- 16 ore fa
- #blackadder
- #rowanatkinson
- #subita
Blackadder (1986) - Stagione 2
Ambientata all'epoca del regno di Elisabetta I. Il protagonista è Lord Edmund Blackadder (interpretato da Rowan Atkinson), un nobile squattrinato, cinico e astuto che cerca di ingraziarsi la potente e lunatica sovrana, rischiando spesso di venire decapitato. Il suo servitore è Baldrick, un misero e stupido omuncolo che cerca di toglierlo dai guai con sghembi piani, stupidi ed inattuabili
#blackadder #rowanatkinson #subita
Ambientata all'epoca del regno di Elisabetta I. Il protagonista è Lord Edmund Blackadder (interpretato da Rowan Atkinson), un nobile squattrinato, cinico e astuto che cerca di ingraziarsi la potente e lunatica sovrana, rischiando spesso di venire decapitato. Il suo servitore è Baldrick, un misero e stupido omuncolo che cerca di toglierlo dai guai con sghembi piani, stupidi ed inattuabili
#blackadder #rowanatkinson #subita
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DivertentiTrascrizione
00:04A presto
00:37I must say, Edmund, it was jolly nice of you to ask me to share your breakfast before the rigours
00:42of the day begin.
00:43Well, it is said, Percy, that civilised man seeks out good and intelligent company,
00:48so that through learned discourse he may rise above the savage and closer to God.
00:53Yes, I've heard that.
00:54Personally, however, I like to start the day with a total dickhead. Remind me I'm best.
00:59Beshrew me, Edmund, you're in good fooling this morning.
01:02Don't say beshrew me, Percy, and these stupid actors say beshrew me.
01:06How I would love to be an actor. I had a great talent for it in my youth. I was
01:11the man of a thousand faces.
01:13So how did you come to choose the ugly mug you've got now?
01:16You know, I'm tush, my lord.
01:18And don't say tush, either. It's only a short step from tush to hey nonny nonny, and then I'm afraid
01:23I shall have to call the police.
01:25Well, God pats me on the head and says, good boy, Edmund.
01:30Well?
01:30My aunt and uncle, Lord and Lady Whiteadder, the two most fanatical Puritans in England, have invited themselves to dinner
01:37here tonight.
01:38But aren't they the most frightful boars?
01:40Yep, but they have one great redeeming feature. Their wallets.
01:45More capacious than an elephant's scrotum, and just as difficult to get your hands on.
01:50At least, until now.
01:51For tonight, they wish to discuss my inheritance.
01:55Hey, nonny nonny, my lord, good news!
01:58All right!
02:01Fetch.
02:04Why have you got a piece of cheese tied to the end of your nose?
02:07To catch mice, my lord.
02:09I lie on the floor with my mouth open and hope they scurry in.
02:14And do they?
02:15Not yet, my lord.
02:16I'm not surprised. Your breath comes straight from Satan's bottom, Lord.
02:21The only sort of mouse you're going to catch is one without a nose.
02:25That's a pity, because the nose is the best bit on a mouse.
02:28Any bit of a mouse will sing like luxury compared to what Percy and I must eat tonight.
02:31We are entertaining Puritan vegetable folk, Baldurs, and that means no meat.
02:37In that case, I shall prepare my turnip surprise.
02:40And the surprise is?
02:42There's nothing else in it except the turnip.
02:45So another word for turnip surprise would be a turnip.
02:49Oh, yeah.
02:51Right.
02:52Get the door, Balduric. Get the door.
02:56Well, my lord, if things got as planned tonight, it would seem congratulations are in order.
03:00Nice try, Percy, but forget it. You're not getting a penny.
03:10Balduric, I would advise you to make the explanation you were about to give phenomenally good.
03:16You said get the door.
03:18Not good enough. You're fired.
03:20But, my lord, I've been in your family since 1532.
03:23So is syphilis. Now get out.
03:28By the way, there was a messenger outside when I got the door.
03:31Says the Queen wants to see you.
03:33Lord Melchett is very sick.
03:35Really?
03:36Yeah. He's at death's door.
03:38Well, my faithful old reinstated family retainer.
03:41Let's go and open it for him, then.
03:46Edmund! Quick, quick! Melchett's dying.
03:49We must do something.
03:51Well, yes, of course. Some sort of celebration.
03:54But let's wait till he's actually snuffed it, shall we?
