1:08:04
Gentlemen, have you reached your verdict?
1:08:07
We have.
1:08:08
Do you find the prisoner at the bar,
Leslie Crosbie, guilty or not guilty?
1:08:13
Not guilty.
1:08:19
-Leslie. Leslie, darling.
-Robert, darling.
1:08:26
Howard, splendid case.
1:08:29
Permit me to congratulate you, sir.
1:08:45
Just one moment, please.
1:08:47
Hold it just a second, please. Again.
1:08:50
-Thank you.
-Thank you.
1:08:52
Thank you very much.
1:08:54
Come, darling.
1:09:12
From that day on, I made a vow not to mix
another cocktail until Leslie was acquitted.
1:09:17
If these aren't up to my usual standards, you
must remember I'm slightly out of practice.
1:09:23
-They're wonderful. Never been better.
-You wouldn't know what you were drinking.
1:09:27
I guess that's right. I can't taste
or think or feel.
1:09:30
All I can do is keep saying to myself,
over and over:
1:09:33
"Leslie's safe."
1:09:35
What's the matter, darling?
Feeling neglected? Here's a cocktail.
1:09:38
Not that you deserve to be told,
but you made a good speech to the jury.
1:09:43
-It was an excellent speech.
-Thank you.
1:09:45
Though you might have been more
impassioned without hurting yourself.
1:09:49
I don't agree. What made it especially
effective was his being simple and honest.
1:09:53
-Good thing Dorothy isn't a lawyer.
-Nor me. I'd probably yell at the jury:
1:09:57
"You half-wits, I know she's innocent.
I tell you, I know."