1. "The Doctor becomes convinced of the
link between events at Stangmoor
and the Keller Process.
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2. "A prison riot puts Jo in danger -
and a terrifying monster strikes at
the Peace Conference.
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3. This episode was first shown on 6
February 1971,
and was seen by 8.8 million viewers.
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4. In the draft scripts,
the Keller Machine was
called the Malusyphus,
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5. implying that the process
siphons off malice.
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6. The Machine prop was made by
visual effects assistant Dave Havard.
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7. It was a second attempt: The first
version was deemed unsatisfactory.
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8. In the script, the officers are rattling
their truncheons against the cell doors.
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9. The flamboyant red jacket sported by
the Doctor here accorded with the
gradual mellowing of his character.
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10. In the previous series, he had worn
a more severe black jacket.
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11. The superimposed flames are a stock film
sequence hired in from
the Movietone library.
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12. The following dialogue between
the Doctor and Jo was significantly
shortened during camera rehearsals,
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13. but the substance of
the cut lines is not known.
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14. In the draft, the Doctor is thunderously
angry that Jo has come back when
she was specifically told not to.
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15. In the draft, she says that he was
"performing a sort of war dance".
Whereas he says it was
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16. "my rather famous impersonation
of a hamburger being well grilled".
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17. At this point in Doctor Who's history,
it was standard practice to rehearse
two episodes together over a fortnight,
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18. then camera-rehearse and record them
over the next two days in studio.
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19. The first two episodes of
'The Mind of Evil' were recorded on
Friday 20 and Saturday 21 November 1970,
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20. in Television Centre Studio 3.
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21. The main recording of both episodes was
done, in story order, between 7.30
and 10.30 on the Saturday evening,
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22. but certain scenes were pre-taped
between 8.30 and 10 p.m. On the Friday,
then edited in during post-production.
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23. The Doctor is referring to the events
of Don Houghton's previous story,
'Inferno'.
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24. In the script, he points out that
the riots are a side-effect.
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25. "nor the parade ground
at Caterham Barracks!"
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26. He also recommends that the Brigadier -
"that bumptious idiot" - should "go and
take a running jump at himself".
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27. The karate was added during rehearsals.
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28. "We're not enjoying a spinsters'
tea-party down in London," says Mike,
but the Doctor is unimpressed:
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29. "Politicians often get themselves
killed. It's developed into
an occupational hazard.
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30. "I wonder when this silly little planet
will learn its lesson."
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31. In the final script, he is more overtly
affectionate,
putting his hand on her face.
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32. In the script, the scene ends with
a shot of the box, throbbing gently.
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33. That's because Don Houghton originally
imagined it all taking place in
a much more public place:
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34. Trafalgar Square. So having Benton
tell it after the event would save the
trouble and expense of filming there!
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35. Cornwall Gardens in South Kensington
is again the location used here -
as you can see from the street signs.
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36. This same location also featured
prominently in an earlier Doctor Who
story, 'The War Machines' (1966),
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37. where it was used for a sequence of the
Doctor
Trapping and neutralising a War Machine.
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38. These scenes with Benton following -
and losing - Chin Lee did not feature
in Houghton's original scene breakdown.
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39. They were added following his
discussion with Terrance Dicks.
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40. Benton was also in civvies on
surveillance duty when he first appeared
in 'The Invasion' (1968),
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41. tailing the Doctor
And his then companion
Jamie.
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42. In the script, she is hiding inside
the workmen's tent
rather than behind it.
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43. UNIT was reminiscent of various other
undercover groups,
often known by acronyms,
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44. The Doctor's car, Bessie, was like a
cross between James Bond's
gadget-laden vehicles
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45. and John Steed's vintage roadsters
in The Avengers (1961-69).
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46. In the breakdown, he gets into the
Brigadier's office disguised as
a technician, and plants a bug.
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47. Don Houghton was asked to change this,
probably because he did something
similar three episodes ago.
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48. These scenes with the Master were filmed
on the same day, 2 November 1970,
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49. although the earlier sequence of Benton
unsuccessfully tailing Chin Lee was done
the following day, 3 November.
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50. Is the Master a supporter of
Newcastle United Football Club?
He appears to have one of their scarves.