03:57Narcett's old methods don't seem to be working.
04:00Come on, little tummy.
04:03Don't start it.
04:04Last night, it was about two o'clock.
04:06I was tucked into bed having this absolutely scrummy dream about ponies
04:10when I was wakened by a terrific banging from Lord Melchett.
04:14Well, I never knew he had it in him.
04:18It's true, I promise.
04:20He was banging on the castle gates and falling over
04:23and singing a strange song about a girl who possessed something called a dicky-died-o.
04:28Oh, yes.
04:30It's a lovely old hymn, isn't it?
04:32Well, Mum, I think I know what's wrong with Lord Melchett.
04:35And, unfortunately, it isn't fatal.
04:38Well, Harry, I'm a cure, the horrible man.
04:39I'm fed up with him lying there moaning and groaning.
04:42and letting off such great and fruits and flappy woof-woofs like a scissor.
04:47But I can't believe one's tiny nose.
04:50The truth is, Lord Melchett just can't take his ale.
04:53No, I protest.
04:55I may be a little delicate this morning,
04:57but what I drank last night would have floored a rhinoceros.
05:00If it was allergic to lemonade.
05:02There's a Blackadder here who can't take his ale.
05:04He's famous for it.
05:05Oh, yeah?
05:05Yeah.
05:06Now, see, it's very exciting.
05:08The boys are getting tough.
05:09I'm sure we all remember the shame and embarrassment of the visit of the King of Austria
05:14when Blackadder was found wandering naked among the corridors of Hempton Court
05:18singing, I'm Merlin the Happy Pig.
05:21What did you have last night, then?
05:22A whole half pint of potato juice.
05:24On the contrary, I had two flagons of claret and a double helping of curried turtle.
05:30I can assure you it's no holds barred with us at the annual communion wine tasting.
05:34Annual!
05:34Ha!
05:35For me and the wild boys, every night is drinky night.
05:38Says who?
05:39Says me.
05:39Says you?
05:40Yeah.
05:41You want to come around sometime?
05:42Have a look at the underside of my table.
05:45Tonight!
05:47Tonight?
05:48Yeah, come on, Melchett.
05:49What are you scared of?
05:50Perhaps you're right.
05:51Perhaps he's all right.
05:52Time to wait.
05:52All right, then, tonight, I'll be there.
05:55Hooray!
05:57And last one under the table gets...
06:0010,000 florins from the loser.
06:02Mum?
06:04Right.
06:05Well, I'll get the beer in, then.
06:06Wah!
06:12Mercy?
06:15Do you know what I'm going to do?
06:17What?
06:18I'm going to go along and find out exactly what happens at these boys' nights.
06:22Good idea, Poppet.
06:24And I'll wear a cloak with a cowl, so no one will recognise me.
06:29Oh, it's another good idea.
06:31You're so clever today, you better be careful your foot doesn't fall off.
06:39Does that happen when you have lots of brilliant ideas?
06:41Your foot falls off.
06:43Certainly does.
06:43My brother, he had this brilliant idea of cutting his toenails with a scythe.
06:49And here's what they are.
06:53Right.
06:53Now, the sort of person we're looking for is an aggressive, drunken lout with the intelligence
06:58of a four-year-old and the sexual sophistication of a donkey.
07:04Cardinal Woolsey?
07:06Boric?
07:07My lord?
07:13Why?
07:14I got fed up with the all-mouse diet, my lord.
07:16I thought I'd try a cat for variety.
07:20Good.
07:20Well done.
07:21And now, returning to the real world, do you have a knife?
07:24Yeah.
07:24Good.
07:25Because I wish to quickly send off some party invitations, and to make them look particularly
07:29tough, I wish to write them in blood.
07:32Your blood, to be precise.
07:34How much blood will you actually be requiring, my lord?
07:37Oh, nothing much.
07:38Just a small puddle.
07:40Will you be wanting me to cut anything off?
07:42An arm or a leg, for instance?
07:44Oh, good lord, no.
07:45A little prick should do.
07:50So, well, my lord, I'm your bondsman and must obey.
07:54I, for God's sake, Boric, I might have a little prick on your finger.
07:58I haven't got one there.
08:00Forget it.
08:01Forget it.
08:02Thank you, my lord.
08:04Right, now, purse.
08:06How's this list going?
08:07Oh, very well indeed.
08:08I thought we could invite my girlfriend, Gwendolyn.
