- 2 days ago
Category
🎥
Short filmTranscript
00:09Tonight, on Wise Guy...
00:12What's wrong with Jenny?
00:14She died, Vinnie.
00:16That makes her ineligible for a transplant under our insurance.
00:20You mean to tell me that the OCB is just going to turn its back on Frank?
00:24One million two hundred and fifty thousand dollars.
00:27I tell you I need money, and the next morning there is a million in change in non-sequential bills
00:32in the front seat of my car.
00:33Now doesn't that seem a little coincidental to you?
00:35Where would I get that kind of money?
00:36That's what I'm here to find out.
01:02I don't know.
02:53Who is it?
02:54It's open the door.
03:06What happened to you?
03:14Can I come in?
03:16Yeah.
03:16Yeah.
03:17Yeah.
03:18Yeah.
03:25Yeah.
03:27Yeah.
03:47All right, if you tell me what you're looking for,
03:50maybe I can help you.
03:51Do you have anything to drink in here?
03:55Oh, there you are.
04:04Frank, Mr. Bose the Eggman gave us that three years ago for Christmas.
04:09Are you ready to peel pain by now?
04:25Why are you staring at me?
04:26I've never had ringside seats to a full festival before.
04:34What's the matter with you?
04:36Give me that.
04:40I guess I'm a little drunk, Vinny.
04:42Yeah.
04:46A little drunk.
04:50You take it.
04:51I'll take it.
04:53I don't believe alcohol and driving mix.
04:55I sure as hell don't believe firearms and alcohol mix.
05:03Well, Vinny.
05:06I never could drink.
05:08What's wrong, Frank?
05:11There's nothing wrong.
05:12If there was something wrong, I could take care of it myself.
05:15You don't have to bite my head off.
05:17I'm just trying to help.
05:18I'm not biting your head off!
05:26Frank, it's two o'clock in the morning and it's an hour's drive to Jersey.
05:29Why don't you tell me what's wrong?
05:32It's my wife.
05:36She collapsed with internal bleeding this morning while she was emptying the dryer.
05:41Drake found her.
05:44She all right?
05:45Vinny.
05:46Oh, God.
05:48Vinny, I hate hospitals.
05:51I hate the sounds.
05:52I hate the smells.
05:53I hate the covers of it.
05:55I break into a cold sweat every time I get near one.
05:58You know, my old man died a slow death.
06:04Maybe I associate loss and lack of control with hospitals.
06:09I don't know.
06:10You know what Shrink say about guys like us?
06:13They say we become cops because we want to be in control.
06:19Frank, what's wrong with Jenny?
06:22Control.
06:28She'd die on Vinny.
06:33You know what it's like to watch somebody you love disintegrate by the day?
06:41Well, what do the doctors say?
06:44Smoldering hepatitis?
06:46Who the hell's smoldering hepatitis?
06:53It's this insidious little beauty that eats away at the liver and then it begins on the brain.
06:58When the liver can't filter the toxins in the body anymore, it causes periods of confusion that are similar to
07:05Alzheimer's.
07:06Jenny loses her ability to think.
07:08She can't remember to wash, comb her hair, change her clothes.
07:22She gets lost going places she's gone to for years.
07:28She wears a little bracelet, Vinny.
07:33So people can call me when she's lost and I can come and get her.
07:39Have you seen any specialists?
07:44I'm sorry. That was a stupid question. I'm sorry.
07:48There's an outside chance that a liver transplant could save her life.
07:52Well, then do it.
07:54It's the money, Vinny.
07:58I don't have the money.
08:00Frank, what are you talking about?
08:01You're a federal agent. The government has great health benefits.
08:05Not for liver disease accelerated by alcoholism, it doesn't.
08:10Jenny's an alcoholic?
08:11It's not something we're proud of.
08:13Been in good clinics. I've had her in AA.
08:16I thought we had it licked.
08:18Well, Frank, you're telling me that nobody will do anything for her?
