The Pawnbroker
- APPROVED
- Year:
- 1964
- 116 min
- 1,028 Views
Sol?
Solly?
I just made some fresh
lemonade, Solly.
It's going to be a nice day.
Not too hot.
Ohh!
Your back again, papa?
Aww.
Why don't you move
into the shade, Sol?
Good morning, uncle Sol.
Mother, I was thinking.
If we could only afford it, Danish
modern would be so perfect.
Solly?
The editorial section.
So, Solly...
What do you think, huh?
About what?
What I told you at brunch.
After all, you live here, too.
You're paying for it.
It really is up to you.
Buy it and keep it.
What?
I said buy it...
Keep it...
The AM-FM television.
That's not what I mean. I mean
about the trip to Europe.
I don't wanna be...
Turn it down, joan.
This music bother you, uncle Sol?
You sure you wouldn't
like some lemonade?
Did you sleep long enough, my son?
I wasn't sleeping.
No. He was drawing his
pornographic pictures.
Give me that!
Oh, look at it!
My god! Look!
It's a nude girl!
Look at that, uncle Sol!
My god!
What have you been doing?
Ha ha!
Give it back to me!
Look what your son's been doing!
Don't you know girls aren't built that way!
All right!
Enough already, will you?
Why can't you leave me alone?
As soon as you come around, my son,
There's a disturbance.
Morton, comb your hair, Morton.
You look like some
kind of character
With your hair like that.
Edward's picking me
up in 10 minutes,
And I don't want you
to frighten him.
What happens to the time?
25 years.
Do you realize it, Sol?
Do I realize what?
25 years next thursday.
Did you know that, Sol?
Yes.
My sister.
My poor sister Ruth.
Mother.
25 years.
My sister Ruth was
beautiful like a picture.
Uncle Solly knows how
beautiful, mother.
He was married to her.
Sol, all you have to
do is say yes or no.
A final yes or no.
A final yes or no about what?
The trip to Europe.
You want to go to Europe, Bertha?
Not me, so much,
But they have family plans now,
So why not?
It's a 17-day tour.
And why do you want
to go to Europe?
Mostly, it's him.
He says it'd be very good
For his standing with
the school board.
And he's always wanted
to visit there, anyhow.
The shrines and the old cities...
There's an atmosphere
we don't have here.
Something mellow.
Age lends its own charm.
Why, you can almost
smell the difference.
It's rather like a
stink if I remember.
All esta tu jefe, Jesus!
No spanish, mama.
No spanish.
English.
You hurry now.
Couple of weeks working for him
Ain't long enough
for you to be late.
Mama, you know what
your trouble is?
You know your trouble?
You worry!
You worry.
Now, me, I don't worry, mama.
You know why?
Because I am going
a long way, mama.
Yeah! A long way.
Jesus...
No more trouble.
No more things like that, Jesus.
No. No more, mama.
No more stealing, no more numbers,
No more peddling, no more nothing.
Strictly legit, ok?
Ok.
Mister?
How much will you give me for this?
I'm here!
Let the business now commence.
Ah, come on, now, Mr. Nazerman.
Don't look that way, now.
Listen, I'm going to insist...
I insist you dock me
exactly 20 minutes I late.
On the other hand,
I'll work so hard for
the next few hours
That you'll wind up giving
me time and a half.
To start with, I'm going
to open the front.
It's an award for oratory.
I won it in a citywide
oratorical contest
Five years ago.
It's gold.
$1.00.
$1.00 for an important
award like this?
20,000 started.
50 semifinalists, and I won.
I recited "the raven."
I was 1 of 20,000.
$1.00. Still at the same address?
Uh-huh.
But it's gold.
Plate. $1.00.
Man the lifeboats!
Here I is again.
All right.
Gimme a dollar.
Honest and true,
It's like bailing out
an old leaky boat
Filled with holes.
You pawn something,
You buy something else,
and then you pawn that.
Each time, the boat's gettin'
deeper into the water.
Ha ha! Ain't it a wonder
a body stay afloat
As long as it do?
Aw, come on, Mr. Nazerman.
Smile.
Here I am with a load
of profit for you.
They's heirloom.
Makes a table look like a table.
I'll sell them for $10 a pair.
$2.00.
My goodness!
Why, these candlesticks
is very high quality.
Cost $25 when new.
Now, I could get $15 easy
down at Triboro pawn.
I suggest, mrs. Harmon,
That you take them
down to triboro pawn.
Ha ha ha!
You a merciless man for sure.
$2.00!
Oh, I'm too pooped to
haggle, Mr. Nazerman.
Sold!
Oh, you's a hard man.
God pity you.
He's the only judge, after all.
Be seeing you again, Mr. Nazerman,
And that's for sure.
Take care now, you hear?
Wait a minute, mrs. Harmon.
You forgot your ticket,
And you forgot your $2.00.
You know, I've been thinking.
Them suits in the back?
I'll make a list of them,
First according to the size,
And then another one
according to condition,
And then the type.
You know, what I mean by that
Is summer or serge or gabardine.
You know, that way any
suit anybody wants,
Pow! Put my finger
on it right away.
I'm just filled with
good ideas, man.
Good morning, Mr. Nazerman.
Good morning.
$2.00.
Quite incidentally, Mr. Nazerman,
I've just been reading a
very remarkable book...
Herbert Spencer's
genesis of science.
Yes, but then you
probably know it well.
It's a very good book.
I- I particularly
like his insistence
That science is born of art,
Not the other way around.
To me, this was refreshing,
Coming from a man
That most modern thinkers
called old-fashioned.
Did any of your
students think of that
While you were at Leipzig?
But Spencer didn't come up with
anything very new, really.
Pythagoras, an artist at heart
And a great lover of music,
Made the discovery that
the pitch of sound
Depends upon the length
of the vibrating string.
That was six centuries
before Christ.
I... I, uh...
From time to time,
I like to drop in here
Because, Mr. Nazerman,
A man gets hungry for talk.
Good talk.
There's your ticket,
and there's your $2.00.
Mr. Nazerman...
$2.00 will be...
quite all right.
I...
I apologize for talking
so much, Mr. Nazerman.
D- d-did...
Forgive me.
Yes?
Nazerman?
How's business, Nazerman?
Business is the same as usual.
We spend more money
than we take in.
will have to pay us money,
Subsidize us.
Can't expect taxes from a
losing business, can they?
Ha ha ha!
That's funny, huh?
That's pretty funny, huh?
I asked you a question, professor.
Pawnshop.
Nazerman?
Yes, sir.
It's for you.
Yes?
We get disconnected or something?
No. I hung up.
The word professor.
I don't like it.
You were a professor
once, weren't you?
What about that?
I asked you a question, nazerman.
I don't like the word
professor from you.
I don't like the way you say it.
Something else bothering you?
Listen...
There'll be a new man
in later tonight.
He'll give you an estimate
for some repair work.
You give him a check.
He'll give you your change in cash.
What's his name?
Savarese.
You be there, professor.
Good morning.
My name is Marilyn Birchfield.
I'm introducing myself around.
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"The Pawnbroker" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 26 Dec. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/the_pawnbroker_15692>.
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