1. By the center, quick march!
Copy !req
2. Eyes right!
Copy !req
3. Eyes right!
Copy !req
4. You a bit cheesed off, sir?
Copy !req
5. George, the day this war began
I was cheesed off.
Copy !req
6. Within 10 minutes
of you turning up,
Copy !req
7. I finished the cheese
and moved onto the coffee and cigars.
Copy !req
8. And at this late stage,
I'm in a cab with two lady companions
Copy !req
9. on my way to the Pink Pussycat
in Lower Regent Street.
Copy !req
10. Well because if you
are cheesed off, sir,
Copy !req
11. you know what would cheer you up?
And that's a Charlie Chaplin film.
Copy !req
12. Oh, I love old Chappers.
Don't you, Cap?
Copy !req
13. Unfortunately, no, I don't.
Copy !req
14. I find his films about as funny
as getting an arrow through the neck,
Copy !req
15. and then discovering
that there's a gas bill tied to it.
Copy !req
16. Oh, beg pardon, sir, but come off!
Copy !req
17. His films are ball-beltingly funny.
Copy !req
18. Rubbish.
Copy !req
19. All right, well, let's consult the men
for a casting vote, shall we? Baldrick!
Copy !req
20. - Sir?
- Charlie Chaplin, Baldrick.
Copy !req
21. What do you make of him?
Copy !req
22. Oh, sir, he's as funny as a vegetable
Copy !req
23. that's grown into a rude
and amusing shape, sir.
Copy !req
24. So you agree with me.
Not at all funny.
Copy !req
25. Oh, come on, skipper, play fair!
Copy !req
26. In that last film of his, when he kicked
that fellow in the backside,
Copy !req
27. I thought I'd die!
Copy !req
28. Well, if that's your idea of comedy,
we can provide our own without expending
Copy !req
29. a ha'penny for the privilege.
There, do you find that funny?
Copy !req
30. Well, no, of course not, sir.
But, you see, Chaplin is a genius.
Copy !req
31. He certainly is a genius, George.
Copy !req
32. He invented a way of getting paid
a million dollars a year
Copy !req
33. for wearing a pair of stupid trousers.
Copy !req
34. - Did you find that funny, Baldrick?
- What funny, sir?
Copy !req
35. That funny.
Copy !req
36. No, sir.
And you mustn't do that to me, sir,
Copy !req
37. cos that is
a bourgeois act of repression, sir!
Copy !req
38. - What?
- Haven't you smelt it, sir?
Copy !req
39. There's something afoot in the wind.
Copy !req
40. The huddled masses yearning to be free.
Copy !req
41. Baldrick, have you been
at the diesel oil again?
Copy !req
42. No, sir. I've been supping
the milk of freedom.
Copy !req
43. Already our Russian comrades
are poised on the brink of revolution.
Copy !req
44. And here, too, sir, the huddled
whassernames such as myself, sir,
Copy !req
45. are ready to throw off
the hated oppressors
Copy !req
46. like you and the Lieutenant...
Copy !req
47. Present company excepted, sir.
Copy !req
48. - Go and clean out the latrines.
- Yes, sir. Right away, sir.
Copy !req
49. You see, now, the reason why
Chaplin is so funny
Copy !req
50. is because he's part of
the great British music hall tradition.
Copy !req
51. Oh, yes, the great
British music hall tradition.
Copy !req
52. Two men with incredibly unconvincing
Cockney accents going,
Copy !req
53. "What's up with you, then?"
"What's up with me, then?"
Copy !req
54. "What's up with you, then?"
"I'll tell you what's up with me,
Copy !req
55. "I'm right browned off,
that's what's up with me."
Copy !req
56. "Right browned off?"
Yeah, right, get on with it!
Copy !req
57. Now, sir, that was funny!
You should go on the boards yourself!
Copy !req
58. Thank you, George,
but if you don't mind,
Copy !req
59. I'd rather have my tongue beaten
wafer-thin by a steak tenderiser,
Copy !req
60. and then stapled to the floor
with a croquet hoop.
Copy !req
61. Sir, sir!
Copy !req
62. Sir, it's all over the trenches!
Copy !req
63. - Well, mop it up, then!
- No, sir, the news!
Copy !req
64. The Russian Revolution has started.
Copy !req
65. The masses have risen up
and shot all their knobs.
Copy !req
66. Well, hurrah!
Copy !req
67. Oh, no, the bloody Russians
have pulled out of the war.
Copy !req
68. Hmm, well, we soon saw them off,
didn't we, sir?
