1:24:05
Stop pod rotation, please, Hal.
1:24:16
Rotate the pod, please, Hal.
1:24:20
Rotate the pod, please, Hal.
1:24:24
I don't think he can hear us.
1:24:26
Rotate the pod, please, Hal!
1:24:30
Yeah, sure, we're okay.
1:24:35
What do you think?
1:24:37
-I'm not sure. What do you think?
-I've got a bad feeling about it.
1:24:41
-You do?
-Yeah. Definitely.
1:24:44
Don't you?
1:24:46
I don't know. I think so.
1:24:49
Of course, he's right about the 9000 Series
having a perfect operational record.
1:24:53
They do.
1:24:54
Unfortunately, that sounds
a little like famous last words.
1:24:58
Yeah. Still, it was his idea to carry out
the failure mode analysis, wasn't it?
1:25:04
It should certainly indicate his integrity
and self-confidence.
1:25:07
If he were wrong it would be
the surest way of proving it.
1:25:10
It would be if he knew he was wrong.
1:25:14
Look, Dave, I can't put my finger on it,
but I sense something strange about him.
1:25:20
I can't think of a good reason not
to put back the Number One unit and...
1:25:24
-...carry on with the failure mode analysis.
-No, no, I agree about that.
1:25:28
Let's get on with it.
1:25:29
Okay. But, look, Dave.
1:25:33
Let's say we put the unit back
and it doesn't fail, huh?
1:25:36
That would pretty well wrap it up
as far as Hal was concerned, wouldn't it?
1:25:41
-Well, we'd be in very serious trouble.
-We would, wouldn't we?
1:25:44
What the hell can we do?
1:25:49
-We wouldn't have too many alternatives.
-I don't think we'd have any alternatives.
1:25:54
There isn't a single aspect of ship
operation that's not under his control.
1:25:58
If he were proved to be malfunctioning...