00:00To be continued
00:30Oh, my God.
01:00Oh, my God.
01:30Oh, my God.
02:00This is very good of you, Anne.
02:10That's all right.
02:11It's not what you're here for, you know, to do jobs.
02:14I don't mind.
02:14You're here because we like you.
02:16Well, I enjoy helping.
02:18Molly, there's such a lot to do today, what with a party.
02:26I hope you're going to be able to stay with us a while.
02:29Oh, well...
02:30I have to go to London next weekend.
02:32I need someone for the children.
02:35We'd love to have you.
02:38I don't know.
02:39I...
02:40This weekend coming?
02:43I think she means no.
02:44Oh, well, it's just that I...
02:45You don't have to apologize.
02:46If you're doing something else, you're doing something else.
02:48You mustn't let people exploit you.
02:51Oh, I don't.
02:53Everybody exploits somebody.
02:56This society is entirely geared for it.
02:58You're right to resist.
02:59Yes, well, we'd better get dressed, Howard.
03:01We've shopping to do.
03:03Who's taking us to school?
03:11Would you like me to, Mrs. Kirk?
03:13Yes.
03:29I don't exploit her as much as you exploit me.
03:38You seem depressed.
03:40I am.
03:42You, on the other hand, seem exceptionally cheering.
03:45Shouldn't I be?
03:46You always are when I'm depressed.
03:49You know what you need?
03:53You need a party.
03:54I do not need a sitting party.
03:57Nor do I need to spend the whole of tomorrow
03:58clearing the bloody thing up.
04:01What I need is a weekend in London.
04:04You get your weekend in London.
04:06I'll find someone.
04:28Why are you depressed?
04:41Remember Rosemary?
04:43Vaguely.
04:44I met her last night at the consumer group.
04:46Oh, yeah?
04:47You know that boy she was living with?
04:50I don't think so.
04:50Yes, you do.
04:51He had a tattoo on the back of his hand.
04:53Anyway, he killed himself.
04:56Oh.
04:57He left Rosemary a note.
04:59Went to the shed at the bottom of the garden
05:01and put a rope around his neck.
05:03Let's do a calculation.
05:04And it's upset you?
05:16Yes.
05:17I can't think why.
05:18You hardly knew the man.
05:21It was the note.
05:24What?
05:25The note he left.
05:27What did it say?
05:29He said,
05:29this is silly.
05:55So you don't find it symptomatic?
05:57What he did.
06:00Oh, what?
06:01I don't understand what he thought he meant.
06:03I don't suppose he did either.
06:05You want to pick a quarrel with him?
06:06He's dead.
06:07He just thought life was silly.
06:09Christ, Barbara.
06:11The fact that he killed himself
06:13doesn't make that into a universal truth, does it?
06:17Is that all?
06:19All what?
06:20All you have to say.
06:21All you can think.
06:27What is it that you want me to think
06:30that I'm not thinking?
06:33Doesn't it worry you
06:34that so many of our friends
06:35feel like that nowadays?
06:38Tired and desperate.
06:40But why is it?
06:42Is it our age?
06:43Is it that the political excitement's all gone?
06:45What's the matter?
06:47Our sort of people
06:48never used to think life was silly.
06:50Don't let it get you down.
06:52Take a Valium.
06:53You have a solution for everyone.
06:55Take a Valium,
06:56have a party,
06:57shoot a soldier,
06:58bang a friend.
06:58Look, Barbara,
06:59I know there's a fashion now
07:00for failure and despair.
07:02I just don't see
07:02why we should go along with it.
07:04Why not?
07:05You've gone along
07:05with every other fashion.
07:08I'm going to have to leave you,
07:09I'm afraid.
07:11You've got that look about you.
07:13First day of term.
07:14What are you plotting?
07:17I don't know what you mean.
07:19Trouble.
07:19I'll see you later.
07:20Well, not later than four.
07:22I need some help
07:22preparing for all this fun.
07:24I'll do my best, of course.
07:44I'll do my best.
08:14I'll do my best.
08:44How long, Moira?
08:55Howard!
