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00:09These chicken sandwiches are for the two idiot British airmen who are still stuck down the drain in the middle
00:14of the town square.
00:16There are too many Germans about to feed them through the grating, so I am going to lower this tray
00:20down the drain in our garden and let it float to them through the underground stream.
00:26Needless to say, needless to say, our plan to get them out on the cover of my old ice cream
00:32van went desperately wrong.
00:34The clapped-out ice-making machinery went berserk and squirted General von Klinkeroffen in the face with vanilla ice cream.
00:42The result is now that ice cream has been banned in Nouvien and General von Klinkeroffen has been treated for
00:47frostbite to his nose.
00:50Oh, René, I found you alone at last.
00:54Why are you revealing so much of your little body, Mimi?
00:57I am going sunbathing.
00:59Oh, owe me to you.
01:03You are very slippery.
01:06I have worn myself all over with olive oil to aid my tan.
01:10Oh, René, take off your clothes and join me behind the N-O's.
01:14There was still some oil in the bottle. I'll apply it.
01:16No, no, no, Mimi, I need that oil to make the vinaigrette for tonight.
01:19All right. Off you go.
01:23And remember, the sun is very hot, so make sure you do not saute yourself.
01:29Oh, René.
01:30See, as well as all the walls, my passions, embrace me.
01:37René!
01:39What are you doing holding that servant girl in your arms?
01:43You stupid woman.
01:45Can you not see this poor child is suffering from sunstroke because she's not wearing her hat?
01:50If I had not caught her, she might have fallen down the drain and be on her way to the
01:53coast by now.
01:55Put your hat on immediately, Yvette.
01:56Oh, I am sorry, René.
01:58I did not realize.
02:00Now go and do your sunbathing.
02:01And remember, keep that hat on.
02:03Thank you, René.
02:04Is that food for the airmen, Mimi?
02:06Yes, I baked them some rock eggs.
02:10Two will be enough.
02:12Any more might sink the tray.
02:15I have told the airmen to stand by for their food.
02:18Is it all ready?
02:18Yes, we have it here.
02:19Then let us lower it down the drain.
02:21Right, hold that.
02:31We cannot go on feeding the airmen like this, Michelle.
02:33How are we going to get them out?
02:35Listen very carefully.
02:37I shall say this only once.
02:39I have discovered that by Baron's Charter dating back to 1534,
02:43that a gypsy fair may be held in the town square on the summer solstice.
02:47How does that help us?
02:49You will ask the gypsies from the camp outside the village to bring us their fair.
02:53I will arrange for one of the tents to be put up over the drain
02:56and the British airmen will get out underneath it.
02:58The Germans will never allow a fair, Michelle.
03:01Well, it is up to you to persuade them, René.
03:03After all, you are very friendly with the colonel and Lieutenant Kruber.
03:05No, no, I am not getting involved.
03:07If you do not, René, some of my more trigger-happy girls
03:10might think that you are a coward and come around here to shoot the place up.
03:13But surely you would stop them, Michelle.
03:15I would give them the bullets.
03:19Very well.
03:20I will go to the gypsy camp and see what I can do.
03:22I will come with you.
03:23I speak a bit of woman-y.
03:25You've never told me that, Edith.
03:27I learn to speak a bit to negotiate for cheap clothes, pigs.
03:30Well, you must go at once.
03:33No, no, we will go this afternoon.
03:34There is nobody to look after the café at the moment.
03:37Where are Yvette and Mimi?
03:38No, sunbathing behind the inn house.
03:41Oh, that is a good idea.
03:43I think I will go and join them.
03:45But you are not dressed for sunbathing.
03:53I hope the neighbours are.
04:03When do you think this food is going to appear?
04:05I'm starving.
04:07I think I see something coming now.
04:12I say.
04:15Someone's eaten all the sandwiches.
04:18You can see the teeth marks in the crust.
04:21Infernal cheek.
04:23Still, at least they've left us the rock cakes.
04:28It's not right.
04:31They can have those, too.
04:35Stand by the door, von Smallhausen.
04:37I am expecting Private Bigstern in exactly ten seconds.
04:41She is never late.
04:43Five, four, three, two, one.
04:49Minus one.
04:56You are late.
04:57I'm sorry, Aldo.
04:59I was titivating myself.
05:02That would take some time.
05:04Let me press you to my bosom.
