:25:06
- Do you ever get the feeling...
- Yeah.
:25:09
that things aren't as rosy
as they appear to be under the surface?
:25:13
What's happening, John?
:25:15
In my humble opinion,
we've become involved
:25:17
in Einstein's time-space
continuum theory.
:25:20
Relatively speaking, that is.
:25:24
- Maybe time's gone on strike.
- What for?
:25:26
- Shorter hours.
- I don't blame it.
:25:28
It must be very tiring being time,
mustn't it?
:25:30
- Why?
- It's a twenty-four hour day, isn't it?
:25:33
- You surprise me, Ringo.
- Why?
:25:35
- Dealing in abstracts.
- Just because I'm a drummer...
:25:39
- I don't halffeel funny.
- You're not halfthe lad you used to be.
:25:43
Look, everything's getting bigger.
:25:45
It's not.
It's us that are getting smaller...
:25:48
- I want my mam.
- and younger.
:25:50
There you are, lads.
Old Fred will get you out of all this.
:25:55
Look at that!
:25:56
- It's all a load of Father Xmas's.
- It's not. It's Father Time.
:26:01
- How do you know?
- I read it in a book.
:26:03
I don't want to alarm you,
but the years are going backwards.
:26:06
What's that mean, Old Fred?
:26:08
Ifwe slip back through time
at this rate,
:26:11
very soon we'll all disappear
up our own existence.
:26:13
- What are we gonna do, then?
- We could always try a few buttons.
:26:17
I want my mam.
:26:20
Time's fast running out for us,
I'm afraid.
:26:22
Can't we do something to the clock?
:26:24
What do you mean, John?
:26:25
Move the hands forward,
see what happens.
:26:27
Clever lad.
:26:28
Something strange is happening.
:26:37
It's speeding up now.
:26:50
Funny... a submarine
remarkably like our own.
:26:54
Uncannily.
:26:56
There's someone in it. Look.
:26:58
- And they're waving.
- It's a group offellas.