- 2 days ago
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00:01Ah!
00:05Ah!
00:07Ah!
00:07Ah!
00:09Ah!
00:09Ah!
00:09Woo-hoo!
00:11Woo!
00:13Careful, Cindy!
00:15Ah!
00:18I don't think so.
00:20Ah!
00:22Ah!
00:25Ah!
00:26Ah!
00:27Ah!
00:29Ah!
00:29Ah!
00:32Amanda!
00:49Amanda!
00:57It's not funny!
00:59My Lord!
01:08Terrible weather where I'm in.
01:17Well?
01:18Well?
01:19You may kiss me.
01:21What?
01:22Do something for me.
01:24What?
01:24Throw away those shoes.
01:27I'll just pop down to the road shop.
01:29I have some new ones handmade.
01:32See you next Friday.
01:34What would Mrs. Maguire say?
01:35What?
01:35They're Dickens!
01:36What? They're Dickens!
01:38We voluntize!
01:40Ah!
01:41Ah!
01:42Ah after breaking.
01:44Get run our best of enemies!
01:47Let us know it!
01:50Margaret.
01:51goals and dreams.
01:53That is me!
02:04Thought I was hunting.
02:05I was hunting for you so many times out.
02:07I was trained for you!
02:15Mr. Chambers!
02:17Sorry, Mr. Brand!
02:19Can't stop!
02:25What the dickens?
02:27You know who I blame.
02:29Sidney Beckett.
02:31It's Bechet.
02:32Mrs. McGuire Bechet.
02:44Mrs. McGuire Bechet.
03:16Mrs. McGuire Bechet.
03:42Mrs. McGuire Bechet.
03:42Mrs. McGuire Bechet.
03:48Mrs. McGuire Bechet.
03:48Mrs. McGuire Bechet.
03:50Mrs. McGuire Bechet.
03:52Mrs. McGuire Bechet.
03:53Mrs. McGuire Bechet.
04:00Mrs. McGuire Bechet.
04:03It's so inconsiderate. I won't have it.
04:07You've got a point.
04:09The man who takes his own life is going straight to hell.
04:30Life is a glorious gift.
04:35One that should not be discarded lightly.
04:40But for some, the trials of life can be a terrible burden.
04:47No one can truly understand the depth of another's suffering.
04:56Verily I say unto you, all sins shall be forgiven unto the sons of men.
05:04All sins shall be forgiven.
05:12Mrs. Staunton.
05:15Thank you, Mr. Chambers.
05:18Thank you so very much.
05:28Such kind words.
05:30Barely recognize the old bastard.
05:34Sorry, darling.
05:37She's German, isn't she?
05:44She's German, you know.
05:54I will only surrender to a superior officer.
05:58Are you the one anywhere they've seen?
06:02Do sit down.
06:08I will.
06:15I will.
06:15Pamela Morton.
06:17Stephen was my husband's business partner.
06:20Sidney Chambers.
06:22I know who you are.
06:33You look rather forlorn standing over here on your own.
06:36No one knows what to say to a clergyman after a funeral.
06:40They can't relax till I've gone.
06:42Perhaps they think they have to behave as if they're still in church.
06:47Perhaps I remind them too much of death.
06:50Is there somewhere we can talk?
07:03Drink.
07:07You're not Sherry?
07:09I'm not partial to it.
07:11But you're a vicar.
07:13One of my many clerical failings.
07:17Anything I say is confidential?
07:21You can rely on my discretion, Mrs. Morton.
07:25I knew that Stephen's marriage wasn't as happy as it had once been.
07:33She is German, you know.
07:36Uh, yes.
07:38A few months ago, I was supposed to be meeting my husband from work.
07:44He'd forgotten, of course.
07:48Stephen suggested we go for a drink.
07:51It was the usual chatter to begin with, but then something changed.
07:59He said we should run away together.
08:03Begin again.
08:06He said we could go to Nice and the French Riviera.
