1. Miss Carmichael, please.
Copy !req
2. Dr. Petersen is ready for you.
Copy !req
3. I'm awfully sorry. I have to go.
Copy !req
4. Had a perfect hand.
Would've beaten the pants off you.
Copy !req
5. - Harry will take you, Miss Carmichael.
- Thank you.
Copy !req
6. (WHISPERING) Watch her carefully.
Don't take your eyes off her.
Copy !req
7. - How are you today, Harry?
- Fine.
Copy !req
8. - You look a little bilious.
- It's the light.
Copy !req
9. I worry about you, dear.
Copy !req
10. I'll be all right.
Copy !req
11. Must we dash into Dr. Petersen's office?
Copy !req
12. Can't we go sit somewhere in private
and talk, just you and I?
Copy !req
13. Love it, if I had time.
Copy !req
14. Would you?
Copy !req
15. Come in.
Copy !req
16. You ruined a very interesting card game,
Dr. Petersen.
Copy !req
17. - You may go now, Harry.
- I'll be outside.
Copy !req
18. I hope you feel better today, Mary.
Copy !req
19. - Well, I don't.
- You will.
Copy !req
20. I think this whole thing is ridiculous.
Copy !req
21. What whole thing, Mary?
Copy !req
22. Psychoanalysis.
It bores the pants off of me.
Copy !req
23. Lying on the couch
like some dreary nitwit, telling all.
Copy !req
24. You don't really expect to get anywhere
Copy !req
25. listening to me babble
about my idiotic childhood.
Copy !req
26. Really.
Copy !req
27. My patients invariably regard me
as a wretched nuisance
Copy !req
28. during our first talks.
Copy !req
29. I see. It's my subconscious
putting up a fight.
Copy !req
30. It doesn't want me cured.
Copy !req
31. Exactly. It wants to continue
enjoying your disease.
Copy !req
32. Our job is to make you understand why.
Copy !req
33. When you know why you're doing
something that's bad for you
Copy !req
34. and when you first started doing it.
Then you can begin curing yourself.
Copy !req
35. You mean I've been telling you lies?
Copy !req
36. The usual proportion.
Copy !req
37. You're right. I've been lying like mad.
Copy !req
38. I hate men. I loathe them.
Copy !req
39. If one of them so much as touches me,
Copy !req
40. I want to sink my teeth into his hands
and bite it off.
Copy !req
41. In fact, I did that once.
Do you care to hear about it?
Copy !req
42. Tell me anything you remember.
Copy !req
43. We were dancing.
Copy !req
44. He kept asking me to marry him,
panting in my ear.
Copy !req
45. I suddenly pretended
I was going to kiss him
Copy !req
46. and sank my teeth into his mustache
and bit it clear off.
Copy !req
47. You're laughing at me.
Copy !req
48. That smug frozen face of yours
doesn't take me in.
Copy !req
49. You just want me to tell you all this
so you can feel superior to me.
Copy !req
50. You and your drooling science.
I detest you.
Copy !req
51. I never want to see
that nasty face of yours again!
Copy !req
52. I can't bear you.
Copy !req
53. You and your nickel's worth of nothing!
Copy !req
54. Come on, Miss Carmichael.
Copy !req
55. Silly fool.
Letting a creature like that worry me.
Copy !req
56. Miss Frozen Puss.
Copy !req
57. (GASPING) Dr. Fleurot,
I want to talk to you alone.
Copy !req
58. I can't stand that woman.
Copy !req
59. I'll see you later, Mary.
Copy !req
60. Come, Miss Carmichael.
Copy !req
61. Murchison must be really out of his mind
to assign Carmichael to you.
Copy !req
62. You may report your findings
to the new head when he arrives.
Copy !req
63. You can't treat
a love veteran like Carmichael
Copy !req
64. without some inside information.
Copy !req
65. I've done a great deal of research
on emotional problems
Copy !req
66. - and love difficulties.
- Research, my eye.
Copy !req
67. I've watched your work for six months.
It's brilliant but lifeless.
Copy !req
68. There's no intuition in it.
Copy !req
69. You approach all your problems
with an ice pack on your head.
Copy !req
70. - Are you making love to me?
- I will in a moment.
Copy !req
71. I'm just clearing the ground first.
Copy !req
72. I'm trying to convince you that your
lack of human and emotional experience
Copy !req
73. is bad for you as a doctor
Copy !req
74. and fatal for you as a woman.
Copy !req
75. I've heard that argument from
a number of amorous psychiatrists
Copy !req
76. who all wanted to make
a better doctor of me.
Copy !req
77. But I've got a much better argument.
Copy !req
78. - I'm terribly fond of you.
- Why?
Copy !req
79. It's rather like embracing a textbook.
Copy !req
80. - Why do you do it then?
- Because you're not a textbook.
Copy !req
81. You're a sweet, pulsing,
adorable woman underneath.
Copy !req
82. I sense it every time
I come near to you.
Copy !req
83. You sense only your own desires
and pulsations.
Copy !req
84. I assure you,
mine in no way resemble them.
Copy !req
85. Stop it. I'm mad about you.
Copy !req
86. I'm afraid I'm boring you.
Copy !req
87. No. Your attitudes are very interesting.
Copy !req
88. You're exactly like Miss Carmichael.
I'd like to throw a book at you.
Copy !req
89. But I won't.
Copy !req
90. - May I borrow this?
- Certainly.
Copy !req
91. Oh, and forgive me for my criticism.
Copy !req
92. I think you'd better stick to books.
And another thing...
Copy !req
93. Pardon me for marching in,
but I'm spreading the tidings.
Copy !req
94. My successor will be due any moment.
Copy !req
95. Dr. Murchison, it's been a pleasure
working under you.
Copy !req
96. Thank you very much.
Copy !req
97. Coming, Dr. Petersen?
Copy !req
98. I'm in no mad hurry
to welcome Dr. Edwardes.
Copy !req
99. It's hard to imagine this place
without you, Dr. Murchison.
Copy !req
100. Yes, I sort of go with the fixtures.
Copy !req
101. More than that. You are Green Manors.
It seems unfair.
Copy !req
102. You're very young in the profession.
Copy !req
103. You haven't learned
the basic secret of science.
Copy !req
104. The old must make way for the new,
Copy !req
105. particularly when the old is suspected
of a touch of senility.
Copy !req
106. That's ridiculous.
Copy !req
107. I should think the Board of Directors
would realize you're feeling better.
Copy !req
108. You've been like a new man
since your vacation.
Copy !req
109. The Board's as fair and all-knowing
as a hospital board can be.
Copy !req
110. I agree with you.
I'm as able and brilliant as ever.
Copy !req
111. But having crumbled once,
I might crumble again.
Copy !req
112. You were overworked.
Copy !req
113. A charming diagnosis
for a broken-down horse.
Copy !req
114. I shall always remember
your cheerfulness today
Copy !req
115. as a lesson in how to accept reality,
Dr. Murchison.
Copy !req
116. Don't be too taken in
by my happy air, Constance.
Copy !req
117. It's the least difficult way
of saying goodbye to 20 years.
Copy !req
118. - Yes, I know.
- (DOORBELL BUZZING)
Copy !req
119. Come in.
Copy !req
120. - Your mail, Dr. Petersen and Mr. Garmes.
- Come in, Mr. Garmes.
Copy !req
121. You're not leaving today?
I'll see you again?
Copy !req
122. I shall hover around for a while
like an old mother hen.
Copy !req
123. At least until Dr. Edwardes
is firmly on the list.
Copy !req
124. How do you feel today, Mr. Garmes?
Copy !req
125. Somewhat better, Doctor. The thing seems
a little less troublesome.
Copy !req
126. May I do that for you, Doctor?
Copy !req
127. Thank you, no.
I can do this myself very well.
Copy !req
128. Please sit down.
I'll be with you in a moment.
Copy !req
129. - So that's the mighty Anthony Edwardes.
- He looks younger than I expected.
Copy !req
130. He's only brought one suitcase. Perhaps
he doesn't intend to remain very long.
Copy !req
131. Leave those daydreams to Dr. Murchison.
Copy !req
132. Gentlemen, our new chief,
Dr. Anthony Edwardes. Dr. Fleurot.
Copy !req
133. - How do you do?
- How do you do?
Copy !req
134. - I am Dr. Graff.
- How do you do?
Copy !req
135. - Dr. Hanish.
- How do you do?
Copy !req
136. There's still some staff members
missing, Dr. Edwardes.
Copy !req
137. These are your quarters.
Copy !req
138. They're very festive for an institution.
Copy !req
139. Dr. Edwardes, Dr. Murchison.
Copy !req
140. How do you do, Dr. Murchison?
I've heard a great deal about you, sir.
Copy !req
141. And I naturally about you.
Copy !req
142. - You're younger than I thought you'd be.
- My age hasn't caught up with me yet.
Copy !req
143. Mine has, it seems. I'm pleased to
hand over the reins to steadier hands.
Copy !req
144. I'm leaving you my library
which contains,
Copy !req
145. amongst other items of interest,
Copy !req
146. your latest volume, The Labyrinth
of the Guilt Complex. An excellent work.
Copy !req
147. I hope Green Manors
will inspire others as fine.
Copy !req
148. I'm very grateful.
Copy !req
149. I don't know the formal words
for an abdication, Dr. Edwardes.
Copy !req
150. May I say, merely, that these quarters
which I've occupied for 20 years
Copy !req
151. are now yours. Will you excuse me?
Copy !req
152. I spent a half-hour with Dr. Edwardes.
Copy !req
153. I must say,
I was most favorably impressed.
Copy !req
154. I intend to learn a great deal
from Dr. Edwardes.
Copy !req
155. I think we all can,
from a man with such obvious talents.
Copy !req
156. - You're familiar with his work?
- Yes, I've read all his books.
Copy !req
157. A very keen, unorthodox mind.
Copy !req
158. It would be dreadful if Dr. Murchison's
successor was unworthy of him.
Copy !req
159. He's joining us.
Copy !req
160. I think you know
everyone here, Dr. Edwardes.
Copy !req
161. - No, not yet.
- Oh.
Copy !req
162. - This is Dr. Petersen.
- How do you do?
Copy !req
163. Dr. Edwardes.
Copy !req
164. Dr. Hanish has been
showing me the grounds.
Copy !req
165. It's a remarkable institution,
Dr. Murchison.
Copy !req
166. - Must be quite beautiful in the summer.
- I pointed out to Dr. Edwardes
Copy !req
167. our various open-air diversions
for the patients.
Copy !req
168. Dr. Murchison always argued
we did not do enough in that direction,
Copy !req
169. and I agree with him.
Copy !req
170. Let me warn you that Dr. Petersen
is a frustrated gymnast.
Copy !req
171. Dr. Fleurot considers anything
beyond sitting and standing gymnastics.
Copy !req
172. I imagine you're very fond of sports.
Copy !req
173. Yes, I am, and I miss them,
particularly winter sports.
Copy !req
174. Did you show Dr. Edwardes
the elm grove?
Copy !req
175. Yes, yes indeed.
Copy !req
176. That's where we hope to have
our new swimming pool.
Copy !req
177. I'm a great believer
in the swimming pool.
Copy !req
178. There's a perfect spot for it
among the elms.
Copy !req
179. Not an oblong one,
but an irregular pool, something...
Copy !req
180. Something like this, you know.
Copy !req
181. Bathhouses should be here.
Copy !req
182. I take it that the supply of linen
at this institution is inexhaustible!
