- 21 hours ago
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Short filmTranscript
00:00Thank you for joining us.
00:30What's the damage?
00:33Contusions on the chest and arms.
00:38Slight bruising on the lower abdomen.
00:42Otherwise, there's not a mark.
00:45Splendid.
01:00Slight bruising on the lower abdomen.
01:18Slight bruising on the lower abdomen.
01:34Slight bruising on the lower abdomen.
01:40Slight bruising on the lower abdomen.
01:46Slight bruising on the lower abdomen.
01:49Slight bruising on the lower abdomen.
01:52Slight bruising on the lower abdomen.
01:55Slight bruising on the lower abdomen.
01:58Slight bruising on the lower abdomen.
02:01Slight bruising on the lower abdomen.
02:04Slight bruising on the lower abdomen.
02:07Slight bruising on the lower abdomen.
02:08Slight bruising on the lower abdomen.
02:10Slight bruising on the lower abdomen.
02:12Slight bruising on the lower abdomen.
02:14Slight bruising on the lower abdomen.
02:15Slight bruising on the lower abdomen.
02:16So, what's new?
02:19How do you like to start fighting the flab?
02:22So long as it doesn't involve any exercise or cutting down on any of my food.
02:26All it involves is a large dose of masochism. Listen to this.
02:30Dear Gwen, I've just completed a ten-week course
02:33with a new weight-reducing organisation called Think Thin.
02:37Physically, it was a success. I lost nearly a stone and a half, but at what a price.
02:42The technique they use destroys all your self-confidence.
02:45And I'm sure it could turn someone with a mental or psychological problem into a nervous wreck.
02:51Why don't you get one of your reporters to take the course?
02:55It'd make an interesting article and you'd be doing a public service.
02:59Well?
03:00Oh, great. The assignment of the year.
03:04And what made you think of little old me?
03:06Not so little. That's why I'm offering you a world exclusive.
03:10Well, why don't you get one of the fellas to go? They're more overweight than I am.
03:15This is the women's page, lovey, and our readers are not interested in overweight men.
03:20They're interested in themselves and new ways of keeping slim, young and beautiful.
03:25Well, I don't know why we have a woman's page. We don't have a men's page.
03:29I mean, how are we going to get rid of sexism in this country
03:32if even Fleet Street think that women are self-centred morons with no minds of their own?
03:36Ours not to reason why. Ours just to increase the female readership of the paper.
03:41Yes. Well, I'd like to write about the real world for a change.
03:44You know, the real heartaches, the shocks that flesh is air to.
03:49Oh, it's just that I am fed up with fashion shows and potted plants and perfect kitchens.
03:55Ruth!
03:57You can't go walking about with Epping Forest on your shoulder.
04:00If you want to be independent, then resign and write a bestseller.
04:04Well, do you have any background stuff on this place?
04:11Not much. It's based at the Chesterton Clinic. Mm-hm.
04:15So, presumably, it's funded by the same foundation. Chesterton?
04:19Do you know who runs it? A man called Willis. Willis?
04:23Used to be a PE teacher at a South London Comprehensive.
04:26Six months after he resigned, he emerged as the director of Think Thin.
04:31How long do I have to stick with this?
04:34As long as you can. I suggest you do some short interim reports
04:37and they will do a big spread when you're finished. Right?
04:40Okay.
04:42Oh, Ruth! Get Roland to get a shot of you each week
04:45so that the readers can follow your progress.
04:47Progress? Why do you skeletons assume
04:50that cutting everybody down to your size is progress?
04:54I'm with Caesar. Let me have men that are fat.
05:04Just taking a call. Another big one coming in soon.
05:18Clean bill of health? Of course.
05:21How old? Late twenties.
05:24Good times. Shame. Those whom the gods love, eh?
05:28Shh! Dork.
05:54Look at her, everybody. Isn't she fat? Isn't she ugly? Isn't she repulsive?
06:11You ought to be ashamed to be seen in public, Joyce.
06:26You should bury yourself up to the neck in sand.
06:29Look! You weren't always like that.
06:32A slim young girl without an ounce of surplus fat.
06:35You put on all that weight through sheer self-indulgence.
06:40Do you like looking so unattractive, Joyce?
06:44You enjoy making men turn away in disgust?
06:47Then what makes you so greedy?
06:50What makes you stuff your face with starchy foods all day?
06:54I don't know. Boredom, I suppose.
