:53:02
I smell cognac, I think.
:53:06
You smell lrish whiskey, I think.
:53:08
- There you are.
- Thank you.
:53:24
It's a pity the corpse
never enjoys the wake.
:53:27
A hell of a nice fellow
to talk to, though.
:53:31
Here's to you, Rupert.
:53:35
Your German--
you're pronouncing it very good today.
:53:39
You're pronouncin'
your English very good too.
:53:43
Where'd you learn English, Willi?
:53:45
Bremen UnterZeeboot Academie,
ten years ago.
:53:49
- How old are you?
- Twenty-seven.
:53:53
You must've had a couple of years in the
Hitler Youth Camp then, with some luck.
:53:59
A lot of luck.
:54:01
Two years.
:54:04
And you?
:54:06
Me what?
:54:08
- I mean, how old?
- I'm 44.
:54:13
- Still very much alive.
- I'm quite well, thanks.
:54:17
I mean, your new command
is very much impressed.
:54:19
One of those nice elderly
British guards told me today...
:54:22
you were a hell of a journalist.
:54:24
That's true. I'm a hell of a journalist.
I could make you famous, Willi.
:54:28
Now why don't you tell the lively old
crime reporter why the man's dead?
:54:34
You expect me to tell you
that I killed him, and why?
:54:39
No, you don't have to.
:54:41
I can see your pleasure
in the kill.
:54:45
Can you?
:54:51
Perhaps you can see somebody
who believes in the war...
:54:55
who believes in his people,
his leaders.
:54:58
We kill in a war
for those things, huh?