Copy !req
183. Forgive me.
Copy !req
184. That reminds me of my professor
in psychiatry, Dr. Brulov.
Copy !req
185. He could never stand a sauce bottle
on the table or even a salt shaker.
Copy !req
186. They took his appetite away.
Copy !req
187. I remember once
at a banquet in his honor,
Copy !req
188. he refused to sit at the speaker's table
Copy !req
189. because he was completely
surrounded by...
Copy !req
190. by ketchup.
Copy !req
191. Last night at dinner,
Copy !req
192. a dimple appeared in your cheek
that was never there before.
Copy !req
193. And I detected the outcroppings of
a mother instinct toward Dr. Edwardes.
Copy !req
194. I detest that sort of high-school talk.
Copy !req
195. Your reactions have upset
one of my pet theories about you.
Copy !req
196. To wit, that you were immune
to psychoanalysts
Copy !req
197. and would end up in the arms
of some Boob McNutt with spiked hair.
Copy !req
198. If I were looking for that type,
Dr. Fleurot, I would have adored you.
Copy !req
199. Come in.
Copy !req
200. Hi.
Copy !req
201. Excuse me, it's from Dr. Edwardes.
Copy !req
202. Love notes already.
The French school of science.
Copy !req
203. I didn't want to come to this
institution, but my brother insisted.
Copy !req
204. I can see no sense in it myself.
Copy !req
205. You see, I'm convinced I'm not suffering
from any hallucination
Copy !req
206. but that my guilt is very real.
Copy !req
207. I know, Dr. Edwardes,
that I killed my father.
Copy !req
208. And I'm willing to
pay the penalty for it.
Copy !req
209. Come in.
Copy !req
210. Thank you for coming so soon.
Copy !req
211. I've been listening to Mr. Garmes
and thought you might help me out.
Copy !req
212. Mr. Garmes, you shouldn't have
disturbed Dr. Edwardes.
Copy !req
213. That's all right.
I'm very interested in Mr. Garmes' case.
Copy !req
214. I knew you would be. He fits perfectly
into your chapters on the guilt complex.
Copy !req
215. Would you mind telling me
what you're talking about?
Copy !req
216. You're here to see if we can cure
your guilt complex by psychoanalysis.
Copy !req
217. But I have no guilt complex.
Copy !req
218. I know what I know.
Copy !req
219. - I killed my father and I...
- No, you didn't kill your father.
Copy !req
220. That's a misconception
that has taken hold of you.
Copy !req
221. I'm sorry, Doctor.
You were talking to him.
Copy !req
222. No, no, go on.
Copy !req
223. People often feel guilty over something
they never did.
Copy !req
224. It usually goes back to their childhood.
Copy !req
225. The child often wishes something
terrible would happen to someone,
Copy !req
226. and if something does
happen to that person,
Copy !req
227. the child believes he's caused it.
Copy !req
228. Then he grows up with a guilt complex
Copy !req
229. over a sin that was
only a child's bad dream.
Copy !req
230. What I am thinking isn't true, then?
Copy !req
231. No. In the course of analyzing yourself,
you'll see that.
Copy !req
232. Would you care
to go back to your room, Mr. Garmes?
Copy !req
233. Harry.
Copy !req
234. I think we'd better put him under drugs
for a few days.
Copy !req
235. He looks agitated.
Copy !req
236. His conviction is curious.
Copy !req
237. But you've encountered such cases
very often, Dr. Edwardes.
Copy !req
238. You described them perfectly
in your book.
Copy !req
239. Yes.
Copy !req
240. Yes, so I did.
Copy !req
241. - Would you mind doing me a favor?
- Not at all, Doctor.
Copy !req
242. I've a headache. I'd like to take
the afternoon off. With you.
Copy !req
243. I understand you're not on duty
till after dinner.
Copy !req
244. - I intended typing out my notes.
- Please, I need a little fresh air
Copy !req
245. and you look as though
it might do you a bit of good.
Copy !req
246. I was going to lunch
with Dr. Hanish.
Copy !req
247. He has an interesting new patient,
a kleptomaniac.
Copy !req
248. Kleptomaniacs for lunch? They'll steal
the food right out of your mouth.
Copy !req
249. - (TELEPHONE RINGING)
- Excuse me.
Copy !req
250. Hello? Yes. Dr. Edwardes.
Copy !req
251. What? Yes, Anthony Edwardes.
Copy !req
252. Who?
Copy !req
253. Sorry, I don't get your name.
Copy !req
254. Norma Cramer?
Copy !req
255. Please, Miss Cramer,
I'm very busy and I don't know you.
Copy !req
256. Some girl claiming to be...
Copy !req
257. I hate practical jokes, don't you?
Copy !req
258. People calling you up and chirping,
"Guess who I am."
Copy !req
259. Sounds like some ex-patient of yours.
Copy !req
260. They're always full
of coy little tricks.
Copy !req
261. Very likely. Come on, let's go.
Copy !req
262. We'll look at some sane trees, normal
grass, and clouds without complexes.
Copy !req
263. I think the greatest harm
done to the human race
Copy !req
264. has been done by the poets.
Copy !req
265. Poets are dull boys, most of them,
but not especially fiendish.
Copy !req
266. But they keep filling people's heads
with delusions about love,
Copy !req
267. writing about it as if it were a
symphony orchestra, a flight of angels.
Copy !req
268. - Which it isn't, eh?
- Of course not.
Copy !req
269. People fall in love, as they put it,
Copy !req
270. because they respond
to a certain hair coloring,
Copy !req
271. or vocal tones or mannerisms
that remind them of their parents.
Copy !req
272. Or sometimes, for no reason at all.
Copy !req
273. But that's not the point. The point is
that people read about love as one thing
Copy !req
274. and experience it as another.
Copy !req
275. They expect kisses
to be like lyrical poems
Copy !req
276. and embraces to be like
Shakespearean dramas.
Copy !req
277. And when they find out differently,
Copy !req
278. then they get sick
and they have to be analyzed, eh?
Copy !req
279. Yes, very often.
Copy !req
280. Professor, you're suffering
from mogo on the go-go.
Copy !req
281. I beg your pardon.
Copy !req
282. - You can't get through there like that.
- I can. I've done it many times.
Copy !req
283. - You hurt?
- No, not at all.
Copy !req
284. - Here.
- No, I'm perfectly all right.
Copy !req
285. I've usually gone on picnics here alone.
Copy !req
286. That doesn't sound like much fun.
Copy !req
287. I haven't gone in for fun,
as you call it.
Copy !req
288. Isn't this beautiful?
Copy !req
289. Perfect.
Copy !req
290. Oh, lunch. Lunch. What will you have?
Ham or liverwurst?
Copy !req
291. Liverwurst.
Copy !req
292. Has anybody seen our new chief today?
Copy !req
293. He has been tied up.
Copy !req
294. He frisked off
with Dr. Petersen at noon.
Copy !req
295. It's odd spending his first day
running after Dr. Petersen
Copy !req
296. like a drooling college boy.
Copy !req
297. It'll do Constance good
to be drooled over.
Copy !req
298. Poor girl's withering away with science.
Copy !req
299. I was telling her only recently
Copy !req
300. that something vital
was missing from her life.
Copy !req
301. Please don't get up.
I just came in because
Copy !req
302. I learned Mr. Garmes became agitated
again this afternoon.
Copy !req
303. - Yes, I gave him a sedative.
- I'm very sorry I wasn't here.
Copy !req
304. Nonsense. You look as if
you had an instructive time.
Copy !req
305. - Instructive?
- Gentlemen, notice her stocking.
Copy !req
306. The lady's been climbing trees.
Copy !req
307. Or lolling in a briar patch.
Copy !req
308. No, it's trees.
There are two leaves in her hair.
Copy !req
309. Allow me, Dr. Petersen.
Copy !req
310. You're surpassing yourself
as a charmer, Dr. Fleurot.
Copy !req
311. Don't run away. Do have some coffee.
Copy !req
312. Dr. Petersen's already eaten,
Copy !req
313. as one can tell by the mustard
on her right forefinger.
Copy !req
314. I would say hot dogs
on the state highway.
Copy !req
315. Would you really? Your diagnosis is,
as usual, wrong, Dr. Fleurot.
Copy !req
316. Not hot dogs, liverwurst.
Copy !req
317. I'm very sorry, I have to leave
this nursery. I must see Mr. Garmes.
Copy !req
318. It looks as if we have Casanova himself
at the head of Green Manors.
Copy !req
319. Did you notice her blush
every time we mentioned his name?
Copy !req
320. It's very late.
Copy !req
321. I was going to read your new book again.
Copy !req
322. I would like to discuss it. I have never
discussed an author's work with him.
Copy !req
323. Of course, at school, we had
several literary professors,
Copy !req
324. but that was quite different.
Copy !req
325. I sound rather nervous, don't I?
Copy !req
326. Not at all.
Copy !req
327. I thought I wanted to discuss
your book with you.
Copy !req
328. I'm amazed at the subterfuge.
Copy !req
329. I don't want to discuss it at all.
Copy !req
330. I understand.
Copy !req
331. It's quite remarkable to discover
that one isn't what one thought one was.
Copy !req
332. I mean, I've always been entirely aware
of what was in my mind.
Copy !req
333. And you're not now?
Copy !req
334. It's quite ridiculous.
Copy !req
335. It was stupid of me to come in here
like a distracted child.
Copy !req
336. You're very lovely.
Copy !req
337. Please don't talk that way.
You'll think I came in to hear that.
Copy !req
338. I know why you came in.
Copy !req
339. Why?
Copy !req
340. Because something has happened to us.
Copy !req
341. But it doesn't happen like that,
in a day.
Copy !req
342. It happens in a moment sometimes.
Copy !req
343. I felt it this afternoon.
Copy !req
344. It was like lightning striking.
Copy !req
345. It strikes rarely.
Copy !req
346. I don't understand how it happened.
Copy !req
347. - What is it?
- It's not you.
Copy !req
348. Something about your robe.
Copy !req
349. My robe? I don't understand.
Copy !req
350. Forgive me. Something struck me.
Copy !req
351. I've been having a rather bad time
with my nerves lately. Your robe...
Copy !req
352. - I mean, the dark lines.
- You're ill.
Copy !req
353. I'll be all right.
Copy !req
354. Hello. Yes, Dr. Edwardes.
Copy !req
355. Yes. Yes. What? Where is he?
Copy !req
356. I'll be there right away.
Copy !req
357. Mr. Garmes, he's run amuck. Tried to
murder Fleurot, then cut his own throat.
Copy !req
358. - Is it bad?
- I think so. He's in surgery.
Copy !req
359. I'll be right along.
Copy !req
360. He's lost a lot of blood,
but I think he'll pull through.
Copy !req
361. - What's the pulse?
- 140.
Copy !req
362. It's going down.
Copy !req
363. - Why are the lights out in the corridor?
- What do you mean?
Copy !req
364. It's dark. That's why he did it.
Copy !req
365. Because the lights are out.
Turn them on!
Copy !req
366. Doors, unlock them!
Copy !req
367. - You can't keep people in cells.
- Dr. Edwardes.
Copy !req
368. Fools babbling about guilt complexes.
What do you know about them?
Copy !req
369. He did it.
Copy !req
370. He told me he killed his father.
Copy !req
371. Put the lights on. Quick!
Copy !req
372. It's dark. It's dark.
Copy !req
373. - He's in collapse.
- He's ill.
Copy !req
374. He didn't look like a heart case.
Copy !req
375. Not heart, shock of some sort.
Must be brought about by exhaustion.
