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E3 "Smiley Tracks the Mole. HD, English subtitles. The legendary series based on John le Carre's novel, with an all-star cast. Retired espionage veteran George Smiley is called out on a top secret mission: to uncover a Soviet agent within top MI6's echelons. Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy is a 1979 seven-part drama spy mini-series, directed by John Irvin. Jonathan Powell produced this adaptation of John le Carré's novel Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (1974). The mini-series stars Alec Guinness, Michael Jayston, Ian Richardson, Anthony Bate, Ian Bannen, Hywel Bennett, George Sewell, Beryl Reid, Susan Kodicek, Terence Rigby, Alexander Knox, Michael Aldridge and Patrick Stewart.
Transcript
00:00Now Ricky Towers' cables to the circus were detailed and specific.
00:15He was required by London Station to submit copious background on Irina.
00:20Names of former contacts, acquaintances inside Moscow Centre.
00:24There should be a file of some size and we need to see it.
00:30That's circus material, George. I can only deliver from the minister.
00:39I know that look, George.
00:41I'm breaking into the circus, am I? Playing burglar bill.
00:44If you wouldn't mind, Peter. And while you're enjoying yourself, I shall visit Oxford to look up an old and invaluable friend.
00:53Please, don't take any unnecessary risks.
01:12ORGAN PLAYS
01:42ORGAN PLAYS
02:12ORGAN PLAYS
02:17You must assume, Peter, the circus has the dogs on you 24 hours a day.
02:23Think of it as a foreign country.
02:28Hello, Bryant.
02:31Hello. Nice to see you again, sir.
02:33Mr. Walden, please.
02:42Mr. Goodham, sir.
02:47Mr. Lordis Strickland's expecting you.
02:50We'll meet you by the barrier on the fifth floor.
02:52All right.
02:55Thanks.
03:04About time someone oiled, these things, isn't it?
03:06We keep asking.
03:08You can talk till you're blue in the face.
03:28Well, Matt, Peter, greetings.
03:31A trifle late, but never mind.
03:32Sorry, Lorda.
03:33You have to make allowances when we come to the yokels.
03:35Oh, God, how long have you had that monster?
03:38You really are a stranger, aren't you?
03:43It says man-eyes.
03:45Fantastic.
03:46Quite fantastic.
03:48Oh, hello, Bill.
03:50What the hell are you doing here, you pariah?
03:55He's got some French diplomatic courier he wants to buy,
03:58and he needs to wash some dirty money.
04:00That's a job for banking section, of course,
04:02so we're sorting out the tango for him.
04:04He knows it has to be London station cleared.
04:06He told me the papers were already routed to you.
04:10They're probably in your intray now, Bill.
04:12They had better be, Peter.
04:15Mind your lock-up of spoons.
04:17These scout hunters, they have the gold out of your teeth.
04:19Lock up the girls as well.
04:22If they'll let you.
04:26There we go, Bill.
04:28Keys of the city.
04:29London station couldn't be in better hands.
04:34Everything's a lot tighter here these days, Willem.
04:37Hey, Lorda, hold on.
04:40Have you seen bloody Bill anywhere?
04:44Indeed, I have seen Bill.
04:46We were having a brief word about a couple of things
04:48back down the corridor.
04:49He's wanted urgently.
04:51Immediately, Lorda, actually.
04:52We've put out an alert for him.
04:54I suspect he may well be on his way to you at this moment.
05:05Peter.
05:07Hello.
05:09Hi.
05:12Thanks for the glad hand.
05:14I did wipe the cow dung off my boots.
05:16What's the joke, Roy?
05:19The joke, Peter, old lad.
05:21Just surprised to see you, that's all.
05:25We're used to having this floor to ourselves.
05:28Would you like to see my pass, Toby?
05:29How are you keeping?
05:34Oh, I wintered very well, thanks.
05:36You know what it's like living in the Brixton rest house these days.
05:38Plenty of ludo, ping-pong.
05:40Normally, I'd be having my afternoon zizzer this time.
05:43Afternoon, Peter.
05:45Don't waste Lorda's time.
05:47No, sir.
05:48Sorry, sir.
05:48No, sir.
05:49departijlan, we'll be using it.
05:57I'll be with you please, don't be with you.
06:00I'll wait for a minute.
06:03You are...