05:07The pressing can wait.
05:08I am not up to it at the moment.
05:11I am.
05:13The silence, von Smallhausen.
05:16I have a little task for you, Elsa.
05:18You know I will do anything for you, Aldo.
05:20I await your instructions.
05:22I wish to gain access to the colonel's office this evening.
05:25So you will invite him out.
05:27Also, the lieutenant and the feathered vop.
05:30May I ask why?
05:32We have made a forgery of a painting
05:34which I wish to conceal in the colonel's desk.
05:37It is the fallen Madonna with the big boobie.
05:41Do not reveal too much, von Smallhausen.
05:44An anonymous phone call
05:45will inform General von Klinkerhofen
05:47of its whereabouts.
05:49The occupants of the office
05:50will be accused of stealing it
05:52and be sent to the Russian front.
05:54That is a masterly plan.
05:56I know.
05:57If you play your part well,
05:59you will get a cut of the original painting.
06:01You have suddenly become even more attractive, Otto.
06:04I will too, as you ask.
06:06You deserve a kiss.
06:11Here, Flick is busy.
06:12See who it is.
06:13Then I'd better not be another woman.
06:15Your wish is my command.
06:23Do not speak.
06:24These are my last coins.
06:27Oh, just to hear your heavy breathing
06:28makes me feel weak.
06:31Even though we are apart,
06:32I want you to know
06:33that I love you,
06:34miss you,
06:35and want you.
06:39I think it is the wrong number.
06:43But I'll just make sure.
06:45My maintenance course will end soon,
06:47and then I will return.
06:49I long for your stern eyes
06:51to penetrate my eyes,
06:53to be pressed against your burns,
06:56and master his body,
06:58to once again
06:59feel your hands on my...
07:05Well?
07:09It was the wrong number.
07:13Excuse me.
07:15I shall have to go out
07:16and have a cold shower.
07:19Leave it running.
07:29I have found these two
07:30in the woods, great or me.
07:31They wish to speak with you.
07:32Who are you?
07:34We are friends.
07:34I am René Artois
07:35from the cafe in the village,
07:37and this is my wife, Edith.
07:38I have for many moons
07:39brought clothes,
07:40takes from your people.
07:41Now we bring you gifts.
07:43Cakes I bake myself.
07:50Give them to the horses.
07:53We have come to ask
07:56if you will bring your fare
07:57to the village
07:57on the summer solstice,
07:59as gypsies have done
08:00since 1534.
08:01Ah, the Germans
08:02will not give us permission.
08:04Oh, that is all right.
08:05He has fixed it.
08:06You will do good business.
08:08Maybe.
08:09First, let me see
08:10if I can trust you.
08:13Give your palm
08:14to the great Romany.
08:17Let me see your lifeline.
08:20Oh, it is very long.
08:22See here,
08:23it becomes a double line.
08:25It even goes
08:26up your sleeve.
08:27What does that mean?
08:29You will die
08:30in a railway tunnel.
08:33And you are lucky
08:34in love, too.
08:36Well, of course.
08:36He is married to me.
08:38I see a line
08:40of tragedy as well.
08:42I also see
08:43many other women
08:44in your life,
08:45younger than your wife.
08:47What does he mean, René?
08:48He means the serving girls
08:49that work with me.
08:51I see danger
08:52and excitement
08:53in your life.
08:54Well, I work
08:55with the resistance,
08:56blowing trains up,
08:57you know,
08:57things like that.
08:58A lot of it seems
08:59to take place
09:00in a broom cupboard.
09:02Miss René?
09:03René?
09:04What does he mean?
09:05You stupid woman.
09:07I meet the girls
09:08in the cupboard
09:09during air raids.
09:11Oui.
09:12Cross my palm
09:13with silver.
09:14Oh.
09:14Oh, yes.
09:22You are a trustworthy man.
09:26Cheap,
09:27but trustworthy.
09:30Maybe now you would
09:30like to inspect
09:31and read the hand
09:32of my wife.
09:36Do I have a long
09:37lifeline, too?
09:38It is hard to see
09:39there are so many wrinkles.
09:42Surely I have seen this
09:43and somewhere before.
09:47Here, look,
09:48the cross of destiny.
09:49Is that a good sign?
09:51It was a child's hand
09:52when I saw it last.
09:53Then it was tiny.