Copy !req
69. Miserable, slant-eyed,
sausage-eating swine!
Copy !req
70. The Russians are on our side.
Copy !req
71. - Are they? Oh...
- They've abandoned the Eastern Front.
Copy !req
72. And they've overthrown Nicholas II,
who used to be bizarre.
Copy !req
73. Who used to be the Tsar, Baldrick.
Copy !req
74. The point is that now the Russians
have made peace with the Kaiser,
Copy !req
75. at this very moment, over three-quarters
of a million Germans
Copy !req
76. are leaving the Russian Front
and coming over here,
Copy !req
77. with the express purpose of using
my nipples for target practice.
Copy !req
78. There's only one thing for it.
I'm going to have to desert.
Copy !req
79. And I'm going to do it right now!
Copy !req
80. - Are you leaving us, Blackadder?
- No, sir.
Copy !req
81. Well, I'm relieved to hear it,
Copy !req
82. because I need you to help me shoot
some deserters later on.
Copy !req
83. There have been subversive mutterings
amongst the men.
Copy !req
84. You'll recall the French army last year
at Verdun, where the top echelons
Copy !req
85. suffered from horrendous uprisings
from the bottom.
Copy !req
86. Yes, sir, but surely that was traced
to a shipment of garlic eclairs.
Copy !req
87. Nonsense, Blackadder.
It was bolshiness. Plain bolshiness.
Copy !req
88. And now that the Ruskies
have followed suit,
Copy !req
89. I'm damned if I'm going
to let the same thing happen here.
Copy !req
90. Oh. And what are you
going to do about it, sir?
Copy !req
91. We're going to have a concert party
to boost the men's morale.
Copy !req
92. A concert party? Well, hurrah!
Copy !req
93. Do you fancy an evening
at a concert party, Blackadder?
Copy !req
94. Well, frankly, sir,
I'd rather spend an evening
Copy !req
95. on top of a step ladder in no-man's land
Copy !req
96. smoking endless cigarettes
through a luminous balaclava.
Copy !req
97. Yes, I didn't think
it would be quite your cup of tea.
Copy !req
98. But I do need someone to help me
organise it, you know.
Copy !req
99. Obviously not a tough,
grizzled soldier like yourself.
Copy !req
100. But some kind of damp-eyed
Nancy Boy who'd be prepared
Copy !req
101. to spend the rest of the war
in the London Palladium.
Copy !req
102. Oh. The show's going
to the London Palladium, sir?
Copy !req
103. Oh, yes, of course.
Copy !req
104. It's no good crushing
a revolution over here,
Copy !req
105. only to get back home to Blighty and
find that everybody's wearing overalls
Copy !req
106. and breaking wind
in the palaces of the mighty.
Copy !req
107. - Good point, sir.
- Now the thing is, Blackadder,
Copy !req
108. finding a man to organise
a concert party
Copy !req
109. is going to be damn difficult,
Copy !req
110. so I've come up with rather
a cunning set of questions
Copy !req
111. with which to test
the candidates' suitability for the job.
Copy !req
112. Oh. And what sort of questions
would these be, sir?
Copy !req
113. Well, the first question is,
"Do you like Charlie Chaplin?"
Copy !req
114. Ah.
Copy !req
115. - Dismissed, Lieutenant.
- Right, sir.
Copy !req
116. "Do you like Charlie Chaplin?"
Copy !req
117. Yes, that is a good question
for a candidate,
Copy !req
118. to which my answer would of course be,
"Yes, I love him."
Copy !req
119. Love him, sir.
Particularly the amusing kicks.
Copy !req
120. - That's funny, cos I thought you said...
- Goodbye, George.
Copy !req
121. And the second question is,
"Do you like music hall?"
Copy !req
122. Ah, yes, another good question, sir.
Copy !req
123. Again, my answer would have to be,
"Yes. Absolutely love it."
Copy !req
124. Mmm, yes.
Well, you see, it's my view, Blackadder,
Copy !req
125. that the kind of person who'd answer yes
to both of those questions
Copy !req
126. would be ideal for the job...
Copy !req
127. - Wait a minute!
- What, sir?
Copy !req
128. Why,
without knowing it, Blackadder,
Copy !req
129. you've inadvertently shown me
that you could do the job.
Copy !req
130. Have I, sir?
Copy !req
131. Yes, sir! You have, sir!
Copy !req
132. And I want you to start work
straight away!
