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  • She was Lo. Plain Lo in the morning.

  • Standing four feet ten in one sock.

  • She was Lola in slacks.

  • She was Dolly at school.

  • She was Dolores on the dotted line.

  • In my arms, she was always...

  • ..Lolita.

  • Light of my life.

  • Fire of my loins.

  • My sin.

  • My soul.

  • Lolita.

  • But there might have been no Lolita at all...

  • ..had I not first met Annabel.

  • We were both 14.

  • Whatever happens to a boy during the summer he's 14...

  • ..can mark him for life.

  • That hotel you see, the Mirana,...

  • ..that belonged to us.

  • She wanted to be a nurse.

  • I wanted to be a spy.

  • All at once we were madly, hopelessly in love.

  • Four months later, she died of typhus.

  • The shock of her death froze something in me.

  • The child I loved was gone.

  • But I kept looking for her...

  • ..long after I'd left my own childhood behind.

  • The poison was in the wound, you see.

  • And the wound wouldn't heal.

  • I probably should have joined the priesthood.

  • Instead, I accepted a teaching post at Beardsley College in America.

  • I had a summer free before the Fall semester.

  • I thought I'd finish a textbook I was working on.

  • A survey of French literature for American students.

  • I took my advance...

  • ..and went to live at the house of friends of my late uncle's, the McCoos,...

  • ..in the New England town of Ramsdale.

  • But on arriving, I found that it was no longer there.

  • But a friend of Mrs McCoo,...

  • ..a widow, Mrs Charlotte Haze,...

  • ..agreed to accommodate me.

  • - Goddamn dog!

  • One minute. Something's burnin'.

  • Lord have mercy!

  • Mrs Haze'll be down in one.

  • ls that Professor Humbert, Louise? Tell him I'll be down in one.

  • She'll be down in one!

  • Monsieur Humbert.

  • Uh, yes.

  • Mrs Haze, is it?

  • Charlotte.

  • I am so pleased to make your acquaintance.

  • Frank McCoo told me all about your scholarly pursuits.

  • I myself just cherish the French tongue.

  • Um... I wonder, could l...

  • Mm. Come in.

  • Harold and l, the late Mr Haze,...

  • ..we simply adored Mexico.

  • The whole idea of a culture that sophisticated.

  • And we think of them as primitive.

  • I mean, look at us!

  • Indeed, yes.

  • Upstairs.

  • I and Lo have our rooms just there.

  • And this is your room.

  • Space for a desk, anything you want.

  • And at $20 a month, you can't beat the price.

  • And here's the bathroom. It's a bit of a mess.

  • And this is the kitchen.

  • Now, if you have any special food needs, you just say.

  • I don't know if Ramsdale can provide you with foie gras, like you're used to.

  • What's that?

  • Uh... timetable. For when I um...

  • I was hoping I wouldn't have to, but I think I've got to go back to New York.

  • - Oh, you're not too favourably impressed. - No... There's a Baudelaire conference...

  • This is not a neat household, but you would be very comfortable here.

  • Very comfortable indeed.

  • Don't say no until you've seen the piazza.

  • Come.

  • Well, I call it the piazza.

  • It's so much work to keep it healthy and green.

  • It's a life's work.

  • That's my Lo.

  • And these are my lilies.

  • I love lilies.

  • - Lily's a nice name, don't you think? - Beautiful.

  • Beautiful!

  • How much did you say the room was?

  • A normal man,...

  • ..given a group photograph of schoolgirls...

  • ..and asked to point out the loveliest one,...

  • ..will not necessarily choose the nymphet among them.

  • You have to be an artist,...

  • ..a madman, full of shame and melancholy and despair,...

  • ..in order to recognise the little deadly demon among the others.

  • She stands...

  • ..unrecognised by them,...

  • ..unconscious herself of her fantastic power.

  • - See you later, alligator. - After a while, crocodile!

  • - Real soon, Daniel Boone. - Get fucked, Daffy Duck.

  • # Don't know why... there's no sun up in the sky

  • # Stormy weather

  • # Since my man and I ain't together...

  • You woke me up.

  • - Sorry.

  • I'll stop.

  • Dolores! Have you made your bed?

  • No, I have not made my bed.

  • I asked you to make your bed, didn't l?

  • No. You asked me if I'd made my bed.

  • Make your bed.

  • - Now!

  • I long for some terrific disaster.

  • Earthquake.

  • Spectacular explosion.

  • Make your bed!

  • Her mother instantly eliminated.

  • Along with everybody else for miles around.

  • Lolita...

  • ..in my arms.

  • I'm sleepy today.

  • Me too.

  • Have you been having trouble sleeping?

  • You can't imagine.

  • Am I getting a zit?

  • What?

  • Do you see a pimple on my chin?

  • You look absolutely perfect to me.

  • Wanna see my chin wobble?

  • OK.

  • Humbert!

  • Humbert...

  • Is she keeping you up?

  • I beg your pardon?

  • No!

  • No. No, I'm...

  • No.

  • Well, it's probably just a 24-hour bug.

  • He was looking forward to meeting you.

  • Has anybody seen my other sneaker?!

  • Your breakfast, Professor Humbert.

  • Don't tell Mother, but I ate all your bacon.

  • - Dolores, that was Mrs Farlow. - So?

  • Rose has a temperature and can't go to Hourglass Lake.

  • - Oh, yeah? - Do not use that tone with me!

  • Are you ready for church?

  • I'm not going to that disgusting church.

  • - Young lady... - No picnic, no church.

  • That is fine with me. It is your conscience.

  • I want your room spick-and-span when I get home.

  • - And wash your hair, young lady. - I did wash it!

