Halls of Montezuma
prev.
play.
mark.
next.

:15:12
Something the matter,
Lieutenant?

:15:13
Get out of here.
:15:19
Hey, Doc, you better
talk to Anderson.

:15:21
He's in some kind
of pain.

:15:25
Did he ask for me?
:15:26
No.
:15:27
Then let me alone.
:15:28
But, Doc, I--
:15:29
If he needs me,
he'll ask for me.

:15:30
Now, look, Doc,
I'm an old friend of his.

:15:31
Let me alone,
I told you.

:15:41
Doc: I'd do anything
for Anderson,

:15:44
but it ain't up to me.
:15:46
I ought to be on my farm
where I belong,

:15:48
working with cows.
:15:50
It's easy to figure
right and wrong with cows.

:15:58
That's a honey of a pipe,
Lieutenant.

:16:02
Say, thanks a lot.
:16:03
Forget it, Doc.
:16:05
The principal of
my old school sent it to me.

:16:07
I don't smoke pipes.
:16:09
Hey, uh...
:16:11
you did a fine job getting
that plasma into me at Tarawa.

:16:15
Forget it, sir.
:16:16
The medical brass say I'll
be out of here pretty soon.

:16:19
Hey, that's fine,
Lieutenant.

:16:21
Yeah.
:16:22
Sit down.
:16:24
Go ahead,
it's all right.

:16:28
There's an old witch
of a nurse out there

:16:30
with an ear like radar and
a tongue like a fire bell.

:16:33
Heh heh.
:16:39
You know what
psychological migraine is?

:16:42
A lot of pain
in the head,

:16:43
no functional
disorder.

:16:45
Heh heh, for a guy
who was a manure spreader

:16:47
in South Dakota 3 years ago,
you're pretty hep.

:16:49
Well, I always wanted
to be a doctor.

:16:51
You know where
a migraine comes from?

:16:55
I ain't that hep,
Lieutenant.

:16:56
It comes from being scared
too many times

:16:58
and wanting to run away...

prev.
next.