Copy !req
133. A couple of shows over the weekend,
Copy !req
134. and if all goes well, we'll start
you off in London, erm, next Monday!
Copy !req
135. Oh, damn.
Copy !req
136. If you need any help fetching
and carrying and backstage and so on,
Copy !req
137. I'll lend you my driver,
if you like. Bob!
Copy !req
138. Driver Parkhurst
reporting for duty, sir!
Copy !req
139. All right, at ease, Bob. Stand easy.
Copy !req
140. - Captain Blackadder, this is Bob.
- Bob?
Copy !req
141. - Good morning, sir.
- Unusual name for a girl.
Copy !req
142. Well, yes, it would be
an unusual name for a girl.
Copy !req
143. But it's a perfectly
straightforward name
Copy !req
144. for a young chap like you, eh, Bob?
Copy !req
145. Now, Bob, I want you to bunk up
with Captain Blackadder
Copy !req
146. for a couple of days, all right?
Copy !req
147. Yes, sir.
Copy !req
148. I think you'll find Bob's just the man
for this job, Blackadder.
Copy !req
149. He has a splendid sense of humor.
Copy !req
150. - He, sir? He? He?
- You see? You're laughing already!
Copy !req
151. All right! Well, now, Bob,
I'll leave you two together.
Copy !req
152. Why don't you get to know each other?
Copy !req
153. Play a game of cribbage, have a smoke,
something like that.
Copy !req
154. They tell me that Captain Blackadder
has rather a good line in roughshag.
Copy !req
155. I'm sure he'd be happy
to fill your pipe. Carry on!
Copy !req
156. So, you're a chap, are you, Bob?
Copy !req
157. Oh, yes, sir.
Copy !req
158. You wouldn't say you were a girl at all?
Copy !req
159. Oh, definitely not, sir!
I understand cricket.
Copy !req
160. I fart in bed! Everything!
Copy !req
161. Well, let me put it another way, Bob.
You are a girl.
Copy !req
162. And you're a girl with
as much talent for disguise
Copy !req
163. as a giraffe in dark glasses
Copy !req
164. trying to get into
a "Polar Bears Only" golf club.
Copy !req
165. Oh, sir, oh, sir,
please don't give me away, sir!
Copy !req
166. I just wanted to be like my brothers
and join up.
Copy !req
167. I want to see how a war is fought,
so badly!
Copy !req
168. Well, you've come
to the right place, Bob.
Copy !req
169. A war hasn't been fought this badly
Copy !req
170. since Olaf the Hairy,
High Chief of all the Vikings,
Copy !req
171. accidentally ordered
80,000 battle helmets
Copy !req
172. with the horns on the inside.
Copy !req
173. I want to do my bit for the boys, sir.
Copy !req
174. - Oh, really?
- I'll do anything, sir!
Copy !req
175. Yes, I'd keep that to yourself,
if I was you.
Copy !req
176. Right, Bob. The second half
starts with Corporals Smith and Johnson
Copy !req
177. - as the Three Silly Twerps.
- All right, sir.
Copy !req
178. The big joke being
there's only two of them...
Copy !req
179. I like that!
That always cracks me up, sir.
Copy !req
180. Followed by Baldrick's
impersonation of Charlie Chaplin.
Copy !req
181. - Yes... Bob, take a telegram.
- Yes, sir.
Copy !req
182. Mr C. Chaplin, Senate Studios,
Hollywood, California. "Congrats. Stop."
Copy !req
183. "Have discovered only person in world
less funny than you. Stop."
Copy !req
184. Name Baldrick. Stop.
Copy !req
185. "Yours, E. Blackadder. Stop."
Copy !req
186. Oh, and put a P.S.
"Please, please, please stop."
Copy !req
187. And then after that we have,
ladies and gentlemen,
Copy !req
188. the highlight of our show.
Copy !req
189. I feel fantastic!
Copy !req
190. Gorgeous Georgina,
the traditional soldiers' drag act.
Copy !req
191. - You look absolutely lovely, sir.
- Oh, psh.
Copy !req
192. Baldrick,
you are either lying, blind or mad.
Copy !req
193. The Lieutenant looks like all soldiers
look on these occasions.
Copy !req
194. About as feminine as W.G. Grace.
Copy !req
195. What are you going to give 'em, George?
Copy !req
196. Well, I thought one or two cheeky gags,
followed by,
Copy !req
197. "She was only the ironmonger's daughter,"
Copy !req
198. "but she knew a surprising amount
about fish as well."
