Clara Hakedosha
prev.
play.
mark.
next.

:12:01
So I sat at home, opened the book,
:12:04
and the exercises jumped in front of my eyes.
:12:25
This lovely building that you see behind me, with the elegant dome
:12:29
is a nuclear plant. A narrow fissure in a thin aluminium pipe
:12:33
separates this plant from the plutonium leak that will cause
:12:36
the death of thousands in horrible agony.
:12:40
This is the dog Charlie.
:12:42
Charlie is the dog that will warm your legs, in the cold winter nights.
:12:45
Two days after the mushroom sinks,
:12:47
Charlie's fur will fall down, and he will look like a mouse.
:12:53
Say, dad - do you think anyone can tell the future?
:13:00
Eh, dad?
:13:03
I think the past is much more interesting than the future.
:13:06
We have one, in the class, that knows what will happen in the future.
:13:12
Who's that?
:13:14
You don't know her. A Russian, kind of weird.
:13:18
With purple eyes.
:13:19
This is the first time you're talking about girls in this house.
:13:23
You know, when I was your age,
:13:26
my dream was to know what everybody's thinking about me.
:13:28
I'd lie for hours in bed, trying to imagine
:13:31
what each and every one of the kids thinks about me.
:13:34
Until this day I keep dreaming about knowing what others are thinking.
:13:39
Mainly, I'd like to know what my inmates are thinking while I...
:13:42
beat the hell out of them.
:13:44
I'm not talking about the thoughts they have when they think they're not guilty
:13:48
but about what they're thinking when they see my hand
:13:51
smacking on their face at 120 kmh.
:13:56
What are they thinking?

prev.
next.