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51. Mr Carr appeared in vision in the draft
script, but is now only voiced
by Laurence Harrington.
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52. Here he incorporates his distinctive
Master theme, first heard in
'Terror of the Autons'.
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53. In 1973, this theme was released with
a suite of music from 'The Mind of Evil'
as 'The World of Doctor Who',
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54. the B-side of a BBC single of Simpson's
signature tune to the Moonbase 3 series.
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55. The script calls for "an elegant but
rather elderly black Rolls Royce".
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56. The car window is open to give a
clear shot of the Master
once he's inside.
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57. The Home Office was the British
government department
with responsibility for prisons.
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58. The draft includes a scene in which the
Foreign Secretary takes some action:
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59. He presents a statement to
the surviving conference delegates.
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60. He is a vocal opponent of the peace
process who made many enemies when he
was the Chinese Ambassador to the USSR.
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61. In the draft: "Hokkien, Brigadier, as
most reasonably intelligent
people would know,
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62. "is a dialect spoken by the inhabitants
of the Fukien Province of China.
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63. "As distinct, say, from the Cantonese,
or the Shanghailese, or the classical
Mandarin language..."
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64. Pik-Sen Lim supplied the translations
and coached Jon Pertwee on how
to deliver his Hokkien lines.
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65. The Doctor's next lines were simplified
for Jon Pertwee's benefit. The
originally scripted words translate as:
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66. "A wretched person of little importance
welcomes you to this country and hopes
you have had a pleasant trip.
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67. "Your presence here delights
and pleases me."
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68. In contrast, Fu Peng's words of Hokkien
remain as first scripted.
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69. "I've made a point of learning at least
twenty or thirty Chinese dialects,"
says the Doctor in the draft.
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70. Terrance Dicks asked Don Houghton to
include a reference to the Chinese
leader, Chairman Mao (1893-1976).
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71. "He did ask my advice about some
scientific problems
which had cropped up..."
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72. "Yes. And I am here to do
all I can to help."
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73. But can the Doctor really have been
bosom friends with the tyrant
and mass-murderer Mao Tse-Tung?
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74. Well, no: In the draft, he later
explains that it was actually
Mao's grandfather...
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75. Don Houghton named the character
after his agent, Margery Vosper.
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76. It was scripted as a bag of sweets,
not a box of chocolates.
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77. This episode, like the last, was
discussed by BBC executives at
their weekly programme review meeting.
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78. On this occasion, on 10 February 1971,
Head of Features Aubrey Singer
had some concerns.
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79. Katy Manning had done her first filming
for Doctor Who exactly two months
prior to this recording.
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80. She had since recovered from a badly
sprained ankle sustained
on that occasion.
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81. The script describes Summers as
"a tired-eyed, subdued man".
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82. He provided the Auton voice in
'Terror of the Autons' the month before.
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83. The new prisoner being led to
the condemned cell is Mailer,
played by William Marlowe (1930-2003)
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84. (no relation to Corporal Bell
actress Fernanda Marlowe).
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85. He was often cast as gangsters,
notably in Callan and Villains
,
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86. He had another Doctor Who role in 1975,
as Lester in 'Revenge of the Cybermen'.
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87. In 1979, six years after the death of
Roger Delgado in a car accident,
Marlowe married his widow, Kismet.
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88. The couple frequently socialised
with Jon Pertwee.
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89. Pertwee was also good friends with
the actor playing Barnham,
Neil McCarthy (1932-85).
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90. "I hope you will do me the honour
of dining with me tonight."
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91. Also on the menu in the draft is pork
cooked in shrimp paste,
to the Brigadier's evident disgust.
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92. Back now to the Brigadier's social
discomfiture in the presence
of the inscrutable Chinese.
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93. In the draft, as he's leaving,
the non-Anglophone aide grasps his hand
and gives it a vigorous shake!
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94. A scene was cut here: The Master is
sipping a brandy in his car and
listening in to Yates on the phone.
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95. Yates is ordering arms and ammunition
for a "Minimum Escort detail", and
give the security code "27953/4A/22".
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96. In the draft,
"scorch marks" are specified.
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97. "Slip up with that rocket," says Yates
in the draft, "and half the countryside
slips up with us."