Copy !req
199. Inspired.
Copy !req
200. Well, at least
you made an effort with the dress.
Copy !req
201. What about your costume, Baldrick?
Copy !req
202. - I'm in it, sir!
- I see.
Copy !req
203. So your Charlie Chaplin costume
consists of that hat?
Copy !req
204. Yes, sir. Except, that in this box
Copy !req
205. I have a dead slug
as a brilliant false moustache.
Copy !req
206. Yes. Only quite brilliant, I fear.
Copy !req
207. How, for instance,
are you to attach it to your face?
Copy !req
208. Well, I was hoping to persuade the slug
to cling on, sir.
Copy !req
209. Baldrick, the slug is dead.
Copy !req
210. If it failed to cling onto life,
I see no reason
Copy !req
211. why it should wish to cling onto
your upper lip.
Copy !req
212. Baldrick! Baldrick!
Come on. Slugs are always a problem.
Copy !req
213. What you've got to do is screw
your face up, like this, you see,
Copy !req
214. and then you can clamp it
between your top lip and your nose.
Copy !req
215. What, like this, sir?
Copy !req
216. - That's it, that's it!
- That's... Right.
Copy !req
217. Sir, sir, there's a visitor to see you!
Copy !req
218. Good Lord! Mr Chaplin!
This is indeed an honor!
Copy !req
219. Why, it calls for some sort
of celebration. Baldrick! Baldrick!
Copy !req
220. Sir, that is extraordinary, because...
Copy !req
221. Because... Because, you see,
this isn't Chaplin at all!
Copy !req
222. This is Baldrick!
Copy !req
223. It is! It's me, sir!
Copy !req
224. I know. I know.
I was, in fact, being sarcastic.
Copy !req
225. Oh, I see.
Copy !req
226. Everything goes above your head,
doesn't it, George?
Copy !req
227. You should go to Jamaica
and become a limbo dancer.
Copy !req
228. They love him, sir! We're a hit!
Copy !req
229. Yes, in one short evening,
Copy !req
230. I've become
the most successful impresario
Copy !req
231. since the manager
of the Roman Colosseum
Copy !req
232. thought of putting the Christians
and the lions on the same bill.
Copy !req
233. Sir, some people seemed to think
that I was best. Would you agree?
Copy !req
234. Baldrick, in the Amazonian rainforests,
Copy !req
235. there are tribes of Indians
as yet untouched
Copy !req
236. by civilization who have
developed more convincing
Copy !req
237. Charlie Chaplin impressions than yours.
Copy !req
238. - Oh, thank you very much, sir!
- He's coming off!
Copy !req
239. What do you think, Bob?
One more? God, I love the theatre!
Copy !req
240. It's in my blood and in my soul!
Copy !req
241. Baldrick, put those in some water,
will you?
Copy !req
242. Yes, sir.
Copy !req
243. I need that applause in the same way
that an ostler needs his ostle.
Copy !req
244. Well done, sir!
Copy !req
245. No, really, I was...
Well, I was hopeless.
Copy !req
246. I mean, tell me honestly, sir.
Copy !req
247. - I was, wasn't I?
- Well...
Copy !req
248. No, come on, out with it,
cos I need to know.
Copy !req
249. Really, I was hopeless.
Copy !req
250. - No, well...
- You're trying to be nice,
Copy !req
251. and that's very sweet of you, sir,
Copy !req
252. but please, come on,
I can take it. I was hopeless.
Copy !req
253. George, you were bloody awful.
Copy !req
254. But you can't argue with the box office.
Copy !req
255. Personally, I thought you were
Copy !req
256. the least convincing
female impressionist
Copy !req
257. since Tarzan went through
Jane's handbag and ate her lipstick.
Copy !req
258. But I'm clearly in a minority.
Look out, London! Here we come.
Copy !req
259. - Ah, Captain Darling!
- Ah, Captain Blackadder!
Copy !req
260. I must say,
I had an absolutely splendid evening!
Copy !req
261. Oh. Glad you enjoyed the show.
Copy !req
262. The show? I didn't go to the show.
Copy !req
263. Important regimental business.
Copy !req
264. A lorry-load of paper clips arrive?
Copy !req
265. Two lorry-loads, actually.
Copy !req
266. Ah, welcome to the great director!
Copy !req
267. - Maestro!
- You enjoyed it, sir?
Copy !req
268. Well, it was mostly awful,
Copy !req
269. but I enjoyed the slug balancer.
