- 2 weeks ago
- #realityrealmus
#RealityRealmUS
Reality Realm US
🎞 Please subscribe to our official channel to watch the full movie for free, as soon as possible. ❤️Reality Insight Hub❤️
👉 Official Channel: />👉 THANK YOU ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
Category
🎥
Short filmTranscript
00:00Satsang with Mooji
00:30Someone said that death might end a life,
00:50but for the survivor, the relationship struggles on,
00:56seeking resolution it may never find.
01:00I suppose we should have guessed that the death of one of us
01:04would bring us back together.
01:05But none of us are under any illusion that time heals.
01:12Miss Pugh?
01:14You and Fleming, Gibson and Parks.
01:17Solicitors.
01:30Stanley, Stanley, how big do you?
01:45Was there you raised the alarm?
01:47At least broke down the door.
01:49A bit of a mess to a men job, I'm afraid.
01:50Once the post-mortem confirmed death as natural causes,
02:01the police got in a company to disinfect the place.
02:04As executor of the will, you'll need to settle the charge from the estate.
02:06Uh, the chemicals, when they sanitised it.
02:17Under the terms of the will, you and the other legatees
02:20can dispose of any personal items as you choose.
02:23Are they coming today, too?
02:24Is it right you all live together?
02:31Former flatmates, it says in the will.
02:35We lost touch over the years.
02:40When probate is complete, the flat will be sold.
02:43All debts discharged, after which the estate will be divided between you and the others.
02:48We'll drop them off for your convenience.
02:58Um, how long was it before they found...
03:04Two weeks.
03:05Joy of city life, eh?
03:18Two weeks through St. Louis...
03:19One more time to...
03:37...
04:09I'll get back to you as soon as possible.
04:12Thank you very much.
04:13Thank you. Bye.
04:14Next six.
04:19The old man bought the lease.
04:21Cheaper than shelling out on rent.
04:23Which makes me a landlord.
04:25But as a paid-up member of the all-properties theft club, the joke is on me.
04:29Um, it's a shared one three guineas a week.
04:32Needs decorating and shit like the others.
04:34The other single, five for a week.
04:36And the doubles across the hall.
04:38Which one are you again?
04:48Charlotte Pugh.
04:51So, Charlotte Pugh.
04:55Do you like what you see?
04:57I like.
04:58I'm not about to lay a load of crap about cleaning rotors on you.
05:11No, I just set out a kind of modus operandi about living here.
05:15We have a chance to challenge the status quo.
05:22Prove there's an alternative socio-economic model to live by other than a nuclear bloody family.
05:27By sharing our labour, our energy, our resources.
05:30Um, like a commune, isn't that?
05:33Works for them in China.
05:36Didn't the abolished landlords in China execute them?
05:39What's the point in social mobility if we just carry the same tired old values around with us, you know?
05:58So, what we do is we construct a model of living based on equality, based on the welfare of the group rather than the selfish needs of the individual.
06:07You know, up to and including sex.
06:20Why not a relationship is just another form of ownership?
06:23What is the animal?
06:24You eliminate the exclusivity of couples, you eliminate jealousy and all the corrosive shit which goes with it.
06:31So, we make a rule.
06:33No sleeping with the same person, flatmates included, on more than three consecutive nights.
06:39What sort of godless setup are you running here?
06:42I want no part of it, frankly.
06:48Better out than in, as they say.
06:49Let's take a vote.
06:51All those in favour of the...
06:52The godless setup, as outlined.
07:01Okay.
07:03Right.
07:06Message received.
07:09Over and out.
07:10I'll let you know.
07:21Send up the next lot, will you?
07:29Since his stroke, the silent vigil for Churchill's recovery continues, as the whole country prays for him in this, his darkest hour.
07:40His defiant vow, we shall never surrender, has never been more apt.
07:45Amen to that.
07:46Amen.
07:52The girl who owns the flat you saw.
07:54Is she at your college, too?
07:57What does it matter?