06:58Boredom? What have you got to be bored about, Joyce?
07:01You say you love your husband. You love your children.
07:04Yes, but they're always away. I'm lonely.
07:09Well, do something about it, you stupid cow!
07:12Start jogging. Start a crash, a political party.
07:16Anything to take your mind off your guts.
07:19Have you looked in the middle lately?
07:21Yeah.
07:22That is why your husband stays out late at the office.
07:25You love the moment when he's going to come back to a quivering mountain of fat!
07:38It's all right, Joyce. It's all right. Here.
07:41I think they've got the message. Off you go.
07:44Right. Ben, stand up and be counted.
08:01Well, what do you think, folks? A slight improvement?
08:05I think you can see an image of the slim inner male there.
08:08How much have you lost, Ben?
08:11I haven't. As a matter of fact, I've gained a couple of pounds.
08:14Well, it doesn't show. You're sinking thin. Now that's important.
08:18Congratulations, Ben.
08:20Congratulations, Ben.
08:26Right. We've got a first-time fatty with us tonight.
08:29Would you like to come forward, Ruth?
08:33You got that photograph?
08:35Yes. As I thought. Nothing congenital about your condition, is there?
08:45No.
08:46Well, you're going to have to pull yourself together, young lady.
08:49Start counting the calories.
08:51Because if you don't, you will be as big as a house at the time you're forty.
08:56What is this? Are you striking a blow for fatty's lip?
09:10Willis's orders.
09:11You're joking.
09:13It's true. He told me after the class to have a big blowout tonight.
09:16That's carrying the snobbery a bit far.
09:19He says I'm a special case.
09:21I've been on a protein and citrus fruit diet for two weeks now.
09:25And I've hardly lost any weight at all.
09:27So Willis suggested I take in some extra fat to give the citrus juice something to work on.
09:31Oh, and he's giving me a pill to take afterwards.
09:34To speed up my metabolism.
09:36Sounds crazy to me.
09:37But then half these diets are so far out, they sound as if they were thought up on April Fool's Day.
09:42You know, some freak wrote to us and said that she'd lost two stone on potatoes and ice cream.
09:47You get many freak letters at the paper.
09:49Mmm. Sack rules. Mainly about sex.
09:52Today is the age of anxiety with just about everyone feeling inadequate.
09:57Yes. And I'm no exception.
10:00Why? Because your marriage failed?
10:04Partly. And partly because I seem to bore people.
10:08I'm expecting your eyes to glaze over long before we come to the coffee.
10:12You want me to wear dark glasses?
10:14Wouldn't do any good. I'd be imagining the boredom even if it wasn't there.
10:18You're something in the city, right?
10:34I'm a merchant banker.
10:36Oh, have I struck gold? How about a loan?
10:39Certainly. There's just one proviso.
10:42What's that?
10:43It'd have to be at least half a million. Otherwise it's not worth the paperwork.
10:47I thought the country was supposed to be on its apples.
10:50Tell me something, Ruth.
10:54Is your coast clear, men-wise?
11:00My coast is so clear, you can see right down to the seabed.
11:07And there's only a couple of wrecks down there.
11:09Good.
11:11And how about your coast, woman-wise?
11:15Hasn't been a vessel in sight for over a year.
11:19Sounds idyllic.
11:21I just love uninhabited islands.
11:24Thanks, Ruth.
11:25What for?
11:26Not glazing over.
11:27Don't knock yourself.
11:28You're more special than you think.
11:32I'll walk you to your car.
11:33Thanks, Ruth.
11:34What for?
11:35Not glazing over.
11:36Don't knock yourself.
11:37You're more special than you think.
11:38I'll walk you to your car.
11:39I hope Willis knows what he's doing.
11:41I feel that's bloody.
11:42It's going to be sort of bled.
11:43I'm back in hell.
11:44I'm sorry to have a dream.
11:45I like it if you'd like to do my life.
11:46I have a bad feeling.
11:47It's a bad feeling, it's not really bad.
11:49Let's go after some disease.
11:50I'm sorry.
11:51I know you haven't had any problems.
11:52Thanks, Ruth.
11:53What for?
11:54Not glazing over.
11:55Don't knock yourself.
11:56You're more special than you think.
11:57I'll walk you to your car.
11:59It's okay.
12:02I hope Willis knows what he's doing.