Copy !req
270. Ah, Private Baldrick, sir.
Copy !req
271. That's right, yes.
Slug fell off a couple of times,
Copy !req
272. but you can't have everything, can you?
Copy !req
273. I'd just suggest a bit more practice,
Copy !req
274. and perhaps a little sparkly costume
for the slug.
Copy !req
275. I'll pass that on, sir.
Copy !req
276. But I do have certain other reasons
for believing the show
Copy !req
277. to be nothing but a triumph!
Copy !req
278. Captain Darling
has your travel arrangements.
Copy !req
279. A ticket to Dover, rooms
at the Ritz, and so forth...
Copy !req
280. - Oh, thank you, sir.
- However...
Copy !req
281. There is one small thing
you might do for me.
Copy !req
282. Yes?
Copy !req
283. Captain Blackadder,
I should esteem it a signal honor
Copy !req
284. if you would allow me
to escort your leading lady
Copy !req
285. to the regimental ball this evening.
Copy !req
286. - My leading lady?
- The fair Georgina.
Copy !req
287. Very amusing.
Copy !req
288. Do you think she'll laugh in my face?
I'm too old, too crusty?
Copy !req
289. Er, no, no, it's just that,
Copy !req
290. as her director,
I'm afraid I could not allow it.
Copy !req
291. I could always find
another director who would allow it!
Copy !req
292. Quite.
Copy !req
293. Well, I'll see what I can do,
Copy !req
294. but I must insist
that she be home by midnight
Copy !req
295. and that there be no hanky-panky,
sir, whatsoever.
Copy !req
296. I shall, of course,
respect your wishes, Blackadder.
Copy !req
297. However, I don't think
you need to be quite so protective.
Copy !req
298. I'm sure she's a girl with a great deal
more spunk than most women you find.
Copy !req
299. Oh, dear me...
Copy !req
300. Absolutely not, sir!
Copy !req
301. It's profoundly immoral
and utterly wrong.
Copy !req
302. I will not do it!
Copy !req
303. We can always find another leading lady.
Copy !req
304. Well, the dress will need a clean.
Copy !req
305. Excellent. Now, the important thing
is that Melchett should
Copy !req
306. under no circumstances realize
that you're a man.
Copy !req
307. Yes. Yes, I understand that.
Copy !req
308. In order to ensure this,
there are three basic rules.
Copy !req
309. One, you must never,
I repeat, never, remove your wig.
Copy !req
310. All right.
Copy !req
311. Second, never say anything.
Copy !req
312. I'll tell him
at the beginning of the evening
Copy !req
313. that you're saving your voice
Copy !req
314. for the opening night in London.
Copy !req
315. Excellent, sir.
And what's the third?
Copy !req
316. The third is most important.
Copy !req
317. Don't get drunk
and let him shag you on the veranda.
Copy !req
318. How do I look, Darling?
Copy !req
319. Girl-bait, sir. Pure bloody girl-bait.
Copy !req
320. Moustache. Bushy enough?
Copy !req
321. Like a privet hedge, sir.
Copy !req
322. Good, because I want to catch
Copy !req
323. a particularly beautiful creature
in this bush tonight!
Copy !req
324. I'm sure you'll be combing women
out of your moustache for weeks, sir!
Copy !req
325. God, it's a spankingly beautiful world.
Copy !req
326. And tonight's my night.
I know exactly what I'll say to her...
Copy !req
327. - "Darling..."
- Yes, sir?
Copy !req
328. - What?
- Erm, I don't know, sir.
Copy !req
329. - Well, don't butt in!
- Sorry, sir.
Copy !req
330. "I want to
make you happy, darling."
Copy !req
331. Well, that's very kind of you, sir.
Copy !req
332. Will you kindly stop interrupting?
Copy !req
333. If you don't listen,
how can you tell me what you think?
Copy !req
334. "I want to make you happy, darling."
Copy !req
335. "I want to build a nest
for your ten tiny toes."
Copy !req
336. "I want to cover every inch
of your gorgeous body"
Copy !req
337. "in pepper and then sneeze
all over you!"
Copy !req
338. Really, sir. I must protest!
Copy !req
339. What is the matter with you, Darling?
Copy !req
340. Well, it's just all so sudden, sir.
Copy !req
341. I mean, the nest bit's fine,
Copy !req
342. but the pepper business
is definitely out!
Copy !req
343. How dare you tell me how I may
or may not treat my beloved Georgina!
Copy !req
344. Georgina?
Copy !req
345. Yes! I'm working out what
I want to say to her this evening.