07:59I was one of the chosen few I would have heard by now.
08:03Susan Reynolds.
08:05From Girl Guides.
08:06She has a flat in Marble Arch.
08:08Her mother says she's looking for someone to share with.
08:10She's an air hostess now.
08:12She'll be away half the time.
08:13You'd have the place to yourself.
08:14Why is there fun in that, then?
08:16Well, the point is to be near college for her studies, isn't it?
08:19It doesn't include her having a bit of fun, does it?
08:20I didn't say it did.
08:25You've spaced with a crumble.
08:26Mum's OK about this, isn't she?
08:31If I do move out.
08:33Nothing stays the same.
08:35She has to face that like the rest of it.
08:38Only have one life, after all.
08:39People try to put us to death.
09:05Talkin' about my generation.
09:07Well, just because we get around.
09:10Talkin' about my generation.
09:12Things that do look awful.
09:14Talkin' about my generation.
09:17I hope I die before I get old.
09:20Talkin' about my generation.
09:21It's my generation.
09:23It's my generation, baby.
09:25Why don't you all fade away.
09:32Don't try to dig what we all say.
09:35It's my generation.
09:36I'm not tryin' to cause a big sensation.
09:40It's my generation.
09:41I'm just talkin' about my generation.
09:44It's my generation.
09:48It's my generation, baby.
09:50All day long, there's been a sort of pilgrimage to Sir Winston's house.
10:02Families have come in from the country.
10:04Young couples.
10:07That's, no, sorry.
10:08No, north signal comes from Alexander Palace.
10:12Damn thing's not thickening.
10:14That's it.
10:14Everyone, this is Lily.
10:20Lily.
10:21Everyone.
10:22Hiya.
10:23Lily's studying painting at...
10:25...Honsey College of Art.
10:28I'm Jay.
10:30Hi.
10:31Hello, Charlotte.
10:32Hi.
10:33Come and get it.
10:35You know what?
10:36I've just clocked it.
10:37I've just clocked it.
10:42I've just clocked why he's chosen us.
10:44Jack.
10:46Why he's chosen us in particular.
10:50We're his guinea pigs.
10:52His what?
10:54Exactly.
10:55We're his socio-economic mix.
10:59Think about it.
11:02He's got the class thing covered, hasn't he?
11:05Race.
11:07You know, I knew.
11:09He's got the professions covered.
11:11Computing, medicine, English, law, art.
11:15And...
11:16Psychology.
11:18Yeah, and that.
11:20So he's hand-picked, every one of us, to conduct his social experiment.
11:27Well, I'm not sure anybody is quite that cynical.
11:31Do you want a bet?
11:32I'm not sure anybody is quite good.
11:33I'm not sure anybody is quite good.
11:34I'm not sure anybody is quite good.
11:35I'm not sure anybody is quite good.
11:36I'm not sure anybody is quite good.
11:37I'm not sure anybody is quite good.
11:38I'm not sure anybody is quite good.
11:39I'm not sure anybody is quite good.
11:40I'm not sure anybody is quite good.
11:41I'm not sure anybody is quite good.
11:42I'm not sure anybody is quite good.
11:43I'm not sure anybody is quite good.
11:44I'm not sure anybody is quite good.
11:45I'm not sure anybody is quite good.
11:46I'm not sure anybody is quite good.
11:47I'm not sure anybody is quite good.
11:48I'm not sure anybody is quite good.
11:49I'm not sure anybody is quite good.
11:50I'm not sure anybody is quite good.
11:51Let's go.
12:21It wraps up.
12:39Come here.
12:41Don't exhale.
12:48It's crap what they say.
12:54It helps an escape from reality.
12:57You know when you get the feeling life is utterly bloody futile.
13:03You light up and lift you up.
13:06Instead of looking into the abyss you're standing on the edge of the world.
13:12You're invincible.
13:15You feel anything yet?
13:25How about this?
13:30Is that part of your social experiment too?
13:37It's about being in the moment.
13:40Seeing where it takes you.