09:55That figures.
09:56Look at my eyes.
09:58Now I see images
09:59of your past in my mind.
10:02I see a big house
10:03with turrets.
10:05That would be the chateau
10:06where I was brought up
10:07in the seventh quarters.
10:08And I see a child
10:10on the doorstep
10:11in a basket.
10:12There are closed pegs
10:14in the basket.
10:15Oh, that would be me.
10:16I was found there
10:17by the butler.
10:18Is it possible
10:19that you are Romana,
10:20the lost gypsy princess
10:22who was taken from us
10:2347 years ago?
10:24Oh, no, no, no.
10:25I am only 36.
10:29Yes, it is the mark.
10:32We are blessed.
10:35Gather round.
10:36Little Romana
10:37has come back
10:38to be our queen.
10:40You mean I am married
10:41to a gypo?
10:43Oh, no, Mr.
10:44We will go along with it.
10:46We need them
10:47to do the fair.
10:48Am I really
10:49a gypsy villain?
10:51There is no doubt
10:52about it.
10:52The spirits never lie.
10:54Does this mean
10:55you will do the fair?
10:56For Queen Romana,
10:57of course.
10:59Bring out our posters.
11:00You must paste them up
11:01in the town.
11:03But now we must celebrate.
11:04Can you sing, Romana?
11:06Your mother
11:07had a magnificent voice.
11:08Another clue, Remy.
11:10She has passed it
11:11unto me.
11:12You have traveled well.
11:14Sing, Romana.
11:18Play, gypsy.
11:20Laugh.
11:22Sing, gypsy.
11:24Cry.
11:25Is this enough?
11:27You are not, Romana.
11:30Positive.
11:32Perhaps a very distant cousin.
11:34We left quite a few babies
11:35on those steps.
11:37I have quite grown
11:38to like the idea
11:39of being a gypsy.
11:40Living here
11:41in the open air.
11:42Singing round the campfire
11:43every evening.
11:45We are not so keen.
11:47You have been away
11:47from us too long.
11:49You have built
11:49your own life elsewhere.
11:51You should go back to it.
11:53What about the fair?
11:54Oh, we'll still do it.
11:56We need the money.
11:57Now take our posters.
11:59We will come
11:59on the solstice.
12:01Goodbye.
12:02Goodbye.
12:03Goodbye.
12:06Hey, Tony.
12:07You are nearly married
12:08to a gypsy queen.
12:10Would not that
12:11have been a shock?
12:12It would have been
12:13to Lieutenant Gruber.
12:16Lieutenant,
12:17how would you like me
12:18to sing you a song?
12:20That sounds like
12:20a good idea.
12:22Lieutenant,
12:22do you know
12:23Naughty Lola?
12:24You start,
12:25I'll follow.
12:27They call me
12:28Naughty Lola,
12:30the wisest girl
12:31on earth.
12:32At home,
12:32my pianola
12:33is played
12:34for all its fuss.
12:36Quené,
12:37that girl is singing
12:38and of key too.
12:41Your ears are
12:42keener than mine.
12:44The boys
12:45love my music,
12:46I can't keep
12:47them away.
12:48So my little
12:49pianola
12:50is working
12:51night and day.
12:52Hi!
12:53Come on,
12:53everybody join in.
12:56They call me
12:57Naughty Lola,
12:58the wisest girl on earth.
13:00At home.
13:00Set!
13:03Colonel,
13:04you are under arrest.
13:05You too, Captain.
13:06What is the matter,
13:07General?
13:07You are under arrest too.
13:09I found this
13:10in your desk,
13:12Colonel,
13:12the remains
13:13of the fallen Madonna
13:14which was stolen
13:15from my quarters
13:15in the chateau.
13:17Clearly,
13:17you are all involved
13:18in this theft.
13:19There must be
13:19some mistake, General.
13:21Yes,
13:21and you made it.
13:23Guards!
13:24Take them
13:24to the dungeons
13:25of the chateau.
13:25Um,
13:26I do not want
13:27to throw a spanner
13:28in the works,
13:28General,
13:29but there are no doors
13:30on the chateau dungeons.
13:32They had woodworm
13:33and were sent away
13:33last week
13:34to be measured
13:34and replaced.
13:35On whose orders?
13:36Yours.
13:39Well,
13:39take them
13:40to the town jail.