Copy !req
346. Oh, yes. Of course. Thank God!
Copy !req
347. - All right?
- Yes, sir. Listening, sir.
Copy !req
348. Honestly, Darling,
you really are the most graceless,
Copy !req
349. dim-witted bumpkin I ever met!
Copy !req
350. I don't think you should
say that to her, sir.
Copy !req
351. Where the hell's that George?
It's 3:00 in the morning.
Copy !req
352. He should be careful wandering around
the trench at night
Copy !req
353. with nothing to protect
his honor but a cricket box.
Copy !req
354. - Hello, Captain.
- About time.
Copy !req
355. Where the hell have you been?
Copy !req
356. Oh, I don't know.
It's all been like a dream.
Copy !req
357. My very first ball.
Copy !req
358. The music, the dancing, the champagne.
Copy !req
359. My mind is a mad whirl
of half-whispered conversations,
Copy !req
360. with the promise of indiscretion
ever hanging in the air.
Copy !req
361. Oh, did that old stoat Melchett
try for a snog behind the fruit cup?
Copy !req
362. Certainly not!
Copy !req
363. The General behaved like
a perfect gentleman.
Copy !req
364. We tired the moon with our talking
about everything and nothing.
Copy !req
365. The war, marriage, proposed changes
to the LBW rule.
Copy !req
366. Melchett isn't married, is he?
Copy !req
367. No, no. All his life he's been waiting
to meet the perfect woman.
Copy !req
368. And at last, tonight, he did.
Copy !req
369. Some poor unfortunate
had old walrus face
Copy !req
370. dribbling in her ear all evening,
did she?
Copy !req
371. Well, yes, as a matter of fact I did
Copy !req
372. have to drape a napkin
over my shoulder, yes.
Copy !req
373. George. Are you trying to tell me that
you are the General's perfect woman?
Copy !req
374. Well, yes, I rather think I am.
Copy !req
375. Well, thank God the horny old blighter
didn't ask you to marry him.
Copy !req
376. He did?
Well, how did you get out of that one?
Copy !req
377. Well, to be honest, sir,
I'm not absolutely certain that I did.
Copy !req
378. What?
Copy !req
379. You can't understand
what it was like, sir.
Copy !req
380. You know, the candles, the music,
the huge moustache...
Copy !req
381. - I don't know what came over me.
- You said yes?
Copy !req
382. After all, sir, he is a general.
Copy !req
383. I didn't really feel I could refuse.
Copy !req
384. He might have had me court-martialled!
Copy !req
385. Whereas on the other hand, of course,
Copy !req
386. he's going to give you
the Victoria Cross
Copy !req
387. when he lifts up your frock
on the wedding night
Copy !req
388. and finds himself looking
at the last turkey in the shop.
Copy !req
389. Yes, I... I know it's a mess,
but, you see, he got me squiffy,
Copy !req
390. and then when he looked into my eyes
and said, "Chipmunk, I love you..."
Copy !req
391. "Chipmunk"?
Copy !req
392. Well, it's his special name
for me, you see.
Copy !req
393. He says my nose looks
just like a chipmunk's.
Copy !req
394. Oh, God.
We're in serious, serious trouble here.
Copy !req
395. If the General ever finds out
that Gorgeous Georgina
Copy !req
396. is in fact a strapping six-footer
from the rough end of the trench,
Copy !req
397. he could precipitate
the fastest execution
Copy !req
398. since someone said,
Copy !req
399. "This Guy Fawkes bloke,
do we let him off or what?"
Copy !req
400. Hello? Yes, sir.
Copy !req
401. Straight away, sir.
Copy !req
402. That was your fiancé, Chipmunk!
He wants to see me.
Copy !req
403. If I should die,
think only this of me...
Copy !req
404. I'll be back to get you.
Copy !req
405. Sir, I can explain everything.
Copy !req
406. Can you, Blackadder? Can you?
Copy !req
407. Well... No, sir, not really.
Copy !req
408. I thought not. I thought not.
Copy !req
409. Who can explain the mysteries of love?
Copy !req
410. I'm in love with Georgina, Blackadder.
Copy !req
411. I'm going to marry her on Saturday,
and I want you to be my best man.
Copy !req
412. I don't think that would be
a very good idea, sir.
Copy !req
413. And why not?
Copy !req
414. Because there's something wrong
with your fiancée, sir.
Copy !req
415. Oh, my God, she's not Welsh, is she?
Copy !req
416. No, sir.
Um, it's a terrible story, but true.