  • - When? - A couple of months ago.

  • I could be a dancer.

  • That's a major option.

  • Cos I do have a natural grace.

  • - You know. A kind of sad beauty. - Sort of sad is right.

  • I'd like to see you dance sometime.

  • Little girls always want to be ballerinas, don't they?

  • I know I did.

  • But I was - how should I put it? - a tad too... plump?

  • - Is that the right word? - Yes.

  • I'll get more Vouvray.

  • Make her take us to Hourglass Lake tomorrow.

  • - Me? - Mm-hm.

  • She'll do anything you say.

  • She's getting a thing about you.

  • Whisper, whisper.

  • What are you two so cosy about?

  • Um... Did I ever tell you both that...

  • ..l was once a...

  • ..that I was once a... um...

  • Uh... that l... I was once a cook in the North Pole?

  • - A cook? - Well, not exactly a cook.

  • I opened a few cans.

  • It was a weather expedition. And I shot a polar bear.

  • - No! - Well, I didn't hit it.

  • Why shoot a polar bear? That's a lousy thing to do.

  • Because I found it...

  • ..with its face - listen to this - in the ice-cream mixer.

  • I couldn't let that pass because we lived off ice cream.

  • You're out of your gourd, Humpy.

  • Will you stop fidgeting with the doll?

  • And now we all think that Lo should go to bed.

  • Lo?

  • What do you mean "we", paleface?

  • So, as I was saying, there I was with my white polar-bear gun...

  • -..to blend in.

  • It's for me!

  • Hello?

  • - No, I'm sorry. She's busy. - I hope you will forgive her bad manners.

  • - Now what?!

  • Look! It's my modern dance creation!

  • Dolores Haze, turn that music down!

  • She is a pest. Just slap her hard if she interferes with your meditations.

  • Psst!

  • Hum...

  • Hum, do you know that I have one most ambitious dream?

  • To get a hold of a real trained maid...

  • ..like that German girl that the Talbots spoke of...

  • ..and have her live in the house.

  • - No room. - Oh, chéri, chéri.

  • You underestimate the possibilities of our humble household.

  • We'd put her in Lo's room.

  • I intended to turn that hole into a guest room anyway.

  • But where would Lo sleep?

  • Little Lo does not enter the picture at all.

  • Little Lo goes straight from camp to a good boarding school...

  • ..with strict discipline and some sound religious training.

  • I won't go!

  • I want all of these name tags sewn on your clothes by tomorrow.

  • I don't want to go.

  • I didn't ask your opinion!

  • I don't want to go and you can't make me.

  • Look, we all think it's a good idea.

  • Professor Humbert thinks it's a good idea, I think it's a good idea, and you are going!

  • Double-crosser!

  • Ow!

  • I asked you to put that suitcase in the car an hour ago!

  • Louise, thank you so much for helping the poor child.

  • Goddamn it! Dolores, I told you to put this lunch basket in the back seat!

  • Why always tell me to do everything?

  • I'm the one that won't be eating it.

  • Louise! Brussels sprouts and meat loaf for dinner.

  • - All right. Drive careful. - Thank you. Let's go!

  • - Bye, my baby. - Bye, Louise.

  • - You be good. I'm gonna miss you. - Agh!

  • Dolores!

  • Let's go!

  • Speed it up!

  • Get in the car!

  • Now what?! That child!

  • - Louise, maybe tenderloin. - That'd be good.

  • I'm waiting!

  • If I've told you once, I've told you a thousand times...

  • ..not to make me wait in the car.

  • If you weren't going to camp, I would ground you.

  • Mr Humble!

  • These damn stairs are gonna be the death of me.

  • Mr Humble!

  • Mr Humble!

  • Mr Humble?

  • I have something for you.

  • Oh, yes.

  • I'm leaving, but I'll be back later.

  • What the hell he doin' in there?

  • This is a confession.

  • I love you.

  • I'm a passionate and lonely woman...

  • ..and you are the love of my life.

  • Now you know.

  • So please, destroy this letter and go.

  • I shall return by dinner time and you must be gone by then.

  • You see, chéri, if l found you at home,...

  • ..the fact of your remaining would mean only one thing.

  • That you want me as much as I do you, as a lifelong mate,...

  • ..and that you are ready to link up your life with mine for ever and ever...

  • ..and be a father to my little girl.

  • Two weeks later, we were married in a simple ceremony.

  • Big Haze made sure little Haze was not in attendance.

  • Mm. This is bliss.

  • This is heaven on earth. Isn't it, Hump?

  • Mm.

  • Are you working on your book?

  • Yes.

  • Oh, a secret drawer. What's in there?

  • Locked-up love letters.

  • Where's the key?

  • Hidden.

  • "I'm in the Mood for Love")

  • During the six weeks we'd been married,...

  • ..l successfully avoided most of my husbandly duties.

  • Throughout July, I'd been offering Charlotte various sleeping tablets,...

  • ..which she gobbled down happily.

  • She was a great taker of pills.

  • # I'm in the mood for love

  • # Simply because you're near me

  • # Funny, but when you're near me

  • # I'm in the mood for love

  • # Heaven is in your eyes

  • # Bright as the stars we're under

  • # Oh, is it any wonder...

  • The last dose I had tried had knocked her out for four hours.

  • But that was not enough to guarantee me an undisturbed night.

  • Hum...

  • At last!

  • Mm.

  • I think I must be immune.

  • Wh... What would you give me if you wanted to uh...

  • ..to knock out...

  • ..say, a cow?

  • J- Just for... seven or eight hours.

  • So that...

  • ..you know, the cow... would stay asleep?

  • Even if you were tossing and turning next to it.

