Bandolero!
prev.
play.
mark.
next.

1:15:00
Ain't there Northern Cheyenne
in Montana?

1:15:02
The Northern...
Well, the Northern Cheyenne...

1:15:06
- I wouldn't lie to you.
- The Crow and the Sioux?

1:15:09
- Well, they're around.
- What else, Mace?

1:15:12
- Listen, Dee...
- What else?

1:15:15
Well, the Blackfeet...
1:15:18
...and Chippewa.
- Some Cree?

1:15:21
Yes. Yes, there are Cree in Montana.
1:15:24
And the Shoshone and the Kootenai
and the Stoney.

1:15:27
Just what are you trying to say?
1:15:29
I'm trying to say there's a lot of
goddamn Indians in Montana, Mace.

1:15:34
- You're impossible to talk to.
- Wait a minute.

1:15:37
Will you sit down, Mace?
1:15:40
I'm tired, Mace. Bone-tired.
1:15:43
I can't even remember what it feels like
to get up in the morning...

1:15:47
...feeling rested and clean,
having a good breakfast.

1:15:50
I can't remember
what it feels like...

1:15:52
...to slip down in between
some cool, clean sheets.

1:15:58
Mace, we'll need money.
Have you thought about that?

1:16:01
I think I know where I can get
my hands on some.

1:16:05
Your brother won't never make it.
1:16:07
There's only one way for him...
1:16:09
...for me, for any of us.
1:16:16
Well, what way is that, Mr. Chaney?
1:16:18
This way. The way we know.
1:16:22
The way we growed.
1:16:25
Well, now, that may be so for you,
but for my brother, it's different.

1:16:30
I don't care if he is your brother.
The son of a bitch...

1:16:37
Now...
1:16:40
...before you apologize, I'm gonna
tell you something, Mr. Chaney.

1:16:44
My brother and I are the sons
of an honest dirt farmer.

1:16:48
A man who slaved all his life
from sunup to sundown...

1:16:51
...and never took time
except to deliver his children...

1:16:55
...and go to meeting on Sunday.
A man who died of old age at 45...

1:16:59
...and who never saw more than
$ 10 at one time in his whole life.


prev.
next.