08:21Or the operation costs $250,000 plus maintenance.
08:27And even if I was covered,
08:31we'd be at the bottom of the list of recipients
08:33because she's a 40-year-old alcoholic.
08:38I sat in my car outside of a savings and loan.
08:45And I couldn't do it.
08:49I couldn't do it.
08:53I'm sorry.
09:00Jenny's gonna die.
09:04And I'm gonna sit there, and I'm gonna watch it.
09:08I'm sorry, Vince.
09:10I shouldn't have come to your house with all this.
09:13I gotta go home.
09:15Where's Drake?
09:19He's staying with friends tonight.
09:21And you're staying with me tonight.
09:25Good night's sleep.
09:27I don't tackle this fresh in the morning, all right?
09:34Well, you take the couch.
09:43All right.
09:46You take the couch.
10:00Oh, Benny.
10:09Here you go.
10:13Oh, Benny.
10:14Oh, Benny.
10:14Here you go.
10:19I don't know what I'm going to do.
10:36Rise and shine, Frank.
10:39I'm going to take a half million diner for a real breakfast.
10:45Frank?
10:50I find Combe the Bureau's insurance policy top to bottom.
10:54Frank's wife simply doesn't qualify.
10:56The government's got to be able to do something.
10:58What about a waiver?
10:59The government doesn't control the policy.
11:01The insurance company does.
11:02They're not about to change the rules for us.
11:05Not to the tune of $250,000 floor and bills that could reach seven figures.
11:13Jenny McPike's medical records clearly indicate
11:16that she's been treated for alcoholism and alcohol-related illness.
11:20That makes her ineligible for a transplant under our insurance.
11:23You mean you're telling me that the OCB is just going to turn its back on, Frank?
11:28While you were in the hospital, we raised $22,678 in donation.
11:33Beckstead kicked in $11,000 of his own money.
11:36Raglan, $4,500.
11:38We're still collecting.
11:41But we'll never get close.
11:50She's all yours, Mr. McPike.
11:56I wrote down some things that you'll have to do.
12:01I think it's all there.
12:03The pallbearers and the music.
12:06I used to joke about playing Stairway to Heaven.
12:10But I want church classical.
12:13You know, Bach and Brahms.
12:15I can't believe you did this.
12:17Well, Frank, you know, you're not very good at that kind of thing.
12:21I've given a lot of thought.
12:22And I think that Drake should go and live with my sister.
12:26You what?
12:26I've spoke to her already.
12:29Frank, there's no way that you can give a 12-year-old boy
12:33the attention that he needs with the demands of your job.
12:37Jane, we'll talk about this later.
12:39I'm thinking of both of you.
12:42Mr. and Mrs. McPike?
12:45Hey, you look like you're holding your own.
12:48Bleeding stopped.
12:51Seem to be thinking a little clearer.
12:54Looks like Thursday might be a good day to let you go home.
12:56You let her go.
12:57What about her care?
12:59There's nothing we can give her here that a part-time nurse can't provide at home.
13:02Wait a second, Buster.
13:03Frank, thank you, Dr. Arricchio.
13:06I would like to get out of here as soon as possible.
13:11Okay.
13:17Hey, Doc.
13:18Dr. Arricchio, can I talk to you a minute?
13:21Looks like you'd be better off talking to an orthopedic specialist.
13:24No, it's about Jenny McPike.
13:27You a relative, Mr....
13:28No, no.
13:29I'm a friend of the family.
13:32I know she's dying.
13:36Do you want to step into my office?
13:38Yeah.
13:42Jenny McPike is a very brave woman who's accepted her fate.
13:47Sometimes, friends and loved ones have a more difficult time accepting terminal illness than the patients.
13:51No, you're absolutely right about that.
13:54I'm not accepting it.
13:55Mr. Terranova, do you have any idea of the extent of Jenny's illness?
13:59No, I don't.
14:00But I do know that she's in one of the foremost hospitals in this country, and you're just sitting there
14:04letting her die.
