- 4 hours ago
- #bleakhouse
- #charlesdickens
#bleakhouse #charlesdickens https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC5domZkB-eRa6BuFOO8OXaQ
Richard is deep in debt and trough with the Army. Ada offers him her inheritance to cover his debts, but he decides to leave service and devote himself to the trial full-time. Doctor Allan Woodcourt is back, still penniless having suffered shipwreck. He arrives too late to save gentle urchin Jo, who dies from pneumonia but first denounces Tlkinghorn as the monster who had the knave persecuted. This time bloody vengeance is exacted.
Starring:
Denis Lawson
Anna Maxwell Martin
Patrick Kennedy
Carey Mulligan
Gillian Anderson
Charles Dance
Alun Armstrong
Timothy West
Burn Gorman
Harry Eden
Richard is deep in debt and trough with the Army. Ada offers him her inheritance to cover his debts, but he decides to leave service and devote himself to the trial full-time. Doctor Allan Woodcourt is back, still penniless having suffered shipwreck. He arrives too late to save gentle urchin Jo, who dies from pneumonia but first denounces Tlkinghorn as the monster who had the knave persecuted. This time bloody vengeance is exacted.
Starring:
Denis Lawson
Anna Maxwell Martin
Patrick Kennedy
Carey Mulligan
Gillian Anderson
Charles Dance
Alun Armstrong
Timothy West
Burn Gorman
Harry Eden
Category
🎥
Short filmTranscript
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02:54I'll come of age very soon and have my own inheritance.
02:57If it's very large, I could save Richard
02:59from having to sell out of the army.
03:01Ada, are you sure it won't be throwing good money after bad?
03:04I can.
03:06I love him, and I want to help him.
03:08And that's all I know.
03:17Rosa, come and sit down by me.
03:29Rosa, remember I told you that I might have to send you away?
03:34Yes, milady.
03:36I have written to Mr. Ranswell and he will come for you tomorrow.
03:40So soon?
03:41Yes, it must be soon.
03:43Rosa, I do not want to part with you.
03:47But it is for the best.
03:52I hope you will think kindly of me, Rosa.
03:57Whatever you hear about.
04:01Ah, here we are, ladies.
04:03As snug and cosier room as any you'll find in deal.
04:07Is this your first visit here?
04:08Yes, it is.
04:09Are you meeting someone from the India, ma'am?
04:12She's due to drop anchor off the downs on the afternoon tide.
04:15Well, lots of folks gone down to see her boats coming to shore.
04:19No, we've come to see an officer who's billeted here.
04:21I wonder, could you tell us how to get to the barracks?
04:23Surely, miss.
04:24Nothing easier.
04:25Come on, sir.
04:36Come on.
04:39Come on.
04:40Come on.
04:44Yes?
04:48Esther.
04:51Peter.
05:00What are you doing here?
05:02Who would have thought of seeing you?
05:05I was just writing to you.
05:07Now, come in. Sit down.
05:11I, uh...
05:13I have nothing to offer you but myself, I'm afraid.
05:17That's all we wanted.
05:18Well.
05:20So what were you writing? Let me read it.
05:22Oh, no need. You can, uh...
05:26Read it in the room.
05:30It's all up with me here.
05:32If you'd have come an hour or two later, I'd have been gone.
05:38Yes, I'm selling out.
05:40That's the end of another career.
05:41Is it really as hopeless as that?
05:43It is.
05:45I'm so no disgrace here, they'd rather be rid of me.
05:48And it's not just the debts.
05:50I've lost my appetite for soldiering.
05:53I can't get my heart to it, or my mind, or my soul.
05:57I can't attend to anything while those villains in court are holding my fate in the balance.
06:03The regiment's ordered abroad.
06:04How could I go abroad?
06:05How could I leave things hanging?
06:06How could I trust Eve and Vols to see to my affairs in as I was at his back?
06:11Richard, I came here to tell you I want you to have my inheritance.
06:17That portion of it, which is mine alone, and will come to me soon.
06:21So that you can set yourself right with the regiment.
06:24And remain in the service.
06:34You could do that for me.
06:36Of course I would.
06:38I'd do more, I'd do anything.
06:41Ada.