08:11Dance on warm summer evenings under the stars.
08:18We talked.
08:20We planned.
08:24We made love.
08:28I'm sorry, I'm embarrassing you.
08:32No.
08:33No, you're not embarrassing me.
08:34We were going to live as we had never lived.
08:37Those were the last words he said to me.
08:39We will live as we have never lived.
08:41So, you see why I've come to you, Mr. Chambers?
08:44Oh.
08:45I'm not sure I do.
08:49Stephen did not kill himself.
08:54When I heard you speak, I knew that I could trust you.
09:00I can't go to the police.
09:03But you, the human heart, that's your responsibility, isn't it?
09:09You can ask any question.
09:13Of anyone.
09:14However private.
09:17I'm sorry, I still don't get your meaning.
09:23I mean murder.
09:26Mr. Chambers.
09:27Mr. Chambers.
09:40Roger, Mr. Tash
10:07Need a girl?
10:11Uh, not at the moment.
10:14See yourself.
10:17Thank you for the kind offer.
10:30Sorry to keep you waiting, Mr. Chambers.
10:33Inspector Keating, you behave yourself, honey.
10:37Piss off, Geordie.
10:39Sorry about that.
10:40Not far worse, believe me.
10:42Bugger yourself sideways, Geordie.
10:51Murder?
10:52Yes, Inspector.
10:56You have a source?
10:58An anonymous source?
10:59Anonymous, of course.
11:03Look, I've got two ongoing fraud investigations.
11:06A spate of burglaries.
11:09I've got a black market fellow selling dodgy mutton
11:11that gives his customers the terrible grunts.
11:15As far as I'm concerned, the case is as clear as crystal.
11:22Uh, sometimes things can be rather too clear, don't you think?
11:30No, not really.
11:32Oh.
11:33Oh.
11:36He drank.
11:37That's what the Irish do, of course,
11:38but he wasn't dead up to his eyeballs.
11:42Took from his firm.
11:44He was on the verge of being discovered,
11:45so he stays on in the office,
11:47sets about a decanter of whiskey,
11:48and he blows his brains out.
11:51Did he leave a note?
11:53Yes.
11:54There was a note.
11:55Oh, well, may I see it?
11:56No, you may not!
11:58Why don't you go back to church and pray for the wicked?
12:03It's murky waters you're sticking your toe into, Mr. Chambers.
12:06That's to you well clear, if I were you.
12:15No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
12:54Mrs. Thornton.
12:56What game were you playing?
12:59Going around in circles?
13:02Oh, well, uh, I just, I came to see how you're getting along.
13:12My husband gave that to me.
13:14We met in Berlin after the war.
13:24He said he'd take me to Carrickfergus,
13:26that we lived by the sea and walked by the shores of Loch Nair.
13:31He said a lot of things.
13:34And I used to believe all of them.
13:38Do you believe your husband was depressed?
13:42He was from Ulster.
13:44I've known a few Ulstermen.
13:46Not all of them are depressed.
13:48Yes, but sometimes the alcohol and...
13:53Of course.
13:56James, and that's all he drank.
13:59And he had like water.
14:03I think what you're asking is,
14:05did it come as a shock him taking his life?
14:09At first.
14:13When you've lost most of your family in war,
14:16then things don't shock for long.
14:22Did you fight, Mr. Chambers?
14:26I did.
14:28Then I think you understand.
14:32You're always welcome in my congregation, Mrs. Thornton.
14:36I'm afraid I'm returning to Berlin.
14:39There is no money, so...
14:41Your husband left no will?
14:44Not that I know of.
14:49Perhaps it's at his office.
14:53I could inquire on your behalf.
14:55You took his funeral when no one else would.
14:58You've done enough.
15:20You've been busy, I imagine, Miss Morrison.
15:25My job is half what it was.
15:28Less than half, if I'm honest.
15:30Mr. Thornton needed looking after.
15:32He was not the most methodical of people.