08:56Had a good summer?
08:57All right, I suppose.
08:59I've finished my book.
09:00Oh.
09:00You?
09:01Got pregnant again.
09:02I'm not married, I trust.
09:03God, no!
09:09Hi.
09:09Dan.
09:10How are you?
09:11I'm glad I found you.
09:15I've heard a rather disturbing piece of news.
09:18What's that?
09:20Apparently, Mangle's been invited to speak here this town.
09:24What?
09:26I said Mangle's been invited to speak here this town.
09:30Who?
09:32Mangle, you know.
09:35Mangle, the geneticist.
09:37The racist.
09:37Oh, God, that bastard.
10:04That's right.
10:13We don't want him.
10:15He's a fascist.
10:15That's what I was thinking.
10:18Who invited him?
10:19I don't know.
10:21Marvin, I suppose.
10:23Presumably.
10:23Was it discussed?
10:25No.
10:27Well, I'll raise it tomorrow at the departmental meeting.
10:29Oh, unless you'd rather.
10:31No, no, that's great.
10:32You raise it.
10:32Okay.
10:34Sir?
10:34This is me.
10:37Bloody nerve.
10:38Are you sure you don't want to see Professor Marvin?
11:00Now, Miss Hull, why should I want to see him when I'm sat out here with you?
11:06It's a beautiful typing job.
11:09Thanks.
11:10Only one thing.
11:12Professor Mangle's name's been left off the list of visiting speakers.
11:16Not by me.
11:17Just a mistake, that's all.
11:18You want me to check with Professor Marvin?
11:19No, no, no, that's all right.
11:20I'll raise it at the meeting.
11:22Your hair's nice.
11:26He always likes my hair when he wants something.
11:29Hmm?
11:30Perhaps we should just add his name and save, you know, that hassle.
11:33You know I can't alter the agenda once I've been agreed.
11:35Of course not.
11:36I'll write you out.
11:41It's lovely to see you again.
11:49Hi, Howard.
11:50Hi.
11:50Oh, hi, Howard.
11:51How you doing?
11:52Oh, fine.
11:53Hi.
11:56Felicity.
11:59How are you?
12:00Good to see you.
12:03Do we have an appointment?
12:05Well, no, but I wanted to ask you advice about something.
12:08I have a problem.
12:10It's me.
12:11Come on.
12:16Can't spell on, I'm afraid.
12:18I'm expecting some first-year students any minute.
12:22How's the name?
12:23Maureen.
12:23Maureen.
12:23Maureen, yeah.
12:23Maureen.
12:24Maureen.
12:24Maureen, yeah.
12:28Well, this is the thing.
12:35See, I'm not really sure that I'm a lesbian after all.
12:40I see.
12:41I think I prefer a man.
12:44Well, that's not a problem.
12:46It is.
12:47Maureen's furious.
12:48She says I'm an Uncle Tom.
12:50She throws shoes at me.
12:52Have they?
12:53Yeah.
12:54Yeah.
12:55What do you think I should do?
13:00Whatever you feel like.
13:04Really?
13:05Maureen says I only want to go with men because I have a slave mentality.
13:12She says I'm a reactionary.
13:13Well, that's obviously nonsense, isn't it?
13:14You think so?
13:15There's only one rule, Felicity.
13:16Do what makes you happy.
13:17Follow the line of your own desires.
13:19I knew your advice would be good.
13:20It always is.
13:21Only because it so closely resembles what people want to hear.
13:23There they are.
13:24Oh.
13:25Would you let them in on your way out?
13:27Okay.
13:28Okay.
13:29Listen, love.
13:30We're giving a party this evening.
13:31Why don't you come?
13:32I'd love to.
13:33Without Maureen.
13:34No.
13:35No.
13:36No.
13:37No.
13:38No.
13:39No.
13:40No.
13:41No.
13:42No.
13:43No.
13:44No.
13:45No.
13:46No.
13:47No.
13:49No.
13:50No.
13:51No.
13:52No.
13:53No.
13:54No.
13:55No.
13:56No.
13:57No.
