:58:04
- It's a nice piece of land.
- Shh.
:58:07
What's the harm?
You've never taken anything.
:58:09
The result? We have nothing.
:58:11
[DOOR CLOSES]
:58:12
Now it's finally quiet.
:58:16
General Zapata, don't you trust me?
:58:22
You must trust me.
:58:24
I promise,
my first preoccupation is the land...
:58:27
...but in a way that's permanent.
Before you do anything by law...
:58:31
...you must have law. We cannot have
an armed and angry nation.
:58:37
It is time to stack our arms.
That is the first step.
:58:41
That is my first request.
Stack your arms and disband your army.
:58:46
- And who will enforce the laws?
- The regular army, the police.
:58:50
They're the ones we just fought
and beat!
:58:54
Give me your watch.
:58:56
- What?
- Give me your watch.
:59:03
Give it to me!
:59:10
It's a beautiful watch.
:59:13
Expensive.
:59:15
- Now take my rifle.
- No.
:59:20
Now you can have your watch back,
but without this, never!
:59:28
You draw a strong moral.
:59:34
You ask us to disarm.
:59:37
How can we get our land or keep it
if we disarm?
:59:43
It's not that simple.
There's a matter of time...
:59:46
Time is one thing to a lawmaker,
but to a farmer...
:59:49
...there's a time to
plant and a time to harvest.
:59:53
And you cannot plant in harvest time.
:59:57
General Zapata, do you trust me?