06:11THE END
06:41THE END
07:11THE END
07:13THE END
07:41oh jingle darling could you possibly make it tomorrow don't be cross jingle it isn't often
07:54my oldest oldest lover comes to see me oh george if only i'd seen you first i'll give you a whole
08:02hour all to yourself honestly i will darling one of my dunderheads i will teach
08:11i don't know why
08:13oh george of all the lovely darling man i ever knew
08:23walked flush did you see his shoes
08:28oh bless you darling god bless
08:41did he walk alone flush not accompanied were we quite alone connie
08:53so what does george want from connie the bad boy
09:00her memory to go over some very old ground connie
09:06hear that flush first they chuck us out with an old bone then they come begging to us
09:12i was the best head of research the circus ever had
09:16everyone knew that
09:18and what did they say the day they gave me the chop
09:22that personnel cow
09:24you're losing your sense of proportion connie it's time you got out into the real world
09:30i hate the real world
09:37i like the circus of my lovely boys
09:43poliakov
09:49alexei alexandrovich poliakov cultural attache soviet embassy london
09:55born march the third 1922 in the ukraine
10:02graduate of leningrad state university
10:06height five foot ten
10:08color of eyes green color of hair black
10:11married but unaccompanied by wife
10:14and a six-cylinder carla trained hood if ever i saw one
10:19but don't tell percy alaline or toby esterhazy
10:23oh no
10:25alexei alexandrovich was as pure as the driven snow
10:30he was persil white wasn't he flush
10:33and connie's an old silly
10:35because if she doesn't lay off and do as she's told
10:38you'd have to pack her bags and go
10:40he's come alive
10:43poliakov just as you predicted
10:46of course he has
10:47of course he has
10:49i knew it in my bones
10:51the day he arrived i thought hello
10:54i'm going to have some fun with you
10:56tough as a button
10:58cultural attache balls
11:01army written all over him
11:03but not declared george
11:05not a mention
11:06oh he had a lovely voice
11:09mellow like yours
11:11i used to play the tapes over and over
11:14just to bathe in it
11:17bottom picture too
11:20i just know
11:21not that we ever caught him at it
11:23we might have done if
11:25tobe had played along and offered him a bum or two
11:28but tiny tobe wouldn't
11:30eight years
11:32i watched pretty polly for eight years
11:39then last remembrance day i got him there he was that smashing november morning at the wreath lane and we photographed his medals two gallon tree and four campaign oh yes
11:54alex poliakov is a star soldier just i told them i'm not a word so i said to tobe listen you two-faced ferret ego has got the better part of cover and that's nothing new now will you turn pretty polly inside out for me because connie's little hunch has turned up trumps
12:17and what did tobe ester hazy say no i got the dead fish voice tell percy aleline percy's in charge
12:24and then not every ex-warrior's a carla agent says percy i said listen percy poliakov's running an english mole so i get the rude letter stop it or else
12:39so i wrote at the bottom yes repeat no
12:46so here we are
12:53flush and me
12:56please kiss me george
13:04hey ho halcyon days
13:21did i start the landslide george you were always dead right connie
13:27and is george now picking up the pieces something of the sort
13:34poor loves trained to empire trained to rule the waves english one could be proud then they could george
13:46all gone
13:53taken away
13:54bye bye world
13:59if it's bad george
14:01don't come back
14:03promise
14:05i want to remember you
14:09just as you were
14:11my lovely lovely boys
14:16promise
14:18promise
14:19all right lauder i'll just have to wait for the wheels to turn
14:34i don't need a pass to use the gents do i
14:39i don't need a pass to use the gents do i need a pass to use the gents do i need a pass to use the gents
14:46oh
14:50oh
14:53oh
15:01oh
15:03oh
15:07oh
15:09oh
15:11oh
15:13oh
17:18Connie's appraisal matches the story Rina gave Ricky Tower.
17:22The implications, the indications, are that Carla has managed to build himself a cage of senior men placed about the globe who work directly and exclusively to him at Moscow Center.
17:35Yeah.
17:36Polyakov is Carla's executant in London.
17:40You offer that as a working hypothesis?
17:44Well, it's called Parisian Witchcraft, that vital flow of Russian intelligence which happily came Alaline's way.
17:50Supplementary estimates to the Treasury.
17:54Special accommodation in London.
17:58Wider exploitation.
18:01See also Secret Annex.
18:04May I see it?
18:06The minister keeps it in his personal safe.
18:09Do you know the combination?
18:10Certainly not.
18:12What's the title of this unobtainable document?
18:15It doesn't have one.
18:17It's highly secret and we've done everything humanly possible to keep the readership to a minimum.
