.
22:24Yes, I know.
22:25But I poured it into the generator.
22:28I didn't poison Victor OED, but I did poison the hotel.
22:32I was so angry.
22:35With myself, with that man, with this place.
22:40So I just thought I'd kill it.
22:43I'm deeply sorry.
22:45I shall confess everything to Mr. Kind, and you will not lose your job, E.D.
23:02You will not lose your job, E.D., and you will not lose your job, E.D.
23:32You will not lose your job, E.D., and you will not lose your job, E.D., and you will not lose your job, E.D.
24:02E.D.
24:09You.
24:11Me.
24:15This isn't easy for me, as I'm sure you can imagine.
24:18Of course.
24:20You've just lost your husband.
24:22That boat sailed a long time ago, Mrs. Book.
24:25And you're not the first of Victor's conquests to telephone.
24:28If it makes it any easier, and you didn't, then what?
24:38Conquer.
24:38I used to come here all the time, you know, to watch you with the latest model.
24:54Madam?
24:54You've read it.
25:07Does he want self-hear assessed like livestock?
25:13Do you think he got what he deserved?
25:15Well, not quite, but, uh...
25:19I mean, what a peak he was.
25:23Do you know, I'd think better of him if it was a real diary.
25:28Something with a bit of proper, adulterous passion.
25:30Don't worry, my dear, I didn't really blame you.
25:37I mean, Victor had charm to spare in his day.
25:41And I grew used to his adventures.
25:46Numb to them.
25:48So used to them, it became a sort of hobby.
25:51Did that sound strange?
25:56My marriage grew cold.
25:58Or my life grew cold.
26:01I don't really think I've felt anything since Dunkirk.
26:07So I'd come here.
26:10Where there was light and laughter.
26:13Usually.
26:16Did you not worry that he, uh, might see you?
26:21Victor hadn't noticed me in years.
26:25There was no reason to think he'd start now.
26:29Is that how you were able to?
26:34What?
26:37The poison.
26:40I mean, you were there.
26:41You-you handed me that cloth.
26:43It would have been easy for you to administer it.
26:46I didn't kill my husband, Mrs. Book.
26:49I pitied Victor.
26:52Didn't despise him.
26:54Then who did?
27:01How was this war?
27:04He did his service in Cairo.
27:06And a stint in the Balkans.
27:09The Balkans?
27:10And before that, he was here.
27:15The home front.
27:16Whereabouts?
27:19Ascot.
27:19Ah, it is you.
27:38Would it be-
27:38What does that say?
27:43Death to parasites.
27:44Thank you for coming.
27:56Everything's off.
27:57Kippers, kidneys, Kedgeri.
28:00And the radiators.
28:01They're definitely off.
28:02Oh.
28:04There's a selection of cold meat.
28:07Splendid.
28:07Well, two of those then.
28:08Please wait on.
28:09Do make sure they're properly cold.
28:11I have whoring consistency.
28:13Sir?
28:13The service.
28:14It is appalling.
28:15Well, call me Marie Antoinette.
28:17But I was expecting the lavatories to flush.
28:20Still, the heating did come on for half an hour.
28:22That was nice.
28:22You said it was urgent, Mr. Book.
28:25In a way, yes.
28:26Are you any closer?
28:27Closer.
28:28To finding out who tried to murder us?
28:30No one tried to murder you.
28:33But the letters.
28:35The threads.
28:36You said those.
28:37What?
28:42You're mad.
28:43How dare you?
28:44Do sit down, princess.
28:46The very idea that I...
28:47I said sit down.
28:50I may be more of a diplomat than the inspector.
28:53There's only so much of this exhausting auteur I can stand.
28:58When did you start?
29:00Sending the letters.
29:02Not right away, I imagine.
29:04For a while it was real.
29:05When we fled our country, there were eyes everywhere.
29:12We feared to eat or drink.
29:15We lived day by day.
29:16Shoveed into stinking cellars.
29:19A hold of filthy ships.
29:22But the threat was real, Mr. Book.
29:25In New York, we were fated.
29:27They love royalty there, as you know, precisely because they have none of their own.
29:31We were invited to all the right parties, met all the right people.