  • Well...

  • Why don't you...

  • ..try these?

  • They're new.

  • My wife takes them and...

  • ..l don't hear a peep out of her all night long.

  • Sounds like just the thing.

  • I'm home!

  • Hello?

  • Hello?

  • Hello?

  • "The Haze woman."

  • "The fat cow"?

  • "The obnoxious mamma"?

  • Well, the "old stupid Haze woman" is no longer your dupe.

  • Charlotte!

  • You're a monster.

  • - You're a despicable, criminal monster.

  • - Now... - If you come near me I'll scream!

  • - Let me just... - Get away from me!

  • I'm leaving tonight.

  • You can keep this house. I don't care.

  • But you will never see that miserable brat ever again.

  • Now get out of my sight!

  • Charlotte, you mustn't...

  • You mustn't ruin our lives.

  • That's...

  • That's just... That's just a fragment of...

  • ..a novel I'm writing.

  • I used your name on those...

  • ..just for... convenience.

  • I'll get us a drink.

  • A nice stiff drink will clear both our heads.

  • Charlotte, I made us a nice stiff drink!

  • Yes?

  • But that's ridiculous.

  • There's this man on the phone saying you've been killed, Charlotte.

  • Charlotte?

  • I'm... I'm sorry.

  • Stand back, please.

  • Where's my wife?

  • - Are you Mr Humbert? - I am.

  • She ran right in front of me.

  • I... I didn't even see her.

  • Sir?

  • I'm sorry, sir.

  • Is this Mrs Humbert?

  • Sir,...

  • ..is this Mrs Humbert?

  • Oh, God...

  • Oh, God... Oh, God!

  • She was walking to the mailbox.

  • She was going to mail these letters.

  • I'm sorry.

  • Thank you.

  • I'll go and... lie down, officer.

  • - Will that be all right? - You go right ahead, sir.

  • I'll just be across in the house if you...

  • Is that the Enchanted Hunters Hotel?

  • Yes. This is Mr Humbert.

  • Tomorrow night.

  • Just the one night, please.

  • Yes, a room with twin beds.

  • For two. Well, one and a half people, really.

  • It's just for me and my...

  • ..my short... my small daughter.

  • She should be here any minute.

  • I sent Charlie for her over at the barn.

  • - Who's Charlie? - Come on, come on.

  • It's such a pleasure to watch our young people make friends.

  • - So uh... who is this Charlie? - Here she is.

  • Hi, Dad!

  • # Hum and Mum, Mum and Hum

  • # Hum and Mum, Mum and Hum

  • # Hum and Mum, Mum and Hum...

  • - How's Mum? - Well... The doctors aren't quite sure.

  • It's something abdominal.

  • Abominable?

  • Abdominal.

  • She's in a special hospital over in Lepingville.

  • So... I thought we'd... we'd...

  • ..go over to Briceland,...

  • ..spend the night there and... visit the hospital tomorrow.

  • Or the next day.

  • So, did you have a good time at camp?

  • Mm-hm.

  • You know, I missed you.

  • I missed you a lot.

  • Well, I didn't miss you.

  • In fact, I've been revoltingly unfaithful to you.

  • But so what? Cos you don't care about me any more anyway.

  • Why do you think I don't care about you?

  • Well, you haven't kissed me yet, have you?

  • Oh!

  • - Uh, I'm sorry, officer. - See a blue sedan, same make as yours?

  • - They might have passed you at the turn. - Blue sedan? No, I don't think... agh!

  • - We didn't see a blue sedan. - No, I don't think we did.

  • Are you sure it was blue? I saw one that was more purple.

  • Or maybe it was more red.

  • All right, OK. Thank you.

  • - Thank you!

  • Don't shoot, don't shoot!

  • Wow! Looks swank!

  • # No, I will never tell lies

  • # But still I'm called Buttercup...

  • Good evening. I have a reservation in the name of Humbert.

  • Twin-bedded room.

  • I called last night.

  • - Two people. - Oh!

  • I'm sorry, Mr Humbug.

  • I held the room with the twin beds for you till 6.30, but I didn't hear from you.

  • We hold till 6.30. And with the flower show and Glory of Christ convention...

  • My name is not Humbug. It's Herbert.

  • Humbert.

  • Just put us in any room. Put a cot in for my daughter. She's very tired.

  • Perhaps I could put you in room 342. It has a double bed.

  • I expect we'll manage. My wife may be turning up later.

  • Please sign here, mister.

  • It's a nice dog, huh?

  • I love dogs.

  • Well, that's my dog.

  • He likes you.

  • Doesn't like everybody.

  • Who does he like?

  • He can smell when people are sweet.

  • He likes sweet people.

  • Nice young people.

  • Like you.

  • Here we are.

  • Thanks very much.

  • Wait a sec. You mean we're sleeping in one room?

  • With one bed?

  • I've asked them to send up a cot,...

  • ..which I'll use, if you like.

  • You're crazy.

  • Why, my darling?

  • Because, my darling,...

  • ..when my darling mother finds out, she'll divorce you and strangle me.

  • Lo,...

  • ..listen to me a moment.

  • For all practical purposes, I am your father,...

  • ..and I'm responsible for your welfare.

  • Now, we're not rich.

  • So when we travel, we-we're sure to be... I mean, we'll be thrown together.

  • Sometimes.

  • Two people sharing the same hotel room...

  • ..are bound to... enter into a...

  • How can I put it? Into a kind of um...

  • The word is "incest".

  • I feel like we're grown-ups.

  • Me too.

  • We get to do whatever we want, right?

  • Whatever we want.

  • Well, now.

  • Who had the pie?

  • Me.