15:36He was a horror to keep tabs on.
15:39A horror to work for.
15:43I miss him terribly.
15:51So you wouldn't know
15:52whom he met on the day he died?
15:56For example?
16:01He had a few meetings.
16:04There was nothing out of the ordinary.
16:06There was an argument.
16:08There were arguments most days near the end.
16:11Say that again, you son of a bitch!
16:13Go home, Miss Morrison.
16:14Please go home.
16:15The next morning, when I came in...
16:23There he was.
16:26There he was.
16:40You make an appointment with the Midlands, it's a bloody mess.
16:44Mr. Chamberson's just inquiring after Mr. Staunton's will.
16:46On behalf of his wife.
16:49He didn't have a will.
16:51That's odd, isn't it?
16:54We lawyers are a bit like doctors.
16:55Neglect our own lives because we think we're immortal.
16:59Sherry?
17:01Uh...
17:02Whiskey, perhaps?
17:04Behind you down as a sherry man.
17:06Most people do.
17:13That's Mr. Staunton's.
17:15Hardly been eating it now, will he?
17:21Stephen drank far too much.
17:24Most of us did, of course.
17:27Came home.
17:30Reached for the bottle.
17:33We were all living under the shadow of it.
17:37Still are, if we're honest.
17:39You were a padre, I imagine.
17:42I fought, Mr. Morton.
17:45With the Scots guards.
17:47Good for you.
17:53So, I understand he was siphoning money from the firm?
17:56What could that possibly have to do with the clergy?
17:58Mrs. Staunton is penniless.
18:00She'll be all right when the wife gets the money.
18:02Will or no will.
18:10So?
18:12There's no will.
18:14Wasted journey, I'm afraid.
18:26Oh, Christ, on a bike.
18:28It wasn't the right whiskey.
18:30The whiskey in the decanter on Staunton's desk.
18:33His wife specifically told me he only drank Jameson's.
18:36Which, as you probably know, has a distinctive, nutty flavor.
18:41The whiskey in the decanter was of a cheaper variety.
18:44Which leads you to conclude?
18:45That it was placed on his desk to give the illusion of Dutch courage.
18:50Which leads you to conclude?
18:51That there was a third party there at his death.
18:54Which leads you to conclude?
18:55That he was murdered, inspector.
18:57Because it wasn't the right whiskey.
18:59Because it wasn't the right whiskey.
19:02You told me to steer clear of murky waters.
19:05Well, sometimes they come to me.
19:07England lost to Hungary last night.
19:106-3.
19:12Beaten by a team no one has ever heard of.
19:15Had a game that we invented.
19:18So I was already in a bad mood, Mr. Chambers.
19:24Go on.
19:54I can't tell you how sorry I am that it has come to this.
20:00I know you will find this upsetting,
20:01and I wish there was something I could do to make things right.
20:07I can't go on anymore.
20:11I'm sorry, so sorry.
20:14You know how hard it has been,
20:16and how impossible it is to continue.
20:21Forgive me, S.
20:33It's his handwriting.
20:35All authenticated.
20:36By whom?
20:39By me, Mr. Chambers.
20:43It's suicide.
20:45The coroner says so.
20:47My boss says so.
20:48Even the poor bugger himself.
20:50Jameson's on old Jameson's.
20:56Case closed.
20:58Case closed.
21:03I could have you arrested.
21:06Really?
21:07What for?
21:08Wasting police time.
21:10But frankly, it was a nice diversion after the whole Hungary debacle, so...
21:14I don't watch football.
21:16Generally leads to disappointment.
21:18Always leads to disappointment.
21:20Backgammon.
21:20Now there's the game.
21:22Backgammon?
21:23Cricket.
21:24Bit of rugby.
21:25Good God, my necks will be bloody badminton.
21:29I'm sorry to have troubled you.
21:32Don't be ridiculous, Mr. Chambers.
21:37Backgammon.
21:39It's the game, Inspector.
21:41It's the game!