12:07He knows what he's doing. I feel absolutely bloated.
12:10Do you know what he asked me at my interview?
12:13He asked whether I'd ever suffered from food poisoning.
12:16Yes, he asked me there too. It's rather long, I thought.
12:20Perhaps it's dangerous for somebody who's suffered from salmonella.
12:24Might bring it on again or something.
12:26Perhaps.
12:29Well?
12:31Well...
12:37Well, that wasn't boring at all.
12:49May I phone you?
12:53Give me your hand.
12:56What's that?
13:08My phone number.
13:10Hmm?
13:20Come on, come on.
13:22Come on, come on.
13:40Love me, love me!
13:44How can I hang?
13:58Learning!
13:59I should work here.
14:00As always, we've got some work at home.
14:04I haven't worked there.
16:05Is he badly hurt?
16:07He's dead, miss. He must have died instantly.
16:12Oh.
16:14How did you get my number?
16:16It was written on his hand.
16:18You know where we can get in touch with his next of kin?
16:20No.
16:22No.
16:24No, I'm sorry, I don't.
16:25No.
16:26No, I don't know.
16:30I don't know.
16:33No.
16:33I don't know.
16:34No.
17:05Excuse me, are you a reporter?
17:22Yes.
17:23Could I have a word with you?
17:25What about?
17:27I don't mean here.
17:29Later.
17:30Somewhere private.
17:31Now listen, Andrew.
17:33Before you say another word,
17:34I write for the woman's page.
17:36And frankly, stories about funeral directors
17:39don't make ladies' hearts go pitter-patt.
17:41It doesn't matter.
17:42I've just got to talk to somebody.
17:44Okay.
17:45That man who died,
17:48was he a friend or a relation?
17:50A friend?
17:52Was he big?
17:54Or on the plump side?
17:56Well, you handled his funeral.
17:58You must have seen him.
17:59No.
18:00They wouldn't let me.
18:01Who wouldn't?
18:02The bosses.
18:03Mr. Basil and Mr. Cedric.
18:06Why not?
18:07They just said they wanted to dress this particular corpse themselves.
18:12But that is usually your job?
18:14One of them, yes.
18:15There used to be another man, but he retired.
18:17Now that's just me.
18:20Now, wait a minute.
18:21Let me get this straight.
18:22You say you didn't see the body?
18:27No.
18:28So how did you know that he was on the plump side?
18:30Sorry.
18:31I heard them talking.
18:33Mr. Cedric told Mr. Basil that there was another big one coming in.
18:37Another big one?
18:38Yes.
18:39That started me thinking.
18:41You see, the same thing happened about, oh, six months ago.
18:44There was a body they wouldn't let you see?
18:47Yes.
18:47Only that time I did see it.
18:49I sneaked into the refrigeration room while they were out.
18:51Why?
18:52I don't know.
18:54I suppose I thought it might be somebody famous.
18:56Somebody who wasn't supposed to be dead.
18:58Was it?
18:59No.
19:00But he was fat.
19:01And it looked as if he had been in a car accident.
19:03So, two fat men are killed on the road in six months.
19:08I don't see that it's anything to get so screwed up about.
19:11Okay, okay, listen.
19:14Do you know why we handled your friend's funeral?
19:16Because Mr. Cedric just happened to be driving along the same road after he crashed.
19:21Another man?
19:22It was Mr. Basil who found the body after his crash.
19:27Coincidence, it must be.
19:28No.
19:29I think there's something funny going on.
19:30You think they're trying to increase their turnover by faking accidents?
19:37Look, if that's what you suspect, why did you go to the police?
19:40I've no proof.
19:42Anyway, they think it was a nutter.
19:44Just like you do.
19:47No, Andrew, I don't think that.
19:49It's just I don't know how I can help.
19:52You can be a witness.
19:55Witness?
19:56That coffin's not been buried, you know.
19:58It's been taken to a family of all about two miles away.
20:01I plan to break in tonight and open it.
20:04You can tell me if it's your friend.
20:06You mean you think it won't be?
20:08I'm not sure.
20:10All I know is I won't be able to rest until I know that everything's okay.
20:13You realise you'd be committing a crime?
20:25Of course.
20:26I know the law.
20:27And that I'd be an accessory.
20:29Please yourself.
20:30I'll do it on my own if I have to.
20:33I'll bring some garlic.
20:35Dracula might try and turn us into the undead.