13:43It's quite a drop.
13:58Be careful.
13:59Oh, I will be.
14:01I will be.
14:22You know the way?
14:40Lily.
14:41God, is it really 20 years?
14:43I don't believe it.
14:52Anyone else here yet?
14:56No.
14:59I'm going to make a start in the kitchen,
15:01so maybe you could do one of the bedrooms upstairs.
15:04Is that where it happened?
15:11Charlie.
15:12Charlie.
15:14There's not been a day when I haven't regretted what I did to you.
15:19Not a day.
15:22I'm going to sew.
15:39All right.
15:41See you later.
15:45So,
17:16She would never start that damn thing.
17:19It's supposed to be smooth, like a mirror, give the illusion of bloody space.
17:28Right.
17:29I'll see you later.
17:30Good luck with it.
17:32Bye, love.
17:32Bye.
17:33Bye.
17:40Where do you reckon it's as she goes every evening?
17:42Library, she says.
17:44Maybe it's confession.
17:46She don't like her mother told her.
17:48That period are called a curse, because it's God's curse on us for Eve eating the apple.
17:54So much for your benign deity.
17:58Have you been seeing anyone since coming to London?
18:02You.
18:06How about back home?
18:08Only a few local ads from school and that.
18:11You know, no one special.
18:13So you didn't do it with any of them?
18:20Go the whole way?
18:20The first time on my 16th birthday present to myself.
18:28I can't wait to get out of the way, see what all the fuss was about.
18:33You.
18:34The girl in my class at the high school, in the middle of her O level, she suddenly drops
18:42out of school, drops out of sight.
18:45I had this Saturday job at the local supermarket on the till.
18:49There was always this endless queue of women with their kids stretching back as far as the
18:52eye could see.
18:55They all looked so...
19:00tired.
19:00One day I looked up.
19:06She was one of them.
19:08Pushing a pram.
19:12There but for the grace of a benign deity.
19:16Still, all good things are worth waiting for, eh?
19:19Then again, maybe I'll die chaste and virginal like all are.
19:24It might not be worth the wait, love.
19:26Trust me, it's just not the big deal everyone says it is.
19:30Rent time, girls.
19:37Oh, er...
19:38Oh, hold on.
19:40I'll have my bag downstairs.
19:41Cheers.
19:49The thing about your benign deity...
19:52Yeah.
19:53It works in mysterious ways.
19:57Thanks.
19:57Well, well, I once believed...
20:08Oh, I failed at the night...
20:11Derivative, vacuous, pointless.
20:16You want to paint by numbers, go do it in someone else's class.
20:19Better yet, go work it out in a gym.
20:20Is that what you call constructive criticism?
20:26If it's any comfort, I'd not put myself out unless I thought you had something going for you now, would I?
20:30Please, God say, you're not falling for that crap.
20:42This is the one place a woman can take her clothes off and become invisible.
20:48Sitting there all day, you see things.
20:50Hear things.
20:51You won't be the first notch on his belt, dear.
20:59Or the last.
21:00Could be a heating element.
21:21Ah, or the capacitor.
21:23And if it is, I'm wasting me time.
21:26Here she is.
21:31Mum.
21:32Dad.
21:33We came down to pay our respects to Mr. Churchill.
21:36Near on.
21:36Three hundred people there were.
21:38Someone stood there all night.
21:39That's unusual.
21:40Not pulled through yet.
21:41He's not a fighter.
21:44Er, this is Victor.
21:46He's on a law scholarship from Jamaica.
21:48Sorry.
21:53Excuse me.
21:56You never said you were sharing with her.
21:59We're lads.
22:02We need to talk, love.
22:03Is there somewhere we can...
22:04No, no, no.
22:05No, look.
22:07I've got things I need to do upstairs.
22:09So I'll, er...
22:11It was very nice meeting you both.
22:12Now, don't jump down our throats.
22:21Just steer us out.
22:23It's your Aunt Helen.
22:25She's, er...
22:26She's broke a hip.
