Half Moon Street
prev.
play.
mark.
next.

:23:02
When did you stop being
a radical, Lord Bulbeck?

:23:06
I like to think l still am.
:23:12
That's my father.
:23:14
He was injured
in the General Strike in 1926.

:23:17
He taught you
trade union organization.

:23:20
The practical side of it.
:23:29
That was my wife.
:23:35
She was killed in an accident.
:23:37
I know...in Turkey.
:23:40
You seem to know a lot about me.
:23:43
I was in China when
you were putting together...

:23:44
the Hong Kong settlement.
:23:47
As a tourist?
:23:49
I was writing my doctorate
on the Chinese economy.

:23:52
Oh, really? An intellectual.
:23:58
What was it like
for you over there?

:24:00
Infuriating.
:24:02
Fascinating.
:24:04
I don't know, everything after
China seems...anticlimactic.

:24:10
Did you get to know
many Chinese?

:24:13
A few.
:24:15
The Chinese weren't
really encouraged...

:24:16
to have Western friends.
:24:17
We were considered...
spiritual pollutants.

:24:21
Spiritual pollutants.
:24:22
I had a Chinese lover
for a while.

:24:25
Oh? Is that allowed?
:24:28
Not really.
:24:30
This is crazy.
:24:32
An escort agency sends me
out on a date...

:24:34
and I end up talking
to Lord Bulbeck about...China.

:24:38
Why don't you call me Sam?
:24:46
Where did you learn to do that?
:24:48
I can't stand helpless men
who can't cook...

:24:51
but you can treat it
as a form of courtship.

:24:54
OK.
:24:57
Tell me about
your Chinese lover.

:24:59
Chinguay?

prev.
next.