- hace 2 días
Un hombre mudo y desesperado roba en la diligencia.
Estrella invitada: Richard Devon
Estrella invitada: Richard Devon
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CortometrajesTranscripción
00:06The Rifleman
00:14Starring Chuck Connors
00:56He finally doesn't know what he's doing anymore
00:58I just casually suggest that we raise the stakes
01:03Ten minutes later, I got them cleaned out
01:06It's like panning gold in the Denver Mint
01:11Come on, drink up here
01:15Red Eye
01:17Sure thing, hey
01:19Hey, the drinks are on me, fella
01:22Celebrating a little strike I just made
01:24Strike, eh?
01:28Uh-oh, I guess my money's no good, fella
01:35Hey, you get a load of them britches
01:39Look at them moccasins, too
01:41What are you doing, boy?
01:43You playing engine or something?
01:45Huh?
01:53Hey, that's a mighty fancy toe sticker you got there
01:57Aren't you afraid you'd cut yourself with such a big knife?
02:00Huh?
02:03Yes, sir
02:05That's mighty fancy
02:06Let me have a look at it
02:07Hello, mister
02:08Let me have a look at it
03:02No, no, no, no, no.
03:07Myrtle, Mark.
03:08Not while you've still got a half a bag left.
03:11Hey.
03:19Let's see.
03:20Now, we have a frying pan and a fork and spoon
03:24que viene a $0.60.
03:33¿Mornen, Myrtle?
03:35Hola, Marc.
03:36Voy a estar con vosotros en un momento.
03:40Justo pronto que termine con este cliente.
03:58¿Qué es lo que querías, Marc?
04:04Some...
04:05Nails.
04:06Nails?
04:07¿Qué tipo?
04:09Tenpenny?
04:09Eightpenny?
04:10Finishing nails?
04:11Shingle nails?
04:13Tenpenny.
04:14For my chicken coop.
04:15Tenpenny.
04:16How many?
04:18Two pounds.
04:19And a door latch.
04:32Here you are, Marc.
04:33Two pounds of tenpenny nails
04:35and an all-weather latch.
04:36That'll be 40 cents.
04:38Well, pa said I could sign.
04:50Thank you, Myrtle.
04:52Be sure and say hello to your pa, Marc.
04:55All right.
05:05That's sure a swell-looking knife you've got.
05:08I've never seen a knife quite like that one before.
05:14Want some peanut brittle?
05:17It's real good.
05:20What's the matter?
05:21Can't you talk?
05:22¿Qué?
06:08¿Qué?
06:25¿Qué?
06:26Gee, I wish I could do that.
06:28Oh, I almost forgot.
06:30My name's Mark.
06:31What's yours?
06:37You got a sore throat?
06:45You mean...
06:47you can't talk?
06:55I'm sorry.
07:10Me?
07:14Write?
07:16Well, can I write?
07:19Oh, sure.
07:20Can you?
07:23Oh.
07:29Can...
07:30I...
07:33write...
07:39Can I write my brand?
07:44Yeah.
07:47Oh, my name.
07:48Me write my name.
07:50Oh, sure.
07:52Here.
08:05I need...
08:06men...
08:17who...
08:22¿Cómo se llama Mark II?
08:25¡I'll be!
08:27¿Y no has visto nada escrito antes?
08:31¡Say, Mark!
08:33Si te vas a estar en la ciudad por un momento,
08:36¿por qué nos podemos encontrar y te enseñar un poco de writing?
08:40¿Y te enseñar un poco de escribir a knife?
08:45¡Vamos a ver!
08:47¡Vamos a ver!
08:49¡Vamos a ver el coche mañana!
08:51¡Hop out Saturday morning!
08:54¡Mark!
08:56¡Mark! ¡Vamos, hijo! ¡Vamos a ir!
08:58¡Vamos, Pa!
09:00¡Vamos a ir ahora, Mark!
09:02¡Es ha sido muy divertido de encontrarte!
09:04¡Vamos a ver aquí Saturday morning, ¿vale?
09:07¡Mark!
09:09¡Vamos, Pa!
09:10¡Vamos, Mark!
09:17¡Conocer!
09:18¿Who you talking to, son?
09:19¡That was Mark!
09:20¡Mark!
09:21¡That's his name!
09:22¡Only he can't talk!
09:24¡He showed me a scar on his throat!
09:26¡Must have had an operation on his voice or something!
09:29¡Oh!
09:29¡Oh! ¡What's his last name?
09:30¡I don't know!
09:31¡I haven't seen him around here before!
09:33¡Neither have I!
09:34¡I met him at the store!
09:36¡I'm going to meet him Saturday morning!
09:37¡Teach him how to write!
09:39Es una cosa muy buena, señor.
09:42Muy bien.
