Double Indemnity
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1:09:24
Hello, Keyes.
1:09:32
- What's on your mind?
- That broken leg.

1:09:35
The guy had a broken leg.
1:09:37
- What are you talking about?
- Talking about Dietrichson.

1:09:40
- He had accident insurance, didn't he?
- Yeah.

1:09:42
- Then he broke his leg, didn't he?
- So what?

1:09:44
And he didn't put in a claim.
Why didn't he put in a claim? Why?

1:09:49
What are you driving at?
- Walter! I had dinner two hours ago.

1:09:53
- It stuck half way.
- The little man is acting up again.

1:09:56
There's something wrong
with that Dietrichson case.

1:09:59
Because he didn't file a claim?
1:10:01
- Maybe he just didn't have time.
- Oh maybe he just didn't know he was insured.

1:10:08
No. that couldn't be it.
1:10:09
- You delivered the policy personally, didn't you?
- Yeah.

1:10:12
- And you got his check.
- Sure, I did.

1:10:15
- Got any bicarbonate of soda?
- No I haven't.

1:10:18
Walter. I've been living
with this little man for 26 years.

1:10:22
He's never failed me yet.
There's got to be something wrong.

1:10:25
Maybe Norton was right.
Maybe it was suicide.

1:10:28
No. Not suicide.
1:10:30
But not an accident either.
1:10:32
What else?
1:10:34
Look, Walter.
1:10:35
A man takes out an accident policy that is worth
a $100,000 dollars if he is killed on a train.

1:10:39
Then, two weeks later,
he is killed on a train.

1:10:41
And not in a train accident, mind you,
but falling off some silly observation car.

1:10:45
Do you know what
the mathematical probability of that is?

1:10:48
One out of....
I don't know how many billions.

1:10:51
And add to that the broken leg.
1:10:54
Now it just can't be the way it looks.
1:10:57
Something has been worked on us.

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