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House.of.Guinness.S01E06.540p.x265.AAC [Full Movie] [Full Story]Full EP - Full
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00:25You
00:30Get down your foot!
00:31The loving angels speak for the dead all over us
00:34And now they sting me through and meet the...
00:37Oh, my God!
00:38Come on here!
00:39You're a speedy, you're a destroyer!
00:42Come out, you're fucking fun!
00:45Don't fight me like you're a...
00:46So you ain't no...
00:47You're a star and star...
00:50You're a star!
01:01No!
01:01What this is?!
01:06Is this Cochran?!
01:09This!
01:11Is this Cochran?
01:15This Cochran!!
01:17This!
01:20This, you've got to come!
01:22Those Saxon bastards have taken your brother!
01:24They've been picking up brotherhood boys all over Dublin!
01:27Wait there!
01:28Come quick, though!
01:46I've crossed the Canadian border.
01:50News from the colony, sir.
01:52An incursion in the quarter.
01:53Irish from the media.
01:56You have business with Mr Guinness?
01:58Urgent business. Good day.
02:01I've been given a message to give to Mr Guinness
02:04on behalf of the poor people of Dublin.
02:18What is the mood between the brothers?
02:21When a matter is trivial, they shout at each other.
02:23When it's important, they whisper.
02:24But today they are silent.
02:26Which means this New York business is more serious than serious.
02:36Sir Arthur.
02:37Master Edward.
02:38Your legal counsel, Mr Isaac Buck, you see.
02:43A gift from Mr Guinness from a representative of the Dublin poor.
02:58Which Mr Guinness?
02:59It is a measure of your joint predicament that it could be for either one of you.
03:04If it is a response to election fraud, perjury in the dark, and somehow getting away with it scot-free,
03:10then it is for you, Arthur, from the Catholics.
03:13If, on the other hand, word has already reached Dublin that the Guinness family is giving 15% to the
03:18Fenians in New York, funding their attacks on the British with every bottle of Guinness sold, then it is for
03:23you, Edward, from the Unionists.
03:25Since today's business is New York, I will claim it.
03:29How kind.
03:30Today's business is many things.
03:33The government in Whitehall is responding to increased Fenian activity in the colonies, specifically the Fenian incursion into the Dominion
03:39of Canada.
03:41Funded by the Guinness family, thanks to you, brother.
03:44The British have issued arrest warrants for Fenians all over Dublin.
03:48Mr Harry!
03:49Mr Harry!
03:52Mr Harry!
04:03As you will read in my legal advice, the timing of these arrests may work in your favour.
04:09How are I? Please, please, Edward, just allow the genius that saved me from jail to get you off the
04:15hook, too.
04:16Your agent, Byron Hedges, in New York, has done a very dangerous deal.
04:21Before it gets out, even I won't be able to save you.
04:24It would be the final blow to your father's legacy.
04:29Yes, I'm told by my contacts.
04:32Oh, your mysterious contacts.
04:34Not if our licensed agent...
04:35No, no, no, no, he's not our agent, he's your fucking agent.
04:38Will you shut up? No, you shut up!
04:40No, you shut up! We have a child!
04:42You're behaving like a child! It's a tapering fucking time!
04:44Please, both of you.
04:46My sources tell me that if Byron Hedges withdraws his offer from the Fenian Brotherhood in New York,
04:52he will be found face down in the Hudson River.
04:56The deal will be exposed.
04:58And the House of Gimnes will come crashing down?
05:01Yes.
05:06I've given your predicament much thought, and I propose we do a deal.
05:11Arrange a more discreet method of payment in exchange for silence.
05:15So, somebody trustworthy will need to get a message to the Fenians.
05:20I suggest we use the services of your Mr. Rafferty.
05:24I try to contact him, but could not locate him the whole of last evening.
05:28I wonder if either of you might know who Mr. Rafferty could be.
05:37Okay.
05:39Bobby.
05:59Wouldn't you want me to stay for breakfast, Mr. Rafferty?
06:03Would you really have me sit down for breakfast with all the maids looking on?
06:08Mr. Rafferty, you look so worried.
06:10Shall I someday lose my mind and try to make you official?
06:16Rest assured, I have no intention of feeling anything for you, other than with my body.
