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Part 1 of 4 of the 1981 drama set in 1972. Howard Kirk is a radical Sociology lecturer at the University of Watermouth. Living in an "open" marriage with wife Barbara, he takes every opportunity to seduce impressionable students whilst indulging in an affair with fellow lecturer Flora Beniform, while also seeking to create division at the university by inventing a rumour that right wing Professor Mangel has been invited to speak at the university. Perturbed by his wife Barbara's recent listlessness, they decide to throw a party, but little realizes the trouble he will create for himself as he becomes entranced by the new university lecturer Annie Callender, and unaware of the growing infatuation of bisexual student Felicity Phee...

(Note: Just in case you are wondering where episode 2 and 3 is, it has been labelled by Dailymtoion as explicit. So here is the link of my video on Dailymotion of Episode 2 here: https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x9v99y8. and Episode 3 here: https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x9va29q. If however you are still unable to see it on Dailymotion Episode 2 also appears uncensored on Youtube here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VOOuHZ4PZZ0, as does Episode 3 here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8yhwV1Yr4xY. If further episodes suffer the same fate as Episode 2 I shall link the others on Youtube for you too. Anyway, enjoy).

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Transcript
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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