1:01:06
	Is that what you are, son? One
little whacked-out crazy fella?
1:01:09
	Definitely. I'd say you've
hit the nail on the head.
1:01:12
	Good. Keep it up, and maybe one day you'll
grow up and become a great man like me.
1:01:26
	Hey, Auggie, I've just been thinking.
1:01:27
	You wouldn't need some
help around the store?
1:01:29
	Some summer help while Vinnie's gone?
1:01:34
	What did you have in mind?
1:01:35
	I'm thinking about the kid.
1:01:38
	I'm sure he'd do a good job for you.
1:01:40
	Hey, kid. You interested in a job? I just got word from your
employment agency that you're looking for a position in retail sales.
1:01:48
	A job?
1:01:49
	I definitely wouldn't turn down a job.
1:01:52
	Come around to the cigar
store tomorrow morning
1:01:55
	at ten o'clock and we'll
talk about it, okay?
1:01:57
	We'll see what we can work out.
1:01:58
	Ten o'clock tomorrow
morning. I'll be there.
1:02:02
	I owe you one.
1:02:04
	Don't forget.
1:02:25
	It's 1942, right?
1:02:29
	And he's caught in
Leningrad during the siege.
1:02:32
	I'm talking about one of the
worst moments in human history.
1:02:35
	Five hundred thousand people
died in that one place,
1:02:38
	and there's Bakhtin,
holed up in an apartment,
1:02:40
	expecting to be killed any day.
1:02:42
	He has plenty of tobacco,
but no paper to roll it in.
1:02:45
	So he takes the pages of a manuscript
he's been working on for ten years
1:02:50
	and tears them up to
roll his cigarettes.
1:02:53
	His only copy?
1:02:54
	His only copy.