Murder on the Orient Express
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1:45:02
You. You were lucky
1:45:05
only to be bound and gagged,
1:45:07
not crushed like the manservant.
1:45:09
- Mr. Beddoes.
- Sir.

1:45:11
You served with the
British army in Scotland.

1:45:14
Colonel Armstrong
was in the Royal Scots.

1:45:16
Would you kindly give Dr. Constantine
your deepest butler's bow?

1:45:23
Yes, there is an old contusion.
1:45:25
The result of a slight fracas
in the mess, sir,

1:45:28
with regard to the quality of a pudding
known as spotted dick.

1:45:32
Thank you, but I think
you've been spotted too.

1:45:36
Mr. Foscarelli is very knowledgeable
about automobiles.

1:45:40
I suspected that perhaps he had
once been Armstrong's chauffeur.

1:45:45
I asked if he had ever
been in private service.

1:45:47
No.
1:45:49
I think Mr. Foscarelli's
appalling English is more genuine

1:45:52
than Miss Ohlsson's,
but I think he meant yes.

1:45:54
- Think, monsieur?
- Think, think. Yes, think!

1:45:57
What else can be done on a train
isolated by a snowdrift?

1:46:00
If all these people are not
implicated in the crime,

1:46:03
then why have they all told me,
under interrogation,

1:46:06
stupid and often unnecessary lies?
1:46:07
Why? Why? Why? Why?
1:46:09
Doubtless, Monsieur Poirot,
because they did not expect you

1:46:11
to be on the train. They had no
time to concert their cover story.

1:46:16
I was hoping someone
other than myself would say that.

1:46:23
Ladies and gentlemen,
1:46:25
we now come
to my own reconstruction

1:46:28
of the night of the murder...
1:46:36
...or the night of the red herrings.
1:46:41
I only wish...
1:46:51
I only wish I could describe it...
1:46:57
...with the incomparable panache...

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