:32:00
Well, nobody knows
what's gonna happen yet...
:32:02
...but the possibilities look limitless.
:32:05
The small companies
who are in it first...
:32:07
...are hoping to be the IBMs and
the Bell Telephones 20 years from now.
:32:12
There's a new red-hot,
very secret development.
:32:15
It's an agricultural plasmid.
Yeasts that are fixing nitrogen.
:32:19
That means that you could
raise wheat, corn...
:32:21
...damn near anything to grow
with no fertilizer.
:32:25
The stakes are enormous.
Farmers spend billions...
:32:27
Fuck the farmers.
Tell him what our end is.
:32:31
Jimmy Chiu,
an ex-professor of mine...
:32:33
...he works at a biology lab
out in Nassau County.
:32:37
He helped found the company.
:32:39
They screwed him out
of his piece of the action.
:32:41
- They fired this poor Chink.
- Yeah, I hear him.
:32:45
He's got some venture capital ready
to set up a new company.
:32:48
They need the new plasmids.
:32:51
He gets us in easy.
High stakes. Low risk. Nonviolent.
:32:56
No worries about our partners
robbing us or ratting us out.
:33:01
Look, if we get the plasmids
and the logbook...
:33:03
...Jimmy Chiu pays us
an even million.
:33:06
You gotta sell a lot of veal cutlets
to match that, Vito.
:33:15
So this whole score
is like one big fancy burglary.
:33:18
Yeah.
:33:19
- Does anyone else know about this?
- No one, just the three of us.
:33:23
What do you think, Pop?
:33:36
What do I think?
:33:39
When you were talking
about yeast-fixing nitrogen...
:33:42
...the look on your face...
- You're in or you're out, but no lectures.
:33:46
I'm in. I'm in. I'm in.
:33:49
You're happy now, huh?
:33:52
- I'm in.
- Yeah.
:33:53
- To the Gypsies of the world.
- Not a hypocritical bone in their bodies.