13:58No.
13:59No.
14:10Grab yourselves a chance.
14:11Sit down.
14:22So.
14:23You want to do sociology?
14:25Well...
14:27To be honest, we have to do sociology.
14:29Oh, I see.
14:30You don't want to do sociology.
14:32Well, it...
14:33I don't really know much about it.
14:36Why did they make us?
14:38Well, how else are you going to find out why the world is as it is?
14:42Is that what it's about?
14:43That's what it's about.
14:45It sounds pretty important.
14:48Absolutely.
14:49Absolutely.
14:50It's the only genuinely relevant subject in the curriculum.
14:55And it's entirely comprehensive.
14:58It takes in everything.
15:00Decimal currency.
15:02The liberty.
15:03Rhodesia.
15:04Abortion.
15:05Coronation street.
15:06You name it.
15:07You'll finally begin to learn something about life.
15:15We'll finally begin to learn something about life.
15:18We'll visit prisons and factories, hospitals.
15:24I'll take you to the law courts and the Salvation Army hostels.
15:31It's a question of opening your minds.
15:35Just keep your eyes open and see if you can come up with an answer
15:38to what seems to me will be one of the crucial questions
15:42of the 70s.
15:45Just at the moment of maximum entropy,
15:48when late capitalist structures are beginning to fall in on themselves,
15:52those of us in the vanguard of the struggle
15:54have suddenly been afflicted with an unaccountable paralysis.
16:00The enthusiasm, the fervour, the revolutionary initiatives
16:05of, what, three, four years ago,
16:08has suddenly dwindled into an extraordinary apathy.
16:14And here, at the first meeting of the revolutionary student front,
16:20we find that the executive outnumbers the members.
16:23the executive outnumbers the members of the government
16:25of the government.
16:26Now, why is this?
16:28Hmm?
16:33You don't radicalise people with talk, Howard.
16:36There's no use going on about Nixon and Cambodia
16:40and apartheid and Heath.
16:42People are fed up with all that.
16:44And they shouldn't be.
16:45I know they shouldn't be, but they are.
16:47What we need is some action.
16:49Some local issues.
16:51Well, I heard something this morning made my house stand up a bit.
16:55Maury Milken told me.
16:57What?
16:58It seems they want to invite Mangle to speak here.
17:02You're joking.
17:03No, I'm not.
17:04Of course, it has to get through the departmental meeting tomorrow,
17:07and I shall obviously do what I can about that.
17:10Theoretically, these decisions are still supposed to be democratic.
17:14Yeah, repressive tolerance.
17:16Right.
17:17Well, just let them try, that's all.
17:19Sure.
17:30So there you are.
17:31And they...
17:34I've seen you for ages.
17:36Hiya.
17:40Have you been brought to your party this evening?
17:42Myra and I always look forward to your parties.
17:45Where is Myra?
17:46She just bought a new dishwasher.
17:49How's Barbara?
17:50Pairing up.
17:51Fighting back.
17:54Thank God it's term again.
17:55I can give up working on my book.
17:58I didn't know you were writing a book.
18:00What's it about?
18:01Well...
18:08Henry, this is the basement.
18:10Well...
18:12What?
18:13What's your book about?
18:15Charisma.