14:06Now, I want some straight answers.
14:11You like to sail, Mr. Terranova?
14:13I love to sail.
14:16But, uh, I don't sail anymore.
14:21I take care of terminally ill patients.
14:23And even a five-minute delay can mean a difference between life and death.
14:26So I don't sail.
14:28I come in here and I work on these models
14:31so that I can be closer to my patients, but they still die.
14:35Anyway, candidates who meet all the requirements,
14:38and I have to go out there in that waiting room
14:40and tell their families there's nothing more that I can do for them.
14:43Now, Mr. Terranova, I'm telling you,
14:44at this point, there's nothing more that I can do for Jenny McPike.
14:49You can do a transplant.
14:54The screening process for transplant recipients is meticulous.
14:58It has to be.
14:59There are a hell of a lot more diseased livers than healthy livers to replace them.
15:03And we have to take a look at all the factors.
15:06You mean like medical coverage?
15:07Yeah, like medical coverage.
15:10Liver transplants cost a fortune.
15:12So if you don't have the money, you just don't get the operation, right?
15:15I'm not denying that hospitals do wallet biopsies
15:17before they decide to take patients on.
15:19Well, aside from the money, what are the other factors?
15:23Age, heredity, family support.
15:26Transplant recipients need a lot of care,
15:29a lot of loving support.
15:31Jenny's 40 years old.
15:32She's got a lousy family medical history
15:34and a husband with a job that's stressful to the family.
15:37None of these make her an ideal candidate.
15:39Who are you to make that judgment?
15:41She's an alcoholic.
15:42She's a human being.
15:44We have young people in these wards
15:46that are waiting for other young people to die so they can live.
15:48We cannot, we will not risk anything so valuable
15:52as a healthy liver on a patient with an alcoholic history.
15:56These are hard facts that we have to live with.
15:58But I tell you what, Mr. Terranova,
16:00you get the state to appoint you Solomon,
16:03I'll give a liver to anyone you want.
16:04I had to look Jenny McPike and her husband in the eye
16:08and tell them that I couldn't save her.
16:12She accepted that.
16:14They suggest you do the same.
16:19Isn't there anything you can do?
16:21If John D. Rockefeller walked through that door
16:23and donated a million dollars to the hospital research center,
16:26that might tweak somebody's attention.
16:28But at this point,
16:30no, there's nothing more I can do.
16:32No, there, no.
20:20Oh, come on, Frank. You're not being soft.
20:22No, there are all kinds of task forces running around the Capitol trolling for dirty feds.
20:27It's probably some kind of ab scam operation.
20:29Either that or some rat bastard druggie trying to pay me back with a sting of his own.
20:33I'm being set up.
20:34Frank, nobody is setting you up.
20:36Then where did the money come from?
20:37I don't know. Maybe it fell out of the sky.
20:39What difference does it make?
20:40You can use this money for your wife's operation.
20:43I am not made that way, Vince.
20:46I should have turned it into the OCB and that's just what I'm going to do.
20:51Frank.
20:55Frank, I put that money in your car.
21:02If you turn it in, it could come back on me.
21:09This, this, this, this is Steelgrave skim money from the Atlantic City casinos.
21:14No, it's not, Frank. It's not Sonny's money.
21:18I need to know where you got it.
21:20What difference does it make?
21:22It makes a difference to me.
21:26All right.
21:29Just call it, uh, my parachute.
21:33Roger.
21:34Yeah, as in Roger Lococo.
21:36This is Mel Profitt's money. The case is cursed from day one.
21:40You know, I'm wrestling with those demons myself, Frank.
21:42We're talking about your demons now.
21:44Roger gave you this money and you kept it.
21:46Frank, the government hung Roger out to dry.
21:48Come on, you were there.
21:50They persuaded him to lead the invasion of Il Pavo,
21:52and when it went bad, they tried to crucify him.
21:55And you think a million dollars is the price they should pay for that?