  • Whaddaya think? Are they me?

  • - Don't look now. - Why?

  • The guy over in the corner.

  • Don't look! He was staring at us.

  • Don't you think that guy looks exactly like Quilty?

  • What, the dentist?

  • Of course not. His brother.

  • The writer Quilty. You know, he writes the plays.

  • The smoking guy. He smokes the Dromes in the ad.

  • We saw him in the lobby with his dog.

  • If I tell you how naughty I was at camp,...

  • ..you promise you won't be mad?

  • Tell me later.

  • I want you to go to bed.

  • I'll go downstairs while you...

  • When I come up, I want you to be asleep.

  • All right?

  • I've been such a disgusting girl.

  • Just let me tell you.

  • Tell me tomorrow.

  • I'm going to go now. All right?

  • Good night, Dad.

  • Night-night.

  • Gentlewomen of the jury,...

  • ..if my happiness could have talked,...

  • ..it would have filled that hotel with a deafening roar.

  • My only regret...

  • ..is that I did not immediately deposit key number 342 at the office...

  • ..and leave the town, the country, the planet, that very night.

  • The Lord knows all, the Lord sees all, the Lord forgives all.

  • Where the devil did you get her?

  • - I beg your pardon? - I said the weather's getting better.

  • It seems so.

  • Who's the lassie?

  • Um...

  • It's my daughter.

  • You lie. She's not.

  • What?

  • I said July was hot.

  • Where's her mother?

  • Dead.

  • Oh. Sorry.

  • Why don't you two lunch with me tomorrow?

  • That clerical crowd will be gone soon.

  • Um...

  • We'll be gone too, thanks.

  • Good night.

  • Sorry. I'm very drunk. Good night.

  • That child of yours needs a lot of sleep.

  • "Sleep is a rose" the Persians say.

  • Smoke?

  • Not just now, thanks.

  • Good night.

  • Enjoy.

  • Get back in the boat with Charlie. You don't have to do that.

  • Back in the boat.

  • I'm thirsty.

  • I'll bring you something.

  • You... You played that with Charlie? At camp?

  • Don't tell me you never tried it when you were a kid.

  • Never.

  • I guess I'm gonna have to show you everything.

  • Gentlewomen of the jury,...

  • ..l was not even her first lover.

  • What are you reading?

  • Nothing.

  • What's the matter?

  • Nothing.

  • Lo...

  • You know that friend of yours - Charlie - at camp?

  • Was he the first one?

  • Can we please get off the subject?

  • I felt more and more uncomfortable.

  • It was something quite special, that feeling.

  • An oppressive, hideous constraint,...

  • ..as if l were sitting with the small ghost of somebody I had just killed.

  • Jesus!

  • What?

  • Can we stop at a gas station?

  • We can go anywhere you like.

  • Well, I need a gas station.

  • I hurt inside.

  • Well, what do you expect?

  • I was a daisy-fresh girl, and look what you've done to me.

  • I should call the police and tell them that you raped me, you dirty old man.

  • - Just wash the windscreen, would you? - Yes, sir.

  • Got some cookies.

  • I want to call Mother in hospital. What's the number?

  • Get in. You can't call the hospital.

  • Why not?

  • Just get in the car.

  • Slam the door.

  • Why can't I call my own mother if I want to?

  • Because your mother's dead.

  • Shh... Shh...

  • We made up very gently that night.

  • You see, she had nowhere else to go.

  • It was then that we began our extensive travels...

  • ..all over the United States.

  • # Now the native population and civilisation is fine

  • # That civilisation is the thing for me to see

  • # Whoa, bongo, bongo, bongo

  • # I don't wanna leave the Congo, no, no, no, no, no, no

  • - When's the best time to buy a bird? - I don't know. When's the best time?

  • When it's going "cheep!"

  • Don't say I never gave you anything.

  • Ow! Don't! I'm trying to drive!

  • Don't do that! Oh, no!

  • If it goes out the window, I won't stop.

  • Don't! What are these? Hair grips?

  • # Civilisation

  • # No, no, no, no

  • # I'll stay right here

  • Look! They have Magic Fingers.

  • Good.

  • I need to shower.

  • Give me a quarter and a dime.

  • What for?

  • For the Magic Fingers.

  • My magic fingers aren't enough?

  • # Amor-r-r, amor-r-r, amor-r-r-r-r

  • # This w-word s-so s-sweet that I r-repeat

  • # Means I adore you-u-u-u-u

  • # Amor-r-r-r-r, amor-r-r-r-r, amor-r-r-r-r...

  • Good shower for once, Lo!

  • First-rate temperature control!

  • Ow! Argh!

  • - Agh! Lo! - Hmm?

  • My God, Lo! Don't flush when I'm in here!

  • What is that?

  • What's what?

  • That thing in your mouth.

  • It's a jawbreaker.

  • It's supposed to break your jaw. Want one?

  • Just give it to me. I've had it with that noise.

  • - Come on, spit it out. I've got a headache. - It's good!

  • Look, just give it to me, will you? Spit it out.

  • You look a hundred per cent better when I can't see you.

  • We took a circuitous route - to put it mildly.

  • In the back of my mind was our eventual destination.

  • Beardsley College, where I would finally take up my teaching position.

  • But in the front of my mind was the need to keep going, keep driving.

  • Lo, that's the last time I let you drive this car.

  • Serve into this square.

  • And, despite our tiffs,...

  • In the square, Lo. Try and get it in the square.

  • ..despite the fuss she made, and the danger and hopelessness of it all,...

  • Aim for my head.

  • ..despite all that, I was in paradise.

  • A paradise whose skies were the colour of hell flames,...