Copy !req
376. Take him up to his room.
I'll take care of him.
Copy !req
377. I'm sorry.
Copy !req
378. I suppose I made
quite an exhibition of myself.
Copy !req
379. Who brought me down here? You?
Copy !req
380. It's rather a mess.
Going to pieces in surgery.
Copy !req
381. Who are you?
Copy !req
382. I remember now.
Copy !req
383. Edwardes is dead.
Copy !req
384. I killed him and took his place.
Copy !req
385. I'm someone else, I don't know who.
Copy !req
386. I killed him. Edwardes.
Copy !req
387. I have no memory.
Copy !req
388. It's like looking into a mirror
and seeing nothing but the mirror.
Copy !req
389. Yet the image is there.
I know it's there.
Copy !req
390. I exist, I'm there.
Copy !req
391. How can a man lose his memory,
his name, everything he's ever known,
Copy !req
392. and still talk like this,
as if he were quite sane?
Copy !req
393. - Are you afraid of me?
- No. You're ill.
Copy !req
394. Loss of memory
is not a difficult problem.
Copy !req
395. Yes, I know, amnesia.
Copy !req
396. A trick of the mind for remaining sane.
Copy !req
397. You remain sane by forgetting something
too horrible to remember.
Copy !req
398. You put the horrible thing
behind a closed door.
Copy !req
399. We have to open that door.
Copy !req
400. - I know what's behind that door. Murder.
- No!
Copy !req
401. That's a delusion you have acquired
out of illness.
Copy !req
402. Will you answer me truthfully
and trust me?
Copy !req
403. I trust you, but it's no use.
I can't think. I don't know who I am.
Copy !req
404. I don't know, I don't know.
Copy !req
405. Who telephoned you yesterday?
Copy !req
406. - Telephoned me?
- Yes. There in the office.
Copy !req
407. Yes, I remember.
Copy !req
408. What did she say?
Copy !req
409. She said she was my office assistant.
She was worried about me, hadn't heard.
Copy !req
410. You mean she was Dr. Edwardes' assistant
and hadn't heard from him.
Copy !req
411. What else did she say?
Copy !req
412. She didn't recognize my voice,
that I wasn't Dr. Edwardes.
Copy !req
413. - You hung up in anger?
- I was confused.
Copy !req
414. My head ached.
Copy !req
415. - Was that your first doubt?
- First doubt?
Copy !req
416. The first time you became confused
as Edwardes?
Copy !req
417. Did anything else happen before that?
Copy !req
418. Yes.
Copy !req
419. When I was in the hotel room
packing to come here
Copy !req
420. I found a cigarette case in my coat.
Copy !req
421. It frightened me.
I didn't know why it should.
Copy !req
422. Here.
Copy !req
423. The initials J.B. See them?
Copy !req
424. When I saw them in the hotel room,
Copy !req
425. they made my head ache.
Copy !req
426. Well, they're probably your initials.
Copy !req
427. J.B., J.B.
Copy !req
428. You must sleep. When you wake up,
you'll be able to tell me more,
Copy !req
429. - if you trust me.
- I trust you.
Copy !req
430. It's late. You'd better get
some sleep yourself. I'll be all right.
Copy !req
431. I'm sure there will be no police inquiry
for a few days.
Copy !req
432. We'll talk about it
and straighten everything out
Copy !req
433. before anything happens.
Copy !req
434. I'll come in in the morning
and report you too ill for service.
Copy !req
435. I have been in Dr. Edwardes' office
for five years,
Copy !req
436. and the man who spoke to me
is not Dr. Edwardes.
Copy !req
437. He let me have my vacation
when he left on his.
Copy !req
438. I was very worried
when I didn't hear from him last week.
Copy !req
439. Then I thought he might have just
come here without reopening his office.
Copy !req
440. - That's why I telephoned.
- Show them the picture.
Copy !req
441. Yes.
Copy !req
442. - That's a different man.
- He was taking a chance.
Copy !req
443. Somebody might have known
what Edwardes looked like.
Copy !req
444. You never saw the real Edwardes?
Copy !req
445. No, I never met him.
Copy !req
446. But I felt something was wrong
from the moment our man appeared.
Copy !req
447. He didn't impress me as a scientist.
Copy !req
448. Last night when he collapsed,
I became actually alarmed.
Copy !req
449. What do you think made him break down
last night?
Copy !req
450. It's obvious now. Garmes.
Copy !req
451. Our impostor, I'm almost certain,
is an amnesia case.
Copy !req
452. Garmes brought him back to reality
for an instant.
Copy !req
453. Being unable to face the truth
of who he was, he collapsed.
Copy !req
454. - You think he may have killed Edwardes?
- There's no question of it.
Copy !req
455. He killed Dr. Edwardes and took
his place in order to conceal his crime
Copy !req
456. by pretending the victim
was still alive.
Copy !req
457. This sort of unrealistic act
is typical of the shortsighted cunning
Copy !req
458. that goes with paranoid behavior.
Copy !req
459. We're wasting time, gentlemen.
His room is upstairs.
Copy !req
460. Oh. Uh, this is Dr. Petersen.
Copy !req
461. - These gentlemen are from the police.
- The police?
Copy !req
462. - What has happened?
- Nothing to be alarmed about.
Copy !req
463. Our Dr. Edwardes turns out
to be a paranoid impostor.
Copy !req
464. He's very likely guilty
of having murdered the real Edwardes.
Copy !req
465. He's disappeared.
Copy !req
466. He is not in his room?
Copy !req
467. - You left him in his room, miss?
- Yes.
Copy !req
468. Did he say anything about himself,
about why he broke down?
Copy !req
469. No. He was not himself.
He was unable to speak coherently.
Copy !req
470. You don't seem very surprised to learn
that this Dr. Edwardes is a fake
Copy !req
471. and may be guilty of murder.
Copy !req
472. I'm used to such surprises in my work.
Copy !req
473. You suspected something then?
Copy !req
474. No. I thought his collapse
due to mental strain.
Copy !req
475. That's a funny diagnosis for a fellow
Copy !req
476. who's supposed to have
just come from vacation.
Copy !req
477. I made no medical diagnosis.
Copy !req
478. I was shocked to see him collapse
and didn't think beyond that.
Copy !req
479. We were all pretty shocked, Sheriff.
The fellow took us all in.
Copy !req
480. All except Dr. Murchison.
Copy !req
481. And he didn't say anything that might
give you an idea of where he went?
Copy !req
482. No.
Copy !req
483. He may be hanging around.
We'll have to go over the grounds first.
Copy !req
484. I'm sorry this has happened
to you, Constance.
Copy !req
485. I felt like warning you about him,
but I wasn't certain.
Copy !req
486. Don't worry. It's not your fault.
They're bound to find him.
Copy !req
487. I'll keep you informed
of the police activities.
Copy !req
488. I say the fellow expected to get away
with it like any criminal.
Copy !req
489. Nonsense. Obviously, a case of amnesia.
Copy !req
490. He hadn't the faintest notion of
who he was or what he was doing.
Copy !req
491. What do you say, Constance?
Copy !req
492. I don't know.
Copy !req
493. You know, if you were anybody but
Constance Petersen, the human glacier
Copy !req
494. and the custodian of truth, I'd say...
Copy !req
495. Yes, you'd say what?
Copy !req
496. My dear, forgive me my scurvy thoughts.
You are telling the truth.
Copy !req
497. I was going to say
that you were holding something back.
Copy !req
498. I'm a sentimental ass.
Copy !req
499. A woman like you
could never become involved emotionally
Copy !req
500. with any man, sane or insane.
Copy !req
501. I suggest you
change the subject, Fleurot.
Copy !req
502. I would be very interested
to ask him certain questions
Copy !req
503. when they bring him back here.
No matter what you think.
Copy !req
504. You'll never ask our mystery man
any questions.
Copy !req
505. Why not?
Copy !req
506. For the very good reason,
the police will never find him alive.
Copy !req
507. Amnesia case of that sort
with the police after him.
Copy !req
508. It's an obvious suicide.
Copy !req
509. The fellow'll put an end to his pain
and nightmare fantasies
Copy !req
510. either by blowing his brains out
or dropping himself out of a window.
Copy !req
511. You're offending Dr. Petersen
with your callousness.
Copy !req
512. I'm sorry, Constance, that our staff
retains the manners of medical students.
Copy !req
513. I'm not offended.
Copy !req
514. I think Dr. Fleurot's ideas are quite
accurate, but I'm tired. Good night.
Copy !req
515. Good night.
Copy !req
516. The police have
asked me to announce
Copy !req
517. that our neighborhood roads
Copy !req
518. are free of the dangerous madman
who escaped from Green Manors.
Copy !req
519. The search for the impostor
has shifted to Manhattan.
Copy !req
520. This is WQZK Brooklyn, George Bell.
Copy !req
521. We now resume
our regularly scheduled program.
Copy !req
522. Sure feels good
to take the weight off your feet.
Copy !req
523. I'm from Pittsburgh.
Copy !req
524. There's a town for you.
Copy !req
525. Really can meet people in Pittsburgh.
Copy !req
526. Friendly.
Copy !req
527. Fellow could live and die in this town,
and he couldn't meet nobody.
Copy !req
528. How about you and me
having a nice little drink together
Copy !req
529. now that we're acquainted?
Copy !req
530. No, thank you.
Copy !req
531. You don't have to be so snooty about it.
Copy !req
532. I'll have you know, madam, that I know
better people than you in Pittsburgh.
Copy !req
533. Yeah, I'm sure you're a great
social success, given half a chance.
Copy !req
534. Now you're talking.
Copy !req
535. Do you mind not
sitting in my lap in public?
Copy !req
536. That's enough of that.
Copy !req
537. Beat it.
Copy !req
538. I'll have you know, I'm a guest
in this hotel. Who do you think you are?
Copy !req
539. I'm the house detective. Get going.
Copy !req
540. This town's getting worse and worse.
Copy !req
541. That's all right, lady,
you don't have to go.
Copy !req
542. I'm sorry you were being annoyed.
I've been watching you for some time,
Copy !req
543. and I figured
something like this might happen.
Copy !req
544. The chief duty of a house detective
is to spot trouble in advance.
Copy !req
545. - You're not registered here, are you?
- No.
Copy !req
546. I didn't think so,
the way you were wandering around.
Copy !req
547. Looking for somebody?
Copy !req
548. Don't be afraid of me.
Copy !req
549. I've got you spotted as
a lady in trouble and from out of town.
Copy !req
550. Schoolteacher or librarian, which is it?
Copy !req
551. - Schoolteacher.
- I thought so.
Copy !req
552. They always look like
they just lost something.
Copy !req
553. - Maybe I can help you.
- I don't think so, thank you.
Copy !req
554. Looking for some man, I suppose.
Must be a relative.
Copy !req
555. And from the worried look,
I'd say a pretty close one.
Copy !req
556. A husband, for instance.
Copy !req
557. - I'm really amazed.
- I hit it, huh?
Copy !req
558. But how could you tell?
Copy !req
559. I'm a kind of a psychologist.
You know, you got to be in my line.
Copy !req
560. Now, would you mind filling in
a few of the blank spaces for me?
Copy !req
561. No. It's just that we quarreled.
Copy !req
562. And then you got sorry and came running
after him. That's the usual psychology.
Copy !req
563. But now you're afraid to face him.
Copy !req
564. No, no.
Copy !req
565. It's that I don't know
what room he's in.