29:36But there is nothing more tragic than exile, Mr. Book.
29:41And nothing more pathetic.
29:44After a time, the invitations dried up, the parade moved on.
29:49And I realized that we had gone from being in danger to something far, far worse.
29:56We had become irrelevant.
29:59What did the New Rezim and Scutari have to fear from us?
30:05Why would they send assassins halfway across the globe to make a way with us?
30:10Why would anyone bother?
30:14But there is glamour in death.
30:16In danger.
30:17And so I began to write all those letters.
30:22Both to us and to the authorities of whichever poor nation we were imposing ourselves upon.
30:28I pay a woman here a modest fee to skulk around the hotel, dropping them off now and then.
30:33Some suspected your other sister might be behind those.
30:38She's dead, Mr. Book.
30:41I saw her shot in the face.
30:43The communists never really trusted her.
30:53And I will not lose another sister.
30:58But then there was an actual poisoning.
31:00I didn't know what to think.
31:02Nafiyya swapped the glasses as always and then that man, that captain, lying dead at her feet.
31:10My mind, it raced.
31:11Had it all become real?
31:16But what else could I do but continue as planned?
31:19It was very well done.
31:23At last, though, the impression of your sister's pen nibs is very distinctive.
31:27Indeed?
31:29Music nib.
31:31Narrow downstrokes, broad crossstrokes for writing musical notation.
31:35Ah.
31:35And she's composing those rather sad and lovely little tunes of hers.
31:39And the references to your wardrobe, too.
31:42Rather specific for a desperate communist assassin.
31:45Oh, I couldn't help myself.
31:49So, does this mean, then, that...
31:51Captain Orr was the intended victim.
31:54So, I have to ask, Mr. Book, in the spirit of your British stories, who done it?
32:04Well, that is the question, dear lady.
32:07Well, that is the question, dear lady.
32:37I'm not really a fan of this sort of thing.
32:39Redolent of the kind of thriller one finds in W.H. Smith.
32:43However, sometimes it really is best to gather everyone together.
32:47Unity of place and all that.
32:49So, on the night of the murder, Mr. Gazealy here set up a first round of two drinks.
32:55Yes.
32:55Which is rejected by the princesses and goes down the sink.
32:59Now we come to the brouhaha.
33:01And a new character enters our drama.
33:04Captain Victor Orr.
33:05Kindly represented here by Mr. Kind.
33:09In you come, Miss Rattle.
33:10Tell us what happened next.
33:12Well, there's Captain Watsit soaked in tavern.
33:15And he's telling me he has some extra duties for me.
33:19Which seem to involve me going to his room and leaving with some money.
33:23So, I decline, of course.
33:25And I'm looking over at Ismael.
33:28I'm looking at him because, well, I think he might help me out.
33:32Do the decent.
33:33And he doesn't.
33:35What happens next, Evie?
33:37Well, I'm thinking, is the captain going to hit me?
33:39So, I tell him where to get off.
33:41And then he says something.
33:44I know some threat or other.
33:45I wasn't listening.
33:47And that's when Jack here came to my rescue.
33:50And then I went outside for a smoke.
33:52Thank you, Miss Rattle.
33:53So, Mr. Gazealy then sets up two more glasses for a new round.
33:59Four Walsingham sours.
34:03In total.
34:06Three good ones.
34:11And one, as we shall see, about to have an extra ingredient.
34:14But when precisely did one of these drinks get a dash of hydrochloric acid?
34:19Princess Nefie, you tell us that you switched two of these glasses around.
34:24Which two?
34:25Like this, Mr. Book.
34:27One of ours.
34:28Four, one of theirs.
34:30Very good.
34:31But you're not drinking yet, are you?
34:32Because you want to see someone else drink first.
34:35Which is only prudent, only sensible when there are so many assassins about.
34:39So, you have to wait a little while longer until the distraction is over.
34:44And this is the Russian roulette moment now, is it?
34:46This was not a casual murder.
34:50It was very carefully thought through.
34:52Now, we know the poison was not in Mr. Gazealy's shaker.
34:55We know that Princess Nefie deserves no reproaches.