  • ..but a paradise still.

  • I know you have accepted a post at Beardsley College,...

  • ..and I know that there, academics are first, last and always.

  • Well, that's not us, Mr Himmler.

  • Uh... Here at Beardsley Prep,...

  • ..what we stress are the three Ds.

  • Dramatics, dancing and dating.

  • Now, I know that the Reverend Rigger is behind us on this. Aren't you, Reverend?

  • - All the way, Miss Pratt. Every inch. - So you see, Mr Humper,...

  • ..for the modern preadolescent, medieval dates are less vital than weekend ones.

  • - What? Weekend what? - Dates, Mr Humping.

  • Uh... boys.

  • # By myself alone at home

  • # Feelin' blue

  • I was not quite prepared for the reality of my dual role.

  • On the one hand, the willing corrupter of an innocent,...

  • ..and on the other, Humbert the happy housewife.

  • Where's the river Rhine?

  • I don't know.

  • You should know that.

  • - Why? - Big battles there in the Great War.

  • Where's the river Seine?

  • I don't know.

  • I thought you were supposed to have learnt these.

  • It's not what I'm on.

  • It seems to be pretty relaxed, this school of yours.

  • # When I was a kid about half past three

  • # My ma said "Daughter, come here to me"

  • # Says "Things may come and things may go"

  • # "But this is one thing you ought to know"

  • # "Oh, t'ain't what you do, it's the way that you do it"

  • # "T'ain't what you do, it's the way that you do it"

  • # "T'ain't what you do, it's the way that you do it"

  • # "That's what...

  • I'm supposed to be in a play.

  • - What play? - I don't know.

  • Some play.

  • At school.

  • With the boys from Butler's Academy?

  • I don't know.

  • Maybe.

  • I don't think it's a good idea.

  • You're depriving me of my civil rights.

  • Where did you learn that language?

  • I'm intelligent.

  • I have a right to be in a play if I want.

  • Not if I say you don't.

  • D'you like that?

  • You want more, don't you?

  • I want things, too.

  • What?

  • Things.

  • You know how my allowance is a dollar a week?

  • Yes, I know.

  • Well, I think it should be two dollars.

  • I said, I think it should be two dollars.

  • A dollar fifty.

  • I really do think it should be two dollars.

  • Am I right?

  • Am I right?

  • God, yes.

  • Two dollars.

  • And I get to be in the play.

  • Oh, rosy mistress of the night.

  • You have enchanted many a hunter's heart.

  • But this time, my temptress,...

  • ..you have met your match.

  • For far more than a hunter,...

  • ..l...

  • ..am a poet.

  • - The night has fallen, Rodrigo. - The...

  • Hold it! Hold it! Mona...

  • Give us a moment. I'd like a word with Dolores.

  • When you say "your larking charms", use your charms for the hunter.

  • Because you're the witch.

  • You're bringing the hunter to your lair.

  • - Hi, Mr Humbert. - Hello, Mona.

  • Some play, huh?

  • You're nymphs. Use your nymph's charms.

  • Seduce the hunter.

  • Look. See right there?

  • That's the actual playwright, Clare Quilty. Can you believe it?

  • Let the music transform you.

  • You'll feel that you've become a witch.

  • - You're a witch!

  • - This play any good, Mona? - Yeah. It's very political.

  • Witch! Witch!

  • More wind! More wind!

  • You're a witch!

  • Aren't you?

  • More wind! I need more wind!

  • The witches now! The witches' dance!

  • In the wind!

  • As she grew cooler towards my advances,...

  • ..l became accustomed to purchasing her favours.

  • Where she hid the money, I never knew.

  • Stop it!

  • I was convinced she was storing it away in order to finance her escape from me.

  • You can't expect me to pay extra in the middle!

  • Ow! Argh!

  • She's a lovely child, Mr Haze,...

  • ..but the onset of sexual maturing seems to be giving her trouble.

  • - Isn't that your observation, Reverend? - To the tee, Miss Pratt.

  • So, you see, it is the general impression that 14-year-old Dolores...

  • ..is morbidly disinterested in sexual matters.

  • Does she never speak about these... matters?

  • Well...

  • That's just it.

  • What's just it?

  • That's... just it.

  • She hasn't said anything.

  • She hasn't breathed a word.

  • Uh... But who has?

  • Are... Are you saying that I've...

  • Exactly.

  • This is a very serious matter.

  • What we're trying to say to you...

  • ..is that someone in the family,...

  • ..maybe you,...

  • This is very difficult for me.

  • Well, let me put it this way.

  • Someone in the family ought to instruct that dear child...

  • ..in the process of human reproduction.

  • I'm so sorry.

  • - I'm so sorry. - I see that I've embarrassed you.

  • Yet you, as her father, ought to take the matter well in hand.

  • Yes. Worry not, Miss Pratt.

  • I... um... I have... this matter in hand.

  • Oh, well,...

  • ..that's all I need to say.

  • Yes?

  • Oh, yes?

  • She missed?

  • Oh.

  • Bye.

  • How are the piano lessons going?

  • Fine.

  • Great. Excellent. Wonderful.

  • Terrif. Perfect.

  • Especially since you missed the last two.

  • Where were you?

  • Where was l?

  • I should have told you before.

  • I was in the park. I was rehearsing the play with Mona.

  • That's your story?

  • That's what I was doing.

  • OK. Give me Mona's phone number.

  • - Mona's phone number? - Just give me Mona's phone number.

  • Klausen 57241.

  • Is Mona there, please?

  • - Mona, this is Dolores's father. - Oh, hello, sir.

  • Mona, were you and Dolores...

  • ..rehearsing the play in the park for the past two Tuesday afternoons?