21:44I saw it myself.
21:46It was from his hand.
21:48Was there a date on it?
21:51Not that I recall, but...
21:52Then it could have been written at any time.
21:54It could have been written months ago.
21:55Mrs. Morden, it was a suicide note.
21:59Do you know, he kept a private diary.
22:02That will tell us who he met that day.
22:04Mrs. Morden...
22:05We have to find the truth.
22:06I have neglected my duties long enough.
22:08You didn't give a damn about your duties yesterday.
22:12Your eyes positively lit up.
22:15Some intrigue to liven up your humdrum little life.
22:24It was murder!
22:28Mr. Chambers.
22:31I believe it was my husband.
22:38I will remember you in my prayers, Mrs. Morden.
23:06I believe it was my husband.
23:14Sydney!
23:21I wasn't expecting you till Friday.
23:25Mrs M said she'd be here. She was very disapproving.
23:27She's always disapproving.
23:30Come on.
23:33Looking elegant, as always.
23:35I've simplified my wardrobe.
23:37Lilac in town, brown in the country.
23:39Makes life so much easier.
23:41Grantchester is hardly the country.
23:43Sydney, Grantchester is not Cambridge.
23:45And Cambridge is most certainly not London.
23:47Look at your lovely new shoes. They're ruined already.
23:51Let's have a picnic.
23:54Your shoes are ruined. Let's have a picnic.
23:57How your mind works, Amanda.
24:00No, it's freezing.
24:06How's my sister?
24:08Oh, did I tell you? She's seeing a jazz man.
24:10No.
24:13My mother will be over the moon about that.
24:15Yes, it's quite the scandal.
24:24You know, you look just like that modelling auntie we saw at the National.
24:28I don't think so.
24:30My nose is, look, disappointingly Roman.
24:33It is wonderfully Roman.
24:40You know what we should do?
24:43We should run away together.
24:46You and I.
24:47We could go to Nice.
24:49The French Riviera.
24:51We could dance on warm summer evenings under the stars.
24:57Sorry.
24:59I don't know where that came from.
25:00I...
25:02I...
25:02I have some news.
25:21That...
25:23That's fantastic.
25:26His name's Guy.
25:30Extraordinarily good looking night out.
25:31Of course.
25:32Incredibly charming.
25:33Absolutely.
25:34Terribly wealthy.
25:39After several years of painstaking research, I've finally got my man.
26:05Well.
26:07Well.
26:09You may kiss me.
26:13I want to meet him.
26:15You will.
26:15Of course.
26:16You will.
26:17Come up to London.
26:18I'll wear lilac just for you.
26:21Promise me you're not lonely, Sydney.
26:24Don't worry about me.
26:46Oh, my God.
27:12Only you could make cleaning look like an act of war, Mrs M.
27:17Do you want to know what people are saying?
27:19Not particularly.
27:22They're saying you should get yourself a wife.
27:26Miss Kendall is a friend.
27:29I know that.
27:30Won't catch the likes of her with the likes of you.
27:36Mrs Morton again.
27:38That thing she does with her hair.
27:40Dangerous woman.
27:42Say I'm with the church warden.
27:44Lying lips are an abomination to the Lord.
27:48I'll say you're taking Bible study.
28:13I'll say you're taking Bible study.
28:18What the dickens?
28:21God help me.
28:24My three brothers died in the First World War.
28:27My Ronnie disappeared for no good reason in the Second.
28:30I'm forced to do for other people.
28:33Clean their unhygienic water closets, but this...
28:37This is the worst indignity yet.
28:40We can't have a dog.
28:41We cannot have a dog.
28:44I don't know the first thing about dogs.
28:46We cannot have a dog.
28:49Black Lab is the best for conversation, I find.
28:51A dog, Amanda.
28:52I can't see you lonely, Sydney.
28:55I'm not lonely.
28:56What are you going to call him?
28:57What about Brutus?
28:59No, look, be serious now.
