:10:00
The price is 20,000 pounds.
English pounds sterling.
:10:04
20,000 pounds. Who are you?
:10:08
I am a spy, obviously.
:10:11
And your life work is espionage?
:10:14
Not exactly.
:10:17
But I have spent a lot of my
life preparing for this day.
:10:21
No spy in history has ever been
paid 20,000 pound for any information.
:10:25
No spy in history has had
to sell what I have to sell.
:10:29
Besides, spies are notoriously
poor businessmen.
:10:33
They are patriots, frustrated
liberals or victims of blackmail...
:10:37
...whose emotional
involvement weakens...
:10:40
...their bargaining position and
destroys sound business judgements.
:10:43
Would you consider it sound business
for the German Government...
:10:46
...to pay 20,000 pounds
to an unidentified amateur...
:10:51
...for a set of so-called
'secret' documents?
:10:53
Not so-called. Not secret.
:10:58
Most secret. Top secret.
:11:01
I am sure they are.
:11:03
And now I have more
serious matters to attend to.
:11:06
I'll have an attendant show you out.
:11:09
Moyzisch.
:11:13
It appears I must think
for both of us.
:11:16
Inform von Papen of my offer.
Naturally, he'll check with Berlin.
:11:20
I'll give you 3 days to
consider my proposition.
:11:23
On March, 7, at three
in the afternoon...
:11:25
...I'll telephone you and ask if
you've received a letter for me.
:11:28
I'll call myself Pierre.
:11:29
If you say no, you'll
never see me again.
:11:31
If you say yes, it'll mean
you have accepted my offer.
:11:34
But I must have more information.
- Lf you accept...
:11:37
...I'll return at ten
o'clock that evening.
:11:39
You'll then receive two rolls of film,
with photographs of the documents.
:11:43
I will receive from you the
sum of 20,000 pounds...
:11:45
...in English bank notes
of small denominations.
:11:48
Should you approve
of my first delivery...
:11:52
...you can have more.
:11:54
For each subsequent film the
price will be 15,000 pounds.
:11:58
Is this all clear?
- It is not at all clear.