Mississippi Masala
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:30:00
All right. Then I'm glad to have
the opportunity to talk with you, sir.

:30:04
I'm sorry. We have nothing to discuss.
:30:06
I believe we do, being that you about
ruined my reputation and business.

:30:10
I think I'm entitled to an answer,
don't you?

:30:15
I see.
:30:18
You think I ain't good enough
for your daughter?

:30:21
No, that's not it.
:30:23
Mina is free to love anyone, to live
as she chooses. I respect her freedom.

:30:28
But that does not absolve me
of my responsibility as her father.

:30:31
No disrespect to you, sir,
but she's a grown woman.

:30:34
And we care for each other.
Now, I think that's all there is to it.

:30:40
You know, once I was like both of you.
:30:43
I thought I could change the world,
be different.

:30:47
But the world is not
so quick to change.

:30:51
Mina is my only child.
:30:53
I don't want her to go through
the same struggle as I did.

:30:56
I'm a black man born
and raised in Mississippi.

:30:59
Ain't a damn thing
you can tell me about struggle.

:31:02
- What do you know about my...?
- No, I know.

:31:05
I know you and your folks can come here
from God knows where...

:31:09
...and be as black as the ace of spades,
but you start acting white...

:31:13
...and treating us like your doormats.
:31:15
I know that you and your daughter
ain't but a few shades from this here.

:31:19
That I know.
:31:35
- To our last night in Uganda.
- In Uganda.

:31:38
- To Uganda. Cheers.
- Cheers.

:31:41
Cheers. Cheers.
:31:43
To Uganda, you have been so good
to us until this madman came.

:31:48
Yeah, we created the madman.
:31:51
We buggers in Uganda.
:31:53
Most people are born with five senses.
We are left with only one.

:31:59
A sense of property.

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