:38:01
...or to an insidious,
fiendish madman.
:38:05
-Bottoms up.
-One moment.
:38:09
Point four: Wine poisoned.
:38:13
An ancient, tasteless, colourless
and odourless Oriental herb...
:38:18
...that kills instantly.
Observe, please.
:38:29
Great Scott, Mr. Wang.
You saved our lives.
:38:32
Not quite, Mrs. Charleston.
:38:35
Bon appétit.
:38:40
Since Wang was the one who could
detect poison, only he was tested.
:38:44
Point five:
:38:46
Mr. Twain is both beguiling
and fiendish.
:38:54
-Get a doctor, quick.
-No, no. It's all right.
:38:57
My wine is not poisoned.
It was just a bad year.
:39:02
Good work, Mr. Wang.
:39:03
We must all be on our guard
through every course of the meal.
:39:07
You're all forgetting one thing.
:39:11
This makes the butler suspicious.
He poured the wine.
:39:14
How would he know which
one to serve the poisoned glass to?
:39:19
That's very simple.
:39:20
Blind people have
a very keen sense of smell.
:39:24
Since we're Anglo-Saxon
and Mr. Wang's son is Japanese...
:39:28
...it wouldn't be hard
to sniff out the Chinaman.
:39:30
See here.
That's a tacky thing to say.
:39:33
It's a tacky world,
Mr. Charleston.
:39:36
-Isn't that right, angel?
-That's right.
:39:38
Quiet, please.
Butler approaches.
:39:41
I apologize. I'm having
communication problems with the cook.
:39:46
Who poured the wine?
:39:48
Mr. Twain, sir.
:39:50
It was left for me
in the refrigerator.
:39:53
I was told to give Mr. Wang
the glass with the sticky stem.
:39:57
And you didn't ask why?
:39:59
I was lucky to find
the refrigerator.