Copy !req
566. He told a friend he was coming
to this hotel but under a different name
Copy !req
567. so I couldn't find him.
Copy !req
568. But I must find him and apologize
and make him feel better.
Copy !req
569. When did he arrive here?
Copy !req
570. Yesterday morning.
Copy !req
571. Give me a description of him.
Copy !req
572. He's very tall and attractive.
Copy !req
573. Dark hair, a rather rugged face
Copy !req
574. and brown eyes and one suitcase.
Copy !req
575. I'll go check on him.
Copy !req
576. Did you find him?
Copy !req
577. Well, I think we got a line.
Copy !req
578. About 25 guys answering your description
registered here yesterday.
Copy !req
579. These are their registration cards.
You might recognize the handwriting.
Copy !req
580. That's very clever of you.
Copy !req
581. - This is his handwriting.
- John Brown, huh?
Copy !req
582. Not much imagination for an alias.
Room 3033.
Copy !req
583. Thank you very much. I was going to sit
here all day watching for him.
Copy !req
584. I know you would. I'm glad to be
of service. I'm a married man myself
Copy !req
585. and I know how it feels to have a wife
come chasing after you to apologize.
Copy !req
586. Constance.
Copy !req
587. What did you come for?
You don't owe me anything.
Copy !req
588. I'm going to do what I want to do.
Copy !req
589. Take care of you, cure you,
and remain with you till that happens.
Copy !req
590. But you can't,
you can't help hide a criminal.
Copy !req
591. You're not going to jeopardize
your standing as a doctor.
Copy !req
592. You're just getting started.
I won't let you be stupid about it.
Copy !req
593. I couldn't bear it away from you.
Copy !req
594. I went through yesterday holding
my breath as if I were being hunted.
Copy !req
595. I couldn't eat or work or do anything
but think of you.
Copy !req
596. So I had to come.
Copy !req
597. I'll get a room on this floor.
I'm here as your doctor only.
Copy !req
598. It has nothing to do with love.
Copy !req
599. Nothing at all.
Copy !req
600. Try remembering.
Copy !req
601. Let your mind go back to your childhood.
Was it happy?
Copy !req
602. Whom did you know in your childhood?
Copy !req
603. I'm haunted, but I...
Copy !req
604. I can't see by what.
Copy !req
605. - It's no use.
- You lived somewhere.
Copy !req
606. You had a mother, you were loved,
you had friends.
Copy !req
607. Yes. Probably a wife.
Copy !req
608. Can you remember her?
Copy !req
609. I didn't say I had one.
Copy !req
610. I said I probably had.
Copy !req
611. No, darling. Thank heaven,
I can't remember a wife.
Copy !req
612. I would like to ask you
a medical question.
Copy !req
613. Constance, would you mind
not prodding me? It mixes me up.
Copy !req
614. I can't remember anything.
Copy !req
615. Except that I love you.
Copy !req
616. How would you diagnose a pain
in the right upper quadrant?
Copy !req
617. A pain that is persistent?
Copy !req
618. Gall bladder, possibly a heart case,
or pneumonia,
Copy !req
619. depending on the patient's history.
Copy !req
620. It's obvious you're a doctor.
Copy !req
621. Yes. The eminent Dr. X.
Copy !req
622. And if we can unlock one tiny memory,
it will give us a key to the others.
Copy !req
623. No.
Copy !req
624. The only thing that comes to my mind
that I keep thinking over and over,
Copy !req
625. - is the logic of the situation.
- What logic?
Copy !req
626. That it was I who was with Edwardes.
Copy !req
627. "Police believe the impostor
who escaped from Green Manors
Copy !req
628. "to be the patient who visited
the real Dr. Edwardes
Copy !req
629. "in the Cumberland Mountains the day
that the noted psychiatrist disappeared.
Copy !req
630. "No trace of Dr. Edwardes has been found
since he left the Cumberland Resort
Copy !req
631. "in the company
of his supposed patient."
Copy !req
632. - Do you remember that?
- No.
Copy !req
633. Why do you believe then
that you were with him?
Copy !req
634. Because wherever we went,
I came back with his identity.
Copy !req
635. I wouldn't have come back
as Dr. Edwardes
Copy !req
636. if I hadn't known that he was dead.
Copy !req
637. How would I know that he was dead
if I hadn't been with him when he died?
Copy !req
638. Were you?
Copy !req
639. I don't remember,
Copy !req
640. but, logically,
I know that I must have been.
Copy !req
641. Logically, I also know
why the body hasn't been found.
Copy !req
642. Because it was hidden by me.
Copy !req
643. Don't you see
that you are imagining all this?
Copy !req
644. You call yourself names. You insist
without proof that you're a murderer.
Copy !req
645. You know what that is, don't you?
Copy !req
646. Whoever you are, it's a guilt complex
that speaks for you.
Copy !req
647. A guilt fantasy that goes way back
to your childhood.
Copy !req
648. I think you're quite mad.
You're much crazier than I
Copy !req
649. to do all this
for a creature without a name,
Copy !req
650. to run off with a pair of initials.
Copy !req
651. The police have not given your name
or case history to the papers.
Copy !req
652. That must mean one thing. That your name
was not in Dr. Edwardes' files.
Copy !req
653. You were in an accident.
Copy !req
654. Where was it?
Copy !req
655. What happened to your hand?
Your hand was burned.
Copy !req
656. You've had an operation
in the last six months.
Copy !req
657. A skin graft. Third degree burns.
Copy !req
658. Your hand was burned. Where?
Copy !req
659. - It hurts.
- Try remembering.
Copy !req
660. My hand hurts.
Copy !req
661. Your hand is remembering.
Open your mind and the pain will leave.
Copy !req
662. - Where did it happen?
- I can't. It hurts.
Copy !req
663. - What happened?
- It's burning. My hand's burning.
Copy !req
664. Try to remember.
Copy !req
665. - My dear, are you all right?
- I'm all right. What happened?
Copy !req
666. You relived an accident you've been in.
Copy !req
667. But the memory only touched
the part of your mind that feels.
Copy !req
668. But it's a beginning. It really is.
Copy !req
669. You'll feel better soon.
Copy !req
670. Who could that be?
Copy !req
671. I know. I sent down for
the later editions of the papers.
Copy !req
672. - You ordered the afternoon papers?
- Yes.
Copy !req
673. - They came. I brought them right up.
- Just a minute.
Copy !req
674. - Here you are. Thank you.
- Thanks.
Copy !req
675. My picture's in the paper.
He recognized me.
Copy !req
676. We've got to go. Quick. We can't pack.
Copy !req
677. Listen, when you left the mountains,
you must have passed through New York.
Copy !req
678. Wherever you came from,
wherever you went,
Copy !req
679. you must've been in a railroad station.
Copy !req
680. You must have heard Edwardes
ask for tickets to somewhere.
Copy !req
681. - I don't remember.
- You will.
Copy !req
682. When you come to the ticket window, try
to relive that other time with Edwardes.
Copy !req
683. Try to repeat what was said then.
Ask for the same tickets.
Copy !req
684. I'll try.
Copy !req
685. One, Philadelphia.
Copy !req
686. Philadelphia. $3.39, including
the total with tax. Thank you.
Copy !req
687. You went someplace with Edwardes.
Ask for tickets to that same place.
Copy !req
688. $8.46, including tax. Thank you.
Copy !req
689. What is it?
Copy !req
690. What do you want, sir?
Copy !req
691. Can you please step aside?
Copy !req
692. I want two tickets.
Copy !req
693. Where to?
Copy !req
694. Rome.
Copy !req
695. - Rome.
- To where?
Copy !req
696. - Rome.
- What Rome?
Copy !req
697. He means Rome, Georgia.
Copy !req
698. Is there anything wrong?
Copy !req
699. My husband is ill. I'm taking him home.
Copy !req
700. Here you are.
Two tickets to Rome, Georgia.
Copy !req
701. He'll be all right in a minute.
These dizzy spells go away quickly.
Copy !req
702. - He looks sick. I'll call a doctor.
- No, no, he'll be all right.
Copy !req
703. Do you feel better now, darling?
Darling?
Copy !req
704. Pull yourself together.
You're all right.
Copy !req
705. When does the train for Rome leave?
Copy !req
706. Birmingham Special.
Leaves in 10 minutes. Track 17.
Copy !req
707. - I feel better now.
- Thank you.
Copy !req
708. That's all right, I'll take him
to the train in case anything happens.
Copy !req
709. He has recovered now.
Copy !req
710. You're very nice to offer help,
but I can get along. Thank you.
Copy !req
711. Act as if we are taking this train.
We walk down-aways and then turn back.
Copy !req
712. - What's the matter with this train?
- The policeman heard us buy the tickets.
Copy !req
713. - Did he act suspicious?
- No, he was very nice.
Copy !req
714. But when he goes
to the police station tonight,
Copy !req
715. he may find descriptions of us posted
and he'll remember us.
Copy !req
716. They'll telegraph Rome, Georgia
and have us picked up.
Copy !req
717. We can't go back to the hotel.
They'll have a million police there now.
Copy !req
718. We're not going back.
We're going to Rochester.
Copy !req
719. Come on, we'll go over
to the Grand Central Station.
Copy !req
720. By the way, what are we going
to Rochester for?
Copy !req
721. We're going to visit Dr. Brulov.
Copy !req
722. That's the fellow
who doesn't like sauce bottles.
Copy !req
723. He was my analyst.
He psychoanalyzed me.
Copy !req
724. Really? What was wrong with you?
Copy !req
725. All analysts have to be psychoanalyzed
by other analysts
Copy !req
726. before they start practicing.
Copy !req
727. That's to make sure
that they're not too crazy.
Copy !req
728. Apparently, the mind is never too ill
to make jokes about psychoanalysis.
Copy !req
729. I'm sorry. I'm a pig.
Copy !req
730. I am. I keep forgetting
you're a patient.
Copy !req
731. So do I.
Copy !req
732. When I hold you like this,
I feel entirely well.
Copy !req
733. Will you love me just as much
when I'm normal?
Copy !req
734. I'll be insane about you.
Copy !req
735. I am normal.
Copy !req
736. At least, there's nothing wrong with me
that a nice, long kiss wouldn't cure.
Copy !req
737. I've never treated a guilt complex
that way before.
Copy !req
738. - We don't want to attract attention.
- Everybody's doing it.
Copy !req
739. - You both going?
- Yes.
Copy !req
740. Don't read the paper.
Let's pick up where we left off.
Copy !req
741. Pick up what?
Copy !req
742. Try to recall the first moment
you thought you were Edwardes.
Copy !req
743. - Darling, I have a confession to make.
- Yes, I'm listening.
Copy !req
744. As a doctor, you irritate me.
Copy !req
745. I sit here swooning with love,
and then suddenly you ask me a question
Copy !req
746. and I don't like you anymore.
Copy !req
747. Do you have to sit there
smiling at me
Copy !req
748. like some smug
know-it-all schoolteacher?
Copy !req
749. I can't help smiling.
That's what happens in analysis.
Copy !req
750. As the doctor begins to uncover
the truth for the patient,
Copy !req
751. said patient develops a fine,
hearty hatred of said doctor.
Copy !req
752. You're going to hate me a great deal
before we're through.
Copy !req
753. - And you're gonna like that.
- As a scientist, yes.
Copy !req
754. And if I shall happen to biff you one,
you'll consider that sort of a diploma.
Copy !req
755. Yes, but don't biff too hard.
Copy !req
756. No, I think we should go on
with our investigation.