18:22The supply of the Witchcraft material is our old friend Merlin.
18:25Does the file give his identity?
18:26Don't be ridiculous.
18:28The minister wouldn't want to know.
18:30And Alaline wouldn't want to tell him.
18:32What does wider exploitation mean?
18:35I refuse to be interrogated, George.
18:38I entirely fail to see why I should waste your time pursuing this line of inquiry.
18:42By advice I should have them specially cleared before I let you see any of this.
18:46Witchcraft cleared?
18:47Yes, George.
18:49Do we have a list of people who've been cleared in that way?
18:53I hope you're not going fair, George.
18:59Please, stick with the primary problem.
19:01The mole, Gerald.
19:03Instead of rootling around in extraneous matters.
19:07This is no time to be whimsical.
19:10Oh, you off.
19:12You won't forget Predo, will you?
19:14Anything at all you can get on him.
19:15Even scraps would help.
19:23He has a point, George.
19:32Witchcraft and Merlin.
19:35Polyakov and the mole.
19:37Predo getting himself shot up on some wild goose chase of Controls in the rural charms of Czechoslovakia.
19:42You think it all connects?
19:45I think, Peter, I'm not the first to make this journey of exploration.
19:51I believe Control was here before me.
19:53He might even have made the full distance.
19:55But for the bullets in Predo's back, there are three of them and Alaline.
20:01Control's words.
20:03He meant Operation Witchcraft, of course.
20:06Merlin's minders, or inventors, or programmers, or marionettes, or what?
20:15Why was Control always so hostile to Alaline?
20:18Percy wasn't a complete fool.
20:20Percy didn't flirt, Peter.
20:22And Control hadn't reckoned on the power of the Alaline lobby.
20:26Who were they?
20:27Golfers.
20:28Golfers and Conservatives.
20:30That's what Control said to me.
20:32I got a call from Control one day, very sharp, very combative.
20:36George, come in here or they'll be bloodshed.
20:47Brother Percy's trying to twist my tail.
20:52Take a look at this nonsense.
20:55Top-level Soviet naval dispatch.
20:59Specially prepared for the Soviet High Command.
21:02Isn't it, Percy?
21:05An appreciation of a naval exercise in the Medellin of Black Sea.
21:11Of which our sailors have been screaming for details.
21:15Haven't they, Percy?
21:17Topicality is always suspect.
21:19Yes, George.
21:20Would you like to repeat that for Percy?
21:23Who made the translation?
21:27God made it, didn't he, Percy?
21:30Don't ask him anything, he won't tell you.
21:33Sure to seize strike power.
21:35Radio activation of enemy alert procedures.
21:38This is hardly my territory.
21:40Don't let that worry you.
21:42Total ignorance of subject matter doesn't bother Percy.
21:45Whose initials are these?
21:47Zaroff.
21:48Admiral.
21:49Black Sea Fleet.
21:50What do our own evaluators say?
21:51They have not seen it.
21:52And what's more, they're not going to.
21:53However, my brother in Christ Lily of Naval Intelligence has passed a preliminary opinion, has he not, Percy?
22:09Percy showed it to him last night.
22:11Over a pink gin, was it, Percy?
22:13At the Admiral, Tim.
22:14Note that, George.
22:16They battened down the hatches and bunged up the portholes for Percy.
22:19Brother Lily telephoned me half an hour ago to congratulate me.
22:24He believes this material to be neither a plant nor chicken feed, but genuine gold dust.
22:29And he seeks our permission to Percy's, I suppose I should say, to apprise his fellow sea lords of its conclusions.
22:38Quite impossible.
22:39It's for his eyes only, at least for another couple of weeks.
22:43It's so hot, you see, George.
22:45But where does it come from?
22:47Who's the case officer?
22:49You'll enjoy this.
22:51Source Merlin has access to the most sensitive levels of Soviet policy making.
22:56We've dubbed his product witchcraft.
22:59And ask him who we are, George.
23:01Merlin is the fruit of a long cultivation by certain people in his service.
23:06People who are bound to me as I am to them.
23:09People who are not at all entertained by the failure rate about this place.
23:13Been too much blown.
23:15Too much lost.
23:16Wasted.
23:17Too many scandals.
23:18I've said so many times that I might as well have talked to the wind for all the heed he'd paid me.
23:24He means me, George.
23:26The ordinary principles of tradecraft and security have gone to the wall in this service.
23:31It's all divide and rule stimulated from the top.
23:34Me again?
