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Porcile (1969) [MultiSub Movie] - [Paolo Pasolini]

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    After a thorough examination
    of our conscience,
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    we've decided to eat you
    because of your disobedience.
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    Wife, you and I are allies.
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    You, mother-father, I, father-mother.
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    Tenderness and harshness surround
    our son from all sides.
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    My God, the Germany of today's Bonn,
    is nothing like Hitler's Germany.
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    They make wool, cheese, beer and buttons.
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    Cannons are only made for export.
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    It's true, we know Hitler was a little female,
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    but we all know he was a female killer.
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    So our tradition has definitely improved.
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    So, she, the killer-mother
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    had obedient, blue-eyed children
    full of great desperate love.
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    Whereas I... I, an affectionate mother,
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    have a son who is neither obedient
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    nor disobedient.
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    PIGSTY
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    Julian, we are two rich bourgeois.
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    The destiny which brought us together
    is not two-faced.
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    It has smiled on us with great naturalness,
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    and we're here to analyse ourselves
    because it's our privilege.
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    I won't talk about it.
    It's painful to talk about myself.
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    How is it painful?
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    It's pain you can't even imagine!
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    Sure, today is the first day of spring.
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    It's your birthday and
    the day we have some explaining to do.
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    What a bore. I feel like making a kite and
    going to the beautiful fields of Godesberg.
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    You make me laugh!
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    You always find excuses
    to get out of things.
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    Julian's lucky.
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    He always has an overpowering
    and childish desire for fulfilment.
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    His reserves of happiness and freedom
    are always at hand.
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    His purpose is always obscure.
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    My 17 years are 47,
    the age your mother won't admit to.
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    I know what these brilliant ideas are for.
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    But today I won't continue being confused
    and tremulous
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    and admire the dumbfounding prospect
    of you running to Cologne with a kite.
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    No, I'll keep you here
    to talk about the two of us.
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    If you were to die, my pretty, I wouldn't
    even be curious where you were buried.
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    But you kissed me once,
    did you or did you not?
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    I'm scratching my head.
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    His sex is male and his name is Julian.
    You don't know who you are.
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    Don't you want to know yourself?
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    - No, I don't want to.
    - Why not?
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    I like the way I am now.
    It's the prerogative of my gender.
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    In your grandfather's Italianised temple,
    as big as a world of a thousand souls,
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    and where, instead, an emperor lived alone
    amid monochrome frescoes,
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    coloured like snow and yellow Indian ink,
    you once were a child.
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    - What happened to you?
    - What happened to you?
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    What has kept you here,
    stunned and unable to leave?
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    In this immense Italianised villa,
    just little things, of course.
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    A wandering leaf, a creaky door,
    a distant grunt.
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    Why do you always kid around,
    you, who are never the comic?
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    Because if you could see me
    for just one instant
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    as I really am,
    you'd run off terrified to get a doctor,
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    if not an ambulance! Hooray!
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    Leave them alone, Father.
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    - Don't worry, we have no secrets.
    - Well, are you engaged or not?
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    Not on your life!
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    - That's a good one.
    - Really, Ida, not yet?
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    We've decided
    to take a trip to Sicily instead.
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    Taormina, an enchanting village.
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    - Have you been there, Mr Klotz?
    - Yes, little Ida, during the war.
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    It's too bad you haven't made up
    your minds.
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    Julian needs a kind, sweet woman,
    one who truly loves him.
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    - Who says I'm in love with him?
    - Well, it would be a good marriage.
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    If we combined our wealth,
    I'd own half of West Germany for sure.
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    Wool, cheese, beer and buttons,
    not to mention cannons.
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    - Hooray!
    - I can see you two get along anyway,
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    a wonderful complicity.
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    - Coward!
    - My best quality is remaining inalienable.
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    Since you're inalienable, you won't change.
    Why don't you come with us to Berlin
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    to join in the first and maybe only
    German march for peace?
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    Because today is a day in August of '67
    and I don't have opinions.
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    I tried to have them, and so I did my duty.
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    I discovered that even as a revolutionary
    I was a conformist.
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    But conformity leads to other worries,
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    for example, taking care of
    your father's business.
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    Yes, but in return it protects me
    from being afraid.
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    - You know exactly what you want.
    - So do you.
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    The time has come. For the first time
    the youth of Berlin are doing something.
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    Ten thousand of them are going to piss
    on the Wall in protest.
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    The Communists on the other side
    will watch them.
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    - You're missing that thing.
    - I'm a girl-boy and I'll piss as well.
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    I've got something else to do.
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    - What?
    - I'm not telling you.
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    - Please tell me.
    - No.
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    - Tell me.
    - No!
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    - I want to know.
    - You'll never find out.
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    - Please!
    - Give up.
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    - What are you going to do?
    - I don't want to tell you.
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    - Why?
    - You're not kidding around any more?
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    - I never kidded around.
    - Do you really want to know?
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    - Yes, I want to know!
    - Are you really going to cry?
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    - Yes, I'm going to cry.
    - You're a fool.
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    But I never know what you're doing,
    what you think, who you are. Never, never!
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    Regarding our march on Berlin, all I know is
    you're a disgusting individualist.
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    Yes, partly, I grunt like my father, in fact.
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    But I won't let you say it.
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    But I'm going to say it.
    You're on your father's side.
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    People like you who want nothing,
    want power.
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    - Your father has power, too.
    - I'd still love you even if you were black.
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    I'm scratching my head.
    None of this interests me.
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    The 50 conformist parts of me are bored,
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    and my 50 revolutionary parts
    are suspended.
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    Both of them want to stay here to enjoy...
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    - What?
    - The infinite repetition of just one thing.
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    - What?
    - What I said before.
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    What I'll do when you and your friends
    are at the Berlin Wall
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    standing under stupid puritanical signs.
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    If you tell me what you're going to do
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    while the rest of those your generation,
    the best in our country,
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    will be marching for the first time,
    I'll be more heroic than my heroism, Julian.
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    I'll be disloyal and stay here with you.
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    Even if you were to betray
    not just those of your generation,
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    but yourself and the truth,
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    you'll never find out what I'm going to do.
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    What right do you have not to tell me?
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    - It's just my right, that's all.
    - What good will it do you?
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    If anything, to make you cry and suffer.
    Tra-la-la.
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    And without fail I'll cry and suffer. Tra-la-la.
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    Just little things, a wandering leaf,
    a creaky door.
