Force 10 from Navarone
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:29:02
I'm not surprised, sir.
:29:04
But, you see, we're not commandos.
We're deserters.

:29:09
Deserters?
:29:11
Give them to me, major.
We kill them now.

:29:15
You see, we were
in a prison camp in Termoli.

:29:19
We escaped.
:29:20
Managed to steal a plane.
Flew here, RAF Lancaster.

:29:23
Were attacked, hit, bailed out and
landed in your territory, thank God.

:29:29
Fascinating.
:29:31
Tell me, why exactly
did you desert?

:29:35
Now, I'm glad you asked that.
:29:38
Yes.
:29:39
Well, I am afraid
that is rather a long story.

:29:43
Oh, please, you must not
be afraid of boring me.

:29:49
Have you ever heard of penicillin?
:29:51
No.
:29:54
Well, I'm not surprised.
It's new.

:29:56
It's a drug that prevents wounds
from becoming infected.

:29:59
It cures a whole range of infections...
:30:02
...including some of the nastier
social diseases.

:30:05
It's become one of the most
sought-after items on the black market.

:30:09
Our friend here, Sgt. Weaver
of the American Medical Corps...

:30:13
...was our supplier.
:30:18
You are saying you stole these drugs
from the Army to sell to civilians?

:30:25
Not just to civilians, major.
We'd sell it back to the Army.

:30:29
Any army.
:30:31
I see.
:30:33
Tell me, what has all this to do
with that suitcase you keep looking at?

:30:39
Well, that suitcase
is full of our penicillin.

:30:42
Oh, indeed. Perhaps
I could see some of it?

:30:45
Certainly, major.
:30:46
Open it, Miller.
:30:50
You can't do that here,
you'd ruin the lot.

:30:52
You know perfectly well that
any contamination will destroy it.

:30:56
It must be opened
under laboratory conditions.

:30:58
There's nearly half a million
pounds worth of stuff here.


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