29:01It'll be walking, feeding.
29:04I wanted to give you something.
29:07I won't be able to see you as often as I used.
29:12I'm sorry.
29:14You know how hard it will be for me, but...
29:17Darling!
29:18It's impossible.
29:23It's impossible to continue.
29:25I'm so glad you understand.
29:28Hello.
29:31Sydney?
29:39I've been thinking about the circumstances of the crime, the people involved, and the nature of love.
29:45Oh.
29:46It wasn't a suicide note.
29:49Dear, dear God.
29:56Listen to the wording.
29:58I'm sorry that it has come to this.
29:59I know you will find this upsetting, and I wish there was something I could do to make things right.
30:04A little restrained for a suicide note, don't you think?
30:08You know how hard it has been, and how impossible it is to continue.
30:12He was ending a relationship, not his life.
30:17Let's just say, for a minute, that's true.
30:22Who was the letter intended for?
30:24His wife, the German?
30:26Or, uh...
30:28A lover?
30:31A lover?
30:33A lover?
30:38You know something.
30:43People feel they can tell me things.
30:47You're lucky.
30:48No one feels they can tell me anything.
30:50Needless to say, there was an affair.
31:03Case like this?
31:05Jealous wife?
31:06Always suspect number one.
31:09Number two?
31:10Pamela Morton.
31:12If it is her, she's playing a dangerous game, don't you think?
31:15Well, a very clever one.
31:18Lover tries to ditch her.
31:19She does him in.
31:21Tries to pin the blame on the hubby she can't stand.
31:24Two birds, one very large stone.
31:27Oh, it really could be the husband.
31:30Finds out about his wife and his army, pal, and...
31:45Have I won?
31:49Yes, you have.
31:51Well, how about that?
32:00Mrs. Morton said there was a diary.
32:02His personal diary.
32:03Maybe that could tell her something.
32:07People talk to you, you say.
32:10Tell you things.
32:11Rather too much, sometimes.
32:23I'm sorry for last time.
32:25I was in a dream when you came round.
32:28I didn't think you were in a dream.
32:31Sometimes when I'm sad, my English disappears.
32:41Morgten, sie tango tanzen.
32:45Ja, sehr gerne.
32:48I very much would like to dance the tango.
32:51Sie sprechen Deutsch?
32:52Ein bisschen.
32:54Very badly, I'm afraid.
32:55Nein, gar nicht.
32:56Not at all.
32:58No.
33:04I believe the police returned your husband's effects.
33:09Effects, yeah.
33:11I didn't know that worked before.
33:13I haven't brought myself to look through them.
33:18Well, we could do it together, perhaps.
33:22If you'd wish.
33:26I'd like that.
33:30Sometimes I think he could come back.
33:33And I should leave the house as he left it.
33:41He would go out late.
33:43Go for a walk.
33:47I think he preferred the nights where there was no one to travel him.
33:54Sometimes I think that's where he's been.
33:57Just full walk.
34:16I should have been a better wife.
34:19Why would you say that?
34:26You have a very kind face.
34:47You have a very kind face.
34:58You have a very kind face.
34:58She said I had a kind face.
35:00That's all.
35:01Still, she's attractive.
35:04For a crowd.
35:07Don't you think?
35:09Meetings.
35:10Birthdays, train times.
35:12That's it.
35:13Nothing.
35:15You didn't answer the question.
35:18I'm aware of that.
35:22Well, Sidney, this is what we in the force call our bloody bugger of a dead end.
35:27I'm afraid of that.
35:28I'm afraid of that.
35:32I'm afraid of that.
35:56Oh!
36:28Oh, my God.
36:56about you non-stop, you know.
36:58Jordy?
37:00Is that vicar of yours?
37:03What? Certainly.
37:04Look at this.
37:06You're worse than the children.
37:09No more splatching.
37:11Go on.
37:11Oh!
37:18Have you got the diary?
37:22You must know we need more
37:23to go on than this.