20:37I'll do it on my own.
20:39I'll do it on my own.
20:41I'll do it on my own.
20:42I'll do it on my own.
20:42I don't know.
21:12I don't know.
21:42I don't know.
21:44Outside.
21:46Maybe it's Dracula.
21:48That doesn't sound so funny in here.
21:50Why is he bandaged up like that?
22:12Search me.
22:13We used to dress them in the best clothes.
22:16What are you doing?
22:17We came here to make a check, didn't we?
22:19No!
22:20Please!
22:21It's only a body.
22:22Your mates get no further use for it.
22:23I don't think he'd care.
22:24I can.
22:25With desecration.
22:26If you don't fancy it, don't look.
22:30I can.
22:31With desecration.
22:32If you don't fancy it, don't look.
22:34I can.
22:35Look.
22:36I can.
22:37You've got this.
22:38You've got this.
22:39Let's see.
22:41Let's do a second.
22:42I've got this.
22:43I can.
22:45You have to do this.
22:46I can.
22:48You've got this.
26:20Where?
26:22That other time six months ago, the following morning I saw Mr. Cedric and Mr. Basil loading
26:27a coffin onto a hearse.
26:29What does that prove?
26:30That's usually the pallbearer's job.
26:31That's usually the pallbearer's job and they had nothing on that day.
26:33I've already checked the diary.
26:34Well, maybe the coffin was empty or they were on their way to Fetcher Corps.
26:38No.
26:39From the way they were struggling there was obviously something inside the coffin.
26:43Maybe it was a private funeral.
26:45Too private to be in the diaries.
26:47I checked the limousines as well.
26:48I checked the limousines as well.
26:49They were all in the garage.
26:50Have you ever heard of a funeral with no cards for the mourners?
26:54You think the same thing may happen tomorrow?
26:55Well, if you were to park outside our yard, you'd find out, wouldn't you?
27:01Oh.
27:02It's pretty nice.
27:03I've never heard of the δrambs.
27:04It's a good day.
27:05I just want to go to a home.
27:06I'm going to go.
27:07I'm going to go.
27:08I'm going to go.
27:09I wish I could take the house right away.
27:11Let me leave this place.
27:12I'm going to go.
27:13Do you have to do that?
27:14The end of the car right in front row comes in front row is still outside.
27:16I want to close the house.
27:17You just want to close the house right away.
27:19No, it's not out there.
27:21It's not out there.
27:22I, but I'm going to get here.
27:24I'm going to close the house.
27:25This is a great place.
27:26And a big thing is a large house right away.
27:27I'm going to close the house.
31:00It's perfectly in order.
31:01The usual amount.
31:02The usual amount.
31:05Another satisfactory transaction on both sides.
31:09I'll be in touch when we need further supplies.
31:12We may be forced to increase our prices, Mr. Rothwell, if the frequency goes on increasing.
31:21Well?
31:21The cost of living, sir?
31:22The cost of living, you understand.
31:25In a manner of speaking, sir.
31:28And the risks involved.
31:30Very well.
31:32Shall we say an extra 5%?
31:3510%.
31:36Of course, if we knew the exact purpose you require them for.
31:4210%.
31:43Thank you, Mr. Rothwell, as long as you're satisfied with the service we provide.
32:21Since the series of successful heart transplant operations, which first brought the Chesterton into the public eye,
32:27a team of surgeons and technicians has been conducting experiments into the replacement of damaged limbs.
32:34And a spokesman announced recently that he believed it would not be long before the bionic man became a reality.
32:41Limb transplants.
32:44So, doctor, what do you think?
32:4520th century body snatchers.
32:48Shades of Birken hair.
32:49I'm sure Andrew's right.
32:50I'm sure Andrew's right.
32:57There is something funny going on.
33:00Look, I would like to follow it up.
33:03But it isn't our territory.
33:05And even if you do come up with a story, the big white chief will probably take it away from you.
33:09Well, I shall resign.
33:11And I shall write the bestseller.
33:16OK.
33:16I think you deserve a shot at it.
33:20Doctor, I shall need a referral letter.
33:23Oh, yes, um...
33:26Intermittent claudication of the left leg.
33:29Hm?
33:30That's your trouble.
33:32Oh.
33:34The condition has been deteriorating considerably
33:37during the last six months.
33:39I shall recommend a vein transplant.
33:41Oh.