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98. In the draft, it turns out that
the Ministry hurried
the missile's technical development,
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99. which means it's unstable, liable
to blow up if it's subjected
to undue vibration -
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100. and for security reasons, the convoy
has been routed through
"bumpy back lanes", not main roads.
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101. As Yates says, "This thing is about
as brittle as a cracked egg".
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102. Sergeant Benton considers
a transfer to the Royal Navy... )
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103. In the breakdown, the Master gives
Chin Lee a bomb,
which she puts in her briefcase.
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104. It is to be left in the conference room
and detonated
when the delegates are there.
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105. It's "a sophisticated device, full
of Kredalite explosive,
triggered to a sonic timer".
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106. It's lucky Chin Lee doesn't have
any contact with the French delegation
at the peace conference.
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107. Her name sounds uncannily
like the French word chienlit,
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108. which means a gross mess
(or, literally, a dog doing
something unwelcome on a bed).
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109. It was Pik-Sen Lim who suggested
to her husband the inclusion of the
peace conference element of the story.
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110. The alarm was scripted
as a siren rather than a bell.
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111. Jo is working in the process chamber,
unaware that the box has melted
the telephone cable...
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112. In an interim revision, Jo does manage
to speak to the Doctor on the phone
before the prison is cut off.
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113. Don Houghton's notes read:
"Doctor tells Jo to take
care and not get involved.
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114. "Jo gets involved, gets captured."
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115. Back in the breakdown, Jo gets into some
different trouble as we approach
the cliffhanger.
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116. And what is Jo Grant's greatest fear?
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117. You'll have to wait till
next week to find out!
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118. We close in on her briefcase,
with the Doctor standing next to it...
and roll end credits!
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119. The trouble with that was that it almost
duplicated the first cliffhanger
in 'Terror of the Autons',
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120. in which a young woman who has been
hypnotised by the Master
tries to detonate a bomb...
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121. The earlier scene introducing
Fu Peng was originally shot on film.
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122. At that point, the actor playing Fu Peng
was Andy Ho (1913-92).
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123. However, Timothy Combe was dissatisfied
with Ho's performance,
finding it very unexpressive.
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124. After viewing the film rushes,
he decided to recast the part.
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125. So the material filmed at the
Commonwealth Institute
had to be scrapped.
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126. The scene was remounted in studio
in the Chinese delegate's suite -
as in the draft script.
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127. However, that's not why the scenes
on this set were pre-recorded on the
Friday evening of the studio session.
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128. The Episode 3 follow-up to this scene
was also pre-recorded on
that same Friday evening,
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129. so the set didn't have to be re-erected
for the next recording
a fortnight later,
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130. and, since Alcott and Fu Peng bow out
after that, the two actors
didn't need to be retained.
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131. In the script, the Senator sees
a Chinese devil mask with blazing eyes,
its mouth opening as if to devour him.
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132. The slightly different creature that
terrorises him in the final programme
was given a nickname on set.
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133. Meet "Puff the Magic Dragon".
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134. Most of the same extras and walk-ons
as in the first episode appeared
in this concurrently-recorded one.
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135. Also seen were Paul Tann
as the Chinese aide,
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136. Jim Delaney as the passer-by
who helps Benton,
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137. and Francis Williams as
the Master's chauffeur.
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138. Stuart Fell was the American aide.
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139. Basil Tang was a Chinese chauffeur and
Charles Saynor a commissionaire in the
cut Commonwealth Institute scene.
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140. All right, I'll be right over.
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141. Your time will not be wasted, Senator.
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142. Hello?
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143. Anyone home?
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144. Mr Fu Peng?
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145. Mr Fu Peng?
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146. Oh. May I ask
what all this is about, Captain?
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147. - Of course.
- Well, where's Mr Fu Peng?
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148. He will be here soon. Sit down.
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149. Now, look, Captain,
I'm in the middle of my dinner and I...
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150. Sit down, please.
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151. All right, but make it short, will you?
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152. What are you doing?
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153. What is this noise?
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154. This noise in my head.
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155. This terrible pounding!
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156. This sound.
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157. What's happening?
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158. Get back! Get back, I tell you!
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159. Get back! Don't come near me!
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160. What's happening?
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