Separate Tables
- UNRATED
- Year:
- 1958
- 100 min
- 769 Views
Alynabawy@Hotmail.Com
analazyz@yahoo.com
Maj. Pollock.
Maj. Pollock!
Well, hello, hello.
What's this? What's this?
Well, I... I was rather
worried about you.
Worried? Why?
Has anybody been talking about me?
O, no. No, no, Major.
It wasjust that, when you were...
away forthese last 2 days.
Oh, I see.
Yes, well, I telephoned the hotel.
I talked to Miss Cooper.
I told her I was visiting a friend.
A company commander of mine...
served under me in the desert campaigns.
Ran into a bit of luck.
I thought I'd give him a hand.
You're always trying to help people,
aren't you, Major?
Well, yes, but, ah...
well, the fellow saved my life once,
just outside of El Alamein.
Pinned down. Short of petrol.
He was a good man.
Oh, yes.
Mark you, Jerry in the desert was
a very different cup of tea
from Jerry on the western front.
- W-were you in Normandy, too, Major?
- No, no, desert rats, you know.
- Still, we got to Berlin, eventually.
- Berlin must have been depressing.
Berlin depressing?
What with all those frauleins and
all those... all those madchens?
I should say not.
By Jove, I could tell youa thing ortwo.
Good life, yes, indeed.
Well, let's go and get
brushed up for dinner, what?
There you are, dear.
Having a stroll with the major?
- Yes, mummy.
- 'Evening, Mrs. Railton-Bell.
Good evening, Major.
- Had your watch stopped, darling?
- N-no, mummy, it's go...
Oh, well, t-the major was telling me
all about the desert campaign.
Yes, I'm sorry to have kept your pride
and joy out in the cold, Mrs. R-B.
The fact is,
I got on to the old days.
That's the trouble with us
old retired warhorses, what, what?
We all talk too much.
Yes.
Well, if you'll excuse me.
Ah, Sibyl, my dearest...
do you mind if yourtactless old mother
whispers something in your ear?
No, mummy.
My dear, such a wonderful
concert this afternoon...
Oh, yes, Gladys, yes.
I'lljoin you in the game room.
Oh, all right, dear.
It'sjust that, do you think it wise
to make yourfeeling forthe major quite so public?
- Yes, staring at him all the time.
Talking to him for hours on end.
Those meetings down on the front.
Quite a lot of people
are beginning to notice.
You don't mean...
You can't mean...
Oh, no. How can
people be so awful?
Control yourself.
- Don't get into one of your states now.
- It's all right, mummy. I'm not in a state.
- Good evening, Mrs. Railton-Bell.
- Good evening, Miss Cooper.
- Good evening, Sibyl.
- 'Evening, Miss Cooper.
Well, dear, I think you better
run upstairs and change for dinner.
You know Miss Cooper
likes us to be punctual.
- Ah, Stratton, still at it, I see.
- Yes.
I don't know how you do it, I must say.
Most praiseworthy effort, I think.
Thank you, Major.
Of course, when I was at Sandhurst...
Oh, I'm sorry,
I mustn't interrupt you, must I?
That's all right, Major.
Ah, when you were at Sandhurst?
Yes. Well, I wasjust going to say,
when I was at Sandhurst,
and when I was at Wellington, too.
I was a hit like you, you know...
sweating away at the books all the time.
Cramming away like mad, I was.
Military history, great battles of the past.
Clausewitz and all that sort of stuff.
I could have told you
a lot about Clausewitz at the point.
Oh, really, sir?
And you can't now, huh?
No, not anymore, I'm afraid.
Everything goes, you know. Everything goes.
Still, I don't regret it.
I did jolly well at Sandhurst.
Oh, did you get the sword of honor, sir?
Get the what?
- The sword of honor?
- Oh, the sword of honor.
No, I came close to it, though.
Passed out pretty high, pretty high.
Yes, you're quite right, sir.
Oh, I'm sorry, my boy. Please go on.
'Fraid I talk too much.
Not at all, sir, but Miss Cooper
just walked by and you were looking for her.
Oh, did she? Yes, I-I want to have
a little chat with her. Thank you.
- Keep up the good work, now.
- Well, I'll try, sir.
Good man.
Ah, there we are, Miss Cooper.
- What can I do foryou, Major?
- It's nothing important, really.
It'sjust that they're sending me up
a copy of the West Hampshire Weekly News.
I wondered if it had arrived yet.
The West Hampshire News?
Yes, I'm told they have a pretty
good page of small ads.
a portable typewriter.
I'm taking a stab at the old war
memoirs, you know.
Of course, if there are any bargains,
one has to be quick off the mark.
Yes, well, there are
some things in my office.
I haven't been through them yet.
- I'll have a look.
- Oh, that's very good of you. Thank you.
I can't understand it.
There's still no answer.
Oh, I'm so sorry, Mr. Fowler.
Will you excuse me?
- One of your old flames, Eh, Mr. Fowler?
- Old flames? Oh, no.
Um, no, it's an old pupil coming
down for a few days.
I used to teach him
classics at school, you know.
Rather backward, I thought him
in those days.
No, as far as old flames are concerned,
I leave all that to you galloping majors.
Oh, those days are all past and
gone now, I'm afraid.
Eheu, fugaces, postume, postume.
Eheu, fugaces, postume, postume.
But weren't they teaching the new
pronunciation in yourtime at Wellington?
Yes, they probably were. I forget now.
I never was much of a hand at Greek.
Latin. Horace.
Latin. Yes, of course. Stupid of me, yes.
- Here we are, Major.
- Ah! Good show. Thank you, Miss Cooper.
Miss Cooper, I think, if you don't mind,
I'd like you to still keep the room.
- After all, he may be on the latertrain.
- Yes, yes, of course.
And, ah, if anything has gone wrong,
which I don't for a moment believe,
I shall naturally expect to pay for it.
- Will you let me know when you can?
- Yes, yes, of course.
By the by, Major, you were in
the Highland division at Alamein, weren't you?
Not in the highland division, no.
- Oh, I thought you were.
- I never said so.
- Well, I wasjust wondering...
- Mr. Fowler, aren't we going to finish this game?
We have a shilling on it,
if you remember.
Oh, yes, of course.
Will you excuse me?
- Good evening, Maj. Pollock.
- Good evening.
- So this is where you've been hiding.
- I was not hiding. Nowjust you shush.
Charles, forget your work for once
and let's go play billiards.
But, darling, the anatomy exams
come up next month. Remember?
Oh, Jean, really.
Have you told yourfather about us?
What did you tell him?
Oh, Charles, what did you tell him?
Oh, for heaven's sake.
That-that-that we were in love with each other.
That we were going to be married.
Well, you told him
a dirty lie then, didn't you?
Why? I do want to marry you.
- You know, I can never understand why...
- You know my views in marriage perfectly well.
I intend to produce paintings, not children.
And be kept in luxury by
London's most celebrated surgeon.
- Wh-who has failed to pass his anatomy.
- Charles?
Let's go for a walk in the garden.
Hmm? Oh, darling, first it's billiards,
now it's a walk.
But it looks so romantic.
Now, how can I possibly mix
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"Separate Tables" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 25 Nov. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/separate_tables_17798>.
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