08:11Sorry, no chicks.
08:12Who else?
08:13Well, that's about as far as I'd got, actually.
08:15Right, I'll dictate.
08:17First, Simon Partridge.
08:19Oh, not farters, parters.
08:21Also known as Mr. Ostrich.
08:23Even he?
08:24But he's a fearful oik.
08:26Takes one to no wonder.
08:27Secondly, Sir Geoffrey Pittle.
08:31Well, here's to the health of Cardinal Chunder Pittle.
08:33The very same.
08:34And thirdly, Freddie Frobetter,
08:37the flatulent hermit of Lindisfarne.
08:39Oh, poor, poor.
08:41Right, that should do the trick.
08:43Oh, and of course, Lord and Lady White, I know who'll be coming anyway.
08:46Oh, yeah.
08:47Oh, no.
08:51I must say, Edmund, it does look a teeny bit like trying to get out of it.
08:55Quite the wrong impression, Mum.
08:57I just want to make it another night, that's all.
08:59Certainly not.
09:01I beg your pardon?
09:02Well, it's just one excuse after another, isn't it?
09:04Next thing, he'll be trying to get out of having his bath altogether.
09:08He isn't talking about bathing.
09:10Well, he should be.
09:11How else is he going to keep clean?
09:13Soon he'll be saying he doesn't want to have his nappy changed.
09:19Lord Blackadder doesn't wear a nappy.
09:21Well, that case is even more important that he has a bath.
09:24It's a party.
09:26I know why you want to get out of it,
09:28because I remember the last time you had a party.
09:31I found you face down in a puddle,
09:33wearing a pointy hat and singing a song about goblins.
09:35That's all right, all right.
09:37Tonight it is.
09:38Oh, Edmund, I do love it when you get cross.
09:42Sometimes I think about having you executed
09:44just to see the expression on your face.
09:49Right, now let's make sure you've got this.
09:52We are having two parties here tonight.
09:54Right.
09:54And they must be kept completely separate.
09:56Right.
09:57Firstly, a total piss-up involving beer throwing,
10:00broken furniture and wall-to-wall vomiting
10:03to be held here in Baldrick's bedroom.
10:06Oh, thank you very much, Maldon.
10:08And secondly, Percy will join me in here
10:11for the gourmet turnip evening.
10:14Is the turnip surprise ready?
10:16It's just, my lord.
10:20Then what is so funny?
10:22Well, my lord,
10:23while Baldrick and I were preparing the turnip surprise,
10:27we had a surprise.
10:29We came across a turnip
10:30that was exactly the same shape
10:35as a thingy.
10:42It was a thingy.
10:43A thingy.
10:45A great big thingy.
10:47It was terrific.
10:49Size is no guarantee of quality, Baldrick.
10:52Most horses are very well endowed,
10:54but that does not necessarily make them sensitive levels.
10:57and I trust you have removed this hilarious item.
11:00Yeah, yes, my lord.
11:02Good, because there's nothing more likely to stop an inheritance
11:04than a thingy-shaped turnip.
11:08Absolutely, Edmund.
11:09But it was jolly funny.
11:11Yes, yes, yes, yes.
11:13I found it particularly ironic, my lord,
11:15because I've got a thingy that's shaped like a turnip.
11:17Yes.
11:19And the place is a artist.
11:21Are you?
11:22Yeah, I hide in the vegetable rack
11:23and frighten the children.
11:26What fun.
11:26Perhaps you've forgotten
11:28that I'm meant to be having
11:28a drinking competition here tonight
11:30with Lord Melchett
11:31and 10,000 florins are at stake.
11:33Oh, dear.
11:35What do you mean?
11:36Well, firstly, you haven't got 10,000 florins
11:39and thirdly,
11:40one drop of the ale
11:41and you fall flat on your face
11:42and start singing that song about the goblin.
11:44That's nonsense.
11:46But just in case it's true...
11:48It is true.
11:49Yes, all right, it's true.
11:50So the plan is,
11:52when I call for my incredibly strong ale,
11:55you must pass me water in an ale bottle.
11:57Have you got that?
11:58Yeah.
11:58When you call for ale,
11:59I pass water.
12:02Percy,
12:03your job is to stay here
12:04and suck up to my aunt.
12:05Well, I think you can trust me
12:07to know how to handle a woman.
12:09Oh, God.
12:11Right.
12:12Here goes.