13:41This is outrageous.
13:42We've been fixed up.
13:44This will not look good
13:45on my CV.
13:48Oh, Harry,
13:50they are being thrown
13:51into jail.
13:52Is that not awful?
13:53Yes,
13:54they have not paid
13:54for their beer.
13:56Clothes pegs!
13:57Clothes pegs!
13:59Who will buy
13:59some clothes pegs
14:00from a poor old
14:01gypsy clothes peg seller?
14:03It is I,
14:04the Claire.
14:06You dress like that
14:07for,
14:07you silly old fool.
14:09I have brought you
14:09a message
14:10from the gypsies.
14:11They cannot bring
14:12their fare to the village.
14:13What?
14:14A black cat
14:15has passed
14:15the Great Romany
14:16walking backwards.
14:17What was the Great Romany
14:19doing walking backwards?
14:22Oh, he wasn't,
14:23the cat was.
14:25It is a bad omen
14:27and they will not come now.
14:28Oh, my God.
14:29How are we going
14:30to get the airmen
14:31out of the drain?
14:32Oh, no.
14:33Michelle is in the back room.
14:34Oh, we must tell her
14:35what has happened.
14:36Yvette,
14:36look after the bar.
14:37Come.
14:39Michelle,
14:40the gypsies
14:40are no longer coming.
14:42They have had a bad omen
14:43at walking backwards cat.
14:44That is a bad omen.
14:46The airmen
14:46will have to stay
14:47down the drain now.
14:48Oh, no, no.
14:48That is out of the question.
14:49They could be discovered
14:50by the Germans
14:51at any moment.
14:52We will have to
14:53organise the fair ourselves.
14:54And how are we
14:54supposed to do that?
14:56We'll dress up in
14:56gypsy clothes
14:57and run our own stalls.
14:59But what about
14:59the posters all over the town?
15:01The villagers
15:01and the Germans
15:02are expecting
15:03a real gypsy fair.
15:04Have you got
15:05a spare poster anywhere?
15:06Oh, oh.
15:06I think there is
15:07one still here
15:08in the drawer.
15:09We will have to provide
15:10all the attractions
15:11on the poster
15:11and no one
15:12will suspect anything.
15:14Ah, René,
15:15you can be
15:15the Great Romany.
15:16But he is a fortune teller.
15:18How am I supposed
15:19to tell fortunes?
15:20Make them up.
15:22Yvette and Mimi
15:23and Officer Crabtree
15:24can man the stalls
15:25along with my resistance girls
15:27who can dress up
15:27as young gypsy maidens.
15:29And what about this?
15:30Who is going to be
15:31the bearded lady?
15:33Oh, there is only
15:34one person left.
15:34You will have to be
15:35the bearded lady,
15:36Madame Yvette.
15:36I am not going
15:37to be the bearded lady.
15:38Why cannot you do it?
15:40Well, look at the picture
15:41on the poster.
15:42I am too tall.
15:43What about Mimi?
15:44She's too small.
15:45Oh, Yvette.
15:46She's too young.
15:47Oh, remember,
15:48Madame Yvette,
15:49it is for the British Airmen.
15:51Oh, very well.
15:52But I do it under protest.
15:54Where am I
15:55to get a beard?
15:56Wait a year
15:57or try the barbers.
16:01I will try the barbers.
16:04General must have gone
16:05nerd to put us in here.
16:07I would have called my lawyer
16:08if he wasn't already
16:09in the nick.
16:11I wish we could get out.
16:13This cell is making
16:14me claustrophobic.
16:15There's one way.
16:20No answer.
16:22We'll get into
16:22even more trouble
16:23if we escape.
16:28Good morning.
16:30I have four migs of two.
16:33Is it morning already?
16:36It is half-pissed socks.
16:41Did you sloop well?
16:43No, we did not.
16:45What is it for breakfast?
16:46I'm hungry.
16:47This is prison.
16:48We do not kick brokfist.
16:51We were licky to get the two.
16:53You are all released.
16:55I'm afraid I owe you an apology.
16:57I have examined the painting
16:58most carefully
16:59and it is clearly a forgery.
17:01I knew there was
17:02some mistake, General.
17:04We had nothing to do
17:05with stealing the painting
17:06from your quarters.
17:07What was the forgery
17:08doing in your desk, Colonel?