18:16well what what's your book about charisma
18:35are you rushing off somewhere or have you time for a coffee
18:46what's your book about privacy now that is to say it's about the outmodedness of the concept of
18:59privacy of the necessity for us all to have total access it looks forward to the time when everyone
19:04will know everything about everything sounds suppose it's finished is it more or less hmm
19:13though at this stage i just assume you didn't mention it to anyone no of course
19:17reason i
19:20i mean the fact of the matter is i've been feeling a bit sheepish about the row we had
19:28end of last term well it doesn't matter no but it's absurd i mean so we've known each other since
19:36we were 18 anyway i can't even remember what it was about you said i damaged your career
19:43did i yes well you know i'm not an ambitious man but well i'm not as unambitious as i'd like to be
19:55and i suppose you see in some strange way you don't have to go into it no what it is is
20:02the things you've achieved somehow they're things i feel i ought to have achieved
20:08and now can't but that's absurd i'm aware of that anyway your other book um television on the child
20:18was an enormous success i know but that was six years ago i wasn't expecting it you see
20:25threw me completely still haven't recovered meanwhile you're popping them out like hot buns
20:37can't get over how much you've changed since leeds no henry the amazing trick is yours
20:43to have stayed exactly the same never used to open your mouth except to talk about your thesis on
20:50what was it christadelphianism in wakefield now look at you high-powered radical never off the telly
21:00of course myra and i we attribute a lot of that to barbara really oh yes well i must get on
21:10i'm glad we've had a chance to straighten this out well it's no use trying to talk at parties is it
21:17and last term well it's just that various things were getting me down you know not that they've
21:23improved at all but how's the garden henry uh such of it i mean as is not only your fingernails
21:28hmm remarkable crop of jerusalem articles really not a carrot fly though well look i promise to get back
21:35golly help barbara prepare
22:05try to photograph it so this morning i can't hear you
22:10don't bite your ass
22:14uter
22:18OB прог aktivities
22:24i've seen it
22:26so
22:27blow it up
22:29it were
22:30okay
22:302
22:30two
22:32But have you any idea why Barbara's so unhappy?
23:02Unless it's a kind of residual competitiveness, the better things go for me, the worse she seems
23:18to go.
23:23Go on.
23:29She seems to want to convince herself I'm a complete phony.
23:32And are you?
23:33I don't think so.
23:38No more than anyone else.
23:41I just like making things happen.
23:45Which she characterises as trendy radicalism.
23:49Do you have a problem, Howard?
23:50What's that?
23:51Your wife understands you.
23:54Am I squashing you?
23:54Well, it's...
23:55Sorry.
23:56Does she have affairs?
24:06Suppose so.
24:07Aren't you interested?
24:08Not really.
24:09No wonder she's unhappy.
24:10I don't suppose we'd have got married if we'd been five years younger.
24:18Just shacked up and moved on.
24:21Why don't you move on?
24:24I'm not sure.
24:27Perhaps one of us is still hoping to win.
24:35Why do you ask?
24:36After all, it is my field.
24:37Families and sex.
24:38Well, I'm sorry not to be more informative, but, er, we believe in going our own way.
24:47Together?
24:48Oh, yeah, we stay together, but, er, we don't trust one another.
24:58Isn't that a definition of marriage?
25:00You don't approve of marriage, do you?
25:02I didn't say that.
25:03I have nothing against it.
25:06I myself just prefer unconditioned fornication.
25:10That's just my particular choice within the options.
25:15If I don't get off home, Barbara will kill me.
25:34Well, I saw Henry today.
25:39How was he?
25:40Blunt.
25:41Did he say why?
25:42He's been uneasy ever since he became a pillar of a bourgeoisie.
25:46When was that?
25:47About nine to fifty-eight.
25:51Would you pass my glasses?
25:54I'll see you later, then.
25:59I've already told you I have a seminar at the Tavistock Clinic.
26:03Oh, come on, Floyd.
26:04There's a paper on schizophrenia.
26:05I want to hear it.
26:06Well, it won't go on all night.
26:07Come afterwards.
26:08I might.
26:09I might.
26:10And I might not.
26:11And I might not.
26:12And I might not.
26:54Where's Barbara?
26:55The bar.
26:56She's good with you, Howard.
27:08Sorry I'm late.
27:09Oh, yes.
27:14Well, you know what it's like, beginning of term.
27:17No.
27:18But whatever it's like, it seems to have set you up a treat.
27:20Well, I had to take these.
27:21I don't want to hear about it.
27:23Oh, yes.
27:24Hands left.
27:25Hands left.
27:26Oh, shit.
27:27Thanks to your homilies on exploitation, she didn't even finish the washing up.
27:35Get off.
27:36I'm having my weekend in London, Howard.
27:37Don't worry.
27:38I'll find someone.
27:39Now, whatever else needs doing to get ready for this party, you're going to do.
27:52What are you all going to do?