12:17Yes, all right.
12:22Uncle!
12:23Hunt!
12:23Greetings.
12:24How nice it is to see you.
12:29Dickie, child, don't lie.
12:31Everyone hates us and you know it.
12:33Hey, may I introduce my friend, Lord Percy?
12:38Well, well, well, Eddie.
12:40You didn't tell me you had such a good-looking aunt.
12:43Good morrow to thee, gorgeousness.
12:46I know what I like
12:48and I like what I see.
12:50For God's sake,
12:53Ah, yes.
12:54Well, well, I hope you had a pleasant inheritance.
12:56Did I say inheritance?
12:57I meant you.
12:58No.
12:59If you'd just like to help yourself to a legacy.
13:01No, a chair.
13:03Chair?
13:04You have chairs in your house?
13:07Oh, yes.
13:07Wicked child!
13:09Chairs are an invention of Satan!
13:11In our house, Nathaniel sits on a spike.
13:16I sit on Nathaniel.
13:18Two spikes would be an extravagance.
13:21Quite.
13:22I will suffer comfort this once.
13:25We shall just have to stick forks in our legs between courses.
13:29I trust you, remember, we eat no meat.
13:31Heaven forbid, no.
13:33So here we feast only on God's lovely turnip, mashed.
13:37Mashed?
13:38Yes.
13:39Wicked child!
13:40Mashing is also the work of Beelzebub.
13:43For Satan saw God's blessed turnip
13:46and he envied it
13:47and mashed it to spoil its sacred shape.
13:51I shall have my turnip as God intended.
13:54Fine.
13:55Warwick?
13:56No.
13:56Would you fetch my dear aunt a raw turnip, please?
13:59Well, we've only got the one.
14:00Just do it.
14:01Thank you.
14:04So, Uncle, will you have your turnip mashed
14:07or as God intended?
14:09He will not answer you.
14:10He has taken a vow of silence.
14:13I believe that silence is golden.
14:26Inheritance.
14:28Edmund, I trust you have invited no other guests?
14:31Oh, certainly not.
14:32Good.
14:33For where there are other guests
14:34that are people to fornicate with?
14:36Well, right.
14:38I'll just go and tell them to fornicate off.
14:40Lord Whiteheader.
14:46Yes.
14:47Well, Lord Whiteheader.
14:49Uh, a vow of silence.
14:51That's quite an interesting thing.
14:53Tell me about it.
15:02Happy birthday to you.
15:05Happy birthday to you.
15:08Happy birthday to you, Amy.
15:12Happy birthday to you.
15:17But it's not my birthday, Archdeacon.
15:22Well, well, get stuck in, boys.
15:25Stuck in!
15:26Wahey, get in!
15:28Well, it sounds a bit rude, doesn't it?
15:30Stuck in!
15:33Sorry.
15:33Back in a tick.
15:34Wahey!
15:35A tick, eh, lads?
15:36Now, that sounds a bit rude, doesn't it?
15:37That sounds a bit like bum.
15:41Ah, Melch, it's late, I see, to avoid the early drinking.
15:44Oh, Melch, you really are a beginner.
15:47You're not even wearing a pair of comedy breasts.
15:49Au contraire, Berger.
15:50Yes, well, let's wait till we get down to the serious drinking, shall we?
15:54Here we go.
15:54No, it's this way.
15:56Here we are.
16:01Good evening.
16:03Uh, lads, uh, this is Lord Melchert.
16:05Hey!
16:06Uh, give him a large one, will you?
16:08Large one?
16:09Wahey!
16:10Get it?
16:10No?
16:11Yes, you do.
16:12You large one.
16:13Sounds a bit rude.
16:15Oh, yes, large one!
16:16You may find the conversation a bit above your head at first, Melch, but you'll soon get used to it.
16:21Well, uh, down the hatch.
16:23Hey!
16:36I heard there's a party room.
16:38No, you guessed there were two, and you're invited to tonight.
16:40But I'm a friend of Lord Percy's.
16:42Oh, you must be Gwendolyn.
16:44You were invited anyway.
16:45Come in, two.
16:46Very much.
16:48It's in here.
16:50Here.
16:51Here.
17:04Sorry, he's sick.
17:07Leprosy.
17:09Of the brain.
17:10What he is trying to tell you is that you appear to be wearing a pair of devil's dumplings.
17:19Oh, my God, my earmuffs have fallen down here.