22:28She needs somebody to help her out in the shop.
22:30And she says, erm...
22:33If you...
22:35If you come back, she'll train you up.
22:38And when the time comes...
22:39She'll sign the lease over to you.
22:43It's the only draper in England.
22:46Guaranteed custom.
22:47Regular clients.
22:48Set you up for life, a place like that.
22:57If I did that secretarial course...
23:00You said I could go to art college.
23:02That were the deal.
23:04You can still do your art and such on Sunday's, can't you?
23:06There's no future in it, love.
23:10It's never gonna put food on table, is it?
23:14It's not for the likes of us.
23:18When the novelty of it wears off...
23:19And it will.
23:21You wake up.
23:22See the world as it is, not as you wish it to be.
23:27It may be too late.
23:28You'll have burnt your boats.
23:30Bridges.
23:32It's burning bridges.
23:36And they're mine to burn.
24:01When I was at school...
24:03My mum and dad used to go on at this.
24:05Oh, you...
24:07You've opportunities we never had.
24:10Work hard, get your exams, get ahead.
24:13That was all fine.
24:15When I was doing my degree up in Newcastle,
24:17but...
24:18When I moved down here,
24:20for me post-grad,
24:21it was a whole different tune.
24:27Newcastle wasn't good enough for me anymore.
24:29Not that I lived down here.
24:34I was above them all.
24:36Thought I was leaving them all behind.
24:42They were right.
24:43In the four hours
24:51since the last bulletin,
24:55there has been no further deterioration.
24:58It was about an hour and a half ago
25:00that Lord Moran, Sir Winston's personal position,
25:03came out of...
25:03And the essay,
25:11the personal is political.
25:13Do you think that means that
25:15liberation for women
25:16lies in our personal experience?
25:19It means we'll only realize our potential
25:22if we transform our relationships with men.
25:24The contraceptive pill
25:26has given us the freedom
25:27to explore sexual intimacy
25:30without fear of pregnancy.
25:32But so long as it's only available
25:33to married women,
25:34the rest of us,
25:35the majority of us,
25:36are denied that freedom.
25:38And if our sexuality is stifled,
25:40so is our potential.
25:54is our potential to be
26:24Oh, my God.
26:54Oh, my God.
27:24I started off in the hotel kitchen.
27:31Dishwasher and dog's body.
27:33And now I've graduated to the heady heights of chambermaid.
27:37You have a grant, don't you, like the rest of us?
27:40Most of it goes back home.
27:42You have to eat too, Orla.
27:43They can't expect you to just...
27:44No, they don't expect it.
27:46I choose to do it.
27:48In Belfast, if you're a Catholic.
27:53Six years, my father's been without work.
27:57My mum holds down two cleaning jobs.
28:00And it's not enough.
28:01With four wee ones to feed.
28:05Don't be worrying about me.
28:07We'll get by.
28:08A house linking around eating our scraps.
28:11I don't want the others knowing, Jay.
28:15I embarrass them enough as it is.
28:16I don't always feel I belong here.
28:31Don't give away too much of yourself, Orla.
28:35Nothing left for the rest of us.
28:37Night.
28:45Night.
29:01Morning.
29:03Morning.
29:04That's a good.
29:05That's a fresh pot.
29:07Any chance someone can cover my shift cooking tonight?
29:10I'm late on an assignment.
29:13Like and if it helps.
29:15Oh, you're saying, Victor, so you are.
29:19All right.
29:21Thanks.
29:25Nina?
29:26Yes, thank you.
29:29You don't have to do that, Victor.
29:32Waits on us.
29:34Just doing my share.
29:37Did you hear it?
29:38Did you hear it?
29:38Did you hear it?
29:40It said that Sir Winston died shortly after eight o'clock this morning.
29:46Parliament will meet tomorrow to authorize a state funeral.
29:50The first held for a commoner in this country.
29:53Some commoner with his title and his country part.
29:55For a generation, he led his people through the darkness of war.
