1:29:03
Jean-Louis!
1:29:04
Jean-Louis.
1:29:06
Reggie! Reggie!
1:29:12
Jean-Louis, thank heaven.
Do you have the...
1:29:16
- What's this?
- A man gave me all those for only three.
1:29:20
A man? Oh, no, Jean-Louis.
Who? Where?
1:29:26
Vite, mon cheri. Vite.
1:29:29
- Là-bas.
- Come on!
1:29:35
- Oh, but he's gone.
- I don't blame him.
1:29:38
Entrez.
1:29:41
- Monsieur Felix?
- Oui.
1:29:46
I was expecting you.
I knew you would come.
1:29:49
Look at them, madame.
1:29:51
Have you ever, in your entire life,
seen anything so beautiful?
1:29:54
I'm sorry. I don't know
anything about stamps.
1:29:57
I know them as one knows his own face,
though I had never seen them.
1:30:01
This one,
a Swedish four shilling...
1:30:04
called
Da Gula Fyraskillingen,
1:30:06
printed in 1854.
1:30:08
- What is it worth?
- Oh, the money is unimportant.
1:30:11
I'm afraid it's very important.
1:30:13
Well, in your money,
perhaps $85,000.
1:30:17
- May I sit down?
- Yes.
1:30:19
- And the blue one?
- Oh, it's called The Hawaiian Blue.
1:30:22
In 1894 the owner was murdered
by a rival collector...
1:30:25
who was obsessed to own it.
1:30:27
And what is its value today?
1:30:29
Sixty-five thousand.
1:30:32
- And the last one.
- Ah, the best for last.
1:30:35
Le chef d'oeuvre de la collection.
The masterpiece.
1:30:39
The most valuable stamp
in the world.
1:30:41
It's called the Gazette Maldave.
1:30:43
It was printed by hand
on coloured paper...
1:30:46
and marked with the initials
of the printer.
1:30:48
Today it has a value of $100,000.
1:30:53
I'm not a thief, madame.
1:30:55
I knew there was some mistake.