17:24It's getting...
17:25Would you like a pair?
17:26It's getting rather cold.
17:28No, thank you.
17:29Cold is God's way of telling us to burn more Catholics.
17:33Well, right.
17:34Which reminds me, auntie...
17:36Don't call me auntie!
17:38An auntie's a relative, and relatives are evidence of sex.
17:41And sex is hardly a fitting subject for the dinner table.
17:45Or, indeed, any table.
17:48Except perhaps a table in a brothel.
17:53Well, now, what was I saying?
17:55Oh, my God.
17:57Turnips, my lady.
18:05Very good.
18:06Very good.
18:09Hello, little handle.
18:11It takes me right back to our wedding night.
18:17We had raw turnips that night, too.
18:25What was that?
18:26What was what?
18:28That noise.
18:30Noise?
18:31Did you hear a noise, Percy?
18:33No.
18:34Good.
18:35Apart from that colossal drunken roar.
18:39That noise.
18:40No, it's the Catholics next door, I'm afraid.
18:42No!
18:43But, I'll just go and burn them.
18:45Back in a minute.
18:53Yes.
18:54Yes.
18:54I'm suffocating.
18:55Well, thank God you knocked.
18:57Come on, now, take a deep breath.
19:00And another.
19:01Better?
19:02Yes.
19:02Good.
19:05Mind you, I'll say one thing for Catholics.
19:09They do have natural rhythm.
19:14I notice you're not drinking, Birgitta.
19:17Oh, don't you worry about me, Maltzius.
19:18I'm holding my own here.
19:20Well, hey!
19:21Holding my own?
19:22Now, that sounds incredibly rude.
19:25Yes, well, I never went to university, of course.
19:28Um, Birgitta, that doesn't explain why you're not drinking with us.
19:32Ah, yes.
19:33No, that's what I actually came to talk to you about.
19:35What do you say to the idea of ten minutes absolute silence
19:38to get some really serious drinking in?
19:41Yes!
19:46Yes, I said, please give me silence, not drench me with dribble.
19:51Well, now, here's a nice glass of cider.
19:54Oh, only cider.
19:55I'm going to go and put some brandy in it.
19:58Yeah!
20:00Quiet!
20:11How are we all going, then?
20:12Not well.
20:14Let us discuss your inheritance.
20:16Hi, it's good.
20:17Um, a little drink first?
20:19Drink, wicked child.
20:21Drink is urine from the last leper in hell.
20:24Oh, no.
20:25No, this is only water.
20:27This is a house of simple purity.
20:32Oh, God.
20:35Oh, God.
20:37Drink booze up, Edmund.
20:47Do you know that man?
20:53No.
20:55He called you Edmund?
20:58Oh, no, him.
20:59Oh, yes, I do.
21:00Then, can you explain what he meant by great booze up?
21:19Yes, I can.
21:21My friend is a missionary, and on his last visit abroad, brought back with him the chief
21:31of a famous tribe.
21:36And he's obviously just woke up, because, as you heard, great booze up.
21:50Well done, Edmund.
21:51Well done, Edmund.
21:51And I think I'd better just go and visit him.
21:53First, over to you.
21:56Yes.
21:57How about some sort of game?
22:00How about a couple of frames of shove, piggy, shove?
22:05Blackadder?
22:06You challenged me to a drinking competition earlier today, and I haven't seen you touch a drop.
22:12Nonsense.
22:12It's true.
22:13You twist and turn like a twisty turny thing.
22:16I say you're a weedy pigeon, and you can call me Susan if it isn't so.
22:21All right.
22:22All right.
22:23Baldrick, fetch my incredibly strong ale.
22:27Oh, God, not Dr. McGlue's amber enema.
22:30A drink for schoolgirls.
22:32Surely not scallops, lobster, scumpy.
22:35No.
22:36It is blackadder's bowel basher, a brew guarantee to knock the backside of a concrete elephant.
22:41Is it not, Baldrick?
22:43No, it's water.
22:44What?
22:46Water?
22:48No, but seriously, Baldrick, I'm presuming you wish to see another dawn.
22:52You did call for your incredibly strong ale, Mum.
22:54Yes, that's right.
22:55Oh, that's a relief.
22:56I thought I'd made a mistake.
22:59Oh!
22:59Oh, God, it's right, it is, Walter!
23:01Oh!
