Captain from Castile
- NOT RATED
- Year:
- 1947
- 140 min
- 104 Views
Hola, Diego!
Pedro!
Hey, de Vargas!
Come! Join us!
What's this, de Silva? It's not the hunting season.
What are you out for?
A runaway servant.
I gave the wretch some lashes yesterday
for the good of his soul...
and he rewards me by running off.
When I get my hands on him,
he'll run no more.
- Are you with us, Pedro?
- With pleasure, Diego.
Have you picked up his trail?
He was last seen along
the Guardia, heading south.
But I know these Indians.
They're sick for their islands.
He'll strike for Mlaga and the sea.
Perhaps. But they're
also shrewd as foxes.
I'll wager he let himself
be seen up here...
then headed straight for Sanlcar
on the seacoast to the north.
That's well reasoned.
You hunt in the valley toward the north.
We'll continue in this direction.
Very well. You scour the hills with your men
and your dogs while I bring him in alone.
That would indeed be a feather in your cap,
Pedro, and a joke on me.
Loose the dogs!
You! You there!
- What's in that bundle?
- Clothes to be washed, seor.
Sure you're not taking
food to someone?
- Oh, no, seor.
- Well, open it up. Let me see.
Have you seen anything of a man
around here? A runaway slave?
No, seor.
Well, keep your eyes open.
If you see anyone, report it to the authorities.
Yes, seor.
Seor Pedro.
Coatl. I didn't know
it was you who ran away.
I sorry, seor.
You forgive me?
I not hurt you. You my friend.
We hunt. We eat together.
Why did you run away, Coatl?
Look, seor.
Five years ago, I am captured
and brought to this country and sold as a slave.
But Coatl no slave. In my own country
across the sea, I am lord. I am prince.
There de Silva be beggar beside me.
I kill him if I could.
Well, be that as it may, the whole
countryside will be on your trail soon.
De Silva has his dogs
set on you now.
You better go back
and give yourself up while you still can.
I die first. I see what happen to others
who run away from de Silva.
He cut leg muscles here.
Never walk again.
Crawl in and out his door
for street boys to laugh at.
No, seor.
I never go back.
Here, take these.
I wish I had more.
But you must hurry. Keep down
the barranca and head for Sanlcar.
Once there, you ought to be safe.
Good luck and God go with you.
- Thank you, Seor Pedro, my friend.
- Here.
Let go!
Let go! Let go!
Seor! Call them off, please!
Let go!
Let go! Let go!
Devil take you!
Let go!
Careful, you wench!
Don't hurt that dog!
Then call him off, blast you!
- I said don't hit that dog.
- Let go! Devil take you! Let go!
Let go!
Stay away! Stay away!
Don't touch me. I'll kill you.
Stay away! Stay away!
Hey, hombres.
What's happening here?
Nada, seor.
This wench was teasing our dogs.
Swine! Liar!
Look, seor, my tablecloth.
Holy saints, look at it.
Seor, those are
Seor de Silva's dogs.
They're worth 10 of her.
Seor de Silva will not thank you
for risking them for one of your stupid jokes.
Now be off with you! Or I'll spare your master
the trouble of laying your backs bare.
Be off!
Be off!
Madre de Dios.
Lopez will murder me.
Lopez?
Who's Lopez?
Sancho Lopez.
Owner of the Rosario Inn
where I work.
His best tablecloth...
ruined.
All right, come along with me.
I'll take you to the inn and explain
to Lopez how it happened.
Here, give me your hand.
Me, seor?
On your horse with you?
Afraid?
No. No, caballero.
- Seor?
- Yes?
- I have seen you before.
- Where?
In church one day.
Of course, you did not see me.
You were in front, near the bishop's nose.
I was in the back.
- What's your name?
- Catana. Catana Perez.
Hold on tight, Catana.
We're going over the wall. Come on!
Welcome, seor.
Welcome to the Rosario Inn.
Oh, an honor, seor.
Seorita.
- Gracias, seor.
- My pleasure, seorita.
Lopez, if it hadn't been for the caballero,
you might never have seen me again.
Not see you again?
Why?
- Look what the dogs did to this tablecloth.
- The dogs?
- Whose dogs?
- Diego de Silva's.
Diego de Silva? Holy saints!
It wasn't Catana's fault.
She defended your property as best she could.
You wait. Just wait till my brother,
Manuel, hears of this.
Be quiet.
The cloth can be mended.
I don't want no trouble
with Diego de Silva.
- Now come, seor. What's your pleasure?
- To quench my thirst.
Jose! Jose!
Quick! Quick!
The caballero's horse.
It's not every day we have the honor
of serving a caballero at the Rosario Inn.
Hurry up. Hurry up.
Wine for the seor. The best.
Bread and cheese too.
Pronto!
This way, seor.
Catana, pronto!
- By your leave. Juan Garcia's my name.
- Pedro de Vargas.
- The son of Don Francisco de Vargas?
- Yes.
Ah, a great cavalier,
Don Francisco. I've seen him.
That is, I've heard of him often.
As who has not?
Do me the honor to join me
in a drink to his health.
- Gracias, seor.
- Innkeeper!
- S, seor.
- Your best Malaga.
Right away. Pronto.
Yes, in the Indies, I've heard
many soldiers from the Moorish wars...
and several from the Italian,
speak of your father.
The Indies?
You have been to the Indies, seor?
For many years.
Ten years to be exact.
Came home and landed at
Sanlcar just two days ago.
- That's not Malaga.
- No, seor.
Tell me about the Indies, seor.
That word sets your imagination on fire, doesn't it?
Well, why not?
It's a new world, my friend.
Listen, I stood on the waterfront
Ah, you could feel
the great land out there.
Tell me, seor, is it true that there's
a country on the southern sea...
where heathen Indians live in palaces
and eat their food off plates of gold?
Aye, and all that.
Kingdoms, empires,
mountains of gold...
just waiting to be taken by the first cavalier
with guts enough to venture.
- To your health, caballero.
- Gracias.
Do you plan to go back
to the Indies, seor?
The only reason I'm here now
is to see my mother.
She's had a thin life.
But not from now on.
Gonna take her back with me to the Indies
where she'll have a house of her own...
a mule, meat every day.
I haven't done badly of late years.
My share of a property in Santo Domingo
brought me 2,000 gold ducats.
2,000?
- Another cup of wine, caballero.
- Uh, gracias.
To the New World, seor.
The New World.
You do not drink.
Uh, no. But please
don't let it disturb you.
I buy wine for
the good of the house.
A penance?
Something like that.
I'm an ordinary man when sober.
When drunk,
I'm not a man, I'm a beast.
I want to kill.
Probably, I have a devil in me. Though heaven
knows, I've done what I could to get rid of it.
Spent a pile of money on candles and
But they never worked.
So So I don't drink.
- Lopez.
- Seor.
My horse.
Thank you for your hospitality, seor.
It's getting late. And if you will excuse me
- Does it happen that you're riding into Jan?
- Yes.
Well, then, by your leave,
I'll ride with you.
- Girl. Have the boy bring my animal too.
- S, seor.
And, uh, here.
- This'll fetch you a new dress.
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"Captain from Castile" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 22 Dec. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/captain_from_castile_5043>.
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