• last year
"The Thin Blue Line," released in 1995, is a British sitcom created and written by Ben Elton. The show is set in the fictional English town of Gasforth and follows the comedic antics of the local police force. Starring Rowan Atkinson as Inspector Raymond Fowler, the series portrays the humorous day-to-day activities and relationships of the officers, including the strict Sergeant Patricia Dawkins (played by Serena Evans) and the dim-witted Constable Kevin Goody (played by James Dreyfus). Known for its witty dialogue and satirical take on police procedures, "The Thin Blue Line" combines slapstick humor with sharp social commentary, making it a beloved classic in British television comedy.

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Transcript
00:00Good evening everybody. You know, sometimes police officers are called upon to restrain
00:09activities of which they personally approve. At such times, stern duty must be our master.
00:17Because above all, the police must obey orders. Even if some orders, as we shall see, are
00:25like the instructions for the timer of an eight-day video recorder. Extremely difficult
00:32to follow. Well, I'm off then. I said, I'm off then. I said, I'm off then. Patricia,
01:00you are demeaning the good name of Gaspeth Police Force. I don't give a donkey's doodah
01:04for the Gaspeth Police Force. You do give a donkey's doodah. I don't give a donkey's
01:09doodah and I'm going. Patricia, I forbid you to go. Please, Raymond, don't forbid me. I'm
01:17a bit late and I just haven't got time to roll around on the floor laughing till I'm
01:20physically sick. But you are a policewoman. No, I'm not. I'm an anarchist. For the next
01:26two weeks, I'm a crazy, wild-eyed child of the forest. I am dedicating my life. Your
01:33holiday? My holiday to the travelling road protesters known as the Dongers. And my name
01:42is not Patricia. It's Squirrel. Squirrel Baggins. Oh, heavens and horlicks, Patricia. Gaspeth
01:52needs a bypass. And you won't stop it by frolicking about in the woods, calling yourself
01:57Troll or Gonk or Nutkin the Sweet Little Tree-Dwelling Imp. Well, I had to try. We do not inherit
02:07the earth from our parents. We borrow it from our children. We don't have any children.
02:13Yes, I am aware of that. But the fact that you are a one-bonk-a-year man does not relieve
02:21me of my responsibility to preserve the environment for future generations. You've changed since
02:27you became a Donger. I feel I hardly know you, Squirrel. Now, if you'll excuse me, I
02:35shall return to my newspaper. Well done. Carry on, carry on. Now, as I'm sure you're
02:52all aware, the whole town is agog with talk of this new bypass. From road rage to road
02:58protest, anything to do with cars seems to provoke people's passions in a quite extraordinary
03:04manner. I'll find him. I swear I'll find him. I've seen some criminal swine in my years
03:12as a copper. I have witnessed some vile and horrendous deeds. But this, this has left
03:19me sad and sickened. Good heavens, Inspector Grimm, what on earth could have happened?
03:23Some maniac has dinged my car. Not the Nissan Micra with the go-faster Kleenexes on the
03:31back shelf. Yes, yes, I think he's scratched the paint. I can't tell till I get a magnifying
03:39glass out and have a proper look. But we were both pulling up at the lights and the vile,
03:45despicable criminal scraped along my side. Well, perhaps you were in his lane. Perhaps
03:54you scraped him. What did you say? Well, I was just... I am a superb driver. Were you
04:07changing lanes? Yes, and I indicated. Nonetheless, you were changing lanes while approaching
04:11a traffic light. I have just told you, I am a superb driver. But did you get his number?
04:20Well, how could I? I was re-tuning the radio when it happened. I'll tell you though, if
04:26I hadn't had a cup of coffee in the other hand, I'd have given chase. Here's a thought,
04:32sir. There's security cameras all over town. Perhaps your dinger's been caught on video.
04:36Well done, Boyle. Requisition all tapes county-wide. This insane maniac must be stopped before
04:45he can scratch again. So, as I was saying, roads and cars are areas where passions run
04:52deep. And there can be no deeper passions than amongst the environmentalists of the
04:57Donga tribe. Sergeant Dawkins has joined them for her holiday, hasn't she? I think it's
05:02great. Yes, me too. I wonder if she's had her nipples pierced yet. Be quiet, goody.
05:13It's not compulsory, is it? Oh, no, no. It's just that when they're cavorting naked in
05:19a haze of marijuana, it gives them somewhere to hang their keys. Yes, well, nipples aside.
