Goldfinger
prev.
play.
mark.
next.

:20:02
Have a little more of this...
rather disappointing brandy.

:20:05
- What's the matter with it?
- I'd say it was a 30-year-old "Fine",

:20:09
indifferently blended, sir.
:20:12
With an overdose of "Bons Bois".
:20:14
Colonel Smithers is
giving the lecture, 007.

:20:19
Gentlemen, Mr Goldfinger
has gold bullion on deposit

:20:21
in Zurich, Amsterdam, Caracas
and Hong Kong - worth £20 million.

:20:25
- Most of it came from this country.
- Why move it?

:20:28
The price of gold varies
from country to country.

:20:31
If you buy it here at $30 an ounce,
you can sell it in, say, Pakistan at $110

:20:35
and triple your money.
:20:37
- If you have facilities for melting it down.
- And has he?

:20:41
Apart from being a legitimate
bullion dealer, Mr Goldfinger poses...

:20:44
No, that's not quite fair.
:20:46
Is, among his many other interests,
a legitimate international jeweller.

:20:51
He's legally entitled to operate
modest metallurgical installations.

:20:55
His British one is down in Kent.
:20:57
We've failed to discover
how he transfers his gold overseas.

:21:01
And Lord knows we've tried.
:21:02
If your department can establish
that it is done illegally,

:21:06
the bank can take action
to recover most of his holdings.

:21:10
I think it's time Mr Goldfinger and I met.
:21:12
Socially, of course.
:21:14
I was hoping you'd say that.
:21:17
It might lead to a business talk...
Mr Goldfinger's kind of business.

:21:21
- I'll need some sort of bait.
- I quite agree.

:21:23
This is the only one we have
from the Nazi hoard in Lake Toplitz.

:21:26
But there are undoubtedly others.
:21:30
Mr Bond can make
whatever use of it he thinks fit.

:21:33
Providing he returns it, of course.
:21:35
It's worth £5,000.
:21:41
You'll draw it from Q branch
with your equipment in the morning.

:21:44
Of course, sir.

prev.
next.