23:02Come on, Dad, let's give him a real drink.
23:06Oh, fine.
23:07Bums up.
23:09Wave bums!
23:10Sounds a bit like bum, doesn't it?
23:12Drink, raggeda.
23:14Drink!
23:18Baggeda!
23:26Percy?
23:28I lost the bet.
23:30Edmund!
23:31Explain yourself!
23:34I can't.
23:36Not just like that.
23:39I'm a complicated person, you see, Aunty.
23:43Sometimes I'm nice, and sometimes I'm nasty.
23:50And sometimes I just like to sing little songs, like, see the little goblins.
23:58I mean, explain why you're wearing a cardinal's hat, why you're grinning and angry, and why you have an ostrich
24:06feather sticking out of your britches.
24:07I am wearing a cardinal's hat because I have an ostrich feather up my bottom, as Mr. Ostrich put it
24:19there, to keep in the little pixies.
24:23And I'm grinning inanely because I think I've just about succeeded in conning you and your daft husband out of
24:31a whooppy great inheritance.
24:34Is that right?
24:35May I remind you, cursed creature?
24:40That your inheritance depends upon your not drinking and not gambling.
24:43Oh, yes, damn.
24:45Percy the devil farts in my face once again.
24:49Not mentioning farts was also a condition.
24:54Shove off, you old trout.
24:57How dare you speak to my husband like that?
25:01Nathaniel, we're leaving.
25:04And you.
25:06Yes?
25:06Has anyone ever told you you're a giggling imbecile?
25:10Oh, yes.
25:15Good riddance, you old witch.
25:18Oops, she's forgotten her broomstick.
25:22Look, I just wanted to say thanks for a splendid evening.
25:27Yes, first rate, all round.
25:30Particularly your jester.
25:33Oh, yes.
25:34By the way, I love the turning.
25:38Very funny.
25:40Exactly the same shape as a thingy.
25:45Good God!
25:47Well, look who it is!
25:50Well, it's a boy's party.
25:53She's a girl.
25:54So she must be the stripper.
25:58Oh, no.
26:00Don't get too depressed, Edmund.
26:03I mean, money isn't everything.
26:08Think of clouds and daisies
26:12and the lovely smiles on little babies' faces.
26:16Be quiet, Percy.
26:18This way!
26:23Whoa, another stripper!
26:25Hooray!
26:26And a male stripper!
26:28Hooray!
26:29Oh, yes!
26:30This is much more like it!
26:33Oh!
26:35And she's come dressed as a queen!
26:38Hooray!
26:40Do you know who I am?
26:44Yes, I know who you are.
26:47Who?
26:49You're Merlin, the happy pig.
26:52Hooray!
26:54Wrong, I'm afraid.
26:56I am the queen of England.
27:01Hooray!
27:05Hooray!
27:05I may have the body
27:07of a weak and feeble woman,
27:10but I have the heart and stomach
27:13of a concrete elephant.
27:16Prove it!
27:18Certainly well.
27:21First, I'm going to have a little drinky,
27:23and then I'm going to execute
27:25the whole ballet lot of you.
27:32See the little goblin,
27:34see his little feet,
27:35and his little nosy woes,
27:38isn't the goblin sweet.
27:39Yes!
27:40See the little goblin!
27:41Wait a minute!
27:42I'm sure there was something
27:43very important I had to do
27:45to all of you this morning.
27:47Hooray!
27:49Hooray!
27:49Hooray!
27:50Remember something about
27:5210,000 florins, was it?
27:54I think it was something
27:55about an inheritance.
27:57Look, do you lot want to hear
27:59about this goblin or not?
28:01Yes!
28:02Right, well, perhaps it's time
28:04I might be allowed to continue
28:05and perhaps finish with any luck.
28:08Luck?
28:10Hooray!
28:11Get it?
28:13No!
28:14No!
28:15Oh, come on!
28:17Luck!
28:18Sounds almost exactly like...
28:21Oh, he's here!
28:25The heart of losing his love mastered
28:28And I, your merry balladier
28:32Am all so well and truly plastered
28:36Whatever, whatever
28:39A bit like Robin Hood
28:42Whatever, whatever
28:46But nothing like it's good
28:49Luck!
28:51Luck!
28:53Luck!
28:54Luck!
28:54I thought he had died
28:56Luck!
28:58Luck!
29:00Luck!
29:01The writers must have lied
29:03Grazie!
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