06:46I shall never forget this.
06:55But you know, of course, I could never accept it.
06:58Not to stay in this wretched life.
07:00I was never meant to be a soldier, and I won't waste your inheritance on trying to continue as one.
07:06Your little fortune will be devoted to what promises a better return.
07:10Where you and I have a larger stake.
07:12Our birthright.
07:12Richard.
07:13Don't be uneasy for me.
07:14I shall only have one thing on my mind now, and Vols and I will work at it, and it
07:17will come right.
07:18I swear it.
07:19It's no use arguing.
07:20My mind is made up.
07:21Just give me an hour or two to wind things up here, and I'll meet you back at the inn,
07:24and we'll travel back to London tomorrow.
07:32All right, ladies, let them through.
07:44Where on earth did all these people come from?
07:46That's the Indian man, miss.
07:48Some of them are from it, and some have come to greet him.
07:50The doctor himself is staying here this night.
07:52What doctor?
07:53I've surely heard of him, miss.
07:55Woodcourt.
07:56The hero of the wreck.
07:58Well, here they are now, I believe.
08:16My son is.
08:41Mr. Snakesby.
08:42No loitering here, son.
08:43Move on.
08:44Hey, quick about it.
08:46Go on, get out of it.
08:49What's the matter, office?
08:50Just riff-raff, Mr. Snakesby.
08:52I'll send him off.
09:03Is that you, Ada?
09:04No, Miss Samerson, it's Alan Woodcourt.
09:31I heard of your illness.
09:33I heard of your illness.
09:35But no doubt you were well looked after, but no doubt you were well looked after.
09:37Oh, yes.
09:38My maid, Charlie, was an excellent nurse.
09:41And you are quite recovered now?
09:44I feel as well as I ever did.
09:46And I am as you see me.
09:51Yes.
09:52You needn't pity me, Mr. Woodcourt.
09:54I was never vain about my look, so there's no harm done.
09:59The marks will fade, you know, until no one will be able to tell.
10:03I've told you I don't want pity.
10:04If they fade, they fade.
10:06If they don't, I shall still think myself very lucky to be alive.
10:09I never quite thought of that before, you know.
10:13No.
10:14Nor did I.
10:17Of course, you're shipwreck.
10:23I heard you were very brave.
10:26How much good will it do me?
10:29I left England as a penniless surgeon and I'm coming back as one.
10:32I can't even afford a decent suit of clothes.
10:35I ran into Richard Carston downstairs.
10:36He said he envied me.
10:38I don't think many men would.
10:41Please.
10:44How do you think he looked?
10:46Very much as before.
10:48Eager, cheerful, but I do see a change in him.
10:51Before I'd have described him as animated,
10:53now perhaps agitated would be the better word.
10:56Is there something that worries him?
10:59Only this dreadful chancery case.
11:02Mr. Woodcourt, would you do something for me?
11:06Anything if I can.
11:08Would you look out for Richard in London?
11:10He needs a good friend more than anything.
11:13Gladly.
11:15I could do with a good friend myself.
11:18Now, what do you say?
11:20Should we all dine together here at the inn?
11:26I'm a free man.
11:29A free man.
11:31I don't know how happy I am, Woodcourt,
11:32to be out of that confounded barracks.
11:34I feel like I'm starting my life all over again.
11:37Here among my friends.
11:40It's a friendship.
11:41A friendship?
11:42It's a friendship.
11:55Oh.
11:56Well, Mother.
12:00Come in, sit down.
12:01You have time?
12:03Aye.
12:04Let's then wait a while.
12:09I remember you sitting there when you were five years old,
12:13with your brother beside you.
12:15Fighting and quarrelling, no doubt.
12:17Oh, no.
12:20That came later.
12:23He was a very sweet-natured boy.
12:26And later on, he was never really bad, just wild.
12:30If you say so, Mother.
12:32I do say so.
12:35He was a dear boy.
12:38I suppose he's buried in some foreign field now.
12:49Come now, Mother.
12:52You've still got me.
12:54Little enough I see you.
12:58I don't mind that.
13:01I know you're a busy man.
13:05I was my grandson.
13:07Oh, sends his love.
13:09He's all right.
13:10He's still pining for that Rosa of yours.