05:28I mean, um, I mean, um, I mean, um, um, I don't know what I mean, actually. Where were
05:37we? Preparing to police the destruction of the planet, sir. Aye, really, Constable. I
05:42do tire of this leftist hectoring. Have you read the Police Code of Common Purpose recently?
05:47Of course, sir. Every day. Can't put it down. Then you'll be aware that it says that our
05:52job is to enforce the law, not to enforce the law if we happen to think it's a nice
05:57one. These environmentalists may have admirable intentions, but being decent and fair and
06:03honest doesn't necessarily make a person right, Habib. If it did, Rolf Harris would be Prime
06:10Minister. Now, in order to prepare ourselves for the tactics of these dongers, I intend
06:17to employ a role-playing technique. We will create a scenario and act out the parts. Acting?
06:24How exciting. Does that mean I can call you darling? Only if you wish to spend the rest
06:33of your career putting out traffic cones on the M25, laddie. Now then, since you seem
06:39so eager to act, Goody, we are going to role-play a protester tied to a tree. Goody, you take
06:45that part. Oh, thank you, sir. I am brilliant at acting. What are you doing, Goody? I'm
06:55doing what you told me, sir. I'm being the tree. I meant to be the protester, besides
07:01which you don't look a bit like a tree. I thought you said you could act. You look like
07:05a plank. Where's your willowy bendiness? I want to be able to picture your gnarled old
07:12trunk. I beg your pardon, sir. I can do an impression of a plum tree, sir, but it means
07:19taking my trousers off. No, sir. No, bless you. Thank you. I will be the tree. I will
07:26be the tree. Now, I've just got to get my focus and... Are you doing it now, sir? Yes,
07:39of course I'm doing it now, Habib. You look like a moose. Well, I feel like a tree. Well,
07:46it's very interesting, sir. Well, thank you, Habib. A talking tree. You don't get many
07:50of them. Cleverness is unattractive in a police officer, Habib. I've got an idea, sir. Why
07:57don't you hold my apple? My mum gives me one every day, but I never eat it because I prefer
08:03sweets. Well, thank you. I think it'll work. How about stuffing my pot plant in your jacket,
08:10sir? Good. Give you a bit of foliage. Well, yes. Thank you, glass. I was Accrington Brownie's
08:18origami champion, sir. Look, a swallow. Ah, good. Excellent. Excellent. There you go.
08:28Role-playing is the key to modern training and props are important. So, I am now a totally
08:33convincing tree. Totally, sir. If I was a duck, I'd lift me leg. Yes, thank you, Habib.
08:40Thank you. Now, Goody, you be an angry protester. I won't. I don't want to. I hate you. I hate
08:47you. Goody, I didn't mean protest about just anything. Oh. Now, get hold of that rope and
08:54pretend to tie yourself to me. Yes. And remember, you are an environmental protester. Yes. Come
08:59on. Yes. My womb is the earth. My breast milk its rivers. I am the she-goddess-led boss.
09:13What insane sausage sandwich are you saying? I am being a protester. When I was a cadet,
09:20we policed a no-nuke demo and a gang of women sang that at us for 15 hours. Yes. We're not
09:26going to sing it here. Get back to your desk. Shall I pretend to untie the pretend knot
09:29I just pretended to tie? Just go. I was just trying to make it more real. Sir, sir, I can
09:36tell you how to deal with a chained person. Well, make it quick. My arms are aching. Idea,
09:41sir. Pretend it's autumn. Drop the apple. Maybe you could be a Virginia creeper, sir.
09:48Then you can lean against the wall. Just get on with it, lads. Well, yes, yes. You see,
09:52as a young constable in London, I was party to a very regrettable incident involving a
09:58man with no trousers chained to the railings of Buckingham Palace. Good heavens. Was the
10:04fellow protesting? I should think I was, sir. I was getting married that morning. Anyway,
10:11the police cut me free and I got married wrapped in a souvenir tea towel. So what you're suggesting
10:18is that when we encounter chained protesters, we should call the police. Well, it worked
10:23with me. Oh, for heaven's sake, we are about to police a serious public disorder. I have
10:29created a brilliant evocation of a mighty and towering oak tree. Apple tree. A mighty
10:34and towering apple tree. With one apple. I've had a heavy windfall. I'm sorry, sir. It's
10:41just more common these days for the protesters to remain up the tree in their dwellings.