23:35We're losing our livelihood, our self-respect.
23:39We've had enough.
23:44We've had a belly full, in fact.
23:46Please.
23:50And like everybody who's ever had enough, he wants more.
23:59This service.
24:02Percy Alleline would sell his mother for a knighthood and this service, for a seat in the House of Rhodes.
24:09Suppose Merlin's genuine.
24:11Suppose Merlin would pick Percy?
24:13It seems somebody has.
24:16I gather Percy's only the impression he'd picked himself and a whole team.
24:22You're sure he left you out, are you, George?
24:25what are you going to do about it depends on it i'll wait for it to show itself
24:40in the meantime i see nothing to deal with except percy's envious eye on my chair
24:47and i've put my thumb in that optic before
24:55george little tattle tuesday again
25:07this time
25:13oh lord
25:25i thought we'd be half over by now
25:27you've got a rabbit to pull out of your hat today percy you've got that britain can make it look
25:34about you very intimidating should we have brought our sandwiches i'll be brief bill so long as i'm
25:41not obstructed i'm sorry traffic should have walked i think you and percy between you are contriving
25:50you're going to keep me off the streets
25:56they're all here now sir
25:59would you go in please gentlemen
26:02how often do i have to emphasize the extreme sensitivity of the source of the witchcraft product i must have a lot of
26:21i must insist there is no existing method of whitehall distribution to meet the case
26:35do i have to remind you of that disgraceful incident when an undersecretary albeit overworked so be it
26:45but the fact remains the man actually gave his dispatch box key to his personal assistant
26:52we simply cannot afford that kind of ludicrous insecurity when we are handling witchcraft
26:59i have already discussed the problem with lily of naval intelligence
27:12and he is prepared to put at our disposal a special main reading room in the admiralty main building
27:20where witchcraft material can be seen by our customers and watched over by a senior janitor of this service
27:28wouldn't you rather have security call
27:30the reading room will be known for cover purposes
27:39as the conference room of the adriatic working party
27:43the AWP room for short
27:45thank you
27:47customers with reading rights will not have passes
27:51since these can be too accessible
27:52like keys
27:54instead they will appear on a special list with their photographs
27:58and they will identify themselves personally to my janitor
28:02whose janitor percy
28:05well he's already got his own personal wizard
28:09the odd commissionaire seems modest enough domestic star
28:13allowing that all this is necessary essential
28:20my minister will want to know a lot more about the cost
28:24you want it to appear to be born by the admiralty even if you have to reimburse coveredly
28:31yes of course the reading room will have to be extensively rebuilt to begin with
28:35now i would like to call your attention to the foreign office comment on the most recent witchcraft product
28:43and i quote
28:45this document sheds an extraordinary sidelight
28:47on soviet aggressive thinking
28:49does that mean they like it
28:56do you like it bill
29:00it's from the very heart of your territory
29:04the fact is in 25 years i haven't laid hands on anything of that quality
29:13unless i'm extremely mistaken nor have our american cousins
29:16anyone taking that stuff to washington could drive a very hard bargain indeed
29:20early days bill agreed george
29:22but if mary maintains the standard of that
29:24we're going to be able to buy whatever's in the yank shop
29:27i don't think control is going to play
29:29that would rule me out as well of course
29:34percy will get his reading room
29:36here and after that i suppose anything's possible
29:56did you want to ask me something mr smiley
30:05i'm afraid he's not seeing anyone at all today
30:08again
30:10i'm being asked why he's cancelled the tuesday conferences
30:19you know i can't add anything to his memorandum mr smiley even for you
30:23even if i could mr smiley no of course
30:28i was rather hoping before i set off on this hong kong trip he wants me to make
30:33well when i get back perhaps he'll have got through that little lot
30:38and now there's a witchcraft committee the minister's in the chair al aline's vice chairman
30:56merlin's become an industry it's the industry and i'm not employed you won't even read al aline's
31:02reports i haven't time they're buying their way in with counterfeit money tell them that
31:10tell them anything i need time
31:16there are three of them and alaline sweat them george tempt them bully them any damn thing give them
31:23whatever they eat i need time
31:35so
31:38so
31:48so
31:50so
31:56Come to the server, Mr. Smiley.
32:26How are your children, Toby?
32:28Doing terribly well, thank you, George.
32:31The boys at Westminster, have I got that right?
32:34Your daughter's probably left school by now, has she?
32:36First year medical student. Loves it.
32:38Good for her.
32:40Toby, I have to ask you this.