21:58If I were to exact the price, this wouldn't even come close.
22:01But this is my cushion, Frank.
22:03It's my insurance policy.
22:11And you work on the deep coverings.
22:13It's real easy.
22:15It's real easy to get swept away in the undertow.
22:17But the upper echelons of the bureaucracy,
22:19they can wash their hands of you any time they want.
22:21They did it to Roger, and they can do it to me if they think it fits their needs.
22:25Roger gave me this money to hold.
22:26And when he disappeared, I decided to hang on to it.
22:29And I kept it because if they decide to turn on me,
22:32I want options.
22:33You are rationalizing an illegal act.
22:37I don't believe it's an illegal act unless the money is used for illegal means.
22:40I haven't used one dime of this money.
22:42I'm still driving the same car.
22:44I'm living in my mother's house.
22:45You don't see me driving around in a limousine and eating at 21, do you?
22:48You took the money.
22:50You kept the money.
22:51It's in your possession.
22:52You committed an illegal act.
22:54And if I don't report it, I am in collusion.
22:57Jesus, why did you do this to me?
22:59I didn't do anything to you.
23:02Damn it.
23:06Yeah, life would be a lot less complicated if I didn't have this money.
23:09But I do.
23:10And I gave it to you.
23:12And that means you're involved.
23:15So what's it going to be, Frank?
23:17Are you going to turn the money and me in?
23:19Or are you going to use it for your wife's operation?
23:21I'm turning it in.
23:23Not the hell you are.
23:24Take your hand.
23:24What?
23:25Take your hand off me.
23:32I had to get away from that money so I could think.
23:35You know, Thomas De Quincey said if once a man indulges in murder, soon he thinks very little of robbing.
23:43We're talking about murder, Frank.
23:45We're talking about saving a life.
23:46We're talking about a series of illegal acts.
23:49It's not right, Vince.
23:50Well, who's to say what's right?
23:51What's right about Khashoggi cruising around in a chamois ceiling yacht while a quarter million people in the Sudan starve?
23:57What's right about 50,000 people in Armenia getting killed in an earthquake?
24:00You know, there was over 100 indictments in the last administration.
24:03You got drugs in the Olympics.
24:05There's AIDS-infected syringes washing up on beaches.
24:08What's right about my brother getting killed by a truck, Frank?
24:12What's right about any of it?
24:13I'm talking about real life here.
24:15The money came from the profits, Vince.
24:18It's drug money.
24:25It is drug money, Vince, and it's a felony.
24:28We don't know what's drug money.
24:29It could be munitions money sanctioned by the government.
24:32That doesn't make taking it any less of a crime.
24:34The real crime is that people without money can't get the medical attention they need.
24:38You are asking me to go against everything I believe in.
24:41Frank.
24:45Let's say we use the money for Jenny's operation.
24:48We donate a million dollars to the liver research center at the hospital.
24:51If we turn that money in, they can use it for anything.
24:54Use it for some sleazy South American dictator or security fence for Oliver North.
24:59And it may be used to put away some of the crud that we go after.
25:02Yeah, maybe.
25:03It might.
25:04But I'm making a moral judgment here that that money is best used for Jenny.
25:12Now, I say that it's the individual's duty
25:14to make tough decisions so long as he's willing to stick by those decisions.
25:19Now, I'm willing to do that, Frank.
25:22What about you?
25:29You mean to tell me that you've never done anything illegal?
25:33Not even a little bit?
25:35You know, you never ran a stop sign,
25:39never tuned up your income tax returns a little bit?
25:42Oh.
25:44Were you born perfect?
25:47Wasn't born perfect.
25:49I'm far from perfect.
25:51Oh.
25:58Must have done something illegal.
26:01I smoked dope.
26:04No.
26:07I mean, I went to college.
26:09Nice.
26:09But I went to college.
26:10I was a normal kid.
26:12You never tried it?
26:14No.
26:15I still got my eye on the Supreme Court.
26:18I only did it a couple times.