06:25Not ever.
06:33No, no. The servants are all awake.
06:39For discretion, but mostly for fun.
06:42You will exit like a thief in the night.
06:47And if I break my fucking neck?
06:49I will get another you.
06:50Now go.
06:56You're fucking insane, you know that.
07:02I'll do it.
07:04Here.
07:06Here.
07:06Here.
07:17Please excuse the intrusion, but I have an urgent message.
07:20We've finished our business. Go on.
07:22It was delivered by a street boy hardly able to keep breath from running from the docks.
07:26From the docks?
07:28It's for you, Master Edward.
07:31From a young lady called Ellen Cockram.
07:40Thank you, Potter.
07:44I write to inform you of troubling news.
07:47This morning, alongside other men from my organisation,
07:50my brother was taken and imprisoned by police forces.
07:53Once again, they persecute men who have done nothing
07:56but speak publicly about their beliefs.
07:59I know we are on different sides,
08:01but I must remind you of the other night,
08:03of how our alliance has evolved.
08:05I've offered my help with the New York situation
08:08and I hope you can do the same with my situation.
08:11I trust in your power and goodwill.
08:21You know Ellen Cochran of the Fenian Brotherhood?
08:27Edward?
08:29Edward?
08:31Our lawyer asked you a question.
08:39What does it mean?
09:08My God, your faith.
09:12Don't talk of God to me, Ellen.
09:17Before you waste any words, I know how you spent the night before last.
09:22What are you talking about?
09:26I have men take shifts outside your lodge and to keep you safe from harm.
09:30You have what?
09:32And my men reported that a man stayed the night.
09:36You have no fucking right.
09:39And a very particular man it was.
09:42What I choose to do in the comfort of my home is none of your fucking business.
09:46It is Ireland's business. What we do is the business of our nation.
10:06I came here to tell you I will try to get you freed.
10:09Another night with your man should do the job, yeah.
10:14Hands away!
10:21You obviously have no decency, but have you no sense?
10:26Rich people in the bedrooms of the poor, sneaking home at dawn, leaving behind empty bottles and babies.
10:36He is a kind man.
10:38Fuck.
10:39Fuck!
10:40Yes, a fuck is what it was.
10:43More than that.
10:43No, you not only appease the rebels, you sleep with them.
10:47Please, sort of selfish surrender of the flesh to temptation.
10:50That's my territory, my job, my role in the business.
10:52It will not affect the material conduct of the brewery.
10:54It's just been two days and already she's sending messages to our door using you as her turnkey.
10:58What other services did you offer him a turn for this fuck?
11:01Services.
11:01She's not a whore, Arthur, not like you.
11:03Not like who?
11:06Say it.
11:08I didn't...
11:08Send a clerk you hardly know to New York who just deals with the devil on our behalf, Edward.
11:12And then you jump into bed with someone...
11:14Simply because that is what we both wanted in that moment!
11:21My God.
11:23We are brothers after all.
11:27I was beginning to think I was the imperfect first attempt and you were the brother perfected.
11:43We talked and drank and laughed.
11:49I just...
11:51Anyway, the birds started singing and I wanted them to go back to sleep.
11:56Oh, Edward.
11:58Out there in the darkness, beyond the baronial halls, there is laughter all night long.
12:05And those birds always sing too soon.
12:08I think it's time for you to marry Adelaide.
12:10She'll put a stop to all this.
12:12Although, I must say, to see you love inappropriately, it's like opening a window for fresh air.
12:19It is not love.
12:20No.
12:21But it is wildly inappropriate.
12:27But said that we need to make our agent in New York part of the wider deal, correct?
12:32In order to make connections with the Fenians, we may not now need the services of Mr. Rafferty.
12:37Yes, because you've already slept with the enemy.
12:39Not the enemy.
12:39She trusts me.
12:40I trust her.
12:42She can help us bridge the gap.
12:44Deeper and deeper he falls in love with the green of our Irish eyes and a sweet green Irish heart.
12:52Get up!
12:53You are ludicrous!
12:54But you're marrying me!
13:03Deeper and deeper he falls in love.
13:08I was expecting Edward.
13:10Yeah.
