:11:00
MAN 9: Freddie said something
about burying the king.
:11:03
MAN 8:
Is that in the play?
:11:11
[CHURCH BELL RINGING]
:11:13
[WOMAN CRYING]
:11:22
PACINO: Here it goes. This is it.
KIMBALL: This is the crunch.
:11:26
PACINO: Now we can say Richard
is the most powerful man at this point...
:11:33
...alive.
:11:34
All of us have cause to wail
the dimming of our shining star.
:11:39
KIMBALL:
The crisis is...
:11:41
...are they going to live by the words
that they spoke to the king...
:11:46
... or are they not?
Is the peace going to hold?
:11:49
I hope the king made peace
with all of us...
:11:52
...and that compact is firm
and true in me.
:11:57
- And so in me.
- And so say I.
:12:00
Then go we to determine...
:12:02
...who they shall be
that shall post to Ludlow.
:12:05
Who is going to go to Ludlow
to get the young prince...
:12:08
...and bring him back to be king?
:12:12
Who 's gonna do it?
:12:14
And Buckingham says,
"Whoever does do it...
:12:19
...we go along too."
:12:20
SPACEY: Whoever journeys to the Prince,
let not us two stay at home.
:12:24
Buckingham decides politically
to align himself with Richard.
:12:29
He does everything for him
in order to...
:12:31
...help him, obviously wanting
to help himself.
:12:35
When I am king...
:12:37
...claim thou of me
the earldom of Hereford...
:12:40
...and the moveables whereof
the king my brother was possess'd.
:12:45
SPACEY: Buckingham is like
the secretary of state.
:12:48
Like the guys who did
the Iran-Contra stuff, the dirty work.
:12:52
PACINO: Mm-hm.
- Propped up the king.
:12:53
PACINO: Without Buckingham,
there's no Richard as king.
:12:57
- Right. He couldn't do it alone.
- Mm-hm.
:12:59
But then, they never can.