Reflections in a Golden Eye
- NOT RATED
- Year:
- 1967
- 108 min
- 314 Views
Private Williams!
Report to Major Penderton's house
for a work detail.
Weldon!
Yeah?
I'm going for a ride, Weldon.
Okay.
What do you mean,
"just a little scratch"?
Look at that! He's been kicked.
It's just a nick, ma'am. He ain't hurt.
Where's my boy? The boy
that takes care of Firebird?
- Private Williams?
- I guess so.
Why, ma'am,
he's up at your house.
What do you mean, my house?
What's he doing up there?
He's doing some work for the major.
I asked Weldon to have
the garden tilled out in the back.
I've invited so many people
to my party...
...they're just gonna spill
out of the house.
Come on, you sweet old thing.
All right, now, private. This...
This section of woods
is to be cleared here.
Take away all the undergrowth
and the briar and the bushes.
Any of the limbs of the large trees
growing at a level of less than six feet...
...are to be cut away.
You understand?
- Yes, sir.
- That's a level of less than six feet.
- Yes, sir.
- Fine.
Now, your boundary
will be this large oak tree here.
You won't have to clear beyond it...
...just from the edge of the grass here
to the oak tree there.
I'll expect you
to complete this work today.
All the tools we've got
will be found in the garage.
I'll be back sometime
late this afternoon.
Listen, I think that the thing
we all overlook, everybody forgets...
...is that who really knows...
...what happened to her in her mind?
Nobody knows that.
- Also...
- "Also"? Also what?
Hell, Leonora,
it's been three months.
Now, she hasn't tried
to do anything like that since...
...and she seems to be okay.
Oh, what does that prove, Morris?
That Alison really is all right?
Well, yes, I guess so.
She hasn't tried to do it again.
How could she?
What she did is something a lady
can only do once, now, isn't it?
Give me your cap.
I want to pick some blackberries.
There.
Now let's take
two things Clausewitz says.
First, the theory of warfare
tries to discover...
...how we make any preponderance
of physical forces...
...and material advantages
at a decisive point.
And two, one of the strongest
weapons of offensive warfare...
...is the surprise attack.
Now, I would not like
to improve on Clausewitz...
...but I would say
that the night detect...
...is one of the strongest weapons
of offensive warfare.
We can look to Major General Terry Allen
when he commanded his forces in Africa.
to the maximum.
Economy of force...
Economy of force.
Concentration, surprise, security...
...offensive action,
movement, cooperation.
All of these have their application
in the night operation.
Susie!
Susie, I'm home!
Hi, there, soldier.
- Hi.
- Hi.
Wait a minute.
Pull!
I think I'll have my drink
out here.
I might as well do those invitations
while I'm at it too.
Soldier...
...I heard you were here this morning,
down at the stables.
My Firebird has been kicked.
- How?
- That, I would like to know.
Probably by some damn mule, or maybe
they put him in with the mares.
I asked for you.
Thanks, Susie.
Soldier, do you want a drink?
Want a drink, soldier?
- No, ma'am.
- Don't you ever drink?
- No, ma'am.
- Not ever?
No, ma'am.
Damn.
Evening, Leonora.
There they are. All 64 of them.
I hope I haven't left anybody out.
How do you spell "cordially"?
Cordially.
C-O-R-D-I-A-double L-Y.
Oh, no!
Don't tell me I have to do them
all over again.
Well, I expect you better.
Oh, God.
What's the matter with you?
Private, the whole idea
was in the big oak tree.
The instructions were to clear
the ground just to the oak tree.
The way the branches
swept down and made a background...
...shutting off the rest of the wood
was the whole point.
Now it's all ruined.
What would the major like me to do?
Well, the major would like you
to pick up the branches...
...and nail them back on again.
No, no. Just get some leaves here...
...and cover the bare spots
where the bushes been removed.
Then you can go.
Here.
That's the boy from the stables,
the one that takes care of Firebird.
Yes, well...
He's also the soldier that
ruined a brand new silk suit for me.
Spilled the better part of a coffeepot
all over my knees.
That was two years ago,
wasn't it?
It'll be a lot longer than that
before you'll forget.
I dislike clumsiness,
willful or otherwise.
Well, there's nothing clumsy
about the way he handles Firebird.
Morris says he's never seen
an enlisted man...
...to handle a horse to equal him.
Morris would find something to like
in any enlisted man.
All right, then, Firebird likes him.
Firebird's a horse.
Firebird is a stallion.
So these two little queers
went into this bar...
...and this great big old barman
was looking at them for a long time.
Finally he said, "Are you two sisters?"
And they said, "Hell, no.
We're not even Catholic."
Oh, you're so funny.
For God's sakes, Leonora, why don't you
go upstairs and put your shoes on?
Oh, my.
Oh, my good...
You look like a slattern
going around the house this way.
Langdons come to dinner...
...I suppose you're gonna sit down
at the table like that.
Sure. Why not, prissy?
You disgust me.
I'll kill you. I swear, I'll kill you.
I'll do it! I will kill you!
Son, have you ever been collared...
...and dragged out into the street...
...and thrashed by a naked woman?
- Would anyone like a drink?
- I would, thanks.
Alison?
Very, very light, please.
Sugar?
Do you want another card?
- Big one?
- Oh, not too big, not too small.
Make mine straight on the rocks.
Not too big, not too small.
I'll have the same, Weldon,
and a little of that branch water.
Weldon, your wife's cheating.
- She tried to look at this card to see if...
- I did not.
You caught me before I had a chance to.
What have you got there?
I'm surprised at you, Morris.
Sitting down playing cards with a woman.
Expecting her not to cheat you.
What's this,
a new sweater for your husband?
It's for Captain Weincheck.
Captain Weincheck. I forgot to invite him.
Well, that's the story of his life, isn't it?
Everybody forgets about Weincheck,
including the promotion board.
He's about the oldest captain in the Army.
Will somebody please tell me
why Captain Weincheck is unpopular?
Is it because he plays the violin,
reads Proust?
Oh, do you remember that tea he gave?
Classical records and cat hairs.
And before God, tea. Only tea.
Captain Weincheck is a gentleman...
...and he's not a thief.
Who said he was?
That afternoon you were speaking of,
at his apartment?
Somebody stole a little
silver Georgian teaspoon.
One of a set of eight
belonging to his great-grandmother.
It was gone when we went to tidy up.
He asked me never to tell about it,
but somebody stole that spoon.
Well, I didn't. It wasn't me.
Well, I'm gonna put everything I have
on this one hand...
...and if I win,
I'll have every chip on the table.
Hit me.
Are aces ones?
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"Reflections in a Golden Eye" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 26 Dec. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/reflections_in_a_golden_eye_16737>.
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