27:53All right.
27:54Open the wine, wipe the glasses, put out all the ashtrays.
27:57Those two hours.
27:58Or leave it for all I care.
27:59I know that you're in favor of unstructured events.
28:02If you want something to be genuinely unstructured, you have to plan it very carefully.
28:07Will you please yourself?
28:08I will.
28:11And if you propose to be intimate with anyone other than myself, I expect you'll need a bath
28:15as well.
28:16No, no, no, no.
28:17No.
28:18Mmm?
28:19No.
28:20No.
28:21Eh?
28:22No.
28:23Eh?
28:24No.
28:25Eh?
28:26No, eh?
28:27No.
28:28Eh?
28:29And you're good.
28:31Oh.
28:33Eh?
28:34Eh?
28:35Eh?
28:36Eh?
28:37Eh?
28:38Eh?
28:41Oh
29:11Myra. Hello, Halbert. I thought you and Barbara might want a hand. Where's Henry?
29:39How should I know? I thought you might. Does Barbara know where you are every minute of the day?
29:45Of course not. Well, then. Red? White? Red.
29:51Oh, what have you been up to all summer? Nothing. Well, Howard was finishing his book.
29:57Oh, Henry's been trying to write a book. Yeah, he told me. It's about time.
30:02I must say I prefer your books, Howard. Especially that first one. The coming of a new sex.
30:09Howard's books are very empty, but they're always on the right side.
30:13Well, at least I can understand them, which is more than I can say for Henry's.
30:16Your hair's looking very nice. It's a wig. Well, it's a very nice wig.
30:25Actually, I didn't come to give you a hand, Kirks.
30:28I came to tell you I've decided to leave Henry.
30:42Why?
30:45What do you mean, why?
30:47Has Henry done something to you?
30:49No, not for years. That's why I'm so bored.
30:52You mean he doesn't sleep with you?
30:54Oh, no, it's not that. He does in his own trite way.
30:58Have you tried someone else?
31:00That's not the point.
31:02So you're not leaving him for someone?
31:04No, for me.
31:06The thing is, what is it that you want that you don't have?
31:12Absence from Henry!
31:17I'm a loved one. You must admit he's become a ludicrous figure.
31:20I'm worried about Henry. I'm concerned for him.
31:22You have talked to him about this, have you?
31:24It's there to talk about.
31:25You're the ones always saying marriage is an archaic institution.
31:29Now, all of a sudden, you want me to stay with him.
31:32Oh, no. No, no, Howard doesn't mean that.
31:34He just wants to get into the question of what's gone wrong.
31:37I thought you'd be on my side.
31:41Well, we are. It's just...
31:44Look.
31:47You remember that time Howard and I split up in Leeds?
31:53I can see you now standing on the doorstep with your saucepan and your portable tally.
31:57Yes, well, we talked ourselves through that.
31:59Yeah, you see, ours hasn't been one marriage. It's been several.
32:03And the amazing thing is you've both changed so much.
32:07Especially you, Howard.
32:09You used to be such a quiet, out-working little lad till Barbara got hold of you.
32:14I don't know how you managed it.
32:16What do you mean?
32:18We've got such a good relationship.
32:20Everyone's life looks easier from the outside.
32:23Oh, come on. Yours is the most successful academic marriage I know.
32:27Everybody else we know is fighting and separating and divorcing and running off with alpha students.
32:33Do you think Henry wants to run off with an alpha student?
32:36No, that's half the trouble.
32:38He might sort of bumble into walking off very slowly with a beta student.
32:42Even that's unlikely.
32:45You mean that you're fed up with him staying at home?
32:48Yes.
32:51Much more of this bloody connubial bliss will end up killing each other.
32:56Right. When are you going to tell him?
32:59Christ, I must put my dress on.
33:01Oh, call me tomorrow.
33:04Howard?
33:05Yeah.
33:06Do you remember that time?
33:08Oh, thanks.
33:09Honey, you've never mentioned it once in four years.
33:11I must just go and see you as a writer.
33:13Do you know that's the only time I've ever been unfaithful to Henry?
