The Terminal
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:04:00
I have January 3rd.
:04:06
Bring him in.
:04:08
Jake, he has no nationality.
OK? No country.

:04:11
He's a national security risk, according
to my interpretation of Section 2.12.

:04:16
I want you to put him in a detention
center and run a clearance on him.

:04:20
That's all I want.
:04:24
What about a federal prison?
:04:27
What about another airport?
:04:30
Hello? Hello?
:04:35
We're detaining so many people,
there's no room anywhere.

:04:39
- Did you try the FBI?
- I tried everybody. Nobody'll take him.

:04:44
You want me to bring him back
to the terminal?

:04:46
No. From now on, Navorski lives here.
:04:59
The people who are coming here today
will be observing me, inspecting me.

:05:05
But most of all they will be looking
at the way that this airport is run.

:05:09
So let's show them why this is the
number-one airport in the United States.

:05:14
We process about 600 planes a day,
:05:18
with a processing time
of 37 minutes per plane,

:05:20
about 60 seconds per passenger...
:05:22
...to be brought into the country.
:05:25
We keep it as clean as possible.
:05:28
- What do you import?
- Computer software.

:05:30
That's a lot of walnuts.
:05:32
Yeah.
My mother-in-law loves these things.

:05:35
Every time I go to Brazil,
I bring her back a bag.

:05:38
- Your mother-in-law?
- Yeah.

:05:40
Mind if I try one?
:05:51
How did you know
those weren't for his mother-in-law?

:05:54
If he's married,
where's his ring?

:05:56
And if he's divorced,
who still talks to their mother-in-law?

:05:59
I'm sorry, but really.
No offence to mother-in-laws, but...


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