34:58All Your Royal Highness did was switch one perfectly safe and effective Walsingham sours for another.
35:04In fact, I would suggest that none of these drinks would have produced anything worse than a hangover until the incident with the coins.
35:11That was the moment of opportunity for someone here to poison one of these cocktails.
35:16The one that he was clearly about to pick up.
35:18Yes, there was no mistake.
35:19Captain Orr had to die.
35:21Why, though?
35:27Do you remember the Arundora star?
35:31Not our finest hour, I feel.
35:34She was torpedoed by the Jerry's.
35:35Started the war.
35:37July 2nd, 1940.
35:39There was a set-to on board, wasn't there?
35:40A lot of internees being sent to Australia.
35:43Canada.
35:43Canada.
35:44Fighting amongst themselves.
35:46Well, that's what it said in the Daily Express.
35:48In Parliament, too, Mr. Book.
35:49Does it mean it's true?
35:50Indeed.
35:54And amongst the passengers, your sister, Maria.
36:10Barberini M. 12th January 1940, Ascot Racecourse.
36:1616th of January, Ascot Racecourse.
36:19Nineteen.
36:20So it was her, Captain Ormet, at the races?
36:23Well, there was no racing during the war.
36:25Quite.
36:26Of course, Ascot's where they put the Regulation 18B look, wasn't it?
36:30English Nazis, German anti-Nazis, ice cream men, spaghetti house vendors,
36:36waiters, waiters who'd once said something vaguely complimentary about the cut of Il Duce's jib, all put under barbed wire.
36:44In a tournament camp?
36:46What was the case against the Barberinis, though?
36:48My parents were born in Italy.
36:49My parents were born in Italy.
36:50My parents were born in Italy.
36:51So someone here claimed I was a fascist.
36:53Marched me out during service.
36:56Sent up north.
36:57Nobody protested.
36:59Particularly the man who ran the bar here in the Blitz.
37:03And your sister.
37:04In 1938, my father said, why not spend the summer with your Italian aunt?
37:13Go to the beach with them, to the Campo Solare, build fires, get some fresh air.
37:21They give you a nice little uniform, like the Girl Guides, but Mussolini's Girl Guides.
37:27Ah.
37:28So she brought the uniform home as a souvenir.
37:32Hmm.
37:33It was enough for the men from 18B.
37:35There it was in a wardrobe, so off she went to escort.
37:40She was interned because of the uniform.
37:44People do take them terribly seriously.
37:46Well, it worked for Victor.
37:48When he was in his sailor suit, people did what he said.
37:51I mean, it was charm, as well as rank.
37:55Rank charm.
37:56That's how he got Maria's name on the list for Canada.
37:59Perhaps we should be generous.
38:01Imagine he was getting her out of the camp to a new life away from the war.
38:05No.
38:06He just wanted the troublesome lover out of the way before his wife found her.
38:10And that ship was a death trap.
38:14I dream about that.
38:17Those people pushing at the barricade.
38:21Great wooden exes wrapped in barbed wire.
38:26And then the sea coming in and drowning them both.
38:30Both?
38:31Maria and the baby.
38:35His baby.
38:38I knew his name, that was all.
38:40But I couldn't find him.
38:42Mess of the war.
38:43Turned everything upside down.
38:45No one was in a great hurry to help out an insignificant WAP waiter.
38:49Turned out I'd been serving in Walsingham Sowers for months.
38:54Victor Orr.
38:55My old friend.
38:56I can't leave you alone for five minutes, can I?
39:00Well the bloody girl can't take a joke.
39:03Let's have a couple of those.
39:04What do you call them?
39:05Walsingham Sowers.
39:07With the two ladies.
39:09For their royal highnesses.
39:11You mean?
39:13These are on me ladies.
39:14The man who took away my precious Maria.
39:18My beloved sister.
39:22So I did what had to be done.
39:25I prepared ice.
39:27Special ice.
39:29Oh.
39:30Oh dear.
39:33So embarrassing.
39:34I do apologize.
39:35Not as always.
39:37Look after the pennies.
39:39And the pounds will look after themselves.
39:41What?
39:44It was her birthday, you see.
40:06Maria's birthday.
40:07Would have been.