13:10My brother is busy clearing up a mess of his own making.
13:13So I'm afraid you've got me instead.
13:16Sorry.
13:18No apology necessary.
13:20Either one of you has the authority to sign off on this.
13:22I've decided to take more of an active role in the business.
13:24It seems that my once perfect brother now actually needs my help managing his imperfections.
13:30And it also seems that our business is no longer just brewing beer.
13:36It's housing the people that drink it.
13:39Is that disapproval in your voice?
13:41Good God, no.
13:41No, no, no, no, no.
13:42If I disapprove of something, I tear it up or I throw it in the fire.
13:45You must have heard of my reputation by now.
13:47I've heard many things about you.
13:49And your brother.
13:50Then you'll know...
13:53Then my brother wants to marry you.
13:58The papers on the left are concerning the cost of demolition of existing slums.
14:02The papers on the right are regarding the construction of new homes.
14:05I think if you and he were to marry, you'd be a splendid thing.
14:10A match made in heaven.
14:13Where do I sign?
14:15You're not even going to look at the accounts?
14:17I put no price on God's work.
14:23And please, as you call upon us for further signatures,
14:27just know that in all the world, my brother has eyes for you and for your love.
14:44I mean, just imagine all the good you could do.
14:48Just by saying, I do.
15:02I'm going to go.
15:21Good job, Seamus.
15:22It's Ben, sir.
15:24Good job, Ben.
15:27Morning.
15:28Good morning, sir.
15:28Thank you, sir.
15:29Good day, bro.
15:33Mr. Guinness.
15:35Two, three.
15:37Patrick?
15:40Patrick.
15:43How goes it?
15:44Ah, working days suits me better than nights.
15:49And the work?
15:51Day flies on the mash or it never stops.
15:54I wanted to thank you.
15:56For the promotion.
15:57No, no, no, no.
16:00Least I could do.
16:04My nights are free now.
16:10Good?
16:11Good.
16:13Do you know, more people are fine with it than you think.
16:19You're fine with what?
16:24See?
16:28World hasn't ended.
16:30Brewery didn't burst its barrels.
16:32Blackbeard didn't flow into the liffy.
16:34And you don't have to jump all the way down into my world.
16:37You can pull me up into your own.
16:40It could take me dancing.
17:08You got our expenditure approved.
17:10Without a blink of an eye.
17:12And it was Arthur who signed the accounts.
17:14He said he has decided to get more involved in the business.
17:17Oh, God, spare us.
17:19He said Edward was clearing up a mess of his own making.
17:23On a few days and the boat begins to rock.
17:25Look, I didn't think Edward was the kind of man who made a mess.
17:31Edward acts so stern and serious because he is afraid of his own kindness.
17:36Arthur acts so frivolous because he is afraid of his own seriousness.
17:39All men are boys playing hide and seek.
17:43Desperately hoping someone is still looking for them.
17:46You think Edward is kind?
17:48And romantic.
17:50Terrible dancer.
17:51Wishes he was a cowboy in the American West.
17:54Am I selling him to you?
17:56I don't want anyone to be sold to me.
17:57Fine.
17:58Could you please get me laudanum?
18:02In pursuit of our philanthropy,
18:04and stop Edward going completely off the rails,
18:07I have suggested that Edward take a trip to a house in Connacht.
18:11I want a voice in his ear telling him what we should be doing to help those poor people.
18:17So, you will travel with him.
18:20And stay with him at Ashford Castle.
18:23Our next project must address rural poverty.
18:32But of course this proposal is not just about sanitation.
18:35Of course it is not.
18:37While you and Edward are helping the poor people, you will fall in love.
18:39No need even for antagonists.
18:43Dodo, when it comes to Guinness marriages,
18:45there is very little point trying to resist the inevitable.
18:49Whatever your feelings,
18:52I will need my baby to have some company.
19:01You're a guest, Mr. Guinness.
19:16My suggestion that we meet at the churchyard behind your father's grave was perhaps grotesque.
19:22But it was a lot more sensible than this.
19:24We are very visible.
19:25Oh, that's the point.
19:26If we had something to hide, we'd be hiding it.
19:30You left your keys on my bedside table.
19:33Would the lady care for a drink?