13:15I offered to educate the girl out of my own pocket.
13:18And they sent me away with a flea in my ear.
13:21And now they want to cast her off.
13:25It's not what I wanted for him.
13:27A girl from the village.
13:30Oh, weren't you a boy from the village?
13:32I was, but I'm not any more, Mother.
13:35I'm as well set up as them upstairs now.
13:38Might buy them out one day
13:39when I've had enough of hard work.
13:42God knows I'd like to,
13:43if it were only to see the look on his face.
13:56I'm afraid you will have a rather chill, damp journey, sir.
14:00We're used to that.
14:17Come here, child.
14:19You must do as he says, Rosa.
14:22Mr. Ranswell will take good care of you.
14:26Come, Rosa.
14:27You do care for my lad, don't you?
14:29Yes, sir.
14:31Well, then.
14:37She seems reluctant to go, sir.
14:39Well, she's not well-bred, you see, Celeste.
14:42If she had remained here,
14:44she would have improved, no doubt.
14:46Good day, Celeste.
14:48Good day, Lady Deadlock.
14:51Come along, Rosa.
15:02My son of a blackguard.
15:30Let's go.
15:31Let's go.
15:32No!
15:44Joe?
15:46Joe?
15:52Watercourt?
15:53A deal?
15:54Yes, we'll have supper together at the inn.
15:57He was very attentive to Esther.
16:00Ada, he was not.
16:01He was polite and kind like a gentleman.
16:04But he got on very well with Richard,
16:07and he has promised to be a friend to him in London.
16:12A friend to Rick in London?
16:17So Rick is selling out after all.
16:18It was all done before we got there.
16:20Nothing we could say would make him change his mind.
16:22And where does he live in London?
16:24I think near Mr. Voles' office.
16:27Very convenient for Mr. Voles.
16:29He'll have Rick safely in his sticky web,
16:33all the better to consume him entirely at his leisure.
16:35Stop!
16:36I can't bear to hear Richard spoken about like that.
16:40He has made his decision,
16:41and I think we should allow him to know what's best for him.
16:44Ada, Ada, I...
16:45I don't think we should discuss it anymore.
16:56Is anything the matter?
16:58Let me look at you, boy.
17:00I'm a doctor, I'm not gonna hurt you.
17:03Wait a minute, don't I know you?
17:05It may call you to the coroner's court.
17:07I've never done nothing, sir.
17:09It's true, sir.
17:10Thank nothing, sir.
17:12St. Albans?
17:12Yes, sir.
17:13And a young lady took pity on him and took him home and nursed him.
17:17And he really ran away in the night and left her with the fever,
17:19and she nearly died of it, sir.
17:22Oh, the poor little thing.
17:25There's nothing you can do for him.
17:28My guess is he has pneumonia in both lungs and more besides.
17:33Come on, then.
17:34Let's find you a place where you can be comfortable.
17:37Oh, oh, be careful of him, Mr. Squad.
17:40Are you sure you can manage it?
17:41Don't you worry, Miss Flight.
17:42He's nowhere at all to carry a furby scrap.
17:45What's this?
17:46General George.
17:47My dear physician, Mr. Woodcourt, sought my assistance
17:50in finding a place for this poor young patient,
17:54and I immediately thought of you.
17:56General George will help us out, I said.
17:59Bring him over here, Phil. Lay him down.
18:02The thing is, I don't want to take him to a hospital or workhouse.
18:06He is terrified that he would be found by a man
18:09who has been harrying him and ordering him to go here and there.
18:12A man called Bucket, Inspector of Police.
18:15I know him, sir.
18:17And I've seen this boy before.
18:18Not like you, though.
18:21He looks very bad, sir.
18:23I fear he is.
18:26Well, he's welcome to stay here as long as it takes.
18:29One way or t'other.
18:30It's very good of you, Sergeant George.
18:34He seems agitated, like.
18:39Joe, anything that we could do for you to put your mind at rest?
18:43Is there a friend that we could call?
18:48Mrs. Snagsby?
18:53And the lady?
18:54Yeah.
18:56Could you tell her I never met her in her home?
19:00I shall, Joe.
19:02I shall.
19:03I shall.