33:19It's pathetic, isn't it?
33:21No, not at all.
33:22PHONE RINGS
33:28Are we the first?
33:29Doesn't matter.
33:30My name's John McIntosh. This is my wife, Jane.
33:32Oh, you're our new man?
33:33That's right.
33:34Come in.
33:35Always first to arrive and last to leave.
33:42When's it, dear?
33:43There, mother.
33:44You are?
33:45It's twins.
33:46Any minute.
33:47If you go in there, I'll fetch you a drink. Barbara will be down any second.
33:51In fact, here she is now.
33:54Wow.
33:55But, however, did you find this place?
34:03We squatted.
34:04They kept showing us all those two-up, two-down garden and garage jobs, but we just couldn't
34:08face it.
34:09This was scheduled for demolition.
34:10We fixed it up ourselves.
34:11Now the council has relented and actually rents it to us.
34:14They're hoping to reclaim the whole terrace.
34:16Amazing.
34:17It's the only place in this town worth living for a sociologist.
34:21You're right at the centre of all the real social problems.
34:25Also, it's very handy for the beach.
34:28Excuse me.
34:29You're welcome.
34:30You're welcome.
34:31Hi, Shelley.
34:32Go on in there.
34:33Yes.
34:34Hi.
34:35Great to see you.
34:36How are you?
34:37Keep trucking.
34:38Back.
34:39Come up the stairs.
34:40Get the drinks through, Joel.
34:41Create your own space, Wayne.
34:42Go on.
34:43Holistic.
34:44Grab yourself a drink there in the kitchen.
34:46Get the drinks through.
34:49Get the drinks through.
35:06Because he's everything.
35:09How are you doing?
35:11Good work.
35:16How are you, Melissa?
35:24Great. Now, watch this.
35:27Mal, Mal, roll over.
35:29Mal, roll over, Mal.
35:31Come on, sweetheart, roll over.
35:34I never get it, I never get it.
35:38What kind of contraceptive do you use?
35:42What about you, Mrs. Kirk?
35:43Oh, I'm pill.
35:44I used to be bong, but now I'm pill.
35:47All in all, I think it's best, don't you?
35:49I have a different method.
35:51What's that?
35:53I call it brute force.
36:14I love you.
36:27You can't cook it.
36:29Look atπειable.
36:30Oh
37:00Yeah, you have a rest
37:06Thanks darling
37:08Come back to see her now
37:10Okay
37:11Bye
37:13Bye
37:30It's started
37:39It's started
37:42Sweetheart, get it out
37:47Come on
37:48Get it out
37:49Come on
37:50Come on
37:52Come on, sweetheart
37:53Please
37:54Get it out
37:56Jesus
37:57Come on
37:58Come on, sweetheart
37:59Oh, Bobbers
37:59Oh, Christ
38:01You're trying
38:02Sorry
38:03You've got to destroy them
38:07It's nothing personal
38:08Well, I think politics
38:10is just about the lowest form
38:11of human endeavor
38:12I mean, it's less important
38:14than morals
38:14or religion
38:15or philosophy
38:16or even aesthetics
38:17Don't you agree?
38:19Just a drug
38:20But all forms of knowledge
38:21are ideological
38:22That means everything
38:23is politics
38:25It's reducible to politics
38:26It can be rendered down
38:28like soup
38:29Like soup
38:29What is this?
38:33No idea
38:33See, if you're not the solution
38:35you must be part of the problem
38:36I'm not arrogant
38:38or self-righteous enough
38:39to believe I'm the solution
38:41Well
38:41but I'm not the solution
38:42I can't get no
38:46But I think it's yours
38:48I can't get no
38:49But I think it's yours
38:50I can't get no
38:54You can't get no
38:57You can't get no
38:59You can't get no
39:00Who is that?
39:21I don't know.
39:23Some German.
39:25Gesundheit.
39:30Somebody's coming more than she gets it while she can.
39:33I don't even know.
40:00Everything all right?
40:17They're going to call me.
40:18Oh, great.
40:24I'm going to stop here.