10:45Really, Kevin should be nestling in your foliage. Perhaps if he was to sit on your shoulders,
10:52then Frank and I can try and get him down. Yes, you may be right there, Habib. Certainly
10:56worth a try. Constable Goody, get up on my desk, please. Yes, yes. Feet apart. Come on.
11:02Yes, can't Constable Habib do this? I'm not sticking my head in there, Kevin. No, I mean
11:07you get your leg over, Inspector Fowler. Goody, Constable Habib is a woman of the opposite
11:14sex. If I'm going to get between anybody's legs, it's going to be a man's. Come on, boy.
11:20Spread your haunches. Fowler, don't bend my curly whirly, please. Mind out for my love
11:29blob. Now, Goody is the protester. I am the tree. Habib and Gladstone, how are you, the
11:38police, going to get him down? I'll come down. I'll come down. When our next door neighbour,
11:43Cat, gets stranded in a tree, the old woman always puts a saucer of milk at the bottom
11:48to tempt a dog. See, and you think the same technique might work with committed environmental
11:54activists. Well, maybe if we add some biscuits. I could make some fudge. You know, you're
11:58going quite bold here, you know. Oh, really? This is quite absurd. None of you are able
12:02to respond at all to the simplest of role-playing techniques. I'm going to put you back on your
12:06desk, Goody. Yes, OK. Well, mind my gonks. I can't keep you up all day. Actually, you
12:11know, the feeling of someone's ears on your inner thighs isn't entirely unpleasant. So
12:18that's the trick, then, is it, sir? Just wait around till the tree gets tired. Smarty pants
12:23gets no thanks, Habib. Clever clogs get scragged in the bogs. Well, we learnt in training that
12:30the only way to get these tree dwellers down is to attach a locked line to them and gently
12:35tease them down. Right. Well, in that case, I will be the tree dweller this time. Gladstone,
12:40would you kindly be a tree? Oh, yes, sir. Not your plum tree, not your plum tree. No,
12:46just come here and hoist me up. Oh, OK, sir. Come along, come along. Now, somebody get
12:51hold of one end of the rope. Hand it up to me. Thank you. Goody, you get hold of the
12:55other end. Yes, yes. Now, pull it and gently tease me. Excuse me? Look, I can't stay up
13:06here all day, laddie. I've got a large constable between my legs. Tease me, tease me. All right,
13:12OK. OK. What's the difference between Inspector Fowler and the canteen cabbage? What? The
13:18cabbage once had a bit of life in it. I'm afraid I can't take credit for that one, sir.
13:25It was Constable Habib's. Thanks a lot, Habib. Goody, and here's one Gary Boyle made up.
13:30No, I didn't. What's the difference between the manager of Barclays having a fight and
13:34Inspector Fowler having a conversation? Well, one's a warring banker, the other one's a
13:39boring... It worked! He's coming down! Goody, I meant tease as in pull the rope, not tease
13:50as in run a very serious risk of being charged. Honestly, I've done my best for you lot. You
13:57began this briefing totally and utterly unprepared, and you complete it slightly less prepared
14:03than that. Well, the coach leaves for the protest at 11.30. Good luck, try to keep
14:09your tempers, disport yourselves with dignity, and above all, try not to arrest Sergeant
14:14Dawkins. Dismissed. Tools of the road, lovely, that's what we are. Oh, Mrs. Soft, we need
14:21this bypass. Blimey, if I want a copper and allowed to park on the pavement and drive
14:25up one-way streets, I don't think I'd even bother owning a car. The way to reduce traffic
14:30is to get people to share their cars. I'm not sharing my car with anyone, especially
14:35veggie environmentalists. I don't want some bean-eating greenie blowing off into my leatherette.
14:47What are you lurking about for, Kevin? Oh, nothing. Well, get on the bus then. Well,
14:53actually, I've got something under my jacket that I'd quite like to show you, but I think
14:58I'll wait until the swelling goes down. I shall speak to your mother. Oh, God, no,
15:03don't you kill me. You see, the thing is, I've got a new belly button. A new belly
15:10button? Well, as good as. I've had it pierced. No. I was very influenced by these road protesters.