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    A grunt.
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    What do you mean, Julian?
    What do you mean?
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    Come on, don't cry, don't be a bore.
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    Of course I'll go with you
    and piss on the Berlin Wall.
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    I heard that our son has plans
    to go to Berlin
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    - with those Communist students.
    - No. He didn't go after all.
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    - Where did he get such an idea?
    - Ida.
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    - But Ida's only 17.
    - That's right.
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    And he's 25.
    And she's there waiting for him.
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    - Is he on my side or against me?
    - Who knows?
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    The times of Grosz and Brecht
    are not yet over.
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    I could easily have been drawn by Grosz
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    as a sad pig and you a sad sow,
    at the dinner table, of course.
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    I with a secretary's bum on my knee
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    and you with your hands between
    the driver's legs.
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    And Brecht could easily have us be villains
    in a play where the poor are the good guys.
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    So what's Julian waiting for
    to grow fat like a pig?
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    Or to give gifts to the poor and dance
    a Tyrolean dance with them?
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    Or what's he waiting for to call me a pig?
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    And to call me a sow.
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    Did you do that thing while I was in Berlin?
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    Ida, I have a proposal for you.
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    What a strange tone of voice you have.
    It's almost like mine.
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    A proposal? Yes, tell me, Julian.
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    I want to kiss you.
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    A kiss? Oh, Julian,
    you don't know how that fills me with joy.
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    I could dance, sing. I could jump for joy
    like a puppy and clap my hands.
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    It's a joy more spectacular than the sun
    or the stars.
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    Who can I tell? Who can I open my heart to?
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    Who do I thank
    while I'm crying and laughing?
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    Nevertheless, Julian, I won't let you kiss me.
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    - All right. How did it go in Berlin?
    - Everything went well in Berlin.
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    What was written on your sign?
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    Nothing in particular. "Down with God."
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    - What do you care?
    - But you care about it a lot.
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    I don't know.
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    So what about our kiss?
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    Ida, why don't you want me to kiss you?
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    Julian, my dignity!
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    What dignity? Tra-la-la.
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    Not that of a woman, or a girl,
    but my freedom. Tra-la-la.
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    But if you love me, you're free.
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    I'm free to not let you kiss me
    and suffer horribly. Tra-la-la.
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    - Ida, have pity on me!
    - No!
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    Not on any condition?
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    Not on any condition?
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    I'll let you kiss me if you tell me...
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    The truth about what I did while you...
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    Yes, what you did while I was there.
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    What I always do while I'm alone.
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    You think I fly kites over the villas
    in Godesberg.
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    What do you do, then?
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    I'm 25 years old and five months.
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    And do you know
    I've never kissed a woman!
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    That's a big one!
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    With all my pacifism and polemics
    about the wealth of Germany,
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    with all my anticlericalism,
    and with all my devotion to free love,
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    with everything that unites me
    to the hundreds of thousands of
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    the most progressive youth in the world,
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    Julian, you shock me
    or even make me laugh.
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    Laugh, that's just what you ought to do.
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    That's why I want to be an SS
    and massacre you with my secret!
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    Come on, kiss me.
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    I can't now.
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    Why not? I give up, you see. Tra-la-lera.
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    The desire to kiss you, as you can see,
    made me want to kill you. Tra-la-la.
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    Do you think I wouldn't be up for that, too?
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    - You're asking me?
    - I'm sure of it now.
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    I won't kiss you. I won't kill you.
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    - Because I love...
    - Who?
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    There's no "who". There is only my love.
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    Dear guinea pig, you're free.
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    The last miserable experiment is over.
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    There he is. Like Christ on the cross.
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    - Does he recognise us?
    - Who knows? No one knows.
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    - He's not looking at anything.
    - He always stares blankly up in the air.
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    - Doesn't he move?
    - No. He never moves an inch.
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    He's been lying there rigidly since August.
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    I left Godesberg in August
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    because he told me he was in love,
    but not with me.
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    We know, my poor Ida.
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    - How was your trip to Italy?
    - Wonderful.
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    We love Italy.
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    If we had won the war,
    we would've bought a villa in Syracuse.
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    So, Ida, who is Julian in love with?
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    - I don't know. He didn't want to tell me.
    - Why not?
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    I don't know, I don't know.
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    If he'd told me,
    this wouldn't have happened.
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    Everything would have gone according
    to plan. All he had to do was say the name,
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    that which he loved, and everything would
    have been happily or unhappily resolved.
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    Why do you say "that" and not "woman"?
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    The only thing I know about that being
    is that it exists.
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    Who is it that's in love with my poor son?
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    And above all, why won't he name them?
    Is he ashamed? Can't he say it?
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    Ida, let me tell you this.
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    His father hired a detective
    because of this mystery
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    to go to Heidelberg
    and wherever else Julian went.
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    - And?
    - Nothing.
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    He hasn't had a relationship with a girl.
    I mean, true and long-lasting relationships.
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    - Did he make love to those girls?
    - I think so, naturally.
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    Come on, don't start crying now.
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    Don't cry, don't cry. Why not?
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    He was proud.
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    Proud? On the contrary!
    He was quick to be vile. Julian had no pride.
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    What are you saying? As a child
    he never asked anyone for forgiveness.
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    But I heard him ask for forgiveness
    thousands of times.
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    You're mad.
    He never went back on his decisions.
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    He never made any!
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    He wasn't very smart,
    but he clung strongly to his beliefs.
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    On the contrary, he was very smart.
    I've never met a smarter boy.
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    He only did well in school
    because he studied a lot.
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    He never studied. He always spent time
    on the playing field, in dancehalls.
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    What are you talking about?
    He was always a serious boy.
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    And always austere, like a saint.
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    Serious and austere? My God!
    He was always so light-hearted.
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    Julian had no sense of humour whatsoever.
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    He was devoted to the army
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    and wanted to become a soldier
    like his grandfather, my father,
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    - who defeated Kerensky on the Vistula.
    - The army left him completely indifferent.
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    I don't think he knew it existed, though
    he never joined in our anti-war protests.
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    He knew the flags of every country
    in the world.
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    - Maybe. I did, too, as a child.
    - But he never liked to travel.
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    That's not true!
    His heart was always with distant peoples.
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    - The Mayans, the Dinka, the Irish.
    - Maybe he saw them in films.
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    The only film he ever went to, and
    by chance, was a retrospective of Murnau.
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    But he was crazy for spy films
    and Westerns.
