:23:00
You know, one day, Sandy,
one day you will go too far.
:23:03
- Hello.
- Oh, Mr. Lloyd.
:23:07
Girls, you know Mr. Lloyd, the art master
from the senior school.
:23:10
- Yes.
- Good afternoon, Mr. Lloyd.
:23:12
- Good afternoon, girls.
- Mr. Lloyd has his studio
somewhere in this neighborhood.
:23:16
Number six... fourth floor, front.
The door's always open.
:23:20
I've been giving my girls an outing.
We've been to the gallery.
:23:22
I've been telling them
the story of Gauguin.
:23:25
Ah, the dangerous Miss Brodie.
:23:27
By whom, pray,
am I considered to be dangerous?
:23:30
It is the consensus.
Your girls are said to be vastly informed...
:23:33
in subjects irrelevant
to the accepted curriculum.
:23:36
Most heinous of all,
you are said to inculcate no team spirit.
:23:39
Is that true, girls?
:23:41
Does Miss Brodie incite you
to shirk your duties on the hockey field?
:23:44
Phrases like the "team spirit" are always
employed to cut across individualism.
:23:49
Cleopatra knew nothing of the team spirit,
if you read your Shakespeare.
:23:53
And where would the team spirit
have got Anna Pavlova?
:23:56
She is the prima ballerina.
:23:58
It is the corps de ballet
that had the team spirit.
:24:00
Oh, Miss Brodie,
you are dangerous.
:24:02
Mm-hmm. Yes.
We must away and catch our tram.
:24:05
I doubt we will get seats.
It is 1932, and chivalry is dead.
:24:10
Miss Brodie?
:24:12
I do want you to come and see
the picture, the one I told you about.
:24:16
What about
next weekend?
:24:18
- No. I'm afraid I'm going...
- Going to Cramond?
:24:21
Why, yes. My girls and I spend nearly
every weekend at Cramond.
:24:27
Mr. Lowther
is most hospitable.
:24:30
Good afternoon,
Mr. Lloyd.
:24:33
Come along, girls.
:24:39
Got it!
:24:41
There we are.
:24:43
- Oh, there's some nice ones up here.
- No. Get one.
:24:47
- I'm watching. It's all right.
- Watch out.
:24:55
Thank you.