26:19It made me paranoid.
26:21It did?
26:22It made me paranoid.
26:23Yeah, I believe you.
26:25Well, anyway, I stopped.
26:27When I found out the Greenbelt Police Force required a polygraph.
26:31Well, so you took the polygraph.
26:34Yeah.
26:35What happened?
26:36I fooled the machine.
26:38I never felt like I was a user, so the machine registered negative.
26:42Well, there you are.
26:44Vince,
26:46you can't equate to taking in this money with the indiscretions of youth.
26:50No, no.
26:51No, I can't.
26:53But I didn't take that money, Frank.
26:55It was given to me.
26:57I just didn't pass it along.
27:00That's all.
27:03Right?
27:06I'll go along with whatever you want to do.
27:11I always wanted to be a cop.
27:14You know, Ginny and I were high school sweethearts together.
27:18Same dreams, same ideals.
27:22I don't know what I thought.
27:25I'd work hard through school, get a job with a police agency.
27:30Life would be a breeze.
27:32Nice home weekends together.
27:35Trips to Ray over the beach.
27:40I love the beach.
27:49I had no idea what the demands of the job were.
27:52Cases don't know weekends.
27:58You know, the first couple times I saw her drunk,
28:01I wrote it off as an aberration.
28:04I didn't know about the coffee cups filled with vodka
28:07that were strategically placed about the house.
28:11The liquor bills paid in cash.
28:18I didn't know until the doctor told me she had liver disease,
28:21that she was an alcoholic.
28:31Benny, I still see her as a fresh-faced, bright-eyed high school sophomore
28:36with all her dreams ahead of her.
28:40And boy, I was the guy that was going to make those dreams come true.
28:51Now she's dying.
29:00Frank, take the money.
29:11Doctor, I'd like to thank you for taking the time to see me.
29:14I wanted one last try at getting my wife some help.
29:18You have to understand that your wife is not one of the fortunates
29:21who meets eligibility standards for a donor organ.
29:31What's this?
29:32That is a donation for your research facility.
29:39Mr. McPike, I know you're a federal agent.
29:43Might you feel that the scalp of a renowned hospital administrator
29:47would look good come funding review time?
29:49I'm not setting you up.
29:51What would you think?
29:53I think my wife is sick.
29:57Federal research funds are drying up.
30:01Look, I can't guarantee anything.
30:04The rules aren't etched in stone.
30:06There have been special considerations in the past.
30:11And Jenny will get the operation?
30:13To keep this facility running, I've had to make some very unusual deals.
30:17Some of my colleagues would call them compromises or sell-outs.
30:21I don't give a flying crap what they call them.
30:23I'll do anything to save lives.
30:27Jenny's name will be put on the list.
30:32Mr. McPike, there's no guarantee she'd survive the operation.
30:37Yes, sir.
30:39That I know.
30:47What did you do, Frank?
30:49I didn't do anything.
30:50Damn it, yes, you did.
30:52I don't know what kind of federal weight you threw around, but I know you did something.
30:56Damn.
30:57Damn.
30:58I had resigned myself to dying.
31:01I had accepted this.
31:03Now, if they find me another liver, I've got to deal with the possibility of living or dying all over
31:08again.
31:09Damn you, Frank.
31:15Pull up a board, have a seat.
31:18Well, how'd soccer practice go?
31:21Fine.
31:22You score any goals?
31:26Well, that's right.
31:27You're a defenseman, aren't you?
31:31Mom's been wanting a gazebo for a long time.
31:34It's the job, buddy.
31:37I wanted to finish this since last summer.
31:39I know.
31:41Maybe sometime you could show me how to build a gazebo.
31:47I'll show you how to build a gazebo right now.
31:51As soon as we finish this fine sandwich.
32:01McPike?
32:07Yes, sir.
32:11They have a new liver for your mother.
32:20They're going to take another human being's liver and put it inside me.
32:26Somebody who was living and breathing just hours ago.