15:22No more Mr. Nice Guy. No, no. I'm young, I'm virile, and I've got a bright red swollen
15:29belly button to prove it. Didn't it hurt? Well, yes, I did feel a bit of a prick. But
15:37it will be worth it if you're so impressed with it that you drag me back to your place
15:42and you give me a right flipping scene. Kevin, you could staple your belly button to a double-decker
15:49bus and I still wouldn't give you a scene to. Quite frankly, I'd rather get my leg over
15:54a dead halibut. So you'll think about it then? No, Kevin, you really should forget about
16:00me. There's lots of nice girls out there, you know. Good-looking bloke like you. Swollen
16:06belly button. You could take your pick. Get out there. Lean on people. Call in favours.
16:18Bend the rules if necessary. And watch yourselves. What we had hoped was a simple ding has now
16:25been confirmed as a scratch. We are dealing with a scratcher. A vicious, immoral, imbalanced
16:35maniac. Inspector Grim, could I have a word please? Well, be quick. Don't fanny about.
16:39Of course. I've no time for fannying about or otherwise. Fanny about on someone else's
16:45time, not mine, because I haven't got any. Find someone who's got time to fanny about
16:50and fanny about with them. I haven't, mate, so fannying about with me is out. Look, Derek,
16:56you're clearly late for your lobotomy. I'll come back later. Very funny, Raymond. Tres
17:02droly. And while you're taking the crumble, society piddles. I mean, while you're taking
17:08the piddle, society crumbles. Derek, listen. Listen. I've had a letter from the chief constable
17:13warning us of an MI5 undercover operation in this area. Apparently they're infiltrating
17:18these road protesters. Hardly James Bond, is it? From dinner jackets and kalashnikovs
17:24to anoraks and jam jars full of cold urine. I haven't got time, Raymond. I am involved
17:32in serious place work. If you get in the way, I'm responsible. Your cock up, my arse.
17:43Oh, I'm sorry, Grim. I thought you might be interested in the fact that Parliament
17:47is allowing the authority of the police to be usurped by secret and unaccountable organisations.
17:53You're not listening to me, Fowler. Let me spell it out. Someone has dinged my motor.
18:01Inspector Grim, kindly keep your personal emotions under control. My personal emotions?
18:07Oh, my. I'm not the one whose bird would rather spend the night with a bunch of flea-bitten
18:12criminal hippies than sleep with her bloke. If you're referring to Sergeant Dawkins, she
18:18is not sleeping with me in order to preserve the planet. Blimey. She must be desperate
18:26to come up with an excuse like that. My Tina just says she's got a headache.
18:34Trees, not roads! Trees, not roads! Trees, not roads! Trees, not roads! Trees, not roads!
18:48Now, these demonstrators play by pretty rough rules, so we've got to be tough. Tougher than
18:53a gravel sandwich. Excuse me. Stop that, you swine. You have no right to use force.
19:02I shall arrest the pair of you. Are you all right, Patricia? Thanks, scum.
19:08Didn't realise there were any decent pigs left. Just checking. Carry on, you men. Carry on.
19:18Come here! All going well, Inspector? I don't know. I haven't found her yet.
19:27You can't kill the spirit. She's like a mountain. She's big and strong.
19:34She goes on and on and on. You can't kill the spirit.
19:39All right, miss. Move along now. Move along. I'm chained to a tree. And I've thrown away
19:45the key. How can I move along, pig? Yes, of course. Hello, Mr Thiccy.
19:54Now, I hope you've told your men to be as gentle as possible. Particularly to the women.
20:01Particularly to the blonde women. Five foot six, blue eyes, sometimes chew their lower lip.
20:07Those sort of women. Go on, pig, get her. Unhand this tree, you eco-Nazis!
20:16Excuse me? Stop! Stop! I'll handle this. My name's Elf. Elf. It's a beautiful name.
20:26My name's Kevin. Patricia, come down this instant. I will not. The earth needs me.
20:35Why are you doing this, Kevin? Did you join the police to fight for justice or to strut about in a nice uniform?
20:43Well, it was a bit of both, really. Then join us, Kevin. Chain yourself to me.
20:48Help me protect our children. You're making an absolute fool of yourself, Patricia.
20:54My name is Squirrel Baggins. Giving an alias to the police is an extremely serious matter.
21:00It is not a criminal offence to take an assumed name. It is if it's Squirrel Baggins.
21:07You can't kill the spirit. She's like a mountain.