40:10It seemed fitting.
40:12Yes.
40:14Yes.
40:15Master of time.
40:18And I took the precaution of keeping some of the poisoned ice.
40:23Tinky tonk.
40:25Wait!
40:26No!
40:28Just ordinary ice allows.
40:31I'm afraid I swapped it.
40:32I'm so very, very sorry about your sister, Signor Barberini.
40:40But murder is murder.
40:44Marco Barberini.
40:45I'm arresting you on a charge of murder.
40:47You do not have to say anything but anything you do say may be taken down and used against you in a court of law.
40:53Do you have anything to say?
40:54Ah.
40:55By the way, Mr. Kind.
40:56The linseed oil in the generators.
40:57That was me too.
40:58Sorry.
40:59I'm sorry.
41:00Oh.
41:01By the way, Mr. Kind.
41:02The linseed oil in the generators.
41:03That was me too.
41:04Sorry.
41:05By the way, Mr. Kind.
41:06The linseed oil in the generators.
41:09That was me too.
41:11Sorry.
41:36Oh, my God.
41:40Mr. Kind.
41:41You wanted a word?
41:42Ah, yes, Miss Rattle.
41:43I was thinking about your position here.
41:46Well, now I know that you were not responsible for the incident with the generators.
41:50Yes.
41:51Well, your dismissal was unnecessarily expeditious.
41:54Yes.
41:56Yes.
41:57And I wanted to say I would very much like to offer that position back to you.
42:01Well.
42:03I accept.
42:04Well, that's all very satisfactory.
42:06There's a ledger here, isn't there?
42:07A ledger?
42:08One with all the comings and goings of the staff.
42:11Might I see my entry?
42:14It's over there.
42:15Yes, of course.
42:26There I am.
42:28Edith Rattle.
42:29Reason for leaving, sabotage.
42:31Well, let us strike that from the record.
42:39Thank you, Mr. Kind.
42:41Now, Mr. Kind, I resign.
42:44You resign?
42:45Yes, I resign.
42:46Would you mind putting that in there for me?
42:49You can't resign.
42:50I believe I just did.
42:55Oh, the workers.
42:59Oh, the workers!
43:11All this is quite correct.
43:13Two more, please.
43:15For those people.
43:17Oh.
43:21Missing the war, are you?
43:23I don't know what the etiquette is.
43:25Oh, I think that's the royal summons.
43:30What else?
43:32For you, Mr. Book.
43:34For the book.
43:36Oh, thank you.
43:41What's that for?
43:43A hundred guineas.
43:44No, I mean, what's it for?
43:46Oh, our copy of the Canoon of Scutari.
43:48In our trade, it pays to specialize.
43:50It'll bounce.
43:52Well, if it doesn't, I shall give it to the Arandora Star Memorial Fund.
43:58Please enjoy. Thank you.
44:00What should we drink to?
44:02To us.
44:04To the Barberinis?
44:05Yes.
44:06To Marco and Maria and...
44:08All the Barberinis.
44:10The lost and the defeated.
44:13All the Barberinis.
44:15Those who bear the name and those who do not.
44:17And let there be no more drownings.
44:35He got me the job.
44:38Mr. Book.
44:40He arranged for you to take me on.
44:43The Princesses were looking for a bodyguard.
44:45Gabriel asked if I could help.
44:48So, you see, he was looking out for you.
44:51Despite your falling out.
44:53You know him well.
44:55We go a long way back.
45:00Looking out for me?
45:04Or manipulating me?
45:06Why would you think of it like that?
45:07He sought me out.
45:09Found me when I come out of prison.
45:11Set me up.
45:13Nice job.
45:15Nice home.
45:16Yes.
45:17Why?
45:18You'd have to ask him that.
45:20I'm a monster.
45:22It's the kind.
45:23I'm grateful.
45:24Of course I am.
45:25It's just...
45:27It's a lot, you know.
45:29They're set up.
45:31The way they are, Mr. and Mrs. Book.
45:32The way he is.
45:34It's hard for me to just...
45:37Accept it.
45:38You have a moral objection?
45:39Me?
45:41What right do I have to moralize?
45:43I think you've answered your own question.
