The Phantom Light
- Year:
- 1935
- 76 min
- 23 Views
Music
THE PHANTOM LIGH Yeah, yeah.
Here, missus, where do I
get a car to the village?
[speaking Welsh]
What?
[speaking Welsh]
Alright. Alright. Alright.
[speaking Welsh]
Same to you.
Huh, nice place, Wales.
God, blimey.
Whose there?
Hello... -Beg pardon?
I'm sorry, miss. Nice evening.
What's nice about it?
I've been here for hours.
Oh, you don't happen to know where
I could find a car, I suppose.
That's just what I'm waiting
for. -Well, isn't anybody about?
Only the old station woman,
and she only talks Welsh.
Funny sort of place.
Oh, here's a porter.
Oi, taffy, come here.
Do you speak English? Well,
I want a car, see. -A car.
A car to take me to the
village. -Both of us.
Car. -Alright, alright,
I heard you, cook.
God bless me soul. Another
white man. How did you get here?
Transferred from Clapham Junction.
-Huh.
Now listen, I've got a
job of work to do, see.
I'm reporting for duty tonight.
I'm taking over at the North
Stake Lighthouse. -Oh, are you?
Yeah, any complaints? -Plenty.
-Well, go on then, spit it out.
Well, down here they say
the lighthouse is haunted,
and what's more, blokes go
mad and kill their selves.
Oh, do they? -Have they? -Yes,
miss. The last bloke done himself in
or somebody done him in.
People say it's ghosts.
-Who told you that?
Well, the whole blinkin' village.
-Ah, don't you listen to him, miss.
He's been so long from a fried
fish shop he's gone batty.
Oh, be quiet, this is interesting.
Well, I'm sorry interrupt, miss,
but you see I'm late as it is.
Now then, old sport,
what about that car?
Right-o, cook. I'll go and
have a look down the road.
Uncle Percy of the Children's Heart.
You know, I think you're
wonderful, mister...
Higgins. -Higgins.
The way you don't seem to mind about
ghosts and murders and things.
Oh, a lot of nonsense. -Well, it
didn't seem like nonsense to me.
Oh, didn't it? -No.
You know, you surprise me, Mr.
Huggins. -Higgins. -Higgins.
I always thought lighthouse keepers were
grim and grisly with yellow teeth and scars.
You know, sort of
human gorillas.
I never realized they were
good looking like you.
Well, there are two in the
service handsomer than me.
Now then, miss, what's
your little game?
Take me with you to
the lighthouse. -What?
Well, don't look at me like that.
-Oh, so that's your game, is it?
Well, you can put that
idea out of your head.
There's nothing of that sort of
thing goes on in lighthouses.
What sort of thing? -Well, that
sort of thing. -How dare you!
Well, ain't that what you meant?
-Of course not. -What did you mean?
Mr. Higgins, I'm going
to tell you the truth.
I live nearby in a small village.
Life in a small village
is very dull, Mr. Higgins.
Not with you there, I'll
lay a pound to the sausage.
Of course, I do all I can.
I belong to a psychic society.
Wales is full of folklore, you
know. -Is it? -Didn't you know? -No.
Now, I've heard this legend
about the phantom light,
and I mean to investigate
it for my society.
Well, I'm very sorry, miss, but
you can't do it on my lighthouse.
You see, I've got me instructions,
and though they mention there's a lot of
funny things they don't mention no women.
We've got work to do on the
lighthouse, and females is tattoo.
Now how good looking am I?
This is the station's car.
It looks it.
Oh, it lools to
beatup to put anybody in.
I suppose there's somewhere
I can sleep tonight.
I expect they'll put
you up at the pub, miss.
This is the pub, miss. -Well,
thank God we've got here.
Where are you off to, mate?
-Harbormasters. Do you mind?
Well, you better
walk the rest. It's safer.
I believe you. How do I get there?
Down the street,
follow the stream,
then take the steps 'round the cliff.
-Right-o. -You'll see it by the harbor.
Here you are, mate. Here's
my share of the damage.
Goodnight, miss. -Goodnight. -So
long, cook. See you at the funeral.
So long, misery. I'll
be in the front carriage.
Not there, miss. That's the bar.
You're the Bottle and Jug.
Well? -Is this the Bottle and Jug?
YES. -I want a bed.
[Crosstalk]
Nice evening. -Maybe.
[Singing in Welsh]
I tell you that nobody may
visit the lighthouse
without the permission of
Trinity House. Nobody at all.
It is the regulations. Nobody.
Not at all. -But if I was to go -
When I tell you it
is the regulations,
I tell you it is
the regulations.
Don't you understand
me when I speak English?
Name of Higgins,
chief lightkeeper.
Reporting for duty at the
North Stake Lighthouse.
Good evening, lightkeeper.
We have been expecting you.
Now that's off my chest.
Oh, thanks very much.
So he did, did he? -Yes, 50 times
did I tell him he could not go,
but he would stand there
and argue. -Funny, ain't it?
You know, there's
lots of folks like him.
They think there's something
romantic about lighthouses.
Romantic. A couple of months out there
in winter weather, that would learn him.
Pork and beans, pork and beans.
And you're lucky if
you find the pork.
By the way, where is
this here lighthouse?
Marked in the chart. -Over there?
I see. Half a mile from
the shore around the inland.
So if I got a bit of skirt in
the village I can't wave to her.
Mr. Owen,
-Yeah.
What about a boat to the lighthouse?
-My brother Griffith will take us over.
The boat is ready. It is the
others we are waiting for.
It is time Dr. Carey
was here, David.
Late he is and we must go
out on the ebb tide. -Aye.
Is it him we're waiting
for? -And Sergeant Jones.
They have to make a report on poor Jack
Davis, the lightkeeper who was killed.
Drowned wasn't he? Poor devil.
He just disappeared.
Disappeared like the other
lightkeeper before him.
Well, I hope it ain't catching.
What's the doctor coming for?
For poor Tom Evans. It is him we will
be bringing off from the light tonight.
What, the other lightkeeper? I
wasn't told this. What's his trouble?
His poor brain got twisted by what he
saw the night Jack Davis died. -Cuckoo?
Only yesterday we knew it. There
were signals from the light.
Very rough it was. Hardly the
relief boat get out to the light.
there now? -Claff Owen. -Owen?
My brother. -Let's get this straight.
There's you two Owens here right now,
then there's Claff Owen
at the lighthouse now.
Then there's the Owen who drove me
down in the car. That makes four.
Anymore Owens?
Well, there is John Owen in the
coal and William Owen, the gas.
They are the cousins of
Owen and Owen at the post.
And there is Iva Owen at
the farm and Trevor Owen.
Owen, Owen, Owen,
ain't anybody paying?
That's not bad.
There will be a sea getting up
before long, Griffith. -Yeah.
Wasn't there a big wreck around
here last year? -Yes, indeed.
One of the Fern line, it was. My
son Emerus was in her, whatever.
It was a lot of men
from this country.
It was the North Stake
light that drowned them all.
You'd better be careful what you're
saying. I mean, this is serious, this is.
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"The Phantom Light" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 19 Dec. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/the_phantom_light_21061>.
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