:05:00
Good-bye, then.
:05:02
- How can I thank you?
- There's no need.
:05:06
If you really want
to thank me...
:05:08
I'll take some eggs to make
a nice omelette for my squire.
:05:11
Take whatever you want.
It's all yours.
:05:13
Thank you!
:05:15
I'll take two-- six.
All right? I'll make a nice omelette.
:05:19
Good-bye, Eleonora!
My regards, Princess.
:05:24
Farewell.
:05:26
Here I am, Ferruccio!
Tonight's special: omelette!
:05:31
All camels here!
:05:41
- Where is this house?
- Turn left. We're almost there.
:05:45
Is your uncle sleeping with us?
:05:48
He's lived in the hotel for 30 years.
He's the head maitre.
:05:51
He's lending us the house.
He uses it for storage.
:05:54
There. We're here.
:05:57
That's Robin Hood,
my uncle's horse.
:05:59
Here's my uncle's buggy
and my uncle's house.
:06:01
And inside is my uncle.
:06:04
Hello, dear uncle! Here we are!
Hurry, it's late.
:06:07
Here we are.
The car broke down!
:06:15
Uncle!
:06:22
- Barbarians.
- Who were they?
:06:24
- Barbarians.
- Why didn't you cry for help?
:06:26
Silence is
the most powerful cry.
:06:29
Is he your poet friend?
:06:31
My name is Ferruccio.
I'm also an upholsterer.
:06:35
Here you are. It's an old storehouse
full of odds and ends.
:06:39
An old passion--
an odd and end in itself!.
:06:42
What's all this stuff for?
:06:45
You can stay as long as you want.
It's not easy to be a waiter.
:06:49
That's the bed.
Legend has it Garibaldi slept there.
:06:52
Nothing is more necessary
than the unnecessary.
:06:55
Barbarians.
:06:56
The town hall is on Via Sestani,
to the right after the colonnade.