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    He didn't enjoy films,
    but he reminded me of Charlie Chaplin.
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    Charlie Chaplin? But can't you see?
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    He's a mannerist St Sebastian.
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    Anyway, there he is, in catalepsy, in a coma.
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    If he could hear and understand us,
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    who knows what he'd say
    about us poor women.
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    Because his prestige is unchanged.
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    He was always there
    even when he was running away.
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    He gave himself prestige
    by playing a bitter game
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    and his mysterious pain hangs over him
    like a silent monument.
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    Mr Herdhitze. Mr Herdhitze,
    my mysterious rival.
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    How troublesome our great fathers are.
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    They have filled our colony with majestic
    industrial complexes like churches.
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    Smokestacks, smokestacks, smokestacks.
    A cement Athens.
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    That's what it means be
    so far ahead of others
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    thanks to the great... of our fathers.
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    While your factories...
    There is no sign of them, Mr Herdhitze.
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    Might they be invisible?
    Have they levitated?
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    Mr Herdhitze. Mr Herdhitze,
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    my mysterious rival who rose from nothing.
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    - May I come in?
    - Come in, my dear fellow, come in.
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    - Good morning, Mr Klotz.
    - Good morning, dear Hans Guenther.
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    How is your son?
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    My dear Hans Guenther.
    You see, he wasn't an obedient son.
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    All in all, he wasn't a disobedient son either.
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    My dear Bertha and I have
    democratically discussed this at length.
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    If he had obeyed me,
    I would have taken him under my wing,
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    and together we would have flown over
    the glorious smokestacks of our Cologne,
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    the furnace of our buttons and cannons.
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    If he had disobeyed me, though,
    I would have crushed him.
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    But with a son who is neither consenting
    nor dissenting
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    there was nothing I could do.
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    God took care of it.
    What did God do with Julian?
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    Since he wanted to do nothing,
    he let him die.
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    And because he wanted to do something,
    he let him live.
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    Idleness, strikes and exile. I don't know.
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    Julian is lying there in his room
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    Julian is lying there in his room
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    like an embalmed saint,
    neither dead nor alive.
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    - But let's talk about us.
    - Good news, Mr Klotz.
  • 41:00 - 41:03
    I congratulate you, my dear Hans Guenther.
  • 41:03 - 41:05
    Thank you, Mr Klotz.
  • 41:05 - 41:08
    - Good news, then.
    - Yes.
  • 41:08 - 41:13
    Mr Herdhitze is none other than Mr Hirt.
  • 41:13 - 41:17
    Hirt. Old Hirt.
  • 41:17 - 41:23
    My old school chum,
    first in Essen then in Heidelberg.
  • 41:23 - 41:25
    Did he have plastic surgery?
  • 41:25 - 41:31
    Of course, Mr Klotz.
    Plastic surgery in Italy is very advanced.
  • 41:31 - 41:34
    In Italy?
  • 41:34 - 41:37
    We should start at the beginning, Mr Klotz.
  • 41:37 - 41:40
    Yes, let's start at the beginning,
    dear Hans Guenther.
  • 41:40 - 41:45
    Well, Mr Herdhitze, your political rival,
  • 41:45 - 41:50
    the bugbear of your industries,
    the new face of West Germany,
  • 41:50 - 41:54
    is none other than Mr Hirt,
    his face transformed by plastic surgery.
  • 41:54 - 41:58
    First of all, I imagine he's become
    a professor of something.
  • 41:58 - 42:01
    Exactly. Of anatomy, in Strasbourg.
  • 42:01 - 42:04
    Good. And then?
  • 42:04 - 42:11
    All right. That takes us to Strasbourg,
    precisely to February 9, 1942.
  • 42:11 - 42:13
    My rheumatism.
  • 42:13 - 42:16
    It's the date of a secret report
  • 42:16 - 42:20
    sent to guess who? Mr Himmler!
  • 42:20 - 42:22
    Crimes against humanity, hooray!
  • 42:22 - 42:25
    I congratulate you, I congratulate you,
    dear Hans Guenther.
  • 42:25 - 42:30
    Do you know what that report was about?
    Here it is.
  • 42:30 - 42:35
    The collection of skulls belonging to
    Jewish Bolshevik commissioners
  • 42:35 - 42:40
    for scientific research
    at the University of Strasbourg.
  • 42:40 - 42:47
    Skulls from who?
    Jewish Bolshevik commissioners?
  • 42:47 - 42:50
    Forgive me if I laugh,
  • 42:50 - 42:54
    but these three words strung together
  • 42:54 - 42:57
    are irresistibly funny!
  • 42:57 - 43:01
    "Commissioners", "Bolsheviks",
    and "Jews" as well.
  • 43:01 - 43:07
    So, the more you have,
    the more you add on.
  • 43:07 - 43:09
    That's really funny!
  • 43:09 - 43:13
    It seems that Mr Hirt,
    now known as Herdhitze,
  • 43:13 - 43:15
    complained that
  • 43:15 - 43:21
    even though almost every race possesses
    a great number of skulls,
  • 43:21 - 43:28
    science only had a small number
    of Jewish skulls available to them.
  • 43:28 - 43:32
    So the war in the East
    would give them the opportunity
  • 43:32 - 43:35
    to make up for this serious gap.
  • 43:35 - 46:19
    That's where Jewish
    Bolshevik commissioners come in.
  • 46:19 - 46:21
    Let's get to the point.
  • 46:21 - 46:29
    Well, these prisoners, in several lots,
    were forced naked into gas chambers.
  • 46:29 - 46:34
    The salts were placed in the pipe.
  • 46:34 - 46:40
    The end of the pipe was closed with a plug.
  • 46:40 - 46:48
    This plug had a metal pipe and
    it forced the salt to spray out.
  • 46:48 - 46:52
    The prisoners were able to breathe
    for a half-minute more,
  • 46:52 - 46:57
    then fell to the ground
    covered in their own excrement.
  • 46:57 - 47:01
    The corpses were still warm when
    they arrived at the Institute of Anatomy,
  • 47:01 - 47:07
    their eyes wide open and shining.
  • 47:07 - 47:16
    They cut the left testicle off the men
    to send to the anatomy lab.
  • 47:16 - 47:21
    Dr Hirt's, now Herdhitze's refrain
    to his collaborators was,
  • 47:21 - 47:26
    "If you don't keep your traps shut,
    you'll end up the same way."
