:42:18
That's something else I've gotta get used to:
Jumping out of my skin every time a door opens.
:42:24
Try to remember.
Try to remember, George.
:42:27
Larry. I've got a tailor named George.
I can remember that much.
:42:31
- Darling, look.
- Don't call me that either.
:42:34
That's something else
I remember too.
:42:36
Even if it didn't happen to me,
but to a guy named Taylor.
:42:38
- That's who you are, that guy.
- I'm Larry Cravat.
:42:42
And I killed a man
on that dock three years ago.
:42:45
I don't know who he was, but I killed him,
and I dropped the suitcase and ran away.
:42:49
But supposing the other man killed him.
Supposing you just ran away.
:42:52
- The other man?
- The one you thought you might have been.
:42:55
Who is he?
:42:57
I haven't got time
to start that all over again.
:43:00
- My two hours are nearly up.
- Do you think you could ever have killed anybody?
:43:05
I know about George Taylor. No.
But I can't speak for Larry Cravat, for me.
:43:10
I can.
The answer is no.
:43:13
- Thanks for your vote.
- Just because you've got another name.
:43:18
Even if you wipe out
a man's memory...
:43:19
doesn't it stand to reason
that his brain is the same?
:43:22
That his- his standards
are the same?
:43:25
- You didn't think much of him.
- I never thought of him as a murderer.
:43:29
And he could have changed
for the better too.
:43:31
Three years of war
can change a man.
:43:34
You're making a nice try,
Chris, but that isn't the way I've heard it.
:43:37
- They say I killed a man.
- And they say you killed Conroy too.
:43:41
- Did you?
- No, but I can remember that. I can't remember anything else.
:43:45
Don't make me try anymore, Chris. I'm too tired.
Don't make me try anymore.
:43:56
I'll get you
a cup of coffee.