19:35Tea.
19:36Champagne.
19:37Very good, sir.
19:38Look, as a consequence of two good people spending a night together in fear of waking the neighbors,
19:43I have had an idea which I wanted to propose to you.
19:46This proposition involves getting my brother out of jail?
19:50Certainly.
19:50It gets your brother out of jail.
19:52It gets my New York situation resolved.
19:55And buries a deal that would destroy everything my father created.
20:04Our lawyer, Mr. Isaac Butt, has intimate connections with senior government officials in Whitehall.
20:11The British would like the Americans to do more, to stop Fenian incursions on the Canadian border.
20:17In return, the Americans need a gesture to appease their Irish vote.
20:21The British have agreed to free some Fenian prisoners and send them to America as proof of goodwill.
20:29In the shipping pages, an American ship docking at Liverpool in two days' time.
20:37The SS Cuba.
20:39The SS Cuba will take the freed Fenians arrested this morning to New York.
20:45And my brother will be one of them.
20:47That's what our lawyer can arrange.
20:49In return, I need your help convincing your brother to take exile in America.
20:53Alan, he will be given a hero's welcome.
20:57And he can start a new life.
20:58And if he doesn't want to go?
21:00I'm afraid he is an empty barrel on the tide of history.
21:06The only other alternative for him is to stay and rot in jail.
21:20When we slept together, I thought I would regret it.
21:24But I've discovered that I can step out of my comfortable world, break back in again, and be improved by
21:31the experience.
21:34I'm so glad I could be of service.
21:39Like, sometimes I'm not good at telling whether people are serious or not.
22:02You return to your tidy world with your tidy solutions.
22:07I'll do your dirty work for my brother's sake, but you and I will never have the keys to the
22:13same door, Mr. Guinness.
22:41Dear Paddy,
22:43When you are given this letter, you will already be aboard a ship bound for New York.
22:48In New York, you will be the conduit through which money can flow from the Guinness Brewery to the Battalions.
22:54I know this is against your will, but I am trying to save your life.
22:59Trust me.
23:00Your liberation and exile are part of a bigger plan.
23:03A plan that helps our cause.
23:06I know you'll burn this letter, but my heart burns with love for you.
23:10You're a devoted sister, Ellen.
23:16I know you'll burn this letter.
23:26I know you'll burn this letter.
23:37You're a divine woman.
23:39I know you'll burn this letter, and the other's sake.
23:42Get the fresh airings.
24:34Are you talking?
24:36Yeah.
24:37Of the SS Cuba?
24:38Yeah.
24:40Now, comrades, behold, Paddy Cochran, one of the Cuba Five, just landed from Liverpool.
24:51Oh, fuck whiskey, Murphy, give him Guinness.
25:00To celebrate the arrival of the hero of the revolution, all Guinness is on me.
25:10Come on, you.
25:13Be careful.
25:16Paddy Cochran is a living brave.
25:19A legend this man is.
25:21Patrick.
25:22Welcome, Leifert.
25:25Champagne is not a drink that men of my class will drink.
25:35On board that rotten ship, I was told that once I had made my way through the welcoming
25:40crowds that I was to come to this bar to meet the relevant people.
25:45Well, you are the relevant people.
25:47To me, you don't look relevant.
25:51Well, if you are still trying to fight for the cause of Irish freedom, now that you are
25:58in America, well then, we are the relevant people.
26:05This guy here, swigging his fucking Guinness.
26:11You think he's the guy that I was told about?
26:14I'd like to hear what you were told about me.
26:17I think you fucking can.
26:27You know, we fed champagne and had the place full because we thought you'd be happy to be
26:31free, but you've got an awful lot of the fucking fog of Ireland about you.
26:36The deal for my freedom was not above and around you.
26:38Not above and around you.
26:39The deal will continue to unfold.
26:44You're a man.
26:45What?
26:46You're a man.
26:47I've made promises to the Brotherhood that you could not keep.
26:51And your head was saved by the fucking Guinnesses.
26:55I have no time for the Guinnesses.
27:01I've never asked for anything of anyone by that name.
27:11I hear your sister's a different man.
27:16Sit down.
27:18You like it or not, Mr. Cochran?
27:22You owe them your freedom.