  • 47:26 - 47:29
    Let's get to the point. The real point.
  • 47:29 - 47:33
    The war was ending
    and the Allied front was nearing Strasbourg.
  • 47:33 - 47:36
    What should Dr Hirt do with
  • 47:36 - 47:40
    the 80 pieces in
    his one-of-a-kind collection?
  • 47:40 - 47:45
    - Well...
    - They were scientifically made to disappear
  • 47:45 - 47:47
    by meticulous cremation.
  • 47:47 - 47:51
    And their gold teeth were given to Dr Hirt
  • 47:51 - 47:54
    who disappeared with them.
  • 47:54 - 47:58
    - But then... There's no proof! No proof!
    - No.
  • 47:58 - 48:03
    At this point an important character
    in our story enters the picture.
  • 48:03 - 48:07
    - Who?
    - A certain Mr Ding.
  • 48:07 - 48:10
    - Ding?
    - Yes, Ding, Mr Klotz. Ding.
  • 48:10 - 48:13
    So he was a Confucian!
  • 48:13 - 48:17
    No. He was the purist of Aryans.
  • 48:17 - 48:22
    So what role did he play in our story?
  • 48:22 - 48:28
    He was no other than Dr Hirt's,
    now Herdhitze's, assistant.
  • 48:28 - 48:32
    He, too, disappeared under the rubble
    as his teacher did.
  • 48:32 - 48:36
    There's no doubt that,
    along with exceptional abundance,
  • 48:36 - 48:39
    it should be noted that Germany
    in those days
  • 48:39 - 48:43
    had an unusual shortage of corpses.
  • 48:43 - 48:46
    The ambiguity of evil.
  • 48:46 - 48:50
    Today Ding calls himself Klauberg. Right.
  • 48:50 - 48:56
    You realise, Mr Klotz, that thanks to
    my short legs and big dark head
  • 48:56 - 49:02
    that among southern Europeans,
    especially in Italy, I don't look like a tourist.
  • 49:02 - 49:07
    - So?
    - Can it be easy to describe my excitement
  • 49:07 - 49:11
    when, obviously throwing caution to
    the wind,
  • 49:11 - 49:13
    I heard, right in downtown Milan,
  • 49:13 - 49:18
    the clink of the monosyllable, "Ding"?
  • 49:18 - 49:20
    - Ding.
    - Ding! Ding!
  • 49:20 - 49:24
    Like in a Chinese concert,
    like rain on roofing-tiles. Ding.
  • 49:24 - 49:28
    So Mr Ding, now known as Klauberg,
    let the cat out of the bag.
  • 49:28 - 49:34
    And Mr Hirt, now known as Herdhitze,
    is done for!
  • 49:34 - 49:36
    A man wishes to see you.
  • 49:36 - 49:40
    - Who is it, my dear man?
    - His name is Herdhitze.
  • 49:40 - 49:44
    - Mr Herdhitze?
    - Yes, sir, Herdhitze.
  • 49:44 - 49:49
    Mr Herdhitze is here?
    Show him in, show him in.
  • 49:49 - 49:51
    Mr Herdhitze!
  • 49:51 - 54:52
    Mr Herdhitze!
  • 54:52 - 54:56
    Marvellous, Mr Herdhitze, what a surprise!
  • 54:56 - 55:00
    I was in the area, my dear Mr Klotz,
  • 55:00 - 55:03
    coming from Cologne and on my way
    to Bonn and I said to myself,
  • 55:03 - 55:06
    "Why not stop in to see
    my dear old school chum?"
  • 55:06 - 55:11
    To tell you the truth,
    I never would have recognised you.
  • 55:11 - 55:12
    Have you had plastic surgery on your face?
  • 55:12 - 55:19
    Yes. Plastic surgery, Italian style.
  • 55:19 - 55:22
    We haven't seen each other
    for a long time, after all.
  • 55:22 - 55:24
    I think it was in '38.
  • 55:24 - 55:29
    Yes, good for you. Spring of '38.
  • 55:29 - 55:31
    What a wonderful spring.
  • 55:31 - 55:39
    Twenty-nine others have gone by since,
    but the old fire never goes out!
  • 55:39 - 55:44
    Always such a jolly fellow, our Herdhitze.
  • 55:44 - 55:49
    Isn't it true, Hans Guenther,
    that Herdhitze in our mother tongue
  • 55:49 - 55:52
    means "blazing fire"?
  • 55:52 - 55:58
    And what fire is blazing, may I ask?
  • 55:58 - 56:00
    The fire of the great Germany,
    of course, Mr Klotz,
  • 56:00 - 56:04
    where it rises from under the ashes
    to produce wool, cheese, beer and buttons.
  • 56:04 - 56:06
    You make me heave a sigh,
  • 56:06 - 56:09
    - my dear Herdhitze.
    - Why, Mr Klotz?
  • 56:09 - 56:12
    Because you are new, brand new, while I...
  • 56:12 - 56:15
    What are you saying? You are...
  • 56:15 - 56:18
    You're a jet plane zooming towards
    the future, Mr Klotz.
  • 56:18 - 56:23
    These exaggerated metaphors
    remind me of Grosz.
  • 56:23 - 56:25
    Are you alluding to
    your humanistic training, Mr Klotz?
  • 56:25 - 56:29
    Yes, and I'm envious of
    your true scientific training, Mr Herdhitze.
  • 56:29 - 56:30
    You mean technical.
  • 56:30 - 56:35
    Yes, there's no contradiction between them
    any more. Only in my head.
  • 56:35 - 56:39
    I feel so old.
    I could be my son's grandfather.
  • 56:39 - 56:40
    Of course.
  • 56:40 - 56:43
    The good son.
  • 56:43 - 56:47
    The silent Julian.
  • 56:47 - 56:52
    We're the same age.
    But I'm really an old fireplace
  • 56:52 - 57:00
    while you're a very modern radiator.
  • 57:00 - 57:14
    - A glass of beer, Mr Herdhitze?
    - I'll have two, Mr Klotz.
  • 57:14 - 57:18
    To our youth, Mr Herdhitze.
  • 57:18 - 57:40
    To our renewed youth, Mr Klotz.
  • 57:40 - 57:46
    I'm sorry if I've stirred up feelings of
    self-accusation and discouragement in you.
  • 57:46 - 57:50
    Those are only objective comments,
    Mr Herdhitze.