29:59He was an inspiration, rallying them to victory.
30:03Oh, bollocks.
30:05Sure I'm good to clear the respect.
30:07But free countries ever will.
30:08What do you want?
30:08Of course, of Royal Britannia.
30:10I wouldn't be in a damn sorry state without him.
30:12Tell that to the people in the East End in Coventry.
30:17When the Germans invaded Belgium, did he order them to bomb the Panzers?
30:20No, no.
30:20He sent them to bomb innocent civilian German cities.
30:24And he calls Coventry in the Blitz war crimes.
30:27You call that heroism if you want me.
30:29I call it hypocrisy.
30:30You know, they say it takes one to know one.
30:32There'll always be an England
30:35While there's a country lane
30:39Wherever there's a cottage small
30:42Beside a field of grain
30:45There'll always be an England
30:48While there's a busy street
30:51Wherever there's a turning wheel
30:54A million marching feet
30:57There'll always be an England
30:59And England shall be free
31:03If England means as much to you
31:06As England means to me
31:09Do you know what, Jack?
31:15What?
31:15I have never, never met anybody
31:18So full of pre-digested crap
31:21As you are.
31:29Victor, give her the bloody rest!
31:46Slavery's over, haven't you heard?
31:48You are a truly unique human being, Jack
32:12I'll never let up
32:14Whatever, Colin
32:15Right
32:15Come on
32:16Here
32:20You are
32:21Here
32:21You are
32:22Here
32:23Here
32:23Here
32:23Here
32:25Here
32:26Here
32:26Here
32:34Here
32:35Here
32:39It's like Malcolm X said, man.
33:09It will give you a quality.
33:14You have to take it.
33:39You have to take it.
33:46You have to take it.
33:51You have to take it.
34:06I'm sorry I lost the plot.
34:21Am I proud of it?
34:22No.
34:23Will it happen again?
34:28Or most certainly?
34:32What's the thing in the third man Harry Lyme says?
34:38If one of those dots stopped moving forever, what would you feel?
34:42If you feel nothing, what does it say about you, about your humanity?
34:48Or is all altruism just self-serving bullshit?
34:53It's because you feel you get so angry.
35:00That's the proof of it, surely.
35:04That's the proof of it.
35:27Married to how long?
35:40Six months.
35:43And your husband agrees to you taking oral contraception?
35:49It's my decision, not his.
35:57You wouldn't credit how many girls come in here wearing a curtain ring from Woolworths, hoping to get the contraceptive pill.
36:06They must think I'm a bloody half-wit.
36:27I'm a bloody half-wit.
36:57Trailer for sale or rent
37:17Rooms to live
37:20No phone, no food, no pen
37:25We need to talk about your mother. She's suffering. It's the change. She's just not coping
37:44with it. She seems fine when we talk on the phone. She doesn't want to be a burden. You
37:47know how she is. It's the empty nest thing. I keep saying her life is over.
37:55I've got so much going on at work. I'm home all hours. So, I thought perhaps if you could
38:04come home just for a couple of months till she's through it.
38:10Why me? Why can't Adam or Peter move back?
38:12Your brothers have their careers to think of, don't they? You can commute like you did your
38:16first term, can't you? It wasn't so bad, was it?
38:18I'll lose my room at the flat. We'll give you another room later, once we've sorted your
38:23mother out. If I thought I could meet her needs, then I would, but I can't. Not in this.
38:29If you think that's easy to admit, think again.
38:36Will you be going home at all this year?
38:57Will you be going home at all this year?
39:00Well, my scholarship barely pays for my fees and my maintenance, so sadly no. You know,
39:09all Jack's talk about poverty and inequality, he knows nothing of them. They're theoretical
39:18to him. It's all just a way of him parading his radical credentials.
39:38Dad!
39:39That's amazing.
39:52I don't know.
40:22Six o'clock summer in the world.
40:44Can you stay the night?
40:46I've elected first thing.
40:49Dad will be sorry to miss you.