  • Um... Let's see.

  • The last two Tuesdays?

  • One of them, Mona, was yesterday.

  • You know, sir, that's... absolutely right.

  • I feel awfully bad about it.

  • I alone am to blame, sir.

  • The whole rehearsing in the park thing was my idea.

  • We did it cos we didn't want to get on your nerves.

  • Well?

  • Did she confirm?

  • She did.

  • And I've no doubt she'd been well instructed by you.

  • In fact, I've no doubt you've told her all about us.

  • Look, Lo, this has got to stop.

  • I don't know what you're up to, but whatever it is,...

  • ..I'll yank you out of Beardsley as fast as I can pack a suitcase unless this stops!

  • Unless what stops?

  • - You know what! - Take it easy, mister!

  • - Show me every penny... - Leave me alone, you pervert!

  • - You're running away from me, I know. - Yes, I am! Anyone'd run away from you!

  • - Show me what you hid! - I earned that money!

  • Go ahead, murder me. Like you murdered my mother.

  • I'm sorry.

  • Murder me like you murdered my mother!

  • Shut up. Shut up!

  • Murder me like you murdered my mother!

  • - Stop that! - Go ahead! Murder me!

  • Go on, murder me! I'm asking you to murder me!

  • - Shut up! - Murder me! Murder me!

  • - Dolores, shut up! - I hate you! I hate you!

  • Calm down.

  • - Calm down!

  • - Come back, Lo!

  • Murderer!

  • I'm sorry. I'm sorry.

  • I'm sorry! I'm sorry! I'm sorry!

  • I do not know who you people think you are, screaming and carrying on!

  • My daughter's friend. I'm sorry. I really can't stay.

  • Oh, good. I was just trying to reach you at home.

  • - I've come to a decision. - You have?

  • Yeah.

  • So buy me a drink.

  • What would you like?

  • Um... I'd like, uh, ice-cream soda...

  • ..with extra chocolate syrup.

  • Please.

  • Nothing for me, thanks.

  • Lo...

  • So tell me.

  • What's the rush?

  • Pay her and let's blow this joint.

  • And do you know what she said,...

  • ..this girl who had been spurning me, mocking me,...

  • ..plotting her escape from me only hours before?

  • She said she wanted to leave Beardsley then and there.

  • She wanted to take another trip,...

  • ..only this time she would choose where we would go.

  • - OK? I choose? OK? - Yes.

  • Did Humbert hum his assent?

  • Oh, yes.

  • I sealed my fate gratefully.

  • Lolita.

  • Take me to bed.

  • Look out for cigarette hangover.

  • Hi. I'm Clare Quilty.

  • Remember, over a million smokers...

  • So we have to be in...

  • ..Wace in exactly one week.

  • But why Wace in a week?

  • Cos we gotta see the... ceremonial dances when they open the Magic Caves.

  • And... exactly two weeks and four days later,...

  • ..we have to arrive in Elphinstone. See?

  • Yes.

  • That's where we climb the Red Rock.

  • We have to climb this rock exactly two weeks and four days later?

  • Exactly.

  • Oh, I'm so excited.

  • I cannot tell you the exact day I first knew for certain that we were being followed.

  • Lo, reach into the glove compartment and get the pad and pencil.

  • Got it? Now write this down.

  • Connecticut.

  • How do you spell that?

  • C- O-N-N.

  • Is that it?

  • No. Now write down...

  • ..PJ...

  • ..44...

  • ..396.

  • All right, give it to me.

  • All right.

  • Put it in the glove box. Don't put gum on it cos it'll get...

  • Why have you got your gum everywhere?

  • Put that in the glove box.

  • There's a detective following us.

  • He looks rather like my Uncle Gustave.

  • He was clever, our pursuer.

  • He kept changing cars.

  • But his presence was as real to me...

  • ..as my own breath.

  • Then suddenly he would disappear and I'd wonder if I'd imagined everything.

  • Lo! What did that man say to you?

  • # Bags around your eyeballs which is red instead of white

  • - What did he say to you? - The guy I was talking to?

  • - Yeah. Look... - # Shucks, I shoulda known...

  • Just tell me what he said to you.

  • He asked me if I had a map. He must've been lost.

  • # My heart's plumb gone

  • # Cos you used temptation

  • # It'd be thrilling... if'n you're willing

  • Look, I've told you about talking to strangers. You've no idea...

  • Lo, listen to me.

  • You're very young and people can take advantage of you.

  • Very hard to imagine.

  • That man was the cop who's been following us.

  • You have to tell me exactly what you told him.

  • If he really is a cop, the worst thing we can do is let him know we're scared.

  • Then he'll know that we're guilty.

  • Or rather, that you're guilty.

  • # Don't sit under the apple tree with anyone else but me...

  • # With anyone else but me

  • # With anyone else but me, no, no, no

  • # With anyone else but me, no, no, no

  • # Anyone else but you

  • # No, no, don't go under the apple tree

  • There's something wrong with the steering.

  • Oh, whoa!

  • Ow! Watch it!

  • What are you doing?!

  • You got a flat, mister.

  • # Open the door, and let me in

  • # Richard, why don't you open the door?

  • Hey...

  • Hey!

  • Hey, you! Come back here!

  • Lo!

  • Lo! Lo!

  • Lo!

  • Put on the handbrake!

  • Pull the handbrake up! Lo!

  • Lo! Pull on the handbrake. Stop the car.

  • Put the handbrake on. Down there! Pull it!

  • - Ow!

  • Jesus Christ!

  • What did you think you were doing?

  • You should thank me.

  • The car was rolling and I stopped it.

  • You should thank me.