33:46Chesterton Clinic? No. Never heard of it.
33:55Are you sure? Was there nothing in the diaries?
33:57No, I'm quite sure.
33:59Well, there obviously is a connection.
34:01It looks to me as if the Chesterton Trust
34:03has come to some kind of secret deal with your bosses.
34:08What? To supply them with arms and legs, do you mean?
34:11Mm.
34:13It's quite creepy.
34:16Mm. It's a nasty racket.
34:18I think it ought to be exposed.
34:20You plan to suss it out, then, this... this clinic?
34:23Mm. I'm gonna try and get myself admitted as a patient.
34:26Now, if I discover any concrete evidence,
34:28I'm not gonna hang around there.
34:29What I'll do is I'll check myself out
34:31and I'll come and find you
34:33and then we can go to the police together.
34:35Okay?
34:36Okay.
34:37I've got three jobs on tomorrow,
34:39so I'll be working late tonight.
34:41I should be here till about 11 o'clock, if you need me.
34:45Right.
34:46Right.
34:47By the way, I'd be careful if I were you.
34:57If they really did fix up those accidents,
34:59they wouldn't think twice about fixing yours.
35:01Well, if they do, Andrew, I expect you to give me a royal send-off.
35:07How old are you, Miss Cairns?
35:21I'm 29.
35:23How far can you walk without pain?
35:25Not very far.
35:27By the time I get home in the evenings,
35:29the leg is throbbing away like mad.
35:32You would actually think, sir,
35:34a vein transplant might be appropriate.
35:37Can you explain what that involves?
35:39I believe it means
35:41replacing the defective artery
35:44with a vein from the other leg.
35:46That's right.
35:47If you have a blockage
35:48which is causing circulatory problems,
35:50it can be very serious.
35:52Not long ago, we'd have had to amputate.
35:54Nowadays, we can offer a less drastic alternative.
35:58Good for you.
36:01Mind the culture. Let's have a look at you.
36:05Right.
36:08Dr Bradley.
36:11I don't believe he's referred a patient to us before.
36:14Well, he certainly seemed to know all about you.
36:16Said you were way ahead of the rest of the field.
36:21Your GP, is he?
36:23Yes.
36:24He's also medical correspondent on the newspaper that I work for.
36:28Diagnosis by proxy?
36:30I'm not sure I approve of that.
36:31He doesn't give instant answers.
36:33If somebody has a specific problem,
36:35he tells them to go to their own doctor.
36:37Would you stand up, please?
36:39Yes.
36:40That hurt?
36:41Yes.
36:42What about that?
36:43Ouch.
36:44We'll have to take some tests, Miss Cairns.
36:46How soon could you come in?
36:48How soon could you take me?
36:49Good night.
36:50Good night.
36:51What?
36:52Good night.
36:54Good night.
44:38What are you after, my dear?
44:41The silver?
44:45No.
44:45No.
44:47No, I...
44:48I was just driving past and I happened to see the house.
44:53I have this thing.
44:54I have this thing.
44:55I have this thing about English country houses.
44:57So you thought you'd pay us a visit.
44:59How nice.
45:00Are you hungry?
45:02Well, I...
45:06May I know you...
45:07May I know you...
45:16May I know your name?
45:17May I know your name?
45:19I know you...
45:49and not...
45:50no, I mean...
45:51but you're taking a dark, okay, good...
45:56I have this thing for now...
45:58could you know you're doing good for a new...
46:00and I will show you...
46:00I have a new place.
46:01It's...
46:03which is you are...
46:04and you're...
46:05I'm not...
46:06I'm not a great one here...
46:08But I'm free.
46:09Of course.
46:12A glass of champagne, my dear, is a particularly fine vintage.
46:19A bit frightening, aren't they?
46:36When I first came, I was absolutely petrified.
46:39But they're not a bad lot, really, not when you get to know them.
46:43Are you a friend of Sir Humphrey's?
46:45I know what you're thinking.
46:47You're thinking, what's that common-looking woman doing in a posh house like this?
46:52No, I wasn't, I assure you.
46:54It's just you were.
46:55It's all right, love.
46:57I still can't believe it myself after all this time.
47:00Joan Ubbord from Bolton of Knobbing with the Gentry.
47:05Do you know, I still have to pinch myself to make sure I'm not dreaming.
47:09There we are, my dear.
47:11Your very good help.
47:13Cheers.
