Kings Go Forth
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:12:00
-'Morning, sir.
-'Morning, Sam.

:12:02
Find yourseIf a pIace to sit.
:12:11
I'm not going to try to persuade you
not to yank this man's stripes...

:12:16
...but I thought maybe you'd fiII me in on
just what happened.

:12:19
Nothing much happened.
:12:20
I hoIIered at him to stop
and he didn't obey orders. That's aII.

:12:26
I can recaII a coupIe times
when you didn't hear an order.

:12:31
-I wouIdn't have gone in there. WouId you?
-You kiddin'? We've got too much sense.

:12:36
Yeah.
:12:37
I can't quite figure this kid.
:12:41
Maybe you don't have to. No, thanks.
:12:44
Sam, don't ride the man so hard.
He can't heIp that he went to coIIege.

:12:49
I was going to put him up for a citation.
:12:51
Don't worry. You'II get pIenty of chances
to give this guy a medaI.

:12:59
How many days have you
and your men been under fire?

:13:01
-AItogether?
-Yeah, aItogether.

:13:04
A hundred and eighty-eight, eighty-nine.
:13:07
You famiIiar with the French Riviera?
:13:09
OnIy what I've read
in the National Geographic.

:13:13
I'm toId big hoteIs are fixed
so that you turn on a water faucet...

:13:18
...and you get either cognac or champagne.
:13:20
That probabIy isn't true,
but suppose you and your men go there...

:13:23
...and make a 24-hour investigation.
:13:26
Yes, sir.
:13:31
An hour later we were halfway to Nice.
That's the kind of a war it was.

:13:35
Some people call it
the Champagne Campaign.

:13:45
Nobody who was there will ever forget
the way the Riviera was that season.

:13:49
The Army had made it a rest area.
:13:52
There'd never been one like it before
and never would be again.

:13:57
They shipped in oranges from North Africa,
eggs from Sweden, steaks from Argentina.


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