  • 57:50 - 57:56
    Someone like you who rose from nothing
    has only to reckon with the present.
  • 57:56 - 58:00
    - How is your dear Bertha?
    - Well.
  • 58:00 - 58:04
    - I know that you're unmarried, Mr Herdhitze.
    - No,
  • 58:04 - 58:07
    I have no heirs, Mr Klotz.
  • 58:07 - 58:11
    I'll leave my industries to the technicians.
  • 58:11 - 58:14
    The future doesn't lie in the hands
    of individuals.
  • 58:14 - 58:19
    No trace of humanistic culture
    will exist in the future.
  • 58:19 - 58:22
    And man will no longer have problems
    with his conscience.
  • 58:22 - 58:27
    You've had some?
    Sorry, but it all seems contradictory.
  • 58:27 - 58:30
    My past constructive experience tells me
  • 58:30 - 58:35
    that contradictions are
    absolutely necessary.
  • 58:35 - 58:38
    Indeed. Indeed, indeed.
  • 58:38 - 58:42
    There comes a time when
    my abjection of pigs,
  • 58:42 - 58:46
    whose bellies can hold
    an entire social class,
  • 58:46 - 58:51
    is purified by regret of the past.
    And that's where I'm wrong.
  • 58:51 - 58:54
    Instead... Instead, instead.
  • 58:54 - 58:57
    There comes a moment in time
    when your abjection of pigs,
  • 58:57 - 59:01
    when you think about the future,
    becomes even more cynical.
  • 59:01 - 59:10
    - And that's where you're right.
    - The ambiguity of goodness.
  • 59:10 - 59:13
    Regarding the Jews...
  • 59:13 - 59:19
    I knew that's where you were headed.
    Another glass of beer, Mr Klotz?
  • 59:19 - 59:33
    Of course, Mr Herdhitze.
  • 59:33 - 59:36
    So, to the health of the Jews, Mr Klotz.
  • 59:36 - 59:42
    To the health of pigs, Mr Herdhitze.
  • 59:42 - 59:45
    About pigs...
  • 59:45 - 59:48
    - Jews or pigs?
    - Pigs, pigs.
  • 59:48 - 59:51
    Do you have any amusing stories to tell me?
  • 59:51 - 59:55
    I know all the amusing stories about pigs,
    thanks to Brecht and Grosz.
  • 59:55 - 59:58
    No, just a minute ago
    I remembered something about pigs
  • 59:58 - 60:02
    when we were talking about heirs
    and inheritances.
  • 60:02 - 60:04
    Your technicians.
  • 60:04 - 60:09
    No. Like before, the farmers,
    now technicians,
  • 60:09 - 60:11
    are innocent. You know they are.
  • 60:11 - 60:15
    Thanks to their productivity
    and loyalty as consumers?
  • 60:15 - 60:20
    Just so. Going back to pigs...
  • 60:20 - 60:25
    Do you remember, Mr Klotz,
    something that happened a few years ago,
  • 60:25 - 60:29
    let me think... In '59.
  • 60:29 - 60:32
    When you changed from Lambrettas
    to household appliances?
  • 60:32 - 60:37
    - Exactly. Your son was 16 then.
    - My son?
  • 60:37 - 60:40
    I can understand your distress,
    but as a friend,
  • 60:40 - 60:44
    a friend from a long time ago,
    but a friend nevertheless,
  • 60:44 - 60:46
    I asked myself,
  • 60:46 - 60:50
    "What's wrong with the son of
    the great Klotz?"
  • 60:50 - 60:56
    My son's just sleepy. He's extremely sleepy.
  • 60:56 - 60:59
    Your son wasn't asleep in '59.
  • 60:59 - 61:05
    I'm referring to that small forgotten episode
    I was telling you about.
  • 61:05 - 61:07
    Go ahead, tell me about it.
  • 61:07 - 61:11
    His great love for the countryside,
  • 61:11 - 61:18
    for German-style gardens,
    full of untamed memories of Greece,
  • 61:18 - 61:24
    misty and sun-drenched, dear to Diotima.
  • 61:24 - 61:28
    That great love couldn't be
    anything but fatal
  • 61:28 - 61:33
    because the fault lies with those
    who think they're above their own past.
  • 61:33 - 61:36
    Let's not argue between ourselves,
  • 61:36 - 61:39
    it's not about us now, if I'm not mistaken.
  • 61:39 - 61:46
    The true protagonist, your son,
    spent his entire life in the countryside,
  • 61:46 - 61:50
    surrounded by gardens,
    an Hellenic paradise.
  • 61:50 - 61:55
    A farmer's house was just beyond it,
    with stables,
  • 61:55 - 61:57
    manure heaps,
  • 61:57 - 61:59
    pigsties.
  • 61:59 - 62:04
    Germans consume great amounts
    of sausage.
  • 62:04 - 62:07
    The story I was telling you about was this.
  • 62:07 - 62:14
    In '59, Julian stole a pig.
  • 62:14 - 62:18
    - That's all it is?
    - Yes, that's all it is.
  • 62:18 - 62:22
    We laughed so much about it
    around the fireplace.
  • 62:22 - 62:25
    Laughter that's now frozen in your throat.
  • 62:25 - 62:27
    Everyone has a cross to bear.
  • 62:27 - 62:29
    The protests of the farmers
    were very amusing to you,
  • 62:29 - 62:34
    the ones who fattened up those pigs
    for Christmas, that first time.
  • 62:34 - 62:36
    A little less the second time.
  • 62:36 - 62:40
    Sure, Julian enjoyed stealing those pigs.
  • 62:40 - 62:41
    What did he do with them?
  • 62:41 - 62:43
    Is that a rhetorical question?
  • 62:43 - 62:46
    No. It's one that comes from common sense,
  • 62:46 - 62:51
    and an annoying one for someone who
    has common sense as well.
  • 62:51 - 62:55
    What did Julian do with the pigs?
  • 62:55 - 62:58
    My dear sir, he probably played with them.
  • 62:58 - 63:01
    He probably put a leash on them,
    like he did with his Great Danes.
  • 63:01 - 63:04
    The thrill of spontaneity!
  • 63:04 - 63:07
    What do you think he did with them?
  • 63:07 - 63:13
    Again, I'm still your good friend
    even though 30 years have gone by.
  • 63:13 - 63:17
    I just really needed
    to understand something
  • 63:17 - 63:19
    that you refused to see.