40:27What?
40:28No.
40:28Red, white.
40:48White.
40:48White.
40:49Oh.
40:52You're a most assiduous host.
40:54Don't care.
40:55And you're a very welcome guest.
40:57Who are you?
40:58Well, I was invited.
40:59Everyone was invited.
41:01That's good.
41:02Because I wasn't invited.
41:04I came with a friend who's now gone home.
41:07Who was that?
41:07A novelist.
41:09I expect he's gone home to make notes.
41:12Aren't you going to tell me who you are?
41:14I'm Miss Callender.
41:16English devout.
41:17I'm their new renaissance man.
41:18I prefer women.
41:20So I've heard.
41:21Oh.
41:21I love small objects like this.
41:26Don't let me keep you from your party.
41:30You're going to fight with those students.
41:32Tends to happen to me at parties.
41:34You must understand that for perfectly good reasons, those kids don't trust anyone over
41:3830.
41:39I'm 24.
41:41How old are you?
41:4234.
41:44Then I can understand why you're on their side.
41:46Like so many middle-aged people, you're naturally envious.
41:50I'm on their side because it's the right side, the side of justice.
41:53You don't appear to have a social conscience at all.
41:58I have a moral conscience.
42:01I know.
42:02It's very old-fashioned.
42:04There we are.
42:05Um.
42:07You'll have to let me save you from yourself.
42:10Oh, no.
42:11Why not?
42:12I never trust anyone over 30.
42:23Henry, Henry, would you just please leave me alone?
42:26You're going to call me around the whole time.
42:27What?
42:28What?
42:28You're going to let me...
42:30What?
42:30Come on, kill us.
42:31Hang on.
42:32Move.
42:33Wait.
42:33Would you just leave me?
42:35Please help me.
42:38Sorry, yes.
42:39What was that?
42:50What?
42:51I haven't spoken to him.
42:53Give us a drink.
42:57Excuse me, I've got to go play host.
43:00Excuse me, folks.
43:01Keep on trucking.
43:06Any news?
43:07False alarm, it seems.
43:10You've been here long?
43:11Hours, it seems.
43:12Only I was wondering if you're seeing Flora.
43:14Flora Benefoam.
43:16I don't know her.
43:18By the way, have you ever heard that Mangle has been invited to lunch you here this time?
43:22Oh, Johnny, good.
43:25That's right.
43:36You don't have to sit here all night, you know.
43:38You're all over the phone, please.
43:40What do you think you're doing?
43:59I'm reading your book.
44:03No right to do that.
44:08It's private.
44:09If I understand it right, there's no such thing.
44:16Why are you doing this?
44:19Howard, I'm in trouble.
44:22I'm not right.
44:23I need help.
44:27Howard, you've got to help me.
44:29What's the matter?
44:31You said follow the line of your own desires.
44:33Yes.
44:36But your desires have to coincide with other people's.
44:38Are you frightened of me?
44:39Of course not.
44:40You're just offering too much.
44:41Won't you take it?
44:42I get a lot of offers.
44:43I'm rearing it.
44:58Oh, my God.
45:01Oh, my God.
45:06Oh, my God.
45:09Oh, my God.
45:41Let's get it in here.
46:05They seem to be enjoying themselves.
46:07Mm, so am I.
46:09Oh, God.
46:11I'm like a fool.
46:12I'm feeling love with you.
46:14I'm trying to hold a shotgun.
46:17Hey!
46:18Hey!
46:19Hey!
46:20Hey!
46:21Hey!
46:22Hey!
46:23Hey!
46:24Hey!
46:25Hey!
46:26Hey!
46:27Hey!
46:28Hey!
46:29Hey!
46:30Hey!
46:31Oh, dear.
46:34Oh, dear.
46:35Hey!
46:36Oh, dear.
46:39Oh, dear.
46:41Hey!
46:42Hey!
46:43Wow!
46:44Hey, woo.
46:45Hey!
46:46Hey!
46:47Hey!
46:48Oh, dear.
46:50Hey!
46:52Hey!
46:53Hey!
46:54Hey!
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