  • Pass me the pad in the glove compartment.

  • It was smart of us to write his number down.

  • What...?

  • What have you...

  • Lo...

  • Lo...

  • Lo, I'm sorry.

  • - I'm sorry!

  • Come here. Come here.

  • Get away!

  • Lo...

  • I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry.

  • I'm sorry.

  • Shall I walk down to the town and get you some fruit?

  • Bananas.

  • Just bananas?

  • Just bananas.

  • # Open the door, Richard

  • # Open the door and let me in

  • # Open the door, Richard

  • - # Richard... - # Why don't you open that door?

  • # Borrow confidently from HFC

  • Quilty can't be here in our studio because he's in Wace, Texas tonight...

  • ..working on the premiere of his brand-new play.

  • But I want to welcome his writing partner,...

  • ..the lovely and talented Miss Vivian Darkbloom.

  • Let's give her a warm Texas welcome.

  • You've been out.

  • I just got up.

  • Don't lie to me.

  • Well, I did go out for a second.

  • You were gone so long. I wanted to see if you were coming back.

  • You tell me who it is! Who is it?

  • Who is it? Tell me who it is.

  • You tell me. Who is it?

  • Who...?

  • - Tell me.

  • Please, tell me.

  • Please tell me.

  • Please tell me.

  • Please tell me.

  • Please!

  • Please... tell... me!

  • Please... please...

  • Please...

  • ..tell me!

  • Please...

  • ..please...

  • ..please...

  • I'll show you to room number 29.

  • It's one of our nicer rooms.

  • Say, what's wrong with your little daughter? ls she ill?

  • Oh, no. She's just feeling a bit... um...

  • My God, Lo!

  • Are you all right?

  • I don't feel... I don't feel very well.

  • It's a virus.

  • Nothing serious. I've had 40 cases in two weeks.

  • - So can I take her home? - We're gonna keep her here overnight.

  • Keep her hydrated, help her sleep.

  • Why don't you get some sleep? It won't help if you catch it.

  • I think I have already. I feel dreadful.

  • - Maybe I should stay. - Go.

  • Call us in the morning.

  • - Here, I'll take those. - Thank you.

  • Uh, yes, hello. This is Mr Humbert.

  • I'm calling to see how my... daughter, Dolores Haze, is.

  • Oh, she's much better.

  • She was up early. No trace of fever.

  • And when Uncle Gustave came for her, we signed her out.

  • Who? Wh... Wh... Who?

  • Uncle Gustave, Dolores called him.

  • He had a sweet little dog. He was the nicest man. Had a big smile.

  • Wait, Ted.

  • - And you let her go with him? - Oh, yes. He paid the bill in cash.

  • They said to tell you not to worry, and they'll be at Grandpa's expecting you.

  • - Then they went off in that nice Cadillac.

  • Hello?

  • Hey!

  • Hey!

  • Nurse!

  • - Where is she? - Who?

  • Who took her? Somebody took my daughter.

  • - You need to talk to the doctor. - But who took her?

  • My daughter was in there last night.

  • - Who took her away? - Hey, relax, pal!

  • Don't tell me to relax! I'm looking for my daughter! Doctor!

  • Doctor! Doctor!

  • What have you done with her?

  • Where is she? Where is she?

  • Tell me where she is! Where is she?

  • Where has she gone? Where? Where? Where?

  • You leave me alone, you bastards!

  • You fucking fiends!

  • Tell me where she is!

  • Get me to that man!

  • I'm just looking for my daughter!

  • - I said relax! - I want to know where she -

  • I'm sorry. I'm sorry. Sorry, sorry, sorry.

  • I'm sorry. I'm sorry.

  • Sorry.

  • I'm sorry. I'm just a little bit...

  • I think I may just have... had a little too much to drink. Sorry.

  • I'm very worried about my daughter, you see.

  • But she's with her Uncle Gustave.

  • So she'll be all right.

  • I'm very sorry. Please forgive me.

  • She's gone to her... grandpa's farm.

  • She'll be absolutely fine there.

  • What better place for her?

  • I'm... I'm fine.

  • Please, I'm sorry.

  • So sorry. Thank you very much.

  • Sorry... Sorry.

  • So sorry.

  • I searched all our old haunts...

  • ..and for several months the trail remained warm.

  • The thief, the kidnapper, whatever you want to call him,...

  • ..he was clever.

  • He would disguise his name.

  • But I could always tell his handwriting.

  • Um... Sir!

  • He had very peculiar Ts, Ws and Ls.

  • Do you know his name?

  • What does he look like?

  • - Let me help. - No, please...

  • Ladies, I'm sorry. We're trying to find...

  • It must be hard for you who already know who it was...

  • ..to understand my mystification.

  • Or maybe you think I was imagining things.

  • ..my daughter.

  • Maybe you think it impossible that there could have been another like me.

  • Another mad lover of nymphets following us over the great and ugly plains.

  • Well, you are right, of course.

  • There was no-one else like me.

  • Eventually the trail went cold and dead.

  • And I went back to cold, dead Beardsley.

  • "Dear Dad, how's everything?"

  • "I'm married. I'm going to have a baby."

  • "I guess it'll come right around Christmas."

  • "This is a hard letter to write."

  • "I'm going nuts because we don't have enough...

  • ..to pay our debts and get out of here."

  • "Dick has been promised a big job in Alaska."

  • "Are you still mad at me?"

  • "Please send us a cheque, Dad. We could manage with three or four hundred,...

  • ..or even less. Anything is welcome."

  • "I have gone through much sadness and hardship."

  • "Yours expecting, Dolly."

  • "Mrs Richard F...

  • ..Schiller."