37:25Oi!
37:26What did your ma'am say?
37:31I mean, take your Jesus.
37:34He didn't settle for one or two miracles, did he?
37:36He went on till people believed him.
37:39Till it was proof.
37:40I think we are quite a long way from Jesus.
37:43I think you might be right.
37:47What?
37:50I know who did it.
37:53I know who killed him.
38:04Don't trouble yourself.
38:05It'll work.
38:07What if it doesn't?
38:09Then I'll remind you that it was your plan.
38:11And a dicey wanted that.
38:31You ready?
38:39Mr. Chang
38:40So, still no sign of the will
38:42You're beginning to test my patience
38:43Oh, if I'm being an inconvenience
38:45No, not at all
38:46It was your wife I was hoping to speak to, actually
38:48On Mrs. Staunton's behalf, of course
38:51Do you know where I might be able to find her?
38:52Why would you possibly need to speak to my wife?
38:54It was she you asked to speak to me
38:56She has Mr. Staunton's diary
38:59Apparently it contains some new information
39:03What new information?
39:06She believes he was murdered
39:10The man put a bullet through his head
39:13She thinks otherwise
39:16She travels to London Friday the 10.17
39:19The same train Mr. Staunton used to get to his meetings
39:23That's right, isn't it?
39:26That's my wife you're talking about
39:28I'm sure there was nothing untoward
39:32I'll speak to her on her return
39:34Thank you for your time
39:48Thank you for your time
41:05He looked at me!
41:08He looked at me!
41:16You told her?
41:18About Stephen and me?
41:21I let her make an assumption.
41:23You betrayed my confidence.
41:26They were having an affair.
41:30A.M. and P.M.
41:34Not morning and afternoon, but initials.
41:39Annabelle Morrison and...
41:45used to being invisible.
41:47She hardly dared believe it.
41:51You were right.
41:53It wasn't a suicide note.
41:56He was ending an affair.
42:01A.M.
42:20Warren?
42:21A drinker.
42:23A gambler, depressed after the war.
42:31All she had to do was set the scene.
42:35Recreate the suicide so vividly, even the police would fail to question it.
42:44A half-drunk decanter of whiskey.
42:47A hastily written note.
43:14No one has ever said they love me.
43:29We cannot erase our pasts, however hard we try.
43:36Instead, we must carry them with us into the future.
43:42We must carry them with us and look forward with hope.
43:46Hope.
43:48We must look forward because to look back is to waste precious time.
43:57Someone recently said to me,
44:00we should live as we have never lived.
44:03And we must, all of us, take heed and live as we have never lived.
44:10For we are all mortal.
44:23We are all fragile.
44:27And we all live under the shadow of death.
44:37What the?
44:38Thicken!
44:41How do you have the energy?
44:42That's what I want now.
44:44The energy for what?
44:45Staunton.
44:46Carrying on with two, you know, lovers.
44:52Exactly.
44:56Here's one for you.
44:57Found a body outside the five bells.
45:00Battered to death.
45:01Ah, hang on.
45:02Hang on.
45:02Is this going to involve murky waters?
45:04Give over.
45:05I'll buy you a pint.
45:06Buy me a whiskey.
45:07Back coming?
45:08You're obsessed.
45:09It's the game, Sydney.
45:11It's the game.
45:15Your sister's here.
45:16Johnny?
45:17This is Sydney.
45:18Sir, this is the famous Johnny Johnson.
45:19We're all in love with Sydney.
45:20Do you remember?
45:21The man of God.
45:23Such a shame.
45:24Guy.
45:25Why are you marrying him?
45:27Leonard.
45:28This is Sydney Chambers.
45:29Where's the ring?
45:30How about if everybody empties their pockets?
45:32Oh, here we go.
45:33Two crimes, one night.
45:35Same circle of friends.
45:36Isn't this illegal?
45:37And highly immoral.
45:38Yes.
45:39First of all you want to be here tonight.