Copy !req
417. Just a few minutes ago,
Copy !req
418. Georgina arrived unexpectedly
in my trench.
Copy !req
419. She was literally dancing with joy,
Copy !req
420. as though something wonderful
had happened to her.
Copy !req
421. - Makes sense.
- Unfortunately, she was in such a daze
Copy !req
422. she danced straight through the trench,
and out into no-man's land.
Copy !req
423. I tried to stop her,
Copy !req
424. but before I could say
"Don't tread on a mine",
Copy !req
425. - she trod on a mine.
- No! No!
Copy !req
426. Well, I say a mine,
it was more a cluster of mines.
Copy !req
427. And she was blown into smithereens.
Copy !req
428. As she rocketed up into the air,
Copy !req
429. she said something
I couldn't quite catch,
Copy !req
430. er, totally incomprehensible
to me, something like,
Copy !req
431. "Tell him his little chipmunk will
love him forever"? I mean, I dunno...
Copy !req
432. Oh! Oh!
Copy !req
433. - How? How? How?
- Oh, it's heartbreaking, sir.
Copy !req
434. - I'm sorry, sir.
- Oh, well, can't be helped.
Copy !req
435. Can't be helped.
Copy !req
436. - That's jolly bad luck, sir.
- Hey-ho.
Copy !req
437. And of course,
on top of everything else,
Copy !req
438. without your leading lady,
you won't be able to put on the show.
Copy !req
439. So, no show, no London Palladium.
Copy !req
440. On the contrary.
I'm simply intending to rename it.
Copy !req
441. The Georgina Melchett Memorial Show.
Copy !req
442. Oh, no! Georgina was the only thing
that made the show come alive.
Copy !req
443. - Apart from her it was all awful!
- Awful!
Copy !req
444. Yes, you'll never find
another girl like Georgina by tomorrow.
Copy !req
445. Oh, it's funny you should say that, sir,
because I think I already have.
Copy !req
446. - Who is she?
- Who is she?
Copy !req
447. So, come on, sir, who is she?
Copy !req
448. Well, that's the problem, isn't it?
I haven't a bloody clue!
Copy !req
449. The only attractive woman around here
is carved out of stone, called Venus,
Copy !req
450. and is standing in a fountain
in the middle of the town square
Copy !req
451. - with water coming out of her armpits.
- So, we're a bit stuck.
Copy !req
452. - Morning, chaps!
- Morning, Bob.
Copy !req
453. Morning, Bob.
Copy !req
454. You can say that again, George.
Copy !req
455. We're in the stickiest situation
since Sticky the stick-insect got stuck
Copy !req
456. on a sticky bun.
Copy !req
457. - We are in trouble.
- Not any longer, sir!
Copy !req
458. May I present my cunning plan?
Copy !req
459. Don't be ridiculous, Baldrick!
Can you sing? Can you dance?
Copy !req
460. Or are you offering to be sawn in half?
Copy !req
461. I don't think those things are important
in a modern marriage, sir.
Copy !req
462. I offer simple home cooking.
Copy !req
463. Baldrick, our plan is to find
a new leading lady for our show.
Copy !req
464. What is your plan?
Copy !req
465. My plan is that
I will marry General Melchett.
Copy !req
466. I am the other woman.
Copy !req
467. Oh, well, congratulations, Baldrick!
I hope you'll be very happy.
Copy !req
468. I will, sir, because when
I get back from honeymoon,
Copy !req
469. I will be a member of the aristocracy,
and you will have to call me "milady".
Copy !req
470. What happened to your
revolutionary principles, Baldrick?
Copy !req
471. I thought you hated the aristocracy.
Copy !req
472. I'm working to bring down the system
from within, sir.
Copy !req
473. I'm a sort of a frozen horse.
Copy !req
474. Trojan horse, Bald rick.
Copy !req
475. Anyway, I can't see what's so stupid
about marrying into wealth and money,
Copy !req
476. and not having to sleep in a puddle.
Copy !req
477. Baldrick, no.
Copy !req
478. It's the worst plan
since Abraham Lincoln said,
Copy !req
479. "Oh, I'm sick of kicking around
the house tonight,"
Copy !req
480. "let's go take in a show!"
Copy !req
481. For a start,
General Melchett is in mourning
Copy !req
482. for the woman of his dreams.
Copy !req
483. He's unlikely to be in the mood to marry
Copy !req
484. a two-legged badger wrapped
in a curtain.