Copy !req
757. We have some new facts
to work with now.
Copy !req
758. - What facts?
- You're a doctor,
Copy !req
759. you were in an accident,
your hand and forearm were burned,
Copy !req
760. - and you were in Rome.
- I was never in Rome in my life.
Copy !req
761. You were either there or going there.
Copy !req
762. You remembered something, no doubt
connected with the burning of your hand.
Copy !req
763. Rome. Think of Rome.
Copy !req
764. Maybe Rome, Italy.
Copy !req
765. When did you go to Rome?
Copy !req
766. What did you do in Rome?
Copy !req
767. Think.
Copy !req
768. Rome.
Copy !req
769. Yes. I remember something.
Copy !req
770. - Fighter planes spotted us.
- You were flying?
Copy !req
771. Transport, Medical Corps.
Over Rome, heading north.
Copy !req
772. - What happened?
- They hit us.
Copy !req
773. Caught fire. Uniform burned.
Bailed out.
Copy !req
774. What else?
Copy !req
775. I don't know. It blacks out.
Copy !req
776. You left the Army?
Copy !req
777. Yeah.
Copy !req
778. I probably deserted. I hated it.
Copy !req
779. I hated killing.
I can remember that much.
Copy !req
780. Your guilt fantasies were obviously
inflamed by your duties as a soldier.
Copy !req
781. Stop it.
Copy !req
782. Babbling like some phony King Solomon!
Copy !req
783. Sit there full of half-witted devil talk
that doesn't make sense!
Copy !req
784. If there's anything I hate,
it's a smug woman!
Copy !req
785. Darling, we're just beginning.
Don't biff too hard yet.
Copy !req
786. I worked as Dr. Brulov's assistant
for a year, right after my internship.
Copy !req
787. He got me the post at Green Manors.
You'll like Alex.
Copy !req
788. I doubt that. One psychoanalyst
in my hair's enough.
Copy !req
789. - What are you gonna tell him?
- That we are on our honeymoon.
Copy !req
790. Doctor, you think of
the most wonderful prescriptions.
Copy !req
791. - Good evening. Is Dr. Brulov in?
- No, he went out right after dinner.
Copy !req
792. He ought to be back soon.
Copy !req
793. Would you mind telling him
I've left his supper on the table?
Copy !req
794. I'm sorry, but I can't wait any longer.
Copy !req
795. There are two gentlemen
waiting for him in there.
Copy !req
796. - How do you do?
- How do you do?
Copy !req
797. How's your mother been lately?
Copy !req
798. She's still complaining
about rheumatism.
Copy !req
799. She figures I ought to get transferred
down to Florida.
Copy !req
800. I said, "Do you expect me to sacrifice
all chance of promotion
Copy !req
801. "just because you've got rheumatism?"
Copy !req
802. Did you take the subject up
with Hennessy?
Copy !req
803. Yeah. He said a transfer
could be arranged,
Copy !req
804. but I'd probably have to start
all over again as a sergeant.
Copy !req
805. I said, "Personally,
I think that's unfair.
Copy !req
806. "After all the work I did
on that narcotics case."
Copy !req
807. What did Hennessy say to that?
Copy !req
808. A lot of things. He made some crack
about me being a mama's boy.
Copy !req
809. Pardon me. That may be for me.
I gave headquarters this number.
Copy !req
810. Hello.
Copy !req
811. Yes. This is Lieutenant Cooley.
Any new developments?
Copy !req
812. When did you find that out?
Copy !req
813. No. Right. I'll be down later. Goodbye.
Copy !req
814. Alex.
Copy !req
815. Who is it, please?
Copy !req
816. My old friend!
Copy !req
817. - Alex.
- My dear darling.
Copy !req
818. I didn't have time to let you know.
I just arrived.
Copy !req
819. Imagine I find you here.
I would have come home quicker.
Copy !req
820. I was giving a lecture
at the Army Hospital.
Copy !req
821. - Are these gentlemen with you?
- No. I'm here with...
Copy !req
822. Dr. Brulov, I'm Lieutenant Cooley
of Central Station.
Copy !req
823. - This is Sergeant Gillespie.
- What for?
Copy !req
824. We thought you might give us some data
on Dr. Edwardes.
Copy !req
825. Data?
Copy !req
826. What is this kind of persecution?
Copy !req
827. I told the policeman yesterday
I know nothing about Edwardes.
Copy !req
828. But yesterday,
you had some kind of theory.
Copy !req
829. I explained to the policeman
Copy !req
830. that if Edwardes took along with him
on a vacation
Copy !req
831. a paranoid patient,
Copy !req
832. he was a bigger fool
than I ever knew he was.
Copy !req
833. It is the same as
playing with a loaded gun.
Copy !req
834. Do you think this patient
might have killed him?
Copy !req
835. I'm not thinking anything.
I'm not a bloodhound.
Copy !req
836. Was Dr. Edwardes
a great friend of yours?
Copy !req
837. What are you talking about?
The man was impossible.
Copy !req
838. You had a quarrel with him when you were
back in New York, I understand.
Copy !req
839. Not New York.
In Boston at the psychiatry convention.
Copy !req
840. What kind of an analyst is it
who wants to cure psychosis
Copy !req
841. by taking people skating
or to a bowling alley?
Copy !req
842. I understand
you threatened to punch his nose.
Copy !req
843. All I did was get up and walk out,
Copy !req
844. and kick over a few chairs
which nobody was sitting in.
Copy !req
845. So you don't have to ask me
any more questions.
Copy !req
846. You have now the facts.
Copy !req
847. Well, thank you very much.
I'm sorry to have bothered you.
Copy !req
848. If anything turns up,
we'll let you know. Goodbye, ma'am.
Copy !req
849. - Good night, sir.
- Good night.
Copy !req
850. What do you suppose
they are snooping around me for?
Copy !req
851. Next they will give me the third degree.
Copy !req
852. Alex, I'm so glad to see you.
I was going to write to you
Copy !req
853. but it happened so suddenly.
I got married.
Copy !req
854. Who is married?
Copy !req
855. Why, Alex, my husband, John Brown.
Copy !req
856. - I'm glad to meet you officially.
- So you are married.
Copy !req
857. There is nothing so nice
as a new marriage.
Copy !req
858. No psychoses yet, no aggressions,
no guilt complexes.
Copy !req
859. I congratulate you
Copy !req
860. and wish you have babies
and not phobias.
Copy !req
861. How about we have a glass of beer
like in the old days?
Copy !req
862. The truth is that we have no hotel room.
All the hotels were so crowded.
Copy !req
863. What do you want with a hotel?
Copy !req
864. That's for millionaires,
not for lovebirds on a honeymoon.
Copy !req
865. You will stay right here.
Copy !req
866. Look how I'm living by myself
with a can opener.
Copy !req
867. My housekeeper has gone to war,
my secretary is a WAC.
Copy !req
868. And I've got a cleaning woman
who can't cook and who hates me.
Copy !req
869. Cook me my coffee in the morning,
and the house is yours.
Copy !req
870. - That's wonderful of you, Alex.
- There's nothing wonderful about me.
Copy !req
871. It's nice to see my old assistant.
Copy !req
872. The youngest,
but the best one I ever had.
Copy !req
873. But who knows now.
Copy !req
874. As my old friend Zannenbaum used to say,
Copy !req
875. "Women make the best psychoanalysts,
Copy !req
876. "till they fall in love.
Copy !req
877. "After that,
they make the best patients."
Copy !req
878. Good night and happy dreams,
Copy !req
879. which we will analyze at breakfast.
Copy !req
880. Good night, Dr. Brulov.
Thanks for everything.
Copy !req
881. Any husband of Constance
is a husband of mine, so to speak.
Copy !req
882. - Good night, Alex.
- Good night.
Copy !req
883. - You were superb with the police.
- Was I?
Copy !req
884. Carried it off
like a grade-A gun monger.
Copy !req
885. I felt terribly stupid for a few minutes
but it turned out very well.
Copy !req
886. Providing the professor isn't wiser
than he seems.
Copy !req
887. Alex? No.
Copy !req
888. Things are different here.
Someone's been here since my time.
Copy !req
889. Alex didn't think anything. He's sweet.
Copy !req
890. He may be sweet, but he didn't even
ask us where our bags were.
Copy !req
891. Alex is always like that,
in a complete dream state socially.
Copy !req
892. Do you know,
this room does look changed,
Copy !req
893. but it isn't.
Copy !req
894. It's I who have changed.
It's called transfer of affects.
Copy !req
895. What is?
Copy !req
896. The fact that everything seems
so wonderful in this room.
Copy !req
897. That's what it's called, is it?
Copy !req
898. Did the police disturb you?
Copy !req
899. No. One ignores such trifles
on a honeymoon.
Copy !req
900. - I take it this is your first honeymoon?
- Yes.
Copy !req
901. I mean, it would be if it were.
Copy !req
902. For what it's worth, I can't remember
ever having kissed any other woman.
Copy !req
903. I have nothing to remember
of that nature, either.
Copy !req
904. You're very sweet.
Copy !req
905. - Of course I'm no child.
- Far from it.
Copy !req
906. I'm well aware that we're all
bundles of inhibitions.
Copy !req
907. Dynamite dumps!
Copy !req
908. No.
Copy !req
909. - Please don't do that.
- Why not?
Copy !req
910. It isn't ethical.
I'm here as your doctor.
Copy !req
911. Well, you can stop worrying, Doctor.
I'm going to sleep on the couch.
Copy !req
912. No, that's also unethical.
Copy !req
913. Now, this honeymoon is
complicated enough
Copy !req
914. without your dragging
medical ethics into it.
Copy !req
915. - I suppose the floor is out?
- The patient always sleeps in the bed.
Copy !req
916. The doctor occupies the couch,
fully dressed.
Copy !req
917. I see you know the rules.
Copy !req
918. You remember something.
Copy !req
919. No.
Copy !req
920. This room reminds you of something.
Copy !req
921. No.
Copy !req
922. You're resisting a memory.
What is in your mind?
Copy !req
923. - I don't know.
- Yes, you do! You're resisting it.
Copy !req
924. Don't start that again.
Copy !req
925. Don't stand there with that wiseacre
look. I'm sick of your double talk.
Copy !req
926. You were looking at the bed.
What frightens you?
Copy !req
927. White lines.
Copy !req
928. When I made fork marks
on the tablecloth, they agitated you.
Copy !req
929. The night you kissed me,
you pushed me away because of my robe.
Copy !req
930. It was white, it had dark lines on it.
Copy !req
931. Try to think. Why does the color white
frighten you? Why do lines frighten you?
Copy !req
932. - Think of white. White.
- It frightens me. I can't look.
Copy !req
933. Don't turn away. Stand still. Look at
the white spread. Look at it, remember!
Copy !req
934. Darling.
Copy !req
935. Oh, darling.
Copy !req
936. You mustn't be frightened.
Copy !req
937. You mustn't. We are making progress.
Copy !req
938. We have the word "white" on our side.
Copy !req
939. Is that you, Mr. Brown?
Copy !req
940. Oh, I thought it was you.
Copy !req
941. I was unable to sleep,
so I came down to work.
Copy !req
942. When you are old,
you don't need to sleep so much.
Copy !req
943. I'm just having a glass of milk
and some crackers.
Copy !req
944. Join me, please.
Copy !req
945. I'll get another glass.
Copy !req
946. I'm glad to have company.
Copy !req
947. Nobody likes to have
crackers and milk by himself.