17:10It was left behind
17:12from all those forgeries
17:13you had made
17:14to fool the resistance, General.
17:15Oh, yes.
17:16Now you remember.
17:17I feel very bad about this.
17:18Come to the Chateau
17:19and I'll give you all
17:20a slap-up breakfast
17:21to make up for it.
17:34Oh, bigger it.
17:59That gypsy there
18:01looks remarkably like
18:02René, Colonel.
18:05He certainly does.
18:11René, it is you.
18:14Hello, Lieutenant.
18:15What are you doing
18:16dressed up as a gypsy, René?
18:18Colonel, the gypsy's
18:19had to cancel
18:20so we are running
18:20the fair ourselves
18:21to avoid disappointing
18:22the villagers
18:23and your men.
18:24That's a good one.
18:25I mean,
18:25they would have been
18:26very disappointed.
18:28You may continue, René.
18:30Can I?
18:34That hearing is
18:35quite becoming, René.
18:39And your skin color
18:40is very authentic.
18:43It is shoe polish.
18:44That would account
18:45for the faint aroma
18:46of cherry blossom.
19:02What do I have to hit?
19:03If I get to the bullseye,
19:05you take off of your clothes?
19:06No, you're not going to keep
19:08trying to buzz it.
19:09It's a piece of cake.
19:11I'm the best shot
19:12in the Italian army.
19:17What do I get for that?
19:19A bill for the vase.
19:20Ah, I got to my range now.
19:22This time, I'm no miss.
19:24Here.
19:25Take this.
19:26You win.
19:27We can't afford the passes.
19:30What a mistake to make.
19:33I'll try the experience
19:35of a lifetime.
19:36Kiss the bearded lady
19:38and win the free entry
19:40to the grand prize raffin.
19:42Ah, I will.
19:50Oh, Madame Hiddith.
19:52It distracts me
19:53to see the woman I love
19:55in a beard.
19:57I do it for the resistance,
19:59Monsieur Alphonse.
19:59Oh, it is so demeaning.
20:01The thought that lips
20:03other than mine
20:04should touch yours.
20:06Do not worry, Monsieur Alphonse.
20:08In this period,
20:08no one will want to kiss me.
20:10Is this when I kiss
20:11the bearded lady?
20:13No, John.
20:14You're Nelly.
20:21Rule up.
20:23Rule up.
20:24Try your lick
20:25at the cuckoo nut shoe.
20:27All right.
20:28Tin Frank's a goo.
20:30You take these three bills
20:32and throw them
20:34at the cuckoo nut.
20:35If you hit the cuckoo nut,
20:37the skintly dressed crimpet
20:39will fall out of the bog.
20:40There's a lot falling out
20:42already.
20:43You can translate somebody.
20:45You throw the balls
20:46at the cuckoo nut,
20:47Colonel.
20:48If you hit it,
20:49if it falls out of the bed.
20:50I've seen it before.
20:50It's rather a waste of money.
20:52I shoot.
20:53I'm very good.
20:55Go easy, please, Colonel.
20:56I do not want
20:57to be tipped out too often.
20:59Don't worry, is it?
21:00I am a German officer.
21:11Oh, thank you.
21:12Colonel.
21:12I am safe, this one.
21:15Down!
21:16Hello!
21:20Oh, you!
21:26Friendly,
21:26we are almost ready
21:27to rescue the airmen.
21:28About time.
21:29Already?
21:30Under cover of this tent,
21:31we have handed down
21:32two gypsy costumes to them.
21:33I have here this gemmy
21:34for them to bang out
21:35the rusty bolts
21:36on the inches
21:37of the grating.
21:41I say, chaps,
21:42are you there?
21:42Hello!
21:44Here, chaps,
21:45take this gemmy
21:46and go to the next
21:47drain along.
21:48It's under the shooting gallery,
21:50so nobody will hear you
21:51banging out those bolts
21:52on the grating.
21:53When you get out,
21:55wait there for us
21:55under the counter.
21:56Right, I won't go.
21:59They are going to the next
22:01drain alone.
22:02It is under the shooting gallery.
22:03They will be safer there.
22:04Then what?
22:05They will wait with Mimi
22:06until the fair is over.
22:07Now I must go.
22:08Are you going to help
22:09the airmen out?
22:10No, I am next door
22:11running the toffee apple store.