32:31Somebody who had a family and dreams.
32:36So, you both know the chances for survival.
32:42Whose liver am I getting?
32:44That's not important.
32:45Oh, it is to me.
32:46I want to know.
32:47It belongs to a 19-year-old Georgetown co-ed who was killed on a D.C. beltway at 416
32:51this afternoon.
32:53The donor organ will be at the airport in a matter of minutes, so we're going to have to get
32:55her downstairs.
32:57Why don't we give him a minute?
33:04Where's Drake?
33:05Mrs. Harmon's staying with him.
33:07This has been the hardest on him.
33:10He's really an emotional boy.
33:14You should get to know him, Frank.
33:15I know him, Jenny.
33:17He's my son.
33:18It takes more than chromosomes to be connected to somebody.
33:21You know, I know I was gone a lot, but I spent my fair share of sleepless nights with him
33:25when he was sick.
33:26I even changed a few diapers in my time.
33:28Yeah, a few.
33:30Now, you were a good provider, Frank.
33:33And I know you meant well.
33:35It was just your damn sense of duty that kept you this far from being a human being.
33:41I did my best.
33:45Did you, Frank?
33:46I thought I did.
33:49I realize now I could have done more.
33:52Well, me too.
33:53I could have done a lot better.
33:57Somewhere along the line,
34:00I just started feeling sorry for myself.
34:05Do you think anybody can say that they did everything exactly right?
34:11Your mother.
34:18Frank.
34:21If I don't make it, you should remarry.
34:25You should.
34:26You need somebody around to pick up the pieces for you, both physically and psychologically.
34:33Be good to Drake.
34:38He's really going to need you now.
35:01She's in the recovery room.
35:03Yeah.
35:04Well, it's a little bit too soon to tell you.
35:07I've got her on some potent immunosuppressant drugs to help with the rejection.
35:13At this point, it's kind of a roll of the dice.
35:15It could be days, maybe weeks before we know if the donor organ took.
35:24It's a good book.
35:27That's good, partner.
35:37McPike.
35:41Thank you, doctor.
35:44That's it, big guy.
35:47Dr. Oricchio feels like the liver's taken.
35:49Your mother's out of the woods.
35:51Your mother's out of the woods.
35:52You're welcome.
36:00You're welcome.
36:01Bye.
36:04Bye.
36:09Bye.
36:11Bye.
36:13Bye.
36:14Bye.
36:18Bye.
36:51Frank, we're all happy that Jenny's doing so well.
36:57I gather this isn't a social visit.
36:59No, sir.
37:03Vince and I are here to turn ourselves in from misuse of government funds.
37:08What did you do, Frank? Fudge on your gas mileage chit?
37:12I used money confiscated in a case to get Jenny her operation.
37:16I knew I was committing a felony, a chargeable offense, and I went ahead and used it anyway.
37:21How much money are we talking about here?
37:23$1,250,000.
37:26Where did you get this $1,250,000?
37:31I got it.
37:35Roger Lococo.
37:36It was Lococo's money?
37:37No, he took it from Mel and Susan Profitt.
37:41He took it so our government could replace Yves Pavot's dictator with one they could pull strings on.
37:46And you didn't like what the government was doing, so you took the money for yourself.
37:50I didn't take it.
37:52Roger gave it to me.
37:53Vince turned the money over to me, and I used it for Jenny's operation.
37:57Now, wait a minute, Frank.
37:58I have full culpability in this.
37:59Mel and Susan Profitt.
38:06Those names have a familiar ring.
38:17The other name was Roger...
38:20Yeah, Lococo.
38:21L-O-C-C-O-C-O.
38:27As far as I can tell, the Profitt case is closed.
38:30As far as the government is concerned, there is no Roger Lococo.
38:37So, what are you talking about?
38:39The money you're talking about doesn't officially exist.
38:54And...
38:58This meeting never took place.
39:09It'd be better for everyone involved, if that's the way it stands.
39:18Frank, you've been a good friend.