  • 63:19 - 63:23
    Since I understood,
    I wanted to demonstrate my love,
  • 63:23 - 63:25
    since you had so much of it for me.
  • 63:25 - 63:27
    So tell me what you understood.
  • 63:27 - 63:32
    Understood? Alas, nothing.
    I just knew about it.
  • 63:32 - 63:36
    - What?
    - After the two pig thefts, your son Julian
  • 63:36 - 63:40
    shut himself off in a long,
    adolescent hermetic state.
  • 63:40 - 63:42
    If he rebelled, a hint of conformity
    would show through.
  • 63:42 - 63:45
    If he obeyed, the fire of dissent.
  • 63:45 - 63:50
    It went on like that for years. A true enigma.
  • 63:50 - 63:52
    He went to school in Heidelberg, fell in love.
  • 63:52 - 63:58
    But I have good reason to think
    his heart was here, in the countryside.
  • 63:58 - 64:02
    It's obvious, passion is passion.
  • 64:02 - 64:06
    Poor Mr Klotz. Another glass of beer?
  • 64:06 - 64:09
    Later, Mr Herdhitze. Let's continue.
  • 64:09 - 64:12
    You have such a thirst to know, Mr Klotz.
  • 64:12 - 64:19
    So all of a sudden you're so interested
    in your son's unhappiness?
  • 64:19 - 64:24
    Haven't you ever asked yourself
    how much that poor boy has suffered
  • 64:24 - 64:27
    to end up the way he has?
  • 64:27 - 64:30
    Now we've come to the moment in time
  • 64:30 - 64:33
    when no court could ever say
  • 64:33 - 64:37
    if you're speaking out of viciousness
    or pity.
  • 64:37 - 64:42
    And if you feel real pain or not
    in wanting to inflict pain on me.
  • 64:42 - 64:52
    Yes, I couldn't answer that myself.
  • 64:52 - 64:56
    I'm here as your rival to destroy you,
    as I have to do,
  • 64:56 - 64:59
    so you won't be able to destroy me.
  • 64:59 - 65:04
    So we talked about pigs instead of Jews.
  • 65:04 - 65:08
    But there's something else.
  • 65:08 - 65:13
    Perhaps it's a taste of the truth.
    Who knows?
  • 65:13 - 65:19
    In truth, the thought of that poor boy
    on the cross brings a tear to my eye,
  • 65:19 - 65:22
    even if it would smack of the ridiculous
    if I told it to others.
  • 65:22 - 65:24
    What?
  • 65:24 - 65:29
    You see, Mr Klotz, Julian's solitary walks,
  • 65:29 - 65:32
    those normal inspections of his,
  • 65:32 - 65:39
    had as its daily destination the pigsty.
  • 65:39 - 65:44
    - Well, then?
    - That's it.
  • 65:44 - 65:48
    As soon as he got to the pigsty,
    the measures Julian could've taken
  • 65:48 - 65:50
    so the farmers wouldn't notice him
  • 65:50 - 65:53
    weren't, of course, of any use
    against my Hans Guenther,
  • 65:53 - 65:58
    namely, a certain Klauberg,
    formerly known as Ding,
  • 65:58 - 66:02
    omnipresent like God and his truth.
  • 66:02 - 66:07
    And so we get to the point where it seems
  • 66:07 - 66:11
    impossible for you to say it,
  • 66:11 - 70:25
    and for me to listen to it.
  • 70:25 - 70:27
    Are you feeling better, Julian?
  • 70:27 - 70:30
    Yes, thanks to a little help from my father.
  • 70:30 - 70:33
    Your ambiguous friend
    and ambiguous enemy.
  • 70:33 - 70:38
    Yes, his ambiguous conscience
    merged with my pure existence.
  • 70:38 - 70:41
    Your father is going through
    a wonderful period in his life.
  • 70:41 - 70:43
    I'm completely indifferent to it.
  • 70:43 - 70:45
    But all Germany is talking about it.
  • 70:45 - 70:48
    It's the main topic of discussion
    in all the newspapers.
  • 70:48 - 70:54
    And all our clean-shaven bearded friends
    have a new reason to feel they're right.
  • 70:54 - 70:57
    Herdhitze & Klotz or Klotz & Herdhitze.
  • 70:57 - 71:02
    It's been the topic of heated argument.
    I think it was decided alphabetically.
  • 71:02 - 71:06
    And in your friends' indignation?
  • 71:06 - 71:11
    Of course Herdhitze, killer of Jews
    and a new man, is at the top of the list.
  • 71:11 - 71:15
    - A small failure for my father.
    - There must have been some bargaining.
  • 71:15 - 71:21
    Oh, yes. Of course there was.
  • 71:21 - 71:24
    A story about pigs for a story about Jews.
  • 71:24 - 71:29
    Fine, Julian. It's hard to talk to you.
  • 71:29 - 71:34
    I came to say goodbye to you, as they say.
  • 71:34 - 71:41
    Fine, Ida. Sooner or later...
    How should I put it? It had to happen.
  • 71:41 - 71:44
    - I'm getting married.
    - With a clean-shaven bearded fellow?
  • 71:44 - 71:47
    Don't laugh, Julian. How can you?
  • 71:47 - 71:49
    Perhaps my courage comes from
    your happiness.
  • 71:49 - 71:54
    - My love for a certain Pubi Jannings?
    - Why not? If you truly love him.
  • 71:54 - 71:57
    No, it's not from the happiness
    Pubi gives me,
  • 71:57 - 72:00
    but from your indifference to my love
    that became indifference
  • 72:00 - 72:01
    toward my estrangement.
  • 72:01 - 72:04
    Ida the judge. What's this Pubi like?
  • 72:04 - 72:09
    A good-looking boy. Two years younger
    than you. Just got his degree.
  • 72:09 - 72:13
    His reformism is as clear as his eyes,
    his morality as strong as his muscles.
  • 72:13 - 72:17
    He's on a sports team.
    He's not anti-Communist.
  • 72:17 - 72:21
    He's tall, blond, but not blond
    like a German, more like a Russian.
  • 72:21 - 72:25
    His respect for others is never servile.
    I've never seen him lose his dignity.
  • 72:25 - 72:28
    - Does he grunt?
    - Julian,
  • 72:28 - 72:33
    I didn't tell you about him
    to get back at you.
  • 72:33 - 72:35
    I'm completely indifferent to it all.
  • 72:35 - 72:37
    No, you feel hate.