47:15If you'll excuse me.
47:17Oh, he's a good host, isn't he?
47:20Such perfect manners.
47:22Oh, and attractive too.
47:24A rich handsome widower.
47:26Oh, he'd make a grand catch, wouldn't he?
47:28How long have you known him?
47:29Humphrey?
47:30Oh, just over a year.
47:32How did you meet?
47:33On a plane.
47:34Well, that's how we all met.
47:36Oh.
47:37You mean you were all on the same flight?
47:39Yes.
47:40Yes.
47:41From London to Marrakesh.
47:44Oh.
47:45Marrakesh.
47:46You mean the one that crashed in the Atlas Mountains?
47:47Yes.
47:48We're the only survivors.
47:49So this is a sort of reunion.
47:50That's right, yes.
47:51We meet once a month.
47:52This is our 13th.
47:53But why?
47:54Oh, I'd have thought it was an experience that you'd rather forget.
47:58We like to remember the others.
47:59The person just what died.
48:00My husband, for one.
48:01We were sitting right next to each other.
48:02And yet all I got were a couple of bruises.
48:03Well, you were lucky.
48:04I was lucky.
48:05I was lucky.
48:06I was lucky.
48:07I was lucky.
48:08I was lucky.
48:09I was lucky.
48:10I was lucky.
48:11I was lucky.
48:12I was lucky.
48:13I was lucky.
48:14So, this is a sort of reunion.
48:15That's right, yes.
48:16We meet once a month.
48:17This is our 13th.
48:18But why?
48:19Oh, I thought it was an experience that you'd rather forget.
48:21We like to remember the others.
48:23The person just what died.
48:26My husband, for one.
48:27You were lucky.
48:28How long was it before they found you?
48:31Two weeks?
48:32Two and a half.
48:34Amazing.
48:35Well, the papers said it was a miracle.
48:38The search parties had given up hope of finding anyone alive.
48:41They shouldn't have done.
48:43It's extraordinary how canny people can be when they're up against it.
48:48Hmm?
48:49The things they can bring themselves to do.
48:57They've had ack!
48:58They're the ones we can't care, they're the ones we can't care about.
49:00They don't care about the children.
49:01The ones we can't care about them.
49:02They can't care about the children.
49:03Dinner is served.
49:12Sorry to hear about your wife, Luciano.
49:14Still, she went quickly. That must have been a blessing.
49:16It was. She was in great pain still.
49:18If she had lived it, it would have only prolonged the suffering.
49:21Yes, when I lost my poor dear Penelope,
49:23it was some consolation that her death was instantaneous.
49:27What happened to her?
49:29A riding accident.
49:31We have a great black mare called Thundercloud.
49:33Moody beast. Unpredictable.
49:35Penelope thought she could control her.
49:37Turned out she couldn't.
49:39Have you thought of marrying again, Humphrey?
49:42I've thought of it, but you know how it is.
49:44At my age, one gets rather set in one's ways.
49:47Difficult to find a woman who's prepared to adapt.
49:50How about you, Ruth? Are you married?
49:54No.
49:56No, I'm a workaholic.
49:59Difficult to find a man who's prepared to adapt.
50:03Perhaps you and Humphrey should get together.
50:07I doubt if our tastes would coincide.
50:10Why do you say that?
50:12Well, I mean, you don't even know me at all.
50:15True.
50:16But with such an age gap between us,
50:18I think there might also be a credibility gap.
50:21I'm a creature of habit, my dear.
50:24And you might find some of my habits a little eccentric.
50:27I'm sure she'd come to share them, Humphrey.
50:31In time.
50:33I doubt it.
50:34I doubt if anyone could share them
50:36who hasn't had to make a virtue of necessity.
50:38Crenshaw.
50:40I believe we're ready for the main course.
50:46Yes, sir.
51:10No!
51:23Something the matter, my dear?
51:26Huh?
51:28I know who's under there.
51:30Oh, I think you're all disgusting!
51:38You think it's wise to let her run off like that?
51:40If she doesn't want to stay, that's her funeral.
51:43By the way, I hope you can all stay the night,
51:46because tomorrow I think I can promise you a very special meal.
51:51Andrew!
52:13Andrew!
52:16Andrew!
52:21Andrew!
52:25It's no use, I'm afraid.
52:44You...
52:45You.
52:56Yes.
52:58I was on that plane as well.
53:15Let's go.
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