27:28I would rather be still rotting in that cell than be beholden to that fucking family.
27:37That fucking family?
27:39I'd like to offer you a job, Mr. Cochran.
27:43As an honorary representative of Guinness Company Limited in New York and Boston.
27:50Why the fuck would I help sell beer for those Protestant bastards?
27:56You wouldn't actually have to sell anything, Mr. Cochran.
28:00Guinness will pay you anyway.
28:05We will pay you handsomely.
28:09Absurdly, even.
28:12And then you might, as a private individual, wish to give some of that absurd amount of money to certain
28:18organisations.
28:20And there would be no official connection to the Guinnesses.
28:24With this arrangement in place, our beer can continue to be approved by the Brotherhood without anything being said or
28:30written down.
28:32Because, as Edward Guinness said to me in his last letter, it's the public perception that causes the consternation.
28:42Fuck you.
28:53Your presence here in New York is part of a much wider arrangement.
29:02So you either play your part, or face the consequences.
29:21Cheeky bastard.
29:30Never seen a man knock back black bushes.
29:32Wouldn't say anything about the week of bushes.
29:38Couple of sips, quick licking their lips, and he's piping up, piping up.
29:42He won't stop singing champagnes till burn them fire.
30:01May I show you to your rooms, madam?
30:04Goodness, they've pressed gang to Potter.
30:06Nothing is being left to chance, is it?
30:08They've prepared rooms in the West.
30:11Sir Edward is in the East.
30:12And the fire burning in the middle, I would imagine.
30:18My only recollection of Edward from family weddings is that, as a boy, he was rather fond of his own
30:24reflection.
30:25I was the second richest man in Ireland.
30:27He can afford all the mirrors he wants.
30:34Can I get your ice, madam?
30:36You have ice?
30:38Brought by ship from Greenland.
30:43But as I understand it, the village has no water.
30:46There is a stream, madam.
30:49I'm actually fine.
31:12Good, have a decanter, please.
31:18The lady Adelaide is impressed, but she's hiding it, as aristocrats always do.
31:24Potter, I can't remember if she drinks wine or if she doesn't approve of alcohol.
31:27Well, after the fuck-up with Benjamin asking her to dance to the wedding, she swigged back quite a large
31:32gin and Indian tonic.
31:34But in fairness, that might have been down to the stress of having her toes trodden on.
31:39I mean, pardon, Mr. Potter, to let you know, the lady has gone.
31:43Gone?
31:44What do you mean, gone?
31:46I mean, she set off walking, and when the maid asked her where she was going, she said...
31:51She said she was walking to Clune Boo.
31:54Clune Boo?
31:54You don't go to Clune Boo without four horses pulling you and a musket in your lap.
32:00Egypt.
32:01This woman says, she says,
32:02the gentlemanans sang.
32:19Whoa, she is young.
32:26I don't know where the whistle is.
32:37you clune boo
32:38it's cholera
32:40or america
32:48go damn target
33:11jesus you know him
33:16did you bring blankets did you bring food
33:19did you bring ice perhaps
33:23there are people here with fevers who would have a use
33:25for your ice from greenland it wouldn't melt on the way
33:27it's only a mile from your grand house to all of this
33:31you never come here no i can see that
33:34since the famine
33:35adelaide it's not safe
33:36so you came riding to my rescue on horses better fed
33:39than these people
33:41in this place you hear your own grave
33:43being dug
33:56what are you doing
34:00trying to impress me now
34:01go back to the house
34:03fetch some ice
34:05it's not really ice in need
34:07i was just making a point
34:08and food
34:09the food they are preparing for us
34:11and blankets
34:12pull some blankets off the bed
34:15go
34:16i gave you an order
34:17fill a hay wagon with ice food
34:19and blankets
34:24i'm sorry
34:25why would you be sorry
34:26he's not yours
34:37you see
34:38gentlemen please
34:41sit down for a while
34:43it would be my pleasure
34:52well it's the clown
34:53and it's the stocky bowl
34:56let's
34:57and make those shoes
34:58don't fall a hole
35:25i have a roof
35:28You have made your point, and not in a very convincing way.
35:31I don't care about making a point.