Copy !req
948. When I was a young man,
I was always saying,
Copy !req
949. "If I could only get alone by myself
Copy !req
950. "instead of wasting my time with people,
Copy !req
951. "I would be happy."
Copy !req
952. Now I am saying just the opposite.
Copy !req
953. This is the secret of old age.
Copy !req
954. Everything becomes just the opposite.
Copy !req
955. Do you know who makes the most trouble
in the world?
Copy !req
956. Old people.
Copy !req
957. They are always worrying
Copy !req
958. what is going to be in the world
tomorrow after they are gone.
Copy !req
959. That's why they have wars.
Copy !req
960. Because old people got nothing else
they can get excited about.
Copy !req
961. Well, we will drink to you,
Copy !req
962. to when we are young
and know nothing except living.
Copy !req
963. Alex. Alex, are you all right?
Copy !req
964. Good morning.
Copy !req
965. Yes, I am all right, thank you.
Copy !req
966. - I fell asleep in the chair.
- Yes.
Copy !req
967. - What time is it?
- 7:00.
Copy !req
968. I was dreaming
this morning I get some real coffee.
Copy !req
969. My husband must have gone out very
early this morning. You didn't happen...
Copy !req
970. He didn't go out.
He's over there on the couch.
Copy !req
971. He's all right. He's sleeping fine.
Copy !req
972. My dear child,
do you think old Alex Brulov,
Copy !req
973. one of the biggest brains
who is in psychiatry,
Copy !req
974. is unable to make out
two and two come out four?
Copy !req
975. I should have known.
Copy !req
976. The moment I see you with a husband
whose pupils are enlarged,
Copy !req
977. who has a tremor of the left hand,
Copy !req
978. who's on a honeymoon with no baggage,
Copy !req
979. and whose name is John Brown,
Copy !req
980. I know practically what is going on.
Copy !req
981. What happened?
Copy !req
982. Only what I expected.
Copy !req
983. There is no use taking chances
with a possibly dangerous case.
Copy !req
984. I sit here waiting.
Copy !req
985. If you scream, I am ready.
Copy !req
986. So he comes downstairs,
and he's dangerous.
Copy !req
987. I can see by his face.
Copy !req
988. So I keep talking
Copy !req
989. while I put some bromide
into a glass of milk.
Copy !req
990. Enough to knock out three horses.
Copy !req
991. When he falls down, I run up to see you.
Copy !req
992. You are sleeping like a baby,
Copy !req
993. and I come back here to watch out.
Copy !req
994. The struggle against his condition
agitates him at times,
Copy !req
995. but there's no danger in him.
Copy !req
996. This is what I found
in his hand last night.
Copy !req
997. He didn't know he had that.
Alex, you mustn't think that.
Copy !req
998. He didn't try to do anything to you,
he couldn't.
Copy !req
999. My dear child, he's not responsible.
Copy !req
1000. But that's not correct.
Copy !req
1001. I'm just a little more experienced
with his type than you.
Copy !req
1002. I grant you know
infinitely more than I do but in this...
Copy !req
1003. Do not complete this sentence
with the usual female contradictions.
Copy !req
1004. You grant me I know more than you.
Copy !req
1005. But on the other hand
you know more than me.
Copy !req
1006. - Women's talk.
- Alex, what are you going to do?
Copy !req
1007. Something more for you, than for me.
I'm calling the police.
Copy !req
1008. - No, no, please...
- You are giving me orders. My own pupil.
Copy !req
1009. You don't know this man,
you know only science.
Copy !req
1010. You know his mind,
but you don't know his heart.
Copy !req
1011. We are speaking of a schizophrenic,
Copy !req
1012. and not a valentine.
Copy !req
1013. We are speaking of a man.
Copy !req
1014. Oh.
Copy !req
1015. I see. Love.
Copy !req
1016. Look at you.
Copy !req
1017. Dr. Petersen,
the promising psychoanalyst,
Copy !req
1018. is now all of a sudden
Copy !req
1019. a schoolgirl in love with an actor,
nothing else.
Copy !req
1020. - Alex, let me tell you about him.
- What is there for you to say?
Copy !req
1021. We both know
that the mind of a woman in love
Copy !req
1022. is operating on the lowest level
of the intellect.
Copy !req
1023. Doctor told me not to smoke
in the morning, but I am too excited.
Copy !req
1024. You're right.
Copy !req
1025. I'm not an analyst, not even a doctor.
I'm not talking to you as one.
Copy !req
1026. But believe me, not what I say,
but what I feel.
Copy !req
1027. The mind isn't everything.
Copy !req
1028. The heart can see deeper sometimes.
Copy !req
1029. The shock of a police investigation
might ruin his chances for recovery,
Copy !req
1030. and I can save him.
Copy !req
1031. But if he killed Dr. Edwardes,
how can you help him?
Copy !req
1032. He didn't, he didn't.
Copy !req
1033. But if it turns out he did,
which I am good and certain it will.
Copy !req
1034. It won't. You yourself
taught me what Freud says.
Copy !req
1035. A man cannot do anything in amnesia that
his real character wouldn't have done.
Copy !req
1036. And how do you know
what his real character is?
Copy !req
1037. I know. I know.
Copy !req
1038. She knows.
Copy !req
1039. This is the way science goes backward.
Copy !req
1040. Who told you what he is?
Copy !req
1041. Freud? Or a crystal ball?
Copy !req
1042. I couldn't feel this way toward a man
who was bad,
Copy !req
1043. who had committed murder.
Copy !req
1044. I couldn't feel this pain
for someone who was evil.
Copy !req
1045. You are 20 times crazier than him.
Copy !req
1046. "She couldn't love him
if he was no good."
Copy !req
1047. This is baby talk, nothing else.
Copy !req
1048. What do you want I should do?
Copy !req
1049. Give me time to treat him and cure him
before the police find him,
Copy !req
1050. and shock him
into an incurable condition.
Copy !req
1051. - This could take a year.
- No. No, no.
Copy !req
1052. All right, half a year?
Copy !req
1053. We should sit and hide for half a year,
Copy !req
1054. waiting to find out if he's going to
cut your throat, my throat,
Copy !req
1055. and set fire to the house.
Copy !req
1056. Oh, my dear girl.
Copy !req
1057. Even to a woman in love,
Copy !req
1058. such a situation must seem
a little unreasonable.
Copy !req
1059. Just a few more days, Alex,
before you turn him over.
Copy !req
1060. Just a few more days,
and then if I can't do anything,
Copy !req
1061. if we both can't,
then you can call the police.
Copy !req
1062. You're not hiding a criminal.
There's no evidence against him
Copy !req
1063. except his own guilt fantasies.
He's wanted only
Copy !req
1064. as a possible witness as to
what happened to Dr. Edwardes.
Copy !req
1065. But in his present condition,
he could tell the police nothing.
Copy !req
1066. Don't you see
you're doing nothing against the law?
Copy !req
1067. We are helping them
by investigating the patient as doctors.
Copy !req
1068. Doctors who want the truth
even more than they do.
Copy !req
1069. All right.
Copy !req
1070. - You'll wait?
- Go make me coffee.
Copy !req
1071. I'll pretend to myself
I'm acting sensible for a few days.
Copy !req
1072. Thank you.
Copy !req
1073. Thank you very much.
Copy !req
1074. I'll make you coffee, with an egg.
Copy !req
1075. - Who are you?
- I'm Dr. Brulov.
Copy !req
1076. Brulov? Yeah, that's right.
Copy !req
1077. Bromides. Who's been
feeding me bromides?
Copy !req
1078. I gave you, to sleep.
Copy !req
1079. Brulov.
Copy !req
1080. Oh, yes. Rochester.
Copy !req
1081. What's your name?
Copy !req
1082. I don't know.
Copy !req
1083. - Constance told you.
- Nobody told me.
Copy !req
1084. If I don't know a patient with amnesia
when I see one, what do I know?
Copy !req
1085. You don't remember
your father or mother?
Copy !req
1086. No.
Copy !req
1087. - Wife or sweetheart?
- No.
Copy !req
1088. Don't fight me.
I'm going to help you, if I can.
Copy !req
1089. I'm going to be your father image.
Copy !req
1090. I want you to look on me
like your father.
Copy !req
1091. Trust me, lean on me.
Copy !req
1092. It's a shortcut,
but we haven't much time.
Copy !req
1093. All right. Go ahead, I'm leaning.
Copy !req
1094. Maybe you've got something
you want to tell me,
Copy !req
1095. a single thought,
a few words in the corner of your head.
Copy !req
1096. Go on, talk to me.
Copy !req
1097. Whatever comes into your head,
just say what it is.
Copy !req
1098. There's nothing.
Copy !req
1099. Maybe you dreamt something?
Copy !req
1100. - Yeah.
- What did you dream?
Copy !req
1101. I don't believe in dreams.
That Freud stuff's a lot of hooey.
Copy !req
1102. You are a fine one to talk.
Copy !req
1103. You've got amnesia,
and you've got a guilt complex.
Copy !req
1104. You don't know if you are coming
or going from someplace,
Copy !req
1105. but Freud is hooey.
Copy !req
1106. This you know.
Copy !req
1107. A wise guy.
Copy !req
1108. You don't like me, Papa.
Copy !req
1109. Do you want I should help you or not?
Copy !req
1110. I'm sorry.
Copy !req
1111. I'll explain to you about dreams,
Copy !req
1112. so you don't think it is hooey.
Copy !req
1113. The secrets of who you are
Copy !req
1114. and what has made you run away
from yourself,
Copy !req
1115. all these secrets
are buried in your brain.
Copy !req
1116. But you don't want to look at them.
Copy !req
1117. The human being very often doesn't want
to know the truth about himself,
Copy !req
1118. because he thinks it will make him sick.
Copy !req
1119. So he makes himself sicker
trying to forget.
Copy !req
1120. - You follow this?
- Yeah.
Copy !req
1121. - How do you feel?
- Coffee.
Copy !req
1122. Awful.
Copy !req
1123. The patient is going to tell us
what he dreamt.
Copy !req
1124. Fine, I'll take notes.
I'll get my glasses.
Copy !req
1125. Now here's where dreams come in.
Copy !req
1126. They tell you what you
are trying to hide.
Copy !req
1127. But they tell it to you all mixed up,
Copy !req
1128. like pieces of a puzzle that don't fit.
Copy !req
1129. The problem of the analyst
is to examine this puzzle
Copy !req
1130. and put the pieces together
in the right place.
Copy !req
1131. And find out what the devil
Copy !req
1132. you are trying to say to yourself.
Copy !req
1133. Let's see.
Copy !req
1134. I kept thinking while I was dreaming
that all this meant something,
Copy !req
1135. that there was some other meaning in it
that I ought to find out.
Copy !req
1136. We'll find out.
Copy !req
1137. I can't make out
just what sort of a place it was.
Copy !req
1138. It seemed to be a gambling house.
Copy !req
1139. But there weren't any walls,
just a lot of curtains
Copy !req
1140. with eyes painted on them.
Copy !req
1141. A man was walking around
with a large pair of scissors
Copy !req
1142. cutting all the drapes in half.
Copy !req
1143. And then a girl came in
with hardly anything on
Copy !req
1144. and started walking around
the gambling room kissing everybody.
Copy !req
1145. She came to my table first.
Copy !req
1146. Did you recognize
this kissing bug?
Copy !req
1147. I'm afraid she looked
a little like Constance.
Copy !req
1148. This is plain, ordinary,
wishful dreaming.