39:21And a good agent.
39:23The Bureau's giving you some time off to be with your wife during her recovery.
39:31How much more of this non-existent money do you have, Agent Terranova?
39:43What do you think?
39:45I say we did a pretty good job.
39:48Mom's really gonna like it.
39:50I hope so.
39:54Let's leave this mess and take on the Super Mario Brothers again.
39:57All right!
40:00Dad, I'm sorry Mom's sick.
40:03But I'm happy to be hanging out with you.
40:06I'm happy to be hanging out with you, too.
40:10I'm gonna be around a lot more from now on.
40:13And you are gonna teach me about some of that soccer.
40:16Awesome!
40:19Now listen, buddy.
40:21Your mama's gonna need us both now.
40:24I know.
40:25I've kind of been studying up.
40:28Once Mom's body accepts the new liver,
40:31it's the psychological stuff that's the hard part.
40:36You know, I am learning a lot from you.
40:40Yeah?
40:41Yeah.
40:49Oh, thanks.
40:57How are you feeling?
40:59Like new.
41:28It's funny what a little oxygen to the brain will do for you.
41:30It's funny because it's common to have visions.
41:31I know.
41:32I know.
41:32It's common to have hallucinations under the knife.
41:35But Frank, there was nothing common about this.
41:40I mean, there I was, still alive, after hours of surgery,
41:44with this stranger's liver inside me.
41:50I had this vision.
41:53It was a virtual epiphany, Frank.
41:55I mean, it really changed my life.
41:59That's good, Jenny.
41:59It came to me with startling clarity
42:03that I was being saved
42:07so that I could help others.
42:10But in order to help others,
42:12I had to help myself first.
42:22Frank,
42:24I want you out of the house when I get home.
42:33You're what?
42:35Didn't it seem strange to you
42:37that I just skipped anger and denial
42:39and settled so easily for acceptance?
42:43Jenny, I love you.
42:45I love you, too, Frank.
42:47That's why I'm letting you go.
42:49We'll both lead fuller and better lives.
42:52You can't do that.
42:53Yes, I can.
42:54And I am.
42:55I know you better than anybody, Frank,
42:58and that is your beauty.
43:00Frank McPike,
43:01the unbending guardian of right.
43:03It's impossible for you to do anything
43:05that is wrong by your standards.
43:09It just came to me, Frank,
43:11and I know it's not all your fault,
43:13but this marriage has been killing me
43:16one millimeter at a time.
43:21Jenny, when you get home
43:22and you have time to think this over,
43:23you'll feel better.
43:24You will.
43:25I've been thinking about it
43:26for 19 years, Frank.
43:29This marriage took a liver from me.
43:32Now you have found a way
43:33to give me one back.
43:35Let's just call it even.
43:50Hit the road, Jack.
43:52Don't you come back no more,
43:54no more,
43:54no more,
43:55no more,
43:55no more.
43:56Hit the road, Jack.
43:57Don't you come back no more.
44:00What'd you say?
44:01Hit the road, Jack.
44:02And don't you come back no more,
44:04no more,
44:05no more,
44:06no more,
44:07Hit the road, Jack.
44:08And don't you come back no more.
44:12Oh, woman, oh, woman, oh,
44:14treat me so mean.
44:15You're the meanest old woman
44:16that I've ever seen.
44:18I guess if you said so,
44:20I'd have to take the things and go.
44:22That's right.
44:23Hit the road, Jack.
44:24And don't you come back no more,
44:26no more,
44:27no more,
44:28no more.
44:29Hit the road, Jack.
44:30And don't you come back no more.
44:33What'd you say?
44:34Hit the road, Jack.
44:36And don't you come back no more,
44:38no more,
44:38no more.
44:39What'd you say?
45:30What'd you say?
45:47What'd you say?
46:09What'd you say?
46:26What'd you say?
46:36Oh, man.
47:07Transcription by CastingWords
47:37CastingWords
47:38CastingWords
Comments