32:43Sorry to come prying.
32:46Your department's a long way behind with its worksheets.
32:49Two months, almost. Now, why is that?
32:52It's not lamplighter's style.
32:56No, we're not infallible, George.
32:58Two months. Well, I won't question it.
33:01Is it terribly important?
33:03Of course, if you say it is, then I'll see it's dealt with, of course.
33:07The question is, why, Toby?
33:10Let me be blunt.
33:12Not your style, George.
33:15I'm allowed to say that, surely.
33:18I am, after all, one of your oldest proteges.
33:21Vienna was a long time ago.
33:24You haven't, perhaps, been using your staff for any special jobs lately, have you?
33:28Either at home or abroad.
33:30I mean the kind of special jobs which, for good reasons of security,
33:34you haven't felt able to mention in your returns.
33:38Who would I do that for, George?
33:41You know, in my book, that's completely illegal.
33:44Well, if Percy Alanine, for example, ordered you to do something and not record it,
33:51that would put you in a difficult position.
33:53What sort of something?
33:55Clear a foreign letterbox, prime a safe house, watch someone's back, spike an embassy.
34:01You see?
34:02It's all lamplight at work.
34:04If Percy told you to do it, you might quite reasonably assume he was acting on instructions from the fifth floor.
34:10I do like the service, George.
34:22I may be sentimental about it, but I prefer to stay in it.
34:26Now, you understand that, you of all people.
34:36My problem is promotion.
34:40I mean the absence of it.
34:44I've so many years' seniority that I feel actually quite embarrassed
34:49when these young fellows ask me to take orders from them.
34:54Who told me?
34:55Which young fellows?
34:57Roy Bland?
34:58Percy?
34:59Would you call Percy young?
35:02Who?
35:03When you're overdue for promotion and working your fingers to the bone,
35:08anyone looks young who's above you on the ladder.
35:11Have you been taking orders?
35:15You know the line of command, George.
35:18Perhaps control could move you up a few rows.
35:29Well, you know, actually, I'm not sure he's able to these days.
35:34Are you?
35:35Are you?
35:43So what's the deal?
35:45There isn't a deal, Roy, really.
35:47It's just that control feels the present situation is unhealthy.
35:51He doesn't like to see you getting mixed up with a cabal.
35:54Frankly, nor do I.
35:56So what's the deal?
35:58What do you want?
36:00What about 5,000 quid out the reptile fund, for starters?
36:05And a house and a car.
36:06And a kid to eat it.
36:08Your father would turn in his grave.
36:11Let him rotate.
36:13You old commie thug.
36:18If there's no deal, George, you'll have to tell control he can get stuffed.
36:24I've paid, you see. You know that.
36:27I don't know what the hell I've bought with it, but I've paid a packet.
36:32Poznan, Budapest, Prague, back to Poznan.
36:37Have you ever been to Poznan?
36:40Sofia, Kiev, two bloody nervous breakdowns and still between the shafts.
36:48That's big money at any age.
36:51Even yours.
36:53No one can deny that, Roy.
36:56And you brought me in, remember.
37:01If you think I'm going to the bad, you've only got yourself to blame.
37:07You're an educated sort of a swine.
37:12An artist is a bloke who can hold two fundamentally opposing views and still function.
37:20Who dreamed that one up?
37:22Scott Fitzgerald.
37:24Well, Fitzgerald knew a thing or two.
37:29And I'm definitely functioning.
37:32As a good socialist, I'm going where the money is.
37:35As a good capitalist, I'm sticking with the revolution because if you can't beat it, spy on it.
37:42Don't look like that, George.
37:46It's the name of the game these days.
37:49You scratch my conscience, I'll drive your jag, right?
37:53No.
37:54Did you get that from Hayden?
37:56Is that one of Bill's jokes about materialist England?
37:59The pigs in clover society?
38:02Don't you like it?
38:03Not much.
38:04Of course there are competitive and acquisitive instincts in Western society.
38:09But they are offset against other concerns which you won't find in...
38:12Poznan, Budapest, Kiev, Sofia.
38:17Tell me all about it, George.
38:20I'm just saying that's England now, man.
38:24All you have to do is look out the bloody window.
38:27You're seen with Bill Hayden a great deal these days.
38:31Jealous, George?
38:34You've got his job.
38:36Your control's high, Chamberlain.
38:38What more do you want?
38:40Long as it lasts.
39:06They do say you write the reports.
39:08I thought that was Roy's job.
39:10No.
