The Americanization of Emily
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1:42:00
That, Bus, is what is known
as letting them have it in spades.

1:42:04
Doubled, redoubled, and vulnerable.
1:42:09
Sir, I'd better really tell you
what happened on D-day.

1:42:12
Is he alive? Is that what you're saying,
that he's alive?

1:42:16
Yes, Miss Barham, we think he is.
1:42:20
Oh, dear.
1:42:25
Miss Barham, we're almost as happy
about this as you are.

1:42:30
Thank you, sir.
1:42:32
Bus, I want you to drive this young lady
down to Southampton...

1:42:36
just as fast as you can make it.
1:42:37
- Yes, sir.
- Get going.

1:42:39
- Good-bye, Harry.
- Good trip, sir.

1:42:42
- Bus.
- Yes, sir?

1:42:45
You were going to tell me
something before about Charlie on D-day.

1:42:49
Nothing, sir. Have a good flight.
1:42:52
Don't forget I want him
in Washington tomorrow.

1:42:54
I don't care what brass
you have to throw off the plane.

1:42:57
I'll have him on the first flight
out of Southampton.

1:42:59
You'd better move back there, sir.
1:43:02
What I didn't tell the Admiral back there...
1:43:04
was that Charlie Madison became
the first American on Omaha Beach...

1:43:07
because I chased him up there
with a Colt.45.

1:43:11
He was, in fact, running the other way...
1:43:14
bolting under fire,
an errant act of cowardice!

1:43:18
Our big brass-band hero...
1:43:20
is a big brass-band coward!
1:43:24
But I didn't tell the Admiral that...
1:43:26
because the Navy needs a hero...
1:43:29
even a miserable, lousy, yellow,
cowardly hero like Charlie Madison.

1:43:35
It's a hoax, Emily.
The whole thing's a hoax.

1:43:38
That's my Charlie. Craven to the end.
1:43:42
- Spaulding.
- Yo.

1:43:44
Clear me a space for Madison
on the first flight out of Southampton.

1:43:47
- I'll call him from the hospital there.
- Right.

1:43:52
Harry, I'm in the administration office
right now.

1:43:55
I can have Madison at the airport by 1:00.
1:43:57
Now don't worry about it.
1:43:59
You just clear a place on the plane
for him, that's all.


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