45:46Book is kind.
45:48I mean, I know I'm kind.
45:50Edmund, kind.
45:52But I once knew a girl called Joy and she was anything but.
45:56There's no sinister martyr, Jack.
45:59They want to help.
46:01Why don't you let them?
46:17With you in just one moment.
46:36Hello again.
46:38Oh, Mrs. Goodwin.
46:40Jean.
46:42After more of the same?
46:43The Pimpernel?
46:44I'm not really sure.
46:45I think I fancy something a little different.
46:48The husband not with you?
46:49No.
46:50The golf course?
46:51No.
46:52The Garrick?
46:53The divorce courts.
46:55Oh.
46:57Oh.
46:59That play you gave me.
47:00A Doll's House.
47:01Most illuminating.
47:03Like you suggested, it rather made me think.
47:06Yes, I thought it might do.
47:07Made me realize how narrow my horizons have become.
47:10Or other.
47:12How narrow Gerald had made my horizons.
47:15Love doesn't always last forever or less.
47:18Never loved him.
47:20Awful man.
47:22But that's all in the past now.
47:24Or in the hands of my solicitor anyway.
47:26So, what can I do for you then, Jean?
47:29What have you got on travel?
47:32Travel?
47:33Lots of it.
47:34Heaps of it.
47:35Exotic travel.
47:36I think it's time I saw a bit of the world.
47:40I've got just the thing.
47:47With you in just one moment, sir.
48:01Thanks.
48:07I know you run on it.
48:08Without tea I am merely...
48:09Unreconstituted dust.
48:17It's hard to let go of the past, Mr. Book, when you have so many questions about it.
48:22Such as?
48:24No.
48:25If it wasn't for you and Trotty, I'd be...
48:28Well...
48:30I'd be sleeping on the embankment.
48:35But now I have a position.
48:38If it's still available.
48:40The Royal Highnesses have let you go.
48:43I'll quit.
48:44Good for you.
48:45Yes, the job's still yours.
48:48So...
48:49I've got a position.
48:52Cozy little room.
48:54Above a bookshop on Archangel Lane.
48:58I'm thinking...
49:02Why me?
49:15Your father gave me this.
49:23The last time I saw him.
49:261935.
49:28The last time?
49:30He died.
49:33Soon after.
49:35I couldn't face looking at this book.
49:41Not for years.
49:44And then the war came and I was busy.
49:48Rather busy.
49:51It was only a few months ago that I picked it up again.
49:54Dared to pick it up.
49:56And I found there was a little more to it than I thought.
50:00What do you mean?
50:04Oh, somewhere, meek unconscious dove.
50:16That sittest ranging golden hair.
50:21And glad to find thyself so fair.
50:25Poor child.
50:27That waitest for thy love.
50:31He's trying to tell me, you see.
50:32About you.
50:36About the son I never knew he had.
51:03Must have been taken around when you were conceived.
51:13Felix.
51:20Felix.
51:24I never had his name.
51:25I mean.
51:27Just that.
51:31Just that one picture.
51:35Your father was a German.
51:39German.
51:41Prussian.
51:43In point of fact.
51:45What was he to you, Mr. Book?
51:48What was Felix to me?
51:49What was Felix to me?
51:51He was everything, Jack.
51:54He was everything, Jack.
51:56He was what the war took away.
51:58He was the whole damn world.
52:00He was the whole damn world.
52:04How did he die?
52:06He was everything.
52:08He was everything, Jack.
52:10He was everything, Jack.
52:12He was everything, Jack.
52:14He was what the war took away.
52:16He was everything, Jack.
52:17I don't know.
52:19I don't know.
52:23How did he die?
52:25I don't know.
52:27Shall we find out?
52:29I don't know.
52:39Shall we find out?
52:58No problem.
52:59No problem.
53:01No problem.
53:02bulliedn
53:10No debt.
53:14winning
53:18Loving
53:23gold
53:23You?
53:28You?
Recommended
52:22
|
Up next
47:31
49:42
46:09
1:01:44
44:45
50:23
48:56
50:57
54:34
57:07
2:37:53
1:23:12
50:59
1:57:44
1:59:55