Our Man in Havana
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1:02:01
They gave me copies of your cables.
1:02:05
- You've been very careless, Mr. Wormold.
- There was nothing in them that mattered.

1:02:09
So I believed.
1:02:11
I would not have agreed
to cooperate with them otherwise.

1:02:14
- Who are they?
- They do not introduce themselves.

1:02:19
The people who tore up my laboratory
and stole my papers.

1:02:24
Had they reported me to the police,
they could have deported me.

1:02:28
How was I to know
that what I decoded for them was true?

1:02:33
You advised me to invent and I invented.
1:02:35
So far as I'm concerned,
Montez was an invention.

1:02:38
Then you invented him too well.
1:02:41
He was no more real to me
than a character in a novel.

1:02:44
His name was real enough,
and his profession.

1:02:48
He denied working for you.
1:02:50
They offered him a great deal of money
if he would work for them instead.

1:02:55
They, too, wanted photographs
of the constructions in the mountains.

1:03:00
- There are no constructions.
- So I thought.

1:03:04
But the British Secret Service
would not be so easily deceived.

1:03:08
Neither will other people here.
1:03:11
Why didn't you stick to invention?
1:03:14
I don't even know...
1:03:17
why I picked on the name of Montez.
1:03:20
I would have loaned you money.
I offered to.

1:03:23
- I needed more than you could lend.
- It needs no skill to kill a man.

1:03:27
But to save a man,
that takes six years of training...

1:03:31
and then one cannot be sure.
1:03:33
There is not one patient
that I know for certain that I have saved.

1:03:38
But the man I killed, I know him.
1:03:42
Why dress up as a soldier?
1:03:45
I was not dressed this way
when I killed a man.

1:03:49
I was dressed as a doctor
and I was reading Charles Lamb.

1:03:55
Mr. Wormold, I just want you identified.

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