Dodsworth
- PASSED
- Year:
- 1936
- 101 min
- 526 Views
- Mr. Dodsworth?
- Yes?
The men are ready.
I hate to see you go, Sam.
Good-bye, Sam.
See if you can slip them into
Mr. Dodsworth's big leather suitcase.
Yes, ma'am.
And when Miss Emily and Mr. McKee
come back from their honeymoon...
I've put all the wedding presents
in her old room.
- Yes, Mrs. Dodsworth.
- Oh, and the...
Good afternoon, sir.
- Mr. Dodsworth's paper?
- Right here, ma'am.
Over there.
Is everything settled?
The Dodsworth Motor Company, Samuel
Dodsworth, president and founder...
became the property of Union Motors
a little over an hour ago.
How do you feel?
How would any man feel
who just sold 20 years of his life?
I suppose you feel kind of lost.
I knew what I was doing when I sold,
and I know what I'm after from now on.
Oh, Sam, don't look
so mournful, darling.
All right, Mary.
I'll fix you a drink.
Just think, Sammy, you're free.
After 20 years of doing
what was expected of us, we're free.
I'm just as keen on this trip
as you are. I'm rarin' to go.
I've always wanted
to see London and Paris.
I want much more
than a trip out of this, Sam.
I want a new life,
all over from the very beginning.
A perfectly glorious,
free, adventurous life.
It's coming to us.
We've done our job.
We've brought up Emily and seen her
married. We've got plenty of money.
Why, if we weren't tied to
this half-baked Middle Western town...
- Fran, don't start knocking Zenith.
- Darling, I'm not knocking Zenith.
But have you ever thought
You go down to the plant and deal
in millions and have a marvelous time.
I go down to the kitchen
and order dinner.
Then there's the ladies' luncheon
and bridge, always the same ladies.
Then dinner... same people
we dined with last week.
After dinner, poker for the men
and women for the women.
There's talk of children and doctors
and servants and the garden club...
Thought you liked
the garden club.
I can't go on liking
the same things forever and ever.
Oh, Sammy darling, I want all
the lovely things I've got a right to.
In Europe, a woman of my age
is just to the point...
where men begin to take
I won't be put on the shelf
for my daughter...
and better than she can.
After all, I've got brains and,
thank heavens, I've still got looks.
Nobody takes me for over 32...
Oh, Sammy darling,
I'm begging for life.
No, I'm not.
I'm demanding it.
I see how you feel.
All right, I'll enjoy life now
if it kills me, and it probably will.
I spy you, European travelers.
Got a little spaghetti?
- Hello, Tubby.
- Hello, Matey. Hello, Tubby.
- We're going with you.
- You're not.
- As far as New York.
- What?
- Can't you offer a fellow a drink?
- Get Tubby a drink.
Will you excuse me?
I won't be two seconds.
- Can I help?
- I'll be right back.
Run along anyway.
Run along.
- All right, say when.
- I don't want a drink.
- What's wrong?
- I'll stay sober till I bawl you out.
- What have I done?
- You know very well.
Union Motors people been to the bank
to see me about you.
What are they running
around to you about me for?
They want me to use my influence
with you as your banker.
Don't blame me
if it doesn't do any good.
They offered to make you first
vice president of the whole outfit...
in charge of production
of all their cars...
They offered me $100,000 the first year
in addition to stock which comes to...
- You turned it down?
- Yeah.
Americans like you and me
can't quit, Sam.
It's meant that we should keep on
working until we die in harness.
I'm out to make a new life
for myself.
I'm out to learn how to enjoy
my leisure, now I've retired.
I've been doing things people expected
of me always. I want to feel free.
I want to sit under a linden tree with
nothing more important to worry about...
than the temperature of the beer,
if there is anything more important.
If you think I can see
my oldest and closest friend...
turned into
an expatriate parlor snake...
because Zenith isn't
good enough for his wife...
Ever since college, I've yessed you
and looked up to you. You're a big man.
You're a great industrialist.
You're a representative citizen.
You're pretty near everything
I'm not and ought to be.
But about your wife, you're
the dumbest, the sappiest, the most...
It's all right, Matey.
Tubby's famous for his very
peculiar brand of humor, aren't you?
It's all right. I'm glad you heard
what I said. Sam knows as well as I do...
I don't know
anything of the kind.
I'm out to see the world I haven't seen
and get a perspective on the USA.
I might get to know myself
at the same time.
I might even get to know my wife.
Oh, come along, Tubby.
We'll be seeing you on the boat.
- You won't see me there.
- Put that glass down too.
- See here.
- I'm not going.
Did I remember to tell you today
that I adore you?
- Mother!
- Why, look who's arrived!
- What are you doing here?
- We thought you were in Nassau.
- We were yesterday.
- Yesterday?
- You broke off the honeymoon?
- Emily had had enough honeymoon.
I don't think so much of sending a girl
off with a husband she doesn't know.
- How'd you get here so soon?
- We decided to surprise you. We flew.
You flew? I don't want you
flying around in airplanes.
- I'm not taking any chances on you.
- It's Harry's job to worry about me now.
I don't know whether this is going
to make going away harder or easier.
A little of both.
Don't see why
we don't rate a honeymoon.
Wait till you have a honeymoon
All visitors ashore, please.
All ashore that's going ashore.
We just got here!
- I saw them. They're right near the top.
- Hey, Emily!
- There they are.
- Oh, yes! I see.
Bye!
- Fran? Fran! We're at sea!
- At sea? That's putting it mildly.
Forget this trunk.
Come on out and see the ship.
- You sound happy. I'm so glad.
- This is the happiest day of my life!
Of course, except
the day I married you.
Get off my dress.
Do you realize this is the first time
we've started out together as lovers?
- I was right, wasn't I?
- Yeah, no more work.
- Now we'll live.
- Together.
- Always.
- Let's look at the ship.
I can't. I got to dress
for dinner and so have you.
- We have to dress for dinner?
- Of course. Don't you want to?
Well, okay.
Remember the first time I asked you
to marry me and we said we'd come here?
And here we are.
I love you more than ever now that
I've got time for it.
And I love you, Sammy.
- Looks like I made a slight error.
- That's all right, sir.
Dry martini, please.
- Mr. Dodsworth?
- Yes.
I heard you were on board. I hope
you don't mind me introducing myself.
Not at all.
I've just been driving one of your cars
- How'd it stand up?
- Tough as nails.
Good.
- My name's Lockert.
- Good to know you.
- Join me in a drink?
- Thank you very much.
- What'll you have?
- Dry martini.
- Make it two, please.
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