  • 72:37 - 72:39
    - Love, I'd say.
    - Then why won't you be a part of it?
  • 72:39 - 72:43
    Why don't you ask one of your Jews
    or blacks?
  • 72:43 - 72:46
    You're useless.
    Perhaps it's because you don't exist.
  • 72:46 - 72:49
    You're only an apparition.
  • 72:49 - 72:52
    Your German is a joke
  • 72:52 - 72:55
    and even though you're here
    it will always be questionable.
  • 72:55 - 72:58
    You already said that,
    and I understood completely.
  • 72:58 - 73:00
    Let's leave each other with love, Julian.
  • 73:00 - 73:02
    Leave each other?
    When were we ever together?
  • 73:02 - 73:04
    - Never.
    - That's obvious.
  • 73:04 - 73:07
    But now that I love someone else,
    unfortunately, the risk is to pity you.
  • 73:07 - 73:14
    Don't worry, I'll make you laugh,
    even if you say I have no sense of humour.
  • 73:14 - 73:16
    Well, goodbye, Julian.
  • 73:16 - 73:27
    - Goodbye, Ida.
    - Goodbye, Julian.
  • 73:27 - 73:29
    How strong and odd my love is.
  • 73:29 - 73:33
    I can't say I love you,
    but that's not what's important.
  • 73:33 - 73:38
    The object of my amorous passion has
    never been so worthless, to say the least.
  • 73:38 - 73:41
    What counts are the sensations I feel.
  • 73:41 - 73:44
    The profound change it made in me.
  • 73:44 - 73:46
    It's not degeneration,
    let me be clear about that.
  • 73:46 - 73:52
    If it were, you'd have understood
    and rightly felt disgust and pity.
  • 73:52 - 73:55
    Nothing has gone from my life.
  • 73:55 - 73:57
    I say that without pride,
  • 73:57 - 74:01
    but with wonder, or let's say
    with a scholarly objectivity.
  • 74:01 - 74:06
    Now these sensations are so wonderful,
    so exciting. They're unique.
  • 74:06 - 74:12
    I can't rid myself of them for an instant,
    not even from my thoughts.
  • 74:12 - 74:15
    It doesn't happen just by being born
    or living. No.
  • 74:15 - 74:18
    There's nothing natural about it.
  • 74:18 - 74:22
    So what do you want?
    I think about it all the time.
  • 74:22 - 74:25
    The sensations this love produce in me
    can be summarised into just one.
  • 74:25 - 74:30
    I was struck by a grace,
    something also akin to a plague.
  • 74:30 - 74:37
    So don't be shocked,
    if an infinite happiness came along with it.
  • 74:37 - 74:43
    It's no wonder
    that I have horrible nightmares at night.
  • 74:43 - 74:45
    But they're the most genuine things
    in my life.
  • 74:45 - 74:49
    I have no other way of facing reality.
  • 74:49 - 74:55
    The other night I dreamt I was
    in a dark road, full of puddles.
  • 74:55 - 75:00
    I was searching along the edge of
    the sidewalk, the puddles full of light,
  • 75:00 - 75:04
    like northern lights, a long Siberian sunset,
  • 75:04 - 75:10
    for something. What was I looking for?
    I don't remember. Perhaps a toy.
  • 75:10 - 75:14
    And at the edge of one of these puddles
    I see a pig, a young pig.
  • 75:14 - 75:19
    I get closer as if to catch him, touch him,
    and he gleefully bites me.
  • 75:19 - 75:23
    He bites off four fingers of my right hand,
    but they remain attached.
  • 75:23 - 75:27
    They don't bleed. It's like they were rubber.
  • 75:27 - 75:31
    I turn around with my fingers dangling,
    upset about the bite.
  • 75:31 - 75:35
    Do I have the vocation of a martyr?
  • 75:35 - 79:25
    Who knows where the truth lies in dreams,
    besides making us anxious about it.
  • 79:25 - 79:28
    To our merger, my dear Herdhitze.
  • 79:28 - 79:32
    To our merger!
    To our merger, my dear Klotz.
  • 79:32 - 79:37
    You'll think I'm obsessed by it,
    but I have to keep saying, Grosz is not dead.
  • 79:37 - 79:40
    The festivities for the merger
    of Klotz and Herdhitze
  • 79:40 - 79:43
    are as natural as spring returning.
  • 79:43 - 79:48
    Light-heartedness, my dear Herdhitze,
    light-heartedness.
  • 79:48 - 79:51
    Who says religion is dead?
  • 79:51 - 79:54
    Look at that wonderful rite.
  • 79:54 - 79:59
    My wife is opening her painted jaws
    and slipping a cream puff into them.
  • 79:59 - 80:04
    God bless the appetite of our spouses.
  • 80:04 - 80:09
    Germany. What a capacity for digestion.
  • 80:09 - 80:10
    Shit.
  • 80:10 - 80:14
    And what a capacity for defecation.
  • 80:14 - 80:18
    No one defecates more than us Germans,
  • 80:18 - 80:23
    over the hearts of our puritan children.
  • 80:23 - 81:11
    Did you hear?
    Minister Ribbentrop has grunted.
  • 81:11 - 81:13
    Good morning, master!
  • 81:13 - 81:36
    Hello, Maracchione!
  • 81:36 - 84:38
    - Good morning, master.
    - Good morning. Hello, Gustava.
  • 84:38 - 84:44
    I...
  • 84:44 - 84:48
    I killed my father,
  • 84:48 - 85:13
    I ate human flesh, and I quiver with joy.
  • 85:13 - 85:16
    I killed my father,
  • 85:16 - 85:20
    I ate human flesh,
  • 85:20 - 86:03
    I quiver with joy.
  • 86:03 - 86:06
    I killed my father,
  • 86:06 - 86:11
    I ate human flesh,
  • 86:11 - 86:24
    I quiver with joy.
  • 86:24 - 86:26
    I killed my father,
  • 86:26 - 86:29
    I ate human flesh,
  • 86:29 - 88:16
    I quiver with joy.
  • 88:16 - 88:21
    Mr Klotz! Mr Klotz! I'm here with
    my colleague Klauberg, the former Ding,
  • 88:21 - 88:25
    because of something very strange
    that is happening.
  • 88:25 - 88:27
    Speak, my dear sir, speak.
  • 88:27 - 88:29
    A delegation of farmers are here.
  • 88:29 - 88:33
    I bet they're led by Italian farm-hands
    with their Togliatti filling their empty heads.