09:43¿Qué pasa con el harness?
09:45Bueno, no está terminado.
09:46Seguire mañana.
10:06Ahí está.
10:08No es tan bueno como una vez.
10:26¡No!
10:34Get out of town far and fast.
10:39If you don't, I'll find you and cut you down to nothing.
10:41No, no, no.
11:27No, no, no.
11:41But today he told me how he lost his voice.
11:46The Indians killed his parents when he was a little boy.
11:48He took them away with them.
11:51Well, he said he was awful scared.
11:53And that he was so scared he couldn't learn to talk their language.
11:58Well, they thought that he was only being stubborn or something.
12:02So they cut out his voice so he wouldn't be able to talk at all.
12:08Then he told me something else.
12:11He said that since the knife cut out his voice, he'd have to let it talk for him.
12:20You can let it down now.
12:24Mark, why don't you go out and invite your friend here for supper?
12:27I'd like to meet him.
12:29I knew you would.
12:31I think he'd like to meet you, too.
12:33I told him a lot about you.
12:34You did, huh?
12:36Well, look, when you get your other chores finished, why don't you ride back to his camp and bring him
12:39here?
12:40By the time you get back, I'll have supper ready.
12:42All right.
12:44I'll be back by Sunday.
12:54Did you care for another piece of pie, Mark?
12:57Well, I don't have to ask this Mark if he wants another piece.
12:59His middle name is pie.
13:01Well, I can't help it if Pa's such a good cook.
13:05Fact is, I think Pa missed his calling.
13:07Oh, shit.
13:26I hear you, too, have been having yourselves quite a time out at your camp on Millers Creek.
13:31Reminds me of my younger days back in the Nations.
13:33My friends and I used to go camping every chance we got up in the Ozarks.
13:38That's when I got my education in camping know-how, from the Masters, the Cherokees.
13:47I know Mark's told me of your treatment by the Indians.
13:50That's a shame, son.
13:52It's a shame.
13:53Nobody can blame you for feeling the way you do.
13:56Right now, you're full of bitterness and hatred,
13:59but you can't let that knife speak for you the rest of your life.
14:03Now, even though you got hurt real bad, there's still a lot of things you can do to help yourself.
14:06One of the best is to get an education.
14:09Now, I know a special school in Denver would be just right for you.
14:13It's pretty expensive.
14:14Might cost as much as $500 tuition,
14:16but you could earn your way by getting a job.
14:19As a matter of fact, I'd be mighty glad to help you get started.
14:23What do you say?
14:31Mark, I tried to show you I was your friend.
14:33You just don't seem to know what the word friend means.
14:38Mark!
14:39Mark, come back!
14:40Let him go, son.
14:41Who shouldn't have talked to him like that?
14:43What should I have said?
14:44Thanks for breaking a bow that meant a great deal to me?
14:47I don't mean that.
14:47You just shouldn't have lost your temper.
14:49I lost my temper.
14:54Oh, not exactly.
14:57But you sure balled him out.
14:59Well, maybe I did.
15:01Only because I was thinking of him.
15:03You see, son, a lot of times people can't help doing things they know are wrong, but when they find
15:10out they can't get away with it, by the way down inside they feel better.
15:15I think I know what you mean.
15:23Well, now, since I did the cooking, how about you doing the dishes?
15:27All right.
15:31Mark.
15:32Come here, son.
15:35I think it might be a good idea if tomorrow morning you rode back to your friend's camp.
15:40I think he'll be wanting to see you.
15:44Thanks, Paula.
15:46Thanks, Paula.
15:47Thanks, Paula.
16:00I want you to leave.
16:03And I'm glad you didn't.
16:05Because I've got a lot of evening up to do.
16:07Now, you take that tote sticker and throw it down on the ground.
16:10And you do it real easy, Mike.
16:13I'm going to enjoy what's coming.
16:18What's the matter with you?
16:21Look, I'm getting tired of talking and getting no answers.
16:24Now, throw it down at night.
16:28For the last time, throw it down.
16:32I'm talking to you.
16:33Answer me!
16:39What is this?
16:41Are you a dummy or something?
16:56Mark!
16:57What happened?
16:58Mark!
16:59Let him go!
17:00Please, Mark!
17:01You're gonna kill him!
17:02Please, let go!
17:04What happened?
17:14It's the third time he's jumped me.
17:17He ought to be locked up or something.
17:20He's an animal.
17:22What did you do to make him act like that?
17:24He must have said or done something.
17:27I didn't do nothing.
17:29He wouldn't answer me when I talked to him.
17:31He just asked me if he was a dummy, that's all.
17:35Mr. McGowan.
17:37He can't talk.
17:38That's why he got mad.
17:40Shouldn't have called him that.
17:43Mark!
17:44Mark!