Copy !req
1149. Go on.
Copy !req
1150. I was sitting there playing cards
with a man who had a beard.
Copy !req
1151. I was dealing to him.
I turned up a seven of clubs.
Copy !req
1152. He said, "That makes 21. I win."
Copy !req
1153. But when he turned up his cards,
they were blank.
Copy !req
1154. Just then, the proprietor came in
and accused him of cheating.
Copy !req
1155. The proprietor yelled "This is my place.
If I catch you again, I'll fix you."
Copy !req
1156. I'm sorry about that kissing bug.
Copy !req
1157. I'm glad you didn't dream of me as
an eggbeater, as one of my patients did.
Copy !req
1158. Why? What would that mean?
Copy !req
1159. Never mind.
Copy !req
1160. Does it make any sense to you,
what I've dreamed?
Copy !req
1161. Not yet. You're trying to
tell yourself something.
Copy !req
1162. What it is, we'll figure out later.
Copy !req
1163. There's a lot more to it.
Copy !req
1164. Go on and try to recall the details.
Copy !req
1165. The more cockeyed, the better
for the scientific side of it.
Copy !req
1166. It was, leaning over the sloping roof
of a high building
Copy !req
1167. was the man with the beard.
I yelled at him to watch out.
Copy !req
1168. Then he went over slowly,
with his feet in the air.
Copy !req
1169. And then I saw the proprietor again,
the man in the mask.
Copy !req
1170. He was hiding behind a tall chimney
and he had a small wheel in his hand.
Copy !req
1171. I saw him drop the wheel on the roof.
Copy !req
1172. Suddenly I was running.
Copy !req
1173. Then I heard something
beating over my head.
Copy !req
1174. It was a great pair of wings.
Copy !req
1175. The wings chased me
and almost caught up with me
Copy !req
1176. when I came to the bottom of the hill.
Copy !req
1177. I must have escaped. I don't remember.
Copy !req
1178. That's all there was.
I woke up and saw Dr. Brulov.
Copy !req
1179. - Have some coffee.
- Thanks.
Copy !req
1180. - Something's happening there.
- What is it?
Copy !req
1181. - Snow.
- The light frightened him.
Copy !req
1182. Photophobia.
Copy !req
1183. No. It was the snow.
Copy !req
1184. That's the white he's afraid of.
Snow and those tracks.
Copy !req
1185. - What tracks?
- The sled tracks in the snow.
Copy !req
1186. The first symptom he revealed
was shock at the sight of fork lines
Copy !req
1187. drawn on a white tablecloth.
Copy !req
1188. And my robe, which had dark lines on it.
And last night, the white coverlet,
Copy !req
1189. like those dark tracks in the snow.
Copy !req
1190. We'll pull the blinds down.
Copy !req
1191. Dr. Edwardes was fond of sports.
Copy !req
1192. He mentions tennis and skiing
in his book as valuable
Copy !req
1193. in the treatment of mental disorders.
Copy !req
1194. Skiing.
Copy !req
1195. Ski tracks in the snow.
Copy !req
1196. That's what those dark lines
symbolize for him.
Copy !req
1197. His horror of them means, of course,
that they are immediately connected
Copy !req
1198. with the cause of his amnesia.
Copy !req
1199. Yes. A murder on skis.
Copy !req
1200. Where did Edwardes go for his skiing?
We must find out.
Copy !req
1201. Can you tell us where? Try.
Copy !req
1202. He has told us already in his dream.
Copy !req
1203. Let me see your notes.
Copy !req
1204. What can we do for him?
Copy !req
1205. You're not his mama, you're an analyst.
Copy !req
1206. Leave him alone.
He'll come out of this by himself.
Copy !req
1207. The sloping roof.
Copy !req
1208. - That means only mountainside.
- They were skiing.
Copy !req
1209. The father image, the bearded man,
is Dr. Edwardes.
Copy !req
1210. That's very simple. Dr. Edwardes
plunged over the precipice while skiing.
Copy !req
1211. And then a shadow chases him
up and down a hill.
Copy !req
1212. That could mean he was escaping
from a valley.
Copy !req
1213. Skiing resorts are often called valleys.
Like Sun Valley.
Copy !req
1214. He was being pursued by a winged figure,
a witch or a harpy.
Copy !req
1215. No. The figure was you.
Copy !req
1216. If you grew wings,
you would be an angel.
Copy !req
1217. The dream's trying to tell him
the name of the resort.
Copy !req
1218. Angel. Angel Valley.
Copy !req
1219. Do you remember Angel Valley?
Copy !req
1220. No.
Copy !req
1221. We can call a travel agency
and check all the resort names.
Copy !req
1222. It wasn't Angel Valley.
Copy !req
1223. I remember it.
Copy !req
1224. It was a place called Gabriel Valley.
Copy !req
1225. What else do you remember now?
Copy !req
1226. Who was the masked figure
in your dream?
Copy !req
1227. It was an accident.
Copy !req
1228. Do you remember that, a skiing accident?
Dr. Edwardes went over a snow cliff.
Copy !req
1229. It was no accident! I can't stand this
anymore. I've had enough of it.
Copy !req
1230. We've got to call the police.
Copy !req
1231. No. We have to go to Gabriel Valley.
You've got to go with me.
Copy !req
1232. - This is for Cooley when he comes in.
- I'll tell him.
Copy !req
1233. At 4:45? Thank you.
Goodbye.
Copy !req
1234. There's a train leaving in an hour. We
can make connections for Gabriel Valley.
Copy !req
1235. I know what I have to do.
I can't go on endangering you.
Copy !req
1236. - I know about last night.
- Nothing happened.
Copy !req
1237. But it will.
I've got to end it before it does.
Copy !req
1238. I love you, but I'm not worth loving.
Copy !req
1239. - Darling, you can help me afterward.
- There's no help afterward.
Copy !req
1240. If you give yourself up to the police
in your condition,
Copy !req
1241. there's no afterwards for either of us.
I can cure you.
Copy !req
1242. - But you can't undo a murder.
- There is none to undo.
Copy !req
1243. - I killed him.
- Stop it.
Copy !req
1244. And now, you... Last night...
Don't try to stop me, I've got to go.
Copy !req
1245. Guilt, guilt, you've lived with it
for a long time, haven't you?
Copy !req
1246. Yes.
Copy !req
1247. - Since childhood.
- What?
Copy !req
1248. Ever since your childhood,
you've tried to run away from something.
Copy !req
1249. You've always felt guilty about
everything that happened around you.
Copy !req
1250. What was it in your youth?
Copy !req
1251. It must have been terrible for you
to prefer to think you murdered Edwardes
Copy !req
1252. rather than remember
what happened long ago.
Copy !req
1253. You said you love me. Look at me.
Then, why am I fighting for you?
Copy !req
1254. - Because I love you. Because I need you.
- But I'm nothing.
Copy !req
1255. I want you to come with me
to Gabriel Valley.
Copy !req
1256. What good will that do?
Copy !req
1257. When you see the hill where the accident
happened, you'll remember it.
Copy !req
1258. We'll go skiing together
as you did with Edwardes.
Copy !req
1259. I was there, I killed him.
Copy !req
1260. You'll see your innocence,
you'll see what really happened.
Copy !req
1261. - You mean, because it will happen again?
- Yes.
Copy !req
1262. And what if I killed him?
Copy !req
1263. Isn't it true that if
the episode's repeated,
Copy !req
1264. I'm likely to do
the same thing I did before?
Copy !req
1265. Then how do you know I won't kill again?
Copy !req
1266. Because I'm convinced
you didn't kill in the first place.
Copy !req
1267. You believe in me enough
to take such a chance?
Copy !req
1268. Of course I do.
Copy !req
1269. We're going back to that ski run.
Copy !req
1270. We'll find out what it was
in your childhood
Copy !req
1271. that's haunted you all your life.
Copy !req
1272. We'll also find out what happened
to Dr. Edwardes.
Copy !req
1273. Did you ever see her before?
Copy !req
1274. Let's go.
Copy !req
1275. I've always loved very feminine clothes,
but never quite dared to wear them.
Copy !req
1276. But I'm going to after this,
Copy !req
1277. I'm going to wear exactly the things
that please me.
Copy !req
1278. And you.
Copy !req
1279. Even very funny hats.
Copy !req
1280. You know, the kind
that makes you look a little drunk?
Copy !req
1281. Put them on.
Copy !req
1282. It was something in my childhood.
Copy !req
1283. Something in my childhood.
Copy !req
1284. I remember now. I killed my brother.
Copy !req
1285. I didn't kill my brother.
It was an accident. It was an accident!
Copy !req
1286. That's what's haunted you all your life.
That was the memory you were afraid of.
Copy !req
1287. It's like looking into a picture book,
an old one,
Copy !req
1288. seeing the familiar pictures
one at a time.
Copy !req
1289. I went to Columbia Medical School,
met a girl with a giggle,
Copy !req
1290. who luckily married my roommate, Ken.
Copy !req
1291. Oh, and by the way,
my name's John Ballyntine.
Copy !req
1292. I'm very pleased to meet you.
Copy !req
1293. Another thing, my Army record's
all right. I was invalided out.
Copy !req
1294. I ran into Dr. Edwardes when
I was in the Cumberland Mountains,
Copy !req
1295. trying to recover
from some kind of nerve shock I got
Copy !req
1296. when the plane crashed.
Copy !req
1297. He was on vacation
but I asked him to help me,
Copy !req
1298. and he invited me to go skiing with him.
Copy !req
1299. We went through New York.
I seem to remember
Copy !req
1300. going to lunch somewhere. It's still
a little vague about that luncheon part.
Copy !req
1301. Then we arrived here,
and the accident happened at that spot.
Copy !req
1302. Where you saved me.
Copy !req
1303. Now, let's not have any confusion
about who saved whom.
Copy !req
1304. Yes, he went over there, all right.
It's still a little foggy.
Copy !req
1305. But I do know that Edwardes was
about 50 feet ahead of me
Copy !req
1306. when he went over. I saw him plunge.
Copy !req
1307. That was the thing that set you off.
That stirred up your old guilt complex
Copy !req
1308. and made you think
that you'd killed him.
Copy !req
1309. Then you had to run away from that, too.
Copy !req
1310. Then you took on the role
of Dr. Edwardes
Copy !req
1311. to prove to yourself he wasn't dead,
so therefore, you had not killed him.
Copy !req
1312. Professor, I never quite realized
in my amnesic state how lovely you are.
Copy !req
1313. Now that you got your head back,
you mustn't lose it again.
Copy !req
1314. It's too late. I'm beyond cure.
Copy !req
1315. How does it feel to be a great analyst?
Copy !req
1316. Not so bad.
Copy !req
1317. - And a great detective?
- Wonderful.
Copy !req
1318. And madly adored?
Copy !req
1319. Very wonderful.
Copy !req
1320. You'll look wonderful in white
Copy !req
1321. with a little orange blossom
in your hair.
Copy !req
1322. That sounds vaguely as if
it had something to do with marriage.
Copy !req
1323. That's a brilliant analysis, Doctor.
Copy !req
1324. Hello.
Copy !req
1325. You know Lieutenant Cooley
and Sergeant Gillespie from Rochester?
Copy !req
1326. Yes, yes, we know them quite well.
Copy !req
1327. How did you find us?
Copy !req
1328. With no thanks to your friend,
Dr. Brulov.
Copy !req
1329. We made a few inquiries at the railroad
station. You left a trail a mile wide.
