Murder Most Foul
prev.
play.
mark.
next.

1:11:03
He thought I might succeed where
he had failed to persuade you...

1:11:07
- To desert my post?
- This is a dangerous place.

1:11:10
- These are dangerous people.
- Only one of them.

1:11:14
- The time has come for plain speak.
- Please, Jim, I'm thinking.

1:11:18
It's here that the answer lies.
1:11:21
Driffold Cosgood, Ralph Summers,
Margaret McGinty, Rose Kane.

1:11:26
Rose.
1:11:28
Rose.
1:11:30
Mr Stringer, we have here
in addition to Margaret McGinty,

1:11:34
an actress called Rose Kane.
1:11:37
I don't understand.
1:11:38
Don't you see? " A rose
by any other name would smell".

1:11:42
- The blackmail note.
- Oh!

1:11:44
Mr Stringer,
tomorrow I must do some digging.

1:11:49
- Digging?
- Yes, into the past.

1:12:07
You mean this Rose Kane?
1:12:09
Yes.
1:12:11
You seem
to remember her well, Mr Tumbrill.

1:12:14
- What is your interest in her?
- I simply want to trace her.

1:12:18
I've been outside
the profession for many years now

1:12:21
and so the only way I...
1:12:23
If you 're an old friend of hers,
I'm afraid you 're in for a shock.

1:12:27
- Oh?
- Poor Rosie was hanged.

1:12:29
- What?
- Yes.

1:12:31
A terrible business,
terrible business.

1:12:35
Will you?
1:12:36
Not so soon after breakfast,
thank you. You were saying?

1:12:40
Oh, yes, terrible.
I shall never forget it.

1:12:44
She opened in this play
somewhere in the sticks.

1:12:47
It was a unique flopperoo,
it didn't even run the night.

1:12:50
Anyhow on the same night, believe it
or not, she poisoned her husband.

1:12:55
- Did she indeed?
- Yes, she did.

1:12:58
She sent her kid out to buy
half a pound of garlic sausage


prev.
next.