17:47Mark!
17:49Mark!
17:52Mark!
17:53Mark!
17:54Mark!
17:54Mark!
17:54Mark, come back!
18:05You say he almost jumped the life out of McGowan?
18:08Yep.
18:09Right over there.
18:10I thought he had turned purple and bust.
18:12A boy like that.
18:14After all he's gone through, he's got a lot of hate built up inside.
18:17He could explode like a keg of powder if he's pushed too far.
18:20Yeah, but he shouldn't have talked to him like that.
18:22No, he shouldn't have, son.
18:24But knowing McGowan, I'm inclined to think he did more than talk to him.
18:27Well, it doesn't look like your friend's coming back for a while.
18:29He might have gone into town.
18:31Let's go.
18:31I've got to see John Hambleton anyway.
18:43He's got a lot of money.
18:47He's got a lot of money.
18:47Now slow down, Harv.
18:50Slow down!
18:50Where did it happen?
18:52Four miles north of here in that little canyon.
18:54I slowed down to take them curves and all of a sudden there was this fellow on top of my
18:57coach.
18:58Boy, that was the slickest operation I ever saw.
19:00He used to appear out of nowhere and land on the coach.
19:02And carrying a big knife.
19:05He made Harv stop the coach.
19:07Then he made us throw our guns down.
19:08And then he motioned to Harv to open the box.
19:11Yeah, and then he took the money.
19:12But what beats me is why he just took $500.
19:15$500?
19:16But he can't be too far away yet.
19:18We opened him up all the way into town.
19:20What'd he look like?
19:21I never got a good look at him.
19:22He stayed behind us all the time.
19:23But he had the wickedest looking knife I've ever seen.
19:26Another thing.
19:27He never said nothing.
19:28Not a word.
19:29Just let that knife do all the talking for him.
19:32Looked like he was wearing buckskin and britches and engine shoes.
19:35That sounds like the hothead who pulled into town yesterday.
19:38First he held a knife on me in the saloon and he jumped me out here in the street.
19:41I knew he was real trouble all along.
19:44Which way do you ride, Harv?
19:46Up in the hills toward Miller's Creek.
19:48I know where he's kept.
19:49I'll take a couple of men and we'll bring you back.
19:51No, you won't, McGowan.
19:52You'll stay right where you are.
19:53What say you got in this, McCain?
19:55With the marshal out of town, this is a matter for the city council.
19:58And speaking for them, McGowan, we don't want you handling our law.
20:02Uh, you're right, Lucas.
20:03We'll form our own posse and go after him.
20:05Mike, I know that boy.
20:06He doesn't strike me as an outlaw.
20:08We go gunning for him, we'll push him into being one.
20:10I've got a hunch why he hit the stage.
20:12I think if I talk to him, I can bring him and your $500 back.
20:16If I'm alone.
20:18All right, Lucas, go ahead.
20:20Thanks, Mike.
20:20You stay here, son.
20:22I'll be back soon.
20:48You stay here, son.
20:58I'll be back soon.
21:00Mark, it's Lucas McCain.
21:01Mark, it's Lucas McCain.
21:07Mark?
21:16Mark, it's Lucas McCain.
21:36No, no, no.
21:51I didn't come here to harm you. I'm sure you know that.
21:54And I don't expect you to harm me.
21:56I came here to talk to you as a friend.
21:59I think I know why you hit that stage today.
22:01But you can't strike back at the whole world
22:03because of what happened between you and McGowan.
22:05Or what happened between you and those Indians.
22:08Don't let the worst kind of people whoop your judgment.
22:12You've had long talks with my son.
22:14I'm proud to call him my son.
22:16You know what a fine boy he is.
22:19Don't destroy his faith in you.
22:21He thinks you're a fine, decent person.
22:24He'd like to call a friend.
22:26I want him to keep thinking that way.
22:38Well, that's you and I take that $500 back where it belongs.
22:42I'll try to make him see your side of it.
23:02Good news, Lucas.
23:04The manager of our Denver office says he'll be willing to watch over the boy
23:08while he serves his probationary period.
23:10Is that all, Mike?
23:11In addition, he says he'll be able to get a job up there
23:14to help pay for his schooling.
23:16Young man, you owe a great debt of thanks to Mr. McCain.
23:20Well, he doesn't have to thank me, Mike.
23:23It was his turn to get a fair break.
23:25Thank you.
23:29Thank you.
23:36Thank you.
23:41Thank you.
23:56Gracias, Mark.
24:18I'm sure glad everything worked out all right for him.
24:21Only you think he can keep out of trouble?
24:25Well, now that a certain long-legged young dogey has taught him the meaning of friendship,
24:29you ought to get along just fine, son.
24:45You ought to get along just fine, son.
25:33You ought to get along just fine, son.
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