40:50I mean, he's home late and some panic at work.
40:57Oh, this is a nice surprise.
40:59Out of the blue?
41:05I saw Daddy in London the other day, actually.
41:10He was with someone.
41:12From work?
41:13Who knows?
41:29I was with someone, too.
41:32A boy.
41:33It's not just girls showing the flat.
41:37It's boys, too.
41:42And one is your boyfriend?
41:45No, I just...
41:48thought you should know.
41:50Why, the secrecy.
41:55Do you think I'm so stuck in the dark ages I can't deal with it?
41:58I used to blame the war for stealing my youth.
42:19And then your father for stealing my future.
42:23I never blame myself, naturally.
42:28Someone somewhere is out there living the life I should have had.
42:33Because I gave it away to the first man I met.
42:36In fact, I said no, you're with him.
42:42I said no.
42:50What's happening?
42:56Hello?
42:56Hello? Jack Walsh about? Who wants to know? His father.
43:09He's just getting up. I'm on my way to the funeral.
43:14Shouldn't only be led to the world.
43:17Churchill's funeral? Mm-hm. I'm hoping to get there meself.
43:22Hello there.
43:26Jack, I'll get you a cup of tea.
43:29If there's a cup free from infection.
43:34So, 5,000 at the rehearsal yesterday.
43:38More heads of state clogging out Westminster than enough bloody MPs.
43:44Oh, you... you're an MP.
43:48For my sins.
43:52Come back.
43:56Wilson was sandbagging de Gaulle over dinner last night about producing some...
44:12Anglo-French supersonic airliner, so he claims.
44:16Softening him up about the common market, more like.
44:18Best of British with that one.
44:20Thank God for Gallic obduracy, I say.
44:22Up.
44:24Good morning.
44:25We were just talking about Churchill.
44:34I assume it's a vain hope that you'll come with me to the funeral.
44:40God, all that xenophobic pomp.
44:44My stomach couldn't take it.
44:45As no doubt you would have already observed, Alan, my son's respect is reserved for...
44:50...melodorous dictators like Fidel Castro and Ho Chi Minh.
44:54It's a pleasure meeting you, sir.
44:56You too, son.
44:58Your mother ran into Mr Bradfield at the bank last week.
45:02He tells me you're overdrawn again.
45:04He's no damn right discussing my accounts with you.
45:05He's the manager and I'm your guarantor.
45:06That gives him the right.
45:07Blame it on the cost of living in London.
45:09You did choose to forego your place at Balliol.
45:10Spare me the dreaming spies and fain again.
45:13For Balliol would have opened doors for you just as soon as I was...
45:16I've next started.
45:17You have to make a money-making's for a good money...
45:19...for a nice money.
45:20You do.
45:21Not for me.
45:22I don't count.
45:23It's a good money.
45:24It's a good money.
45:25That's a good money.
45:26I'm not.
45:27It's a bad money.
45:28Yeah, sir.
45:29We've got a bit of money.
45:30I didn't...
45:31Carly had a lot.
45:32I'd like a great buyers.
45:33I came...
45:34You..
45:35I was gonna make a good money here.
45:37Balliol would have opened doors for you just as it did for me.
45:40Doors which you have voluntarily elected to slam closed.
46:00Debts are like children.
46:03Begot in pleasure.
46:05Brought forth in pain.
46:07Brought forth in pain.
46:15Courtesy of my son I seem to have a spare ticket.
46:17It's a reserved seat at St Paul's for family and friends.
46:20If you're interested.
46:22If you're sure sir then...
46:25We could grab a bite at my club on the way.
46:29And it's Edward.
46:31Good morning.
46:32Morning.
46:33Morning.
46:34Morning.
46:35Morning.
46:36Morning.
46:37Morning.
46:38Morning.
46:39Morning.
46:40Oh no, I'm just watching this.
47:10Oh no, I'm just watching this.
47:40So what are you and Earl, the right honourable someone?
47:55My father and I, our disappointment in each other is mutual and terminal.