21:15Now, I'm going to attach this rope to you. Get back! Get back, you fascists!
21:21Patricia, are you all right? Police brutality! Police brutality!
21:26Stand back, pig. Aren't there any burglars and muggers out there?
21:34Or does the public pay you to defend it from beautiful, wounded woodland nymphs?
21:40Let me down! Let me down at once! If you don't, you will leave me no choice but to arrest you.
21:58Right, that's it. You're under arrest. Come along with me.
22:05She goes on and on and on and on...
22:09What do you think you're doing?
22:11My name's not Kevin. It's Pixie. I'm protecting the planet. And I think I might be on here.
22:20Dereliction of duty is an offence, Pixie. Even in the magic forest.
22:26I thought you lot were supposed to be against the exploitation of dumb creatures.
22:30Yes.
22:33I don't even know your name.
22:35That's right, Patricia. Get the swine's name. Well done.
22:38What are names? I am known by my deeds. I am the Green Avenger. The one that bypass builders fear most.
22:46They'll have to build a bypass just to get round his head.
22:50Most people call me... Stalin.
22:54My name is Squirrel Baggins.
22:57Squirrel?
22:58Yes, Stalin.
23:00I came here to protect things of great beauty.
23:03But I never dreamed I would end up protecting something as beautiful as you.
23:08Oh.
23:10I have a woodland hideaway. Perfect for a squirrel. You can rest and perhaps nibble on my nuts.
23:17Come with me now. Deep. Deep into the forest. And I will show you my beautiful bender.
23:24Patricia!
23:26Raymond, he means his secret dwelling made from boughs of fallen wood. Don't you, Stalin?
23:31Well, I can certainly show you that as well, if you like.
23:39Ours is not to reason why, Habib. Ours is but to do and...
23:45Get suspended from a tree by the dongers.
23:50Well, you've all done very well today. And acted with great restraint.
23:56What we must remember is that these people are deeply frustrated.
24:00Yes, I know how they feel.
24:03Some crusty called me a fascist. Me!
24:06I said, listen, mate, I've had skinheads shove dog drool through my litter box.
24:10Well said, Constable. And did he slink away suitably cowed?
24:14No. He said he hadn't called me a racist. He'd called me a fascist.
24:19Which is an authoritarian opposed to democracy and liberalism.
24:22Ah. And what did you say to that?
24:24Well, I was a bit stumped, quite frankly. So I said, shoot your mouth, you pompous git.
24:28And I nicked him.
24:31Those years at Accrington School Debating Society, not entirely wasted then.
24:36I remembered skinheads putting dog drool through our litter box.
24:40One day I heard it happening, so I opened my window and I emptied a full baby's potty on him.
24:45And did he ever come back again?
24:47He had to. It was a postman.
24:50What a world.
24:53Sometimes I wish I could just go and live somewhere on Radio 4.
24:58Oh, well, I'll be wending my sad, lonely, weary way.
25:03Dismissed.
25:06Goodnight, everybody.
25:08I think you should be very proud of Sergeant Dawkins, sir.
25:15She's standing up for what she believes.
25:18Suffering discomfort and cold.
25:21It'll be horrible out there in the woods tonight.
25:24Yes, that's true, isn't it?
25:27Thank you, Habib. You've made me see things differently.
25:31A knight or two shivering in a forest and she'll soon come running back.
25:37Well, I'm going home for a nice cup of Horlicks.
25:42I rather doubt Patricia will get anything warm and satisfying inside her tonight.
25:48Oh, what am I doing?
26:05This is terrible.
26:08Squirrel, we're wood folk.
26:12Free spirits. We aren't chained by society.
26:16We reject their roads and we reject their conventions.
26:19They can't make us small and guilty like them.
26:23That's a sort of nice way of asking for a bonk, isn't it?
26:28Squirrel, I am nature.
26:31A savage, an earth creature, are you?
26:36Well, I am a member of the National Trust.
26:38Then act like a member of the National Trust.
26:43Provide me with unhindered access to your areas of outstanding natural beauty.
26:54Patricia!
26:55Come on, Squirrel.
26:57You've been avoiding Earth movie equipment all day.
27:00I've got one set of Earth movie equipment you won't want to protest about.
27:16Stallion, if you don't mind that we didn't...
27:22It was too soon. I couldn't.
27:25Ah, that's OK, babes.