Copy !req
485. Secondly, we are looking
for a great entertainer,
Copy !req
486. and you're the worst entertainer
since St Paul the Evangelist
Copy !req
487. toured Palestine
with his trampoline act.
Copy !req
488. No, we'll have to find somebody else.
Copy !req
489. What about Corporal Cartwright, sir?
Copy !req
490. Corporal Cartwright
looks like an orangutan.
Copy !req
491. I've heard of the bearded lady,
but the all-over body hair lady
Copy !req
492. frankly just isn't on.
Copy !req
493. - Willis?
- Too short.
Copy !req
494. - Petheridge?
- Too old.
Copy !req
495. - Ta plow?
- Too dead.
Copy !req
496. Oh, this is hopeless.
There just isn't anyone.
Copy !req
497. What am I doing? Bob!
Copy !req
498. - Sir?
- Sir, what a brilliant idea!
Copy !req
499. Bob, can you think of anyone
who could be our leading lady?
Copy !req
500. What do you think, Bob?
One more?
Copy !req
501. No, George.
Always leave them hungry.
Copy !req
502. Congratulations, Bob. I have to admit,
I thought you were bloody marvelous.
Copy !req
503. Thank you, sir.
Copy !req
504. Permission to slip into something
more uncomfortable, sir?
Copy !req
505. Permission granted.
Copy !req
506. Oh, sir, it's gonna be wonderful!
Copy !req
507. Not just for me,
but for my little partner, Graham.
Copy !req
508. - Doing our Charlie Chaplin
Copy !req
509. - all round the world.
- Yes.
Copy !req
510. From Shaftesbury Avenue
to the Cote d'Azur, they'll be saying,
Copy !req
511. "I like that little black one,
but who's that berk he's sitting on?"
Copy !req
512. - I'm not with you, sir.
- Of course not.
Copy !req
513. But don't worry, we'll have years
in luxury hotels for me to explain.
Copy !req
514. Now you two, get packing, get packing!
Copy !req
515. The boat-train leaves at 6:00,
and we're going to be on it!
Copy !req
516. - Blackadder.
- Ah, Darling! Everything all right?
Copy !req
517. - Oh, yes.
- Got the tickets?
Copy !req
518. - Oh, yes.
- Ah.
Copy !req
519. - Blackadder!
- Oh, hi, General. Enjoy the show?
Copy !req
520. Don't be ridiculous.
Copy !req
521. The worst evening
I've ever spent in my life!
Copy !req
522. - I'm sorry?
- Will you stand still
Copy !req
523. when I'm talking to you?
Copy !req
524. If by a man's works shall ye know him,
Copy !req
525. then you are a steaming pile
of horse manure!
Copy !req
526. But surely, sir,
the show was a triumph?
Copy !req
527. A triumph? The Three Twerps
were one twerp short, again.
Copy !req
528. The slug balancer seems now to be doing
some feeble impression of Buster Keaton,
Copy !req
529. and worst of all,
the crowning turd in the water pipe,
Copy !req
530. that revolting drag act at the end!
Copy !req
531. - Drag act?
- Yes! Poor Bob Parkhurst
Copy !req
532. being made to look a total arse!
Copy !req
533. With that thin reedy voice
and the stupid, effeminate dancing!
Copy !req
534. - Ah...
- So, the show's canceled. Permanently.
Copy !req
535. But what about the men's morale, sir?
Copy !req
536. With the Russians
out of the war and everything.
Copy !req
537. Oh, for goodness' sake,
Copy !req
538. Blackadder, have you been
living in a cave?
Copy !req
539. The Americans joined
the war yesterday!
Copy !req
540. So how is that going to
improve the men's morale, sir?
Copy !req
541. Oh, because, you gibbering imbecile,
they've brought with them
Copy !req
542. the largest collection of
Charlie Chaplin films in existence!
Copy !req
543. Oh, I've lost patience with you.
Fill him in, Darling.
Copy !req
544. Yes, sir.
Copy !req
545. We received a telegram this morning from
Mr Chaplin himself, at Senate Studios.
Copy !req
546. "Twice-nightly screening of my films
in trenches excellent idea. Stop."
Copy !req
547. "But must insist E. Blackadder
be projectionist. Stop."
Copy !req
548. "Oh, P.S.
Don't let him ever stop."
Copy !req
549. - Oh, great.
- No hard feelings, eh, Blackadder?
Copy !req
550. Not at all, Darling.
Copy !req
551. Er, care for a Liquorice Allsort?
Copy !req
552. Oh, thank you.
Copy !req