  • 88:33 - 88:35
    Togliatti is dead.
  • 88:35 - 88:38
    Do they have signs? Are they waving flags?
  • 88:38 - 88:43
    Not really, Mr Hirt. I mean, Mr Herdhitze.
  • 88:43 - 88:48
    So it's not a demonstration.
    They're not raising up red flags,
  • 88:48 - 88:51
    not shaking their hoes and shovels?
  • 88:51 - 88:55
    Why are they here, then?
    No one invited them to the festivities.
  • 88:55 - 88:57
    Why don't you let them in?
  • 88:57 - 89:00
    It's because they don't want to talk to you.
  • 89:00 - 89:03
    Only with the toughest man in the company.
  • 89:03 - 89:08
    It's not very sensitive to make such
    a distinction on the day of the merger.
  • 89:08 - 89:10
    But that's how it is. Farewell.
  • 89:10 - 89:23
    I feel a strong urge for a cream puff.
  • 89:23 - 89:26
    Okay, let's go. What are you waiting for?
    Show them in.
  • 89:26 - 89:52
    Don't be afraid, come on. Step forward.
  • 89:52 - 89:56
    Well? Have you nothing to say now?
    What's the matter?
  • 89:56 - 89:59
    They're embarrassed, Mr Herdhitze.
  • 89:59 - 90:02
    Come on, open your mouths!
  • 90:02 - 90:07
    - You, old Wolfgang.
    - I can't talk, and it's not because I'm stupid.
  • 90:07 - 90:09
    Is it about Julian?
  • 90:09 - 90:13
    Come on, don't whine now, old Wolfgang,
    or Wolfram, whatever your name is.
  • 90:13 - 90:16
    I don't have the strength, sir.
  • 90:16 - 90:18
    I'll speak if I may, sir.
  • 90:18 - 90:21
    Are you one of the Italian immigrants?
  • 90:21 - 90:27
    Yes, sir. My German is not too good,
    but I can say what needs to be said.
  • 90:27 - 90:29
    Go on, then.
  • 90:29 - 90:31
    - You know that the pigsty...
    - The pigsty?
  • 90:31 - 90:35
    Every day Mr Julian used to
  • 90:35 - 90:38
    take a walk down there.
  • 90:38 - 90:40
    Filthy boy.
  • 90:40 - 90:44
    He went there today, too,
    along the same road.
  • 90:44 - 90:46
    Even though there were festivities
    at the villa.
  • 90:46 - 90:53
    Right. To steal your innocence
    and our conscience.
  • 90:53 - 90:55
    How can either of us condemn him,
  • 90:55 - 90:58
    if he only suffered by withdrawing
    into himself.
  • 90:58 - 91:01
    By closing his eyes he watched us.
  • 91:01 - 91:06
    Julian wasn't one of those victims
    who talk with their executioner,
  • 91:06 - 91:08
    and he didn't ask for a confessor.
  • 91:08 - 91:12
    He didn't confuse himself with anyone else.
    His vileness was graceful.
  • 91:12 - 91:17
    He betrayed all of us without ever
    promising to be faithful.
  • 91:17 - 91:22
    Am I wrong, or is this a funeral eulogy?
  • 91:22 - 91:25
    Yes, Mr Herdhitze.
    Now that I listen to old Wolfram,
  • 91:25 - 91:28
    even though I don't understand
    what he's saying,
  • 91:28 - 91:30
    I feel like crying, too.
  • 91:30 - 91:33
    Julian is dead?
  • 91:33 - 91:35
    He went down towards the pigsty.
  • 91:35 - 91:38
    That I got. Go on.
  • 91:38 - 91:41
    The child Gustava was always
    the last to leave him.
  • 91:41 - 91:44
    Today she followed him
    longer than usual and...
  • 91:44 - 91:46
    Talk, you boor!
  • 91:46 - 91:50
    She came back after a little while,
    sobbing and screaming.
  • 91:50 - 91:54
    Oh, my! We thought she was dying.
    She screamed,
  • 91:54 - 91:58
    "The pigs are eating Mr Julian!"
  • 91:58 - 92:01
    - And what did you do?
    - Us? We said to ourselves,
  • 92:01 - 92:04
    "Why don't we go and see
    what's happening down at the pigsty?"
  • 92:04 - 92:08
    So we left our work
    and went down to the valley.
  • 92:08 - 92:10
    What did you see?
  • 92:10 - 92:12
    The pigs were all crowded together,
  • 92:12 - 92:16
    and how they were shrieking!
    We could hear them at the top of the hill.
  • 92:16 - 92:21
    And as we were running downhill,
    we realised...
  • 92:21 - 92:22
    You realised?
  • 92:22 - 92:27
    That the little girl, Mr Herdhitze,
    was telling the truth.
  • 92:27 - 92:30
    Literally?
  • 92:30 - 92:34
    The pigs were eating a man and...
  • 92:34 - 92:37
    And what?
  • 92:37 - 92:41
    It really was Mr Julian. But by now...
  • 92:41 - 92:44
    By now?
  • 92:44 - 92:50
    By now the pigs were chewing
    the last shreds of Mr Julian.
  • 92:50 - 92:52
    One had a hand in its mouth
  • 92:52 - 92:56
    and the others were trying to take it away
    and eat it themselves.
  • 92:56 - 93:00
    Those disgusting beasts ate all of him.
  • 93:00 - 93:04
    Everything?
    Not even a finger could be saved?
  • 93:04 - 93:06
    A tuft of hair?
  • 93:06 - 93:09
    No, nothing. Nothing.
  • 93:09 - 93:13
    Those pigs made a clean sweep of him?
  • 93:13 - 93:17
    Yes, sir. If you hadn't seen them
    with your own eyes
  • 93:17 - 93:21
    eating a man, you wouldn't know
    anything had even happened.
  • 93:21 - 93:23
    No sign of him was left?
  • 93:23 - 93:28
    A scrap of cloth, a sole from his shoe?
  • 93:28 - 93:31
    No, nothing.
  • 93:31 - 93:33
    A button?
  • 93:33 - 93:37
    No, nothing at all!
  • 93:37 - 93:45
    Then,
  • 93:45 - 93:50
    not a word to a soul.
  • 93:50 -
    THE END
Title:
Porcile (1969) [MultiSub Movie] - [Paolo Pasolini]
Duration:
01:33:59

English subtitles

Revisions