:31:08
How's that for a cockamamie assignment?
:31:10
He's been getting these eccentric flashes
ever since his wife died last year.
:31:14
Yeah. He's got something in the back
of his mind.
:31:17
I'll check and see
if I can't find photographer's mates.
:31:19
Where are you going?
:31:22
Call in about noon, Charlie.
:31:25
I don't know what's the matter
with Charlie...
:31:44
Hello, Emily.
:31:45
Hello. You're just in time for tea.
:31:49
Thank you.
:31:54
- You brought me some chocolates?
- Two boxes of Hershey's.
:31:57
That's very American of you, Charlie.
:32:00
You just had to bring along
some small token of opulence.
:32:03
I don't want them.
:32:06
You Yanks can't even show affection
without buying something.
:32:09
Don't get into a state over it.
I thought you liked chocolates.
:32:12
I do! But my country's at war...
:32:14
and we're doing without chocolates
for a while.
:32:16
I don't want oranges or eggs
or soap flakes, either.
:32:19
Don't show me how profitable it'll be
to fall in love with you, Charlie.
:32:23
Don't Americanize me.
:32:29
That's my father.
He lost a leg in the first war.
:32:33
Got the Victoria Cross for that.
:32:36
He died in an air raid a week after
that portrait was painted.
:32:40
That's my brother, there.
:32:42
His name was Charlie, too, by the way.
:32:44
He was shot down during the blitz.
:32:47
Sacrificed himself to save his squadron.
:32:51
The one you're looking at now
is my husband.
:32:54
He looks like a rake.
:32:57
Yes. He was very bawdy.
:32:59
I was insane about him.