35:33Right now, I care about digging a grave for men too weak to dig it themselves.
35:36But this isn't for them, though, is it? It's simply to impress me.
35:42I am not trying to impress you.
35:47Adelaide, you should know there is a woman.
35:50I've slept with her, I left my keys beside her bed, and she unlocked something in me.
35:56I'm a cold fish.
35:58I think that something has moved in me, and I wouldn't say that it is loved or anything like that,
36:10but I have come to see things in a different way because of her.
36:30I have come to see things in a different way.
36:35I have come to see things in a different way.
37:03I understand that it's a procedure for Guinness mistresses.
37:07She would not accept it.
37:14Come.
37:21We used to come here to watch the sunset.
37:24I had a maid who told me when I was a boy that the sun was actually falling into the
37:30water and being extinguished.
37:32I believed her.
37:36I was told that the brewery was your only obsession.
37:46I suppose if the brewery wants to conquer America, it really wouldn't do to be seen supporting only the Union.
37:52I mean, I don't mean to be cynical.
37:57I have found that the people who are most cynical in this world are the ones with the least experience
38:02of it.
38:02You think I'm sheltered?
38:04Oh, a rather grand shelter you've lived in.
38:06And now I peer out and shake my head with disapproval.
38:08That's the time quicker than tea dances, I suppose.
38:13Such a relief you're not looking for a wife.
38:15And that you were not looking for a husband.
38:39And that you were not looking for a husband.
39:10Hello.
39:13You asked to see me?
39:14Tonight, at 9 o'clock, this I dress, there is a dance.
39:24Right.
39:26Well, I'll wear my Sunday suit then.
39:37You can wear your Sunday suit.
39:41But there will be no hymns.
39:43No prayers.
39:44Good.
39:45Good.
39:46Good.
39:50Good job.
39:52Sir.
39:53Do the good work.
40:50It's nice.
40:53Nine o'clock, he says it's a dance.
40:55So there'll be a lot of them.
40:57A fine catch, good.
41:03Police will arrive just after ten.
41:06When they arrive, they will let you go.
41:09I will give them your name, and you will give them a code word.
41:14The code word is retribution.
41:28It's not just for the money you're doing, miss.
41:32Come here.
41:34If you don't help me expose his dirty secret, I will expose yours.
41:40Your father will be shamed, and twenty years in jail will be waiting for you.
41:44Come here.
42:03Did you tell her about the other woman?
42:08Yes, I did.
42:08Do you have to know everything, Potter?
42:12Did it work, do you think?
42:14What do you mean, did it work?
42:16People only want things if they think they can't have them.
42:20Potter, spare me your wisdom and come and finish this tie, would you?
42:32I bet it worked.
42:40To honesty.
42:42To being surprised by honesty.
42:45To being surprised by honesty.
42:53Potter?
42:55Yes.
42:56Yes, Margot.
42:581844.
43:00I chose it because that's the year of your birth.
43:05Yes, I am rather old to be a spinster, aren't I?
43:08Everyone tells me.
43:09No, I wasn't making a point.
43:19Actually, this wine is rather wonderful.
43:22Yes, the year of your birth must have been very sunny and warm.
43:31And I am neither of those things correct?
43:34I think neither of us is very good at talking when there is no particular thing to talk about.
43:50Potatoes and eel gravy, sir.
44:00I thought you might appreciate the gesture.
44:02What kind of gesture are you mocking me?
44:05No, no, I'm not trying to mock you, no.
44:07Look, no matter what our name may be,
44:14you and I, we're no different to the people living one mile away from us.
44:27Take care.
44:28Please.
44:34Take care.
44:36I don't know.
45:25I don't know.
45:47I don't know.
46:31I don't know.
46:38I don't know.
46:41I don't know.
46:44I don't know.
46:47I don't know.
47:01I don't know.
47:08I don't know.
47:09I don't know.
47:20I don't know.
47:36I don't know.
47:39I don't know.
47:41I don't know.
47:44I don't know.
48:05I don't know.
48:16I don't know.
48:24I don't know.
48:29I don't know.
48:43I don't know.
48:49I don't know.
48:56I don't know.
49:01I don't know.
49:13I don't know.
49:31I don't know.
49:33I don't know.
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