39:11Bland makes the translations.
39:13You write the covering reports.
39:15They're typed on your machine.
39:18The material's not cleared for typists.
39:23Percy Alleline won't do.
39:25Is that the premise?
39:27Which means that Merlin won't do either.
39:29Poor old Control.
39:31He isn't a pickle.
39:33Merlin would do if he were my source, wouldn't he?
39:36If Dazzling Bloody Bill here putted along and said he took a whacking big fish and wanted to play him alone and sod the expense, what would happen then?
39:44Control would say, that's very nifty of you, Bill boy.
39:47You do it just the way you want, Bill boy.
39:50Have some filthy jasmine tea.
39:52You'd be giving me a medal now, instead of sending you snooping round corridors.
39:59We used to be rather a classy bunch.
40:02Why are we so vulgar these days?
40:04He thinks Percy's on the mate.
40:06So he is.
40:07I also want to be head boy.
40:09And Toby and Roy have designs on your spot.
40:15Since when was ambition an offence in our peacely outfit?
40:21Is Anne at home?
40:27Sent her out to play while you grill your old buddy.
40:33Who runs him, Bill?
40:34Percy?
40:35Who do you think?
40:36Carla runs him.
40:38Stands out a mile.
40:40Lower-class bloke with upper-class saucers.
40:42Must be a bounder.
40:43Bill?
40:44Percy is sold out to Carla.
40:46Any possible explanation?
40:48Percy is our house-mode.
40:51I meant who runs Merlin?
40:53Who is Merlin?
40:56What's going on?
41:04This is a Callow, isn't it?
41:06Nice.
41:07Nice.
41:08Very nice.
41:09Bill.
41:10Doesn't anyone think my nose should be out of joint?
41:14I'm supposed to be in charge of the Russian target.
41:17Given it my best years.
41:19Set up networks, talent spotters, all mod cons.
41:24You chaps on the top floor have forgotten what it's like to run an operation where it takes you three days to post a letter and you don't even get an answer for your trouble.
41:31That's hardly fair to control.
41:33You've heard him a hundred times on how he detests the glamour boy agents who hog the budget.
41:39How he hates miracles if they put the bread and butter networks out of focus.
41:44It's a pity he doesn't have the same hatred of failure.
41:49Has he lived with it too long?
41:53Face it, George.
41:55It's Percy.
41:57Percy's success.
41:59It's thrown control.
42:01And me, a bit.
42:04Trouble is, my networks haven't been good enough.
42:06This is new.
42:09I fancy this very much.
42:14Anne gave it, ma'am.
42:16Making amends?
42:17Probably.
42:19Must have been quite a sin.
42:24How is she?
42:29George, cut the cord.
42:32Get away from control.
42:37He's cut you out of his life for weeks on end.
42:40Dispatching you about with errands of probation I could handle.
42:44What's he doing up there?
42:47He's been going through files of old circus folk heroes from year minus one, half of them under the earth already.
42:54Sniffing out the dirt to see who was pink, who was a queen.
42:58He's given us all that, hasn't he?
43:02I don't think that's true.
43:04Senile paranoia.
43:06Control's going potty.
43:08And he's also dying.
43:11It's just a question of which gets him first.
43:13And within six months of Bill Hayden's diagnosis, Control was indeed dead.
43:26And what killed him?
43:29Operation Witchcraft or Operation Testifier?
43:32Neither.
43:34But it's not been melodramatic.
43:36Control would disapprove.
43:38He died of old age.
43:39A little early.
43:42But Testifier destroyed his function in life, which was a form of murder.
43:50I don't have nearly enough on Testifier, Peter.
43:55Would you please, er...
44:00Of course, George.
44:09Imkü meny California for color for love.
44:11Drink as much of Israel, it's all about the unknown.
44:14Government want to make my mind.
44:16Presenters be made manner of What is salvation in the past.
44:20Great use of Marian arts Saiyan videos as rocks.
44:22It's all about the unknown to all.
44:24For life will have been pavedibilities with me.
44:26Of course, only unable to make physically alive, but with alt имеет,
44:28norathletti thepine nerf defendants well.
44:30Of course, we will disagree with others together for design and also forSmall and Janus.
44:31According to the Lord
44:45For my eyes have seen your eyes salvation
45:00Which now has breathed before the face of all people
45:19To be your light, to light your chances
45:31And to be the glory of my people Israel
45:53Glory be to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost
46:06As it was in the beginning, is now and ever shining
46:19One without end, Amen
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