19:09Thought you'd wish to know, sir.
19:11Sir Lester and this lady came to town today.
19:15Did they know?
19:18She sent the maid away.
19:20The pretty girl.
19:21The one you mentioned.
19:23Gone.
19:25Thought you'd wish to know, Mr. Tolkien.
19:29Thank you, Clam.
19:36And how do you find yourself, my poor lad?
19:41I'm in luck here, Mrs. Snagsby.
19:44We're very cosy here.
19:49I never meant to do it, sir.
19:51Do what, Joe?
19:56Might the lady you need to die?
20:01She's coming here herself, Joe.
20:04You can tell her yourself.
20:13Pray God he lives that long.
20:15There's very little I can do for him.
20:18Poor lad.
20:20Hold up, my boy.
20:21Hold up.
20:23I'll beat this over.
20:29Don't let the other one come.
20:32Inspector Bucket, Joe.
20:34No, he won't come here.
20:36No.
20:37The other one.
20:40You know him, Mrs. Snagsby?
20:43Where I was took, behind the big desk.
20:46It was him.
20:50He set the inspector onto me.
20:53That's when all my trouble started.
20:55No, no, Joe.
20:56He wouldn't harm you.
20:57Who?
20:58Who do you speak of?
21:00By Mr. Tolkienhorn.
21:05A Donkey Kong様.
21:15Are you still here?
21:30How is he making it?
21:31Theả pot is something about his own.
21:31What can we do, who 사람이
21:38well i thought we had an agreement lady deadlock what agreement that you would take no action
21:46without reference to me you have violated that agreement by sending that girl away
21:51what possible harm can it do to spare an innocent girl from the taint of scandal
21:58if i wish to protect my secret it is not your secret any longer it is my secret in trust
22:03for
22:04celeste and the family i consider our agreement to be broken lady deadlock
22:10and i reserve the right to take what action i see fit you must do as you wish
22:20and that is all i have to trouble you with this evening wait
22:29do you mean to tell sir leicester tonight no not tonight
22:38tomorrow then
22:42it may be tomorrow
22:46good evening lady deadlock
23:09what's the matter joe
23:13thought i was tom all alone again
23:18it's just a dream joe you're safe now you're with friends
23:25not for very long though
23:28going ain't i moving on about the cop we said right
23:35you don't have to go anywhere joe where did you think of going
23:45by and by joe not yet
23:50it's getting very dark
23:53i thought there'd be a light coming
24:02joe did you ever know a prayer
24:07i miss joe can you say what i say
24:14our father
24:18our father
24:20which art in heaven
24:27art
24:28in heaven
24:30heaven
24:31hallowed be
24:45dead
25:00dead
25:01dead your majesty
25:04dead my lords and gentlemen
25:06dead your worships
25:09dead right reverends of every order and degree
25:12dead and dying
25:14everything else around does
25:18everyday
25:43Oh, dearie.
25:44Beg pardon, my lady. I thought you'd retired for the night.
25:47Sir Lester has retired for the night. I am going out.
25:51Call for the carriage, my lady?
25:52Not necessary, Mercury. I simply want a breath of fresh air, that is all.
25:58So will you be so good as to unbolt the door?
26:01Very good, my lady.
26:27Mr. Poor lad will have a proper burial.
26:31Mr. Jarndyce, he'll see to that.
26:34Clergyman.
26:36Brass-handled coffin.
26:39I'm proper in ship-shape.
26:43He's a good man, not Mr. Jarndyce.
26:46That man bears a heavy weight of blame, Phil.
26:50Mr. Jarndyce, what's he done?
26:52Not Jarndyce.
26:54Tolkienhorn.
26:56The war comes back to Tolkienhorn.
27:01He's like the old enemy himself.
27:06I'm going out, Phil.
27:08What have you got, just have a night?
27:10Never you mind.
27:19I'll be going home then, Mr. Tolkienhorn.
27:22All right, Clare.
27:24Good night then, sir.
27:25Good night.
27:36Thank God, sir.
27:37No harm done.
27:38Good night.
27:38Thank God, sir.
27:53No harm done.
27:53Good night.
28:12Who's there?
28:18Who's there, I say?
28:20You.
28:26You.
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