48:03Join the club.
48:11Best leave me to my own devices, Sharla.
48:15Here I go again.
48:23Watch them out for us.
48:25Here I go again.
48:31Daddy?
48:32Someone's birthday.
48:33Housewarming.
48:34Hardly the best taste.
48:35The day of all days.
48:36Or that either.
48:38When did you start doing that?
48:39Why are you here, Daddy?
48:40I was up for the funeral.
48:41I thought we might get something to eat.
48:42I thought we might get something to eat.
48:43Oh.
48:44Is what's the name not available then?
48:49What?
48:50The tart and the mini skirt I saw you kissing.
48:51And don't insult me by telling you it was nothing.
48:52I know what I saw.
48:53Tell me.
48:54All those work trips over the years.
48:55All the late nights in the office.
48:56Is she the first?
48:57Is she the first?
48:58No.
48:59No.
49:00No.
49:01No.
49:02No.
49:03No.
49:04No.
49:05No.
49:06No.
49:07No.
49:08No.
49:09No.
49:10No.
49:11No.
49:12No.
49:13No.
49:14No.
49:15No.
49:16No.
49:17No.
49:18No.
49:19No.
49:20No.
49:21No.
49:22No.
49:23No.
49:24Okay.
49:25We're leaving all night.
49:26No.
49:27All the work trips over the years.
49:29All the late nights in the office.
49:30Is she the first?
49:32Or the twenty-first?
49:33It's not like that.
49:34What is it like?
49:35She was my age.
49:36Daddy younger even.
49:37I'm human Charlotte, I, I made a mistake.
49:38It's your compassion I can't get.
49:40Compassion.
49:41Where was yours when you tried to talk me into moving back home so you could shag your way around
49:48Whatever I've done, I'm still your father.
49:51I deserve some damn respect!
49:53Respect? There's a word.
49:59Do this some other time.
50:02Tell me, Daddy.
50:04What do you think?
50:07Is it too short?
50:10Too sluttish?
50:12Then I'm your daughter, aren't I?
50:15Different rules apply.
50:17From now on, I make my own rules.
50:38One day.
50:41Aye.
50:41Hey!
50:49Give it to them, just give it to them.
51:04utral
51:05Slupe let your head down girl, let it hang down on me
51:21Slupe let your head down girl, let it hang down on me
51:30Yeah baby, come on Slupe let my head down girl, let it hang down on me
51:39Slupe let your head down girl, let it hang down on me
51:49For your love, for your love, I would give the stars of love
51:58For your love, for your love
52:02I will give you more and more
52:07Happy Bill?
52:15It's a huge personal sacrifice, but since it's you...
52:19For your love!
52:24For your love!
52:28For your love!
52:30I'll give the moon and the world mine together
52:34I'll give the stars and the sun before I live
52:39For your love!
52:40For you every night
52:42I'll give you diamonds bright
52:45So the days I will excite
52:47Make you dream of me tonight
52:49For your love!
52:54For your love!
52:58For your love!
53:00For your love!
53:02For your love!
53:04For your love!
53:09For your love!
53:15I don't know what I'm doing.
53:45I don't know what I'm doing.
54:15I don't know what I'm doing.
54:45I don't know what I'm doing.
55:15What's the deal on that?
55:27We'll never get equality in the boardroom until we get it in the bedroom, won't we?
55:38You know how long I've waited to meet someone like you.
55:43I mean, finally.
55:45Finally, a girl who doesn't confuse a bit of uncomplicated sex with all the romantic crap about commitment and love.
55:56I'd like a pound for every time I've been sucked into that particular hell.
56:07Well, you're unfamished, aren't you?
56:09You're unfamished.
56:11I'm not.
56:12I'm not.
56:13I'm not.
56:14I'm not.
56:16PIANO PLAYS
56:46PIANO PLAYS
57:16PIANO PLAYS
57:46PIANO PLAYS
58:16PIANO PLAYS
58:25PIANO PLAYS
Be the first to comment