Jezebel
- APPROVED
- Year:
- 1938
- 104 min
- 1,109 Views
Boy, stop here.
Might as well get us a ball.
Julie will have plenty
to drink at the party.
Party liquor. Messed up
with cherries and such. Come on.
- Wait right here.
- Yes, sir, Mr. Cantrell, sir.
Man, you talk crazy.
I say that horse is
out of the Truxton strain.
- Gentlemen.
- Good afternoon.
- How are you, General Bogardus, sir?
- How are you, Buck? Ted?
- Going to the party?
- Yes, indeed.
- See you later then, sir.
- Yes.
The Truxton strain's
the best horse blood in this state.
Here's somebody
that really knows bloodlines.
Hi, Buck Cantrell.
Come here and help us decide a bet.
Got no time, Huger.
Ted and I were just shifting.
Won't take any time at all, Buck.
You heard him, Huger.
Buck got no time.
Gentlemen, Buck Cantrell got no time.
Five-to-four, he doesn't know the day.
I'll do better. Even money,
he doesn't know what month.
Know what time of day it is, anyhow.
Must be getting on towards 3:00.
If it was any later,
De Lautruc would be a lot drunker.
Is it not admirable Monsieur Cantrell
can joke so cleverly...
...when he has just lost
the lady of his heart?
- Better not, Rene.
- Yes, gentlemen.
Monsieur Cantrell
has just lost his lady.
I wouldn't go on, De Lautruc.
See, gentlemen,
Monsieur Cantrell is in bad humor...
...because Julie Marsden is marrying...
- De Lautruc.
a lady's name.
Must have misunderstood you, sir.
And if I did mention
the name of a lady?
Why, just that a gentleman doesn't
mention a lady's name in a barroom.
Are you trying
to teach me manners, my friend?
Wouldn't think of trying, De Lautruc.
But I somehow don't like your hat
or your ears or anything between them.
- Plain enough?
- Amply, sir. Pierre?
I've the honor to ask you
to name a friend.
- I'm acting as...
- Shoot, Ted.
You're too young
for this sort of thing.
Gentlemen, a moment.
Buck, I ought to get De Lautruc myself.
It's my brother that's gonna marry her.
That makes it much more
my quarrel than yours.
- Let me act for you, Buck.
- Well, if you feel that bad about it.
I've the honor
to be acting for Mr. Cantrell.
- Sunrise at the Oaks satisfactory?
- Perfectly, sir.
Why do you wanna make it
so confounded early?
Make it 10:
00. De Lautruc ain't wild.We don't have to sneak up
on him in the dark.
Your servant, gentlemen.
Come on, youngster.
We gotta get on to the party.
Gentlemen, let's have another drink.
Buck, listen...
Here's something
I've been aiming to get all day.
- Must have trimmings for the party.
- Cantrell, one minute.
- You riding along with us?
- I have my carriage.
Cantrell, I don't like this.
Miss Julie's name was mentioned.
As her guardian,
I don't like her mixed up in this.
Miss Julie's name was mentioned?
Why, sir, if it was, I never heard it.
It's just that I don't
like De Lautruc, is all. May I?
Cantrell, you're a fool. De Lautruc's
an old hand. Been out a dozen times.
Thirteen's liable to be
unlucky for De Lautruc.
You know these French. They shoot
for the head and like as not, miss.
and bust his tripes.
General Bogardus, sir, your servant.
Mrs. Kendrick. Miss Kendrick, ma'am.
- Keep in the shade, Albert.
- Yes, Mrs. Kendrick, ma'am.
I won't have the horses
standing in the sun, you hear?
Yes, ma'am.
- Stay in your seat.
- Yes, ma'am.
- Keep your hat and gloves on.
- Yes, ma'am.
- And your coat buttoned.
- Yes, ma'am.
Yes, ma'am.
- Mrs. Kendrick, ma'am.
- Good evening, Cato.
Miss Kendrick.
- Honoria, how good of you to come.
- Sweet of you to ask us, Belle.
And, Stephanie,
how pretty you look, child.
Oh, thank you, Miss Massie.
Stephanie, your manners.
- I do hope we aren't late, Belle.
- Late? Julie isn't here herself yet.
- What?
- At her own party in her own house.
Really, I don't know
what to do with that girl.
Well, I always say,
"Better late than never."
Excuse me, please, Honoria.
like that before people.
Girls don't curtsey anymore.
- I read it in Godey's.
- They do in New Orleans.
You've no call to take up
with Yankee manners.
- How do you find yourself, Mrs. Petion?
- Honoria, Stephanie.
Belle just told me Julie is late
for her own party in her own house.
But I always say,
"Punctuality is the politeness of kings."
Politeness was never
one of Julie's virtues.
Ted, isn't it exciting?
is the luckiest man.
Providing he keeps
Oh, you're just trying to talk
like Buck Cantrell.
I wish Julie would come.
So does Aunt Belle.
She's having a fit.
Tell me, wasn't Mr. Cantrell
just crushed?
Crushed? Buck Cantrell?
Hounds all over him. Tom with
his knife, high-tailing with a bear.
The only way you could tell
which was which, he had a hat on.
Laugh, I thought I...
- Yes, Miss Belle?
- Theophilus, that child isn't here yet.
You're her guardian.
You'll have to speak to her.
You're her aunt, Miss Belle.
Why don't you?
- Girl never was on time in her life.
- It's outrageous of her.
Oh, time ain't so important, Miss Belle.
Seems like the longer I live,
the more there is of it.
And I don't know
what to say to people.
Evening, Miss Julie.
Thank you, Gros Bat.
Take him around, Ti Bat.
Now, Ti Bat, don't stand there
with your eyes bulging out like that.
- He knows you're scared.
- Yes, ma'am, Miss Julie, but he bite.
Well, then you just plain
bite him back.
- Good evening, Uncle Cato.
- Praise be, Miss Julie.
- Miss Belle's been nigh on to a fit.
- I know, I'm late.
Miss Julie, I done laid out
your party dress.
Thanks. No time.
Got to go in to my guests.
- Miss Julie, in them horse clothes?
- They won't mind.
Good evening, everybody.
Terribly sorry to be late.
I had trouble with the colt.
- Hello, dumpling.
- Julie, your riding habit.
No time to change, darling. Stephanie.
- Thank you, honey.
- How are you, Ted?
- Fine as frog's hair.
Good evening. Good evening.
How do you do?
So sorry, but when a colt
gets high-headed...
...teach him his manners
or ruin him.
- Yes, that's so important, isn't it?
- Hello, Molly. Excuse me, will you?
I declare. I hope I'm broad-minded,
but I must say...
I know what Stephanie would get
if she did such a thing, big as she is.
I always say, "Spare the rod
and you spoil the child."
It sounds so thrilling, darling,
living way up North in New York.
Julie, I wish you and Pres
all the happiness...
...the best of health...
- And the most of prosperity.
Sherry, ma'am?
You said the very same thing
the last time Pres and I were engaged.
until you finally get married.
My dear, the toddies
are for the gentlemen.
- Whiskey, Uncle Billy?
- Yes, ma'am.
- The very best of Bourbon.
- That's fine.
To the very good health
of the future Mrs. Dillard.
Buck.
Aren't you gonna wish me
happiness too?
What's the use? You won't get it
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"Jezebel" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 26 Dec. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/jezebel_11276>.
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