27:27There's nothing I like more than spending a night with a bird who's desperate for it,
27:31but is too uptight to admit it.
27:33See you. I've got a world to save.
27:42I'm not desperate for it.
27:45Walk a mile, rest a while, we're two miles from home.
27:48Three miles from home, we're three miles from home.
27:52We'll walk a mile, we'll rest a while, we're two miles from home.
27:56We play by the rules.
27:58They are destroying the Earth.
28:01We need to fight.
28:03Peaceful protest isn't working.
28:06We must destroy the destroyer.
28:11I'll show you how to make bombs.
28:13We can burn their death machines.
28:16Get stones, bricks, clubs, knives.
28:19This time, when they come with their security men and their pigs,
28:24we'll be ready.
28:27You can't do that, you bloody idiot.
28:30They'll bring in tear gas. Riot police.
28:33What will you do then?
28:36I can get guns if you want them.
28:40Mr Stallion, I am a police officer,
28:44and you are under arrest for incitement to riot and violence.
28:48Dream on, babes.
28:50No pig will ever take me.
28:54Will you follow me?
28:57If you do, you'll be following him to jail, I'm afraid.
29:01You, sir, are under arrest.
29:03Another pig. Ha!
29:08Now, be careful. I've been trained.
29:14Thanks. We'll drink it later.
29:17Ha!
29:20All right, then. Come on.
29:23Come on.
29:33Ah!
29:39So you've finally bonked me, babe.
29:42I knew you would.
29:45I brought your breakfast, Patricia.
29:50I had to do it, but I hate myself.
29:54He was so wild, so strong.
29:57You didn't bonk a donger.
29:59Only on the head.
30:02And then I arrested him.
30:04But I still admire him.
30:06He cares about the future and he'll go to prison for his beliefs.
30:10I fear not, Patricia.
30:12I fear not, Patricia.
30:14Mr Stallion is free.
30:17Thank you, Habib.
30:19Yes, sir.
30:21On the grounds that he, like us, is in the employ of Her Majesty.
30:25What?
30:30Colton, MI5.
30:33Babes.
30:35A secret agent?
30:37One of Britain's elite.
30:39Britain's elite?
30:41Throughout the Cold War, you were run by the KGB.
30:45There's a sort of gay-sexualist dating agency for grumpy alcoholics.
30:50Burgess Maclean, Philby Blunt,
30:53the fifth man, the sixth man, the eighth man from the left.
30:57If you told them the time of the last coach to Croydon,
31:00they'd have flogged it to Moscow for a bottle of scotch and a copy of Zipper.
31:04Go on. Clear off.
31:06No. I want to know what he was doing.
31:08Agent provocateur, babes.
31:10Infiltrate the protesters.
31:13Penetrate them, if possible.
31:17Identify the hotheads and provoke them into violent action.
31:21What about people's beliefs?
31:23Is this chick for real?
31:25You're nothing but an oily little sneak and a coward.
31:28My boyfriend Raymond is twice the man you'll ever be.
31:34And, what's more,
31:37not having sex with him is ten times nicer than not having sex with you!
31:46Yes, well...
31:48Least said, soonest mended, perhaps.
31:51Go on. Clear off.
31:53Go and listen to somebody's phone calls.
31:58Ha!
32:07Has he gone? Yes.
32:09Shame. I'd like to have met him.
32:11I must say, it's quite a treat,
32:14having a real-life spy in the station.
32:18Very special breed of men.
32:20Tough, ruthless,
32:22no fannying about.
32:26Oh, sorry, I missed him. I think we might have bonded.
32:29Who's this in this micro in the car park?
32:31Who are you?
32:33Carlton. Am I fine?
32:35It's mine, as it happens.
32:37Grim, CID. It's a lovely motor, don't you think?
32:40You fancy a spin?
32:42You ding my Aston.
32:44Do you drive an Aston Martin?
32:46A dinged Aston Martin, dinged by you.
32:48You ding me! I did not! You ding me!
32:51No way, mate! You ding me!
32:53You learn to drive, why don't you?
32:55You learn to drive! Get some glasses!
32:57Get a hearing aid!
33:02Right.
33:05Look.
33:09Maybe we should just exchange names and addresses.
33:35Aston Martin
33:37Aston Martin
33:38Aston Martin
33:39Aston Martin
33:40Aston Martin
33:41Aston Martin
33:42Aston Martin

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