22:14Lieutenant Gruber
22:15is coming this way.
22:16He is coming here?
22:17Oh, my God.
22:19You must keep him here
22:20as long as you can, René.
22:21We want as few Germans
22:22about as possible
22:23when the airmen
22:24come out of the grating.
22:29Ah, here you are, René.
22:32I knew I would find you
22:34eventually.
22:35I see you have a little tent
22:37all to yourself.
22:38Yes, I am standing in
22:40for the great Romany.
22:41I suppose you have come
22:42to have your fortune told.
22:44Can you do it?
22:44Oh, we country folk
22:46often have the power.
22:47I will try my best.
22:48Sit down
22:49and I will get my ball out.
22:56Oh, quite an impressive size.
23:01The mists swirl.
23:03Now they are clearing.
23:06Oh!
23:07Snowball, Carthens.
23:09You ain't won't fight.
23:11I say, why don't we go back
23:12and try the other thing?
23:13The hinges on that one
23:13are always off.
23:14Good idea.
23:15Let's try.
23:19Let's try.
23:24I am most impressed
23:26with your fortune telling, René.
23:28But now I really should
23:29be getting back to the car.
23:30Oh, is there nothing else
23:32you would like
23:33from the great Romany?
23:34That depends
23:35what you had in mind.
23:37The great Romany
23:38has the power
23:38to communicate
23:39with the dead.
23:40Perhaps I could try it for you.
23:41Is there anybody
23:42you would like to speak to?
23:44Your grandmother, perhaps?
23:45That would not be easy, René.
23:47She's not dead yet.
23:49But, yes,
23:51perhaps there is someone.
23:52Your late twin brother.
23:55My brother?
23:57The one I had shot.
23:58It still afflicts
24:00my conscience terribly.
24:01I would like to ask
24:02his forgiveness.
24:03I will try my best.
24:06Should we hold hands?
24:07No, that will not be necessary.
24:12He is very near.
24:16Ah.
24:19Nearer than I expected.
24:22He forgives your
24:23left-hand impression.
24:25Oh, my God, René.
24:26What's happening?
24:29I did not want to see him.
24:30I just wanted to give him a message.
24:35René, what is happening?
24:36Why is left-hand group
24:37screaming?
24:38These idiot airmen
24:39have come up the wrong drain.
24:41Well, at least
24:41they are safe.
24:43René, I have come to help.
24:46Oh, hello!
24:48Hello!
24:49Hello, Jans.
24:52This way, Jans.
24:54Oh, to that.
24:55I thought we'd never
24:56get out of that drain.
24:58Who are you?
24:59Ah, Wing Commander
25:00Blankensop, old gal.
25:01I shot down three weeks ago.
25:02I've been trying to find
25:03a way out of the
25:03blasted drain ever since.
25:05It's all right.
25:05I thought we'd pop up.
25:06Ah, this is Fairfax
25:08and Carstaff also shot down.
25:09Hell yeah!
25:11Hello!
25:12Well, you chaps
25:13seem to acclimatise well.
25:15Eat ginger, my dear brother.
25:17Hello!
25:18Hello!
25:18Mr. Sparks, the radio operator.
25:22I say, chaps, I say, chaps,
25:23keep it down a bit.
25:24Jerry's everywhere.
25:25All right, KVJ.
25:26All right.
25:27Well, glad to meet you.
25:28I hope we can stay here for a while.
25:29Are you all English?
25:30Yes, sir, absolutely.
25:32I'm the leader of the French Resistance.
25:33Oh, how do you do?
25:34And this is René Artois,
25:36a Resistance hero.
25:37His cafe is the safe house.
25:39You can hide that.
25:40Oh, good show.
25:41And this is his wife, Edith.
25:42She'll be looking after you.
25:46Yes.
25:47On second thoughts,
25:48I think we'll take our chances
25:49down the drain.
25:50Right, yes, you will have.
25:51Right then, come on, Jack.
25:53Let's get all those
25:54pongy clothes off her.
25:55This is the best idea
25:56you've had yet.
25:58Well done, Edith.
25:59You are fighting
26:00those new idiot airmen away.
26:02Oh, René.
26:03We live in such dangerous times.
26:05If I take off my beard,
26:07will you hold me
26:08and kiss me?
26:09Better keep it on, Edith.
26:12Well, they could come back up again.