  • Well!

  • Come in.

  • You, Molly, stay out.

  • Good girl.

  • Husband at home?

  • Yeah.

  • Where do you wanna sit? The rocker or the divan?

  • Come sit with me on the divan.

  • Is that him?

  • Up the ladder?

  • You want me to call him in?

  • No.

  • He's not the one I want.

  • He's not the what?

  • You know what I mean.

  • Where is he?

  • Look...

  • Dick has nothing to do with all that stuff. He thinks you're my father.

  • Please don't bring up all that muck.

  • - All right, I'll find out myself. - You really don't know?

  • My God, Dad, it was Quilty.

  • It was Clare Quilty.

  • Yes.

  • Yes, of course.

  • Quilty.

  • Yeah.

  • He was the only man I was ever really crazy about.

  • What about me?

  • Where did he take you?

  • Just tell me.

  • Well, everybody knew he liked little girls.

  • He used to film them in his mansion over in Parkington, Pavor Manor.

  • But I wasn't gonna do all those things.

  • All what things?

  • Two girls and two boys or...

  • ..l don't know, three or four men.

  • And Vivian was filming the whole thing.

  • I said "No, I'm not gonna blow all those beastly boys."

  • "I want you."

  • So he threw me out.

  • I looked and looked at her...

  • ..and I knew, as clearly as I know that I will die,...

  • ..that I loved her more than anything I'd ever seen or imagined on earth.

  • She was only the dead leaf echo of the nymphet from long ago...

  • ..but I loved her, this Lolita,...

  • ..pale and polluted and big with another man's child.

  • She could fade and wither - I didn't care.

  • I would still go mad with tenderness...

  • ..at the mere sight of her face.

  • Lolita...

  • From here to that old car that you know so well...

  • ..is a stretch of 25 paces.

  • Make those 25 steps...

  • ..with me, now.

  • You're saying you'll give us some money if I go to a motel with you?

  • No... No!

  • I'm saying leave here and come live with me, die with me, everything with me.

  • You're crazy.

  • If you refuse, you still get the money.

  • - Really? - Yeah.

  • There. Have it.

  • Oh my God.

  • You're giving us four thousand bucks?

  • - Thank you... - No...

  • Don't touch me.

  • I'll die if you touch me.

  • Just tell me... there's a chance you'll come with me.

  • No, honey.

  • I'd almost rather go back with Clare.

  • Oh...

  • I'll go now.

  • - Can I call Dick in to say goodbye? - No. I don't want to see him, at all.

  • I just want to go.

  • Lo, can you ever forget what I've done to you?

  • Say goodbye, Molly.

  • Say goodbye to my dad.

  • Dick! Guess what!

  • Ladies and gentlemen of the jury,...

  • ..l have to say that I regret all I did before that last goodbye in Coalmont.

  • But I regret nothing of what came after.

  • Now, who are you?

  • Are you, by any chance, Brewster?

  • You know, you don't look like Jack Brewster.

  • I mean, the resemblance is not particularly striking.

  • Somebody told me he had a brother with the same phone company.

  • I'm neither of the Brewsters.

  • Pull over!

  • Pull over!

  • Do you recall a little girl named...

  • ..Dolores Haze?

  • You see, I'm her father.

  • Nonsense.

  • You're a foreigner. You're an agent of a foreign power.

  • You're a foreign literary agent.

  • She was my daughter.

  • She was my child.

  • Oh, you know, I adore children myself.

  • And fathers...

  • I love fathers.

  • Ah...

  • Sit down!

  • Oh. There they are.

  • Now we need matches. You got a light?

  • Quilty, I want you to concentrate.

  • You're about to die.

  • Ooh.

  • Jesus!

  • Do you want to be executed standing up or sitting down?

  • Just let me think, let me think. It's not an easy question.

  • Try to understand what is happening.

  • I- l-l-l...

  • - Remember Dolores Haze. - I'm willing...

  • I'm willing to try. I am. Just...

  • OK. Listen.

  • I made a mistake, which I regret,...

  • ..sincerely.

  • I couldn't have any fun with your Dolly. I'm practically impotent is the sad truth.

  • But she had a swell vacation, met some remarkable people. Hey, do you know -

  • Stay still!

  • Oh, God...

  • You cheated me.

  • You cheated me of my redemption.

  • - You have to die. - I don't know what you're talking about.

  • My memory and my eloquence are not at their best today.

  • But really, you have to admit you were never an ideal stepfather.

  • Hm?

  • I did not force your protégée to join me.

  • It was she who made me remove her to a happier home.

  • Look around you. See?

  • You see this house?

  • It's very cool in the summer. Comfortable. I suggest that you move in, hm?

  • I think you'll be happy here.

  • You can use my wardrobe.

  • We have the most reliable and bribable charwoman.

  • "Cleaning lady" is the American term.

  • She has not only daughters, she has granddaughters.

  • And I know a thing or two about the chief of police...

  • ..that makes him my slave.

  • My slave. Drop the gun.

  • And here's another thing. Drop the gun.

  • I have, upstairs, the most unique collection of erotica.

  • Drop the gun. Drop the gun.

  • Also, moreover, I can arrange for you to attend executions.

  • Not everybody knows the chair is painted yellow.

  • Somebody help!

  • Aargh! Agh!

  • That hurts, sir.

  • That hurts atrociously, my dear fellow.

  • God...

  • You should not continue in this fashion, really.

  • Get out!

  • Get out of here!

  • What I heard then was the melody of children at play.

  • Nothing but that.

  • And I knew that the hopelessly poignant thing...

  • ..was not Lolita's absence from my side...

  • ..but the absence of her voice from that chorus.

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