Copy !req
1330. You arrived just in the nick of time.
Copy !req
1331. I believe that's the usual expression.
Copy !req
1332. We found the body of Dr. Edwardes.
Copy !req
1333. It's almost exactly where
you told the local police it would be.
Copy !req
1334. - You remember the spot very well.
- Thank goodness it's all cleared up.
Copy !req
1335. Not quite, Dr. Petersen.
Copy !req
1336. I'm afraid a bullet was found
in the body.
Copy !req
1337. That's impossible.
Copy !req
1338. - It was in his back.
- The case is one of murder.
Copy !req
1339. We shall have to detain you, sir.
Copy !req
1340. It's my duty to inform you that anything
you say may be used against you.
Copy !req
1341. No.
Copy !req
1342. You mustn't say you killed him.
Copy !req
1343. Try to remember what happened
before Edwardes went over.
Copy !req
1344. But when he said he killed him,
he wasn't himself.
Copy !req
1345. He was in a state of
great mental distress.
Copy !req
1346. You can't put him away. You can't!
Copy !req
1347. It'll destroy his mind.
Don't you understand?
Copy !req
1348. Goodbye, my dear.
Copy !req
1349. We won't give up hope. I'm going to
fight and fight and get you free.
Copy !req
1350. My dear girl,
Copy !req
1351. you cannot keep bumping your head
against reality
Copy !req
1352. and saying it is not there.
Copy !req
1353. The evidence was definite.
Copy !req
1354. We can't remove it by wishing or crying.
Copy !req
1355. He trusted me.
Copy !req
1356. I led him into a trap. I convicted him.
Copy !req
1357. Is that real enough for you?
Copy !req
1358. There is no one to blame.
Copy !req
1359. The case was a little deeper
than you figured.
Copy !req
1360. This often happens.
Copy !req
1361. You must realize now one thing.
Copy !req
1362. It is over for both of you.
Copy !req
1363. It's not over.
Copy !req
1364. - You will have other cases.
- It's not over. It never will be.
Copy !req
1365. Don't ask me to stop, I can't. I can't.
Copy !req
1366. Oh, I'm... I'm sorry, I...
Copy !req
1367. Thanks for straightening things out
with Dr. Murchison
Copy !req
1368. and everyone.
Copy !req
1369. It is very sad
Copy !req
1370. to love and lose somebody.
Copy !req
1371. But in a while, you'll forget,
Copy !req
1372. and you will take up
the threads of your life
Copy !req
1373. where you left off not so long ago
Copy !req
1374. and you will work hard.
Copy !req
1375. There's lots of happiness
in working hard.
Copy !req
1376. Maybe the most.
Copy !req
1377. I will write to you.
Copy !req
1378. Oh, Alex.
Copy !req
1379. You're very good.
Copy !req
1380. I'm sorry to hurry you, Dr. Brulov,
but your car is waiting.
Copy !req
1381. - You have just time.
- Thank you.
Copy !req
1382. I'm always late, always forgetting.
Copy !req
1383. A brilliant man.
Copy !req
1384. I should have gone
to the station with him.
Copy !req
1385. You're too tired.
Copy !req
1386. I know that feeling of exhaustion
only too well.
Copy !req
1387. One must humor it, or it explodes.
Copy !req
1388. I shall try to help you in every way.
Copy !req
1389. - You will take care of yourself?
- Yes.
Copy !req
1390. And try to forget things
better forgotten.
Copy !req
1391. You've got a great career ahead of you,
Constance.
Copy !req
1392. Thank you. Well, at least one good thing
came out of all this.
Copy !req
1393. You are back at Green Manors.
Copy !req
1394. Who knows what would have happened
to the place under Dr. Edwardes?
Copy !req
1395. I knew Edwardes only slightly.
Copy !req
1396. I never really liked him.
Copy !req
1397. But he was a good man,
in a way, I suppose.
Copy !req
1398. Well, good night, Constance.
Copy !req
1399. I hope you feel rested in the morning.
Copy !req
1400. I knew Edwardes
only slightly.
Copy !req
1401. I never liked him very well.
Copy !req
1402. I knew Edwardes only slightly.
Copy !req
1403. Knew Edwardes slightly.
Copy !req
1404. Knew Edwardes.
Copy !req
1405. Knew Edwardes slightly.
Copy !req
1406. Knew Edwardes.
Copy !req
1407. Knew.
Copy !req
1408. Come in.
Copy !req
1409. I want to talk to you, Dr. Murchison.
Copy !req
1410. It's rather late,
and you need rest, Constance.
Copy !req
1411. I must talk to you.
Copy !req
1412. Nocturnal confidences
are bad for the nerves.
Copy !req
1413. - Is it something about your work?
- Yes.
Copy !req
1414. - Can't it wait till morning?
- It can't wait.
Copy !req
1415. Do sit down.
Copy !req
1416. Now, what's your problem?
Copy !req
1417. It is a dream
one of my patients reported.
Copy !req
1418. May I ask who the patient is?
Copy !req
1419. The patient is John Ballyntine.
Copy !req
1420. I fancied that.
Copy !req
1421. You're still working on
the possibility of his innocence.
Copy !req
1422. Charming loyalty.
Copy !req
1423. One of your most
attractive characteristics, Constance.
Copy !req
1424. What did he dream?
Copy !req
1425. He dreamt he was in a gambling house,
it was full of odd people
Copy !req
1426. playing with blank cards.
Copy !req
1427. Blank cards.
Copy !req
1428. Obviously the patient was trying to deny
it was a gambling house
Copy !req
1429. by dreaming of spurious cards.
Copy !req
1430. One of the people in the place went
around cutting the drapes in half.
Copy !req
1431. Another was a scantily dressed girl
who was kissing everybody.
Copy !req
1432. With a little effort, one could almost
imagine the inmates of Green Manors.
Copy !req
1433. That's what I had in mind,
Dr. Murchison.
Copy !req
1434. Interesting notion to play around with,
isn't it?
Copy !req
1435. Do go on.
Copy !req
1436. There were eyes painted on the curtains
around the walls.
Copy !req
1437. Oh.
Copy !req
1438. The guards at Green Manors.
Copy !req
1439. The patient was playing cards,
now no longer blank.
Copy !req
1440. A game of twenty-one with a bearded man
who was evidently Dr. Edwardes.
Copy !req
1441. Yes, one usually dreams of one's analyst
as authority with a beard.
Copy !req
1442. He dealt Edwardes the seven of clubs,
and Edwardes said,
Copy !req
1443. "That makes it 21."
Copy !req
1444. I would say the patient was trying
to mention a locale.
Copy !req
1445. The seven of clubs might mean a club.
Copy !req
1446. Yes, with the word "twenty-one" in it.
Copy !req
1447. There is such a place in New York.
It's called the 21 Club.
Copy !req
1448. I've heard of it.
Copy !req
1449. The patient dreamt
Copy !req
1450. the proprietor of the place came in and
began accusing Dr. Edwardes of cheating.
Copy !req
1451. He ordered Edwardes out and said,
"I won't allow you to play here.
Copy !req
1452. This is my place.
I'm going to fix you."
Copy !req
1453. The dream gives the locale
a double identity.
Copy !req
1454. The 21 Club and Green Manors.
Copy !req
1455. The proprietor seems to belong
more to the latter.
Copy !req
1456. In fact...
Copy !req
1457. I would say that this angry proprietor
who threatened Dr. Edwardes...
Copy !req
1458. was myself.
Copy !req
1459. It seemed that way to me.
Copy !req
1460. I presume you only arrived
at this solution tonight?
Copy !req
1461. Yes.
Copy !req
1462. And have confided your
psychoanalytic findings to nobody?
Copy !req
1463. Not yet.
Copy !req
1464. Was there any more to the dream?
Copy !req
1465. Yes.
Copy !req
1466. The patient dreamt he and Dr. Edwardes
were on a high sloping roof,
Copy !req
1467. and that he saw Edwardes plunge
over the edge to his death.
Copy !req
1468. He also saw the angry proprietor
hiding behind the chimney laughing,
Copy !req
1469. holding a small wheel in his hand.
He dropped the wheel.
Copy !req
1470. The symbolism of
the small wheel escapes me.
Copy !req
1471. It was a revolver.
Copy !req
1472. The proprietor who threatened
Edwardes' life in the 21 Club
Copy !req
1473. dropped a revolver in the snow
in Gabriel Valley
Copy !req
1474. after shooting Dr. Edwardes in the back.
Copy !req
1475. The weapon is still there
at the foot of a tree
Copy !req
1476. with the murderer's fingerprints on it.
Copy !req
1477. I can't agree with this part
of your interpretation,
Copy !req
1478. for the good reason that
the weapon is now in my hand.
Copy !req
1479. I imagined something
of this sort would happen
Copy !req
1480. when I made the slip tonight
about knowing Edwardes.
Copy !req
1481. That started your agile,
young mind going.
Copy !req
1482. You were having a breakdown.
Copy !req
1483. In a state of panic, you heard that
Edwardes was to take your place here.
Copy !req
1484. So you sought him out
in his favorite restaurant,
Copy !req
1485. where he was lunching
with John Ballyntine.
Copy !req
1486. You accused him of stealing your job.
Copy !req
1487. You threatened to kill him.
Copy !req
1488. He calmed you down, told you he was off
on a skiing vacation.
Copy !req
1489. You followed him there
Copy !req
1490. and shot him from behind a tree.
Copy !req
1491. That's enough. Your story is ridiculous.
Copy !req
1492. You'll make a fool of yourself.
Copy !req
1493. A love-smitten analyst
playing a dream detective.
Copy !req
1494. There'll be no dreams for the police.
Copy !req
1495. They'll find out from the waiters
in the 21 Club that you were there.
Copy !req
1496. You'll be identified as the man
who had a row with Dr. Edwardes.
Copy !req
1497. There will be people who saw you
on the train to Gabriel Valley,
Copy !req
1498. who saw you there.
Copy !req
1499. There will be no dreams
necessary for this case.
Copy !req
1500. I see.
Copy !req
1501. You're an excellent analyst,
Dr. Petersen, but a rather stupid woman.
Copy !req
1502. What did you think I'd do when
you told me all this? Congratulate you?
Copy !req
1503. You forget in your imbecilic devotion
to your patient
Copy !req
1504. that the punishment for two murders
Copy !req
1505. is the same as for one.
Copy !req
1506. You're not going to commit
a second murder, Dr. Murchison.
Copy !req
1507. I hadn't planned to, but you're here.
Copy !req
1508. You're not leaving.
Copy !req
1509. A man with your intelligence
does not commit a stupid murder.
Copy !req
1510. You're thinking you were not
mentally responsible
Copy !req
1511. for that other crime in the snow.
Copy !req
1512. They'll find extenuating circumstances
in the state of your health.
Copy !req
1513. They'll not execute you
for the death of Dr. Edwardes.
Copy !req
1514. You can still live,
read, write, research,
Copy !req
1515. even if you are put away.
Copy !req
1516. You're thinking that now, Dr. Murchison.
Copy !req
1517. If you shoot now,
it is cold, deliberate murder.
Copy !req
1518. You'll be tried as a sane murderer,
Copy !req
1519. convicted as a sane man,
Copy !req
1520. and killed in the electric chair
for your crime.
Copy !req
1521. I'm going to telephone the police now,
Dr. Murchison.
Copy !req
1522. And remember what I say.
Copy !req
1523. Any husband of Constance
is a husband of mine, so to speak.
Copy !req
1524. All right.
Copy !req
1525. - Goodbye. Good luck.
- Goodbye.
Copy !req