1:08:02
Who was it?
1:08:04
Captain Montoya?
1:08:05
No, the man
1:08:07
who beat you up.
1:08:09
I don't know.
1:08:12
I don't remember.
1:08:14
Sometimes it's better that way.
1:08:21
I dreamt we found a treasure.
1:08:25
We already have plans with it.
1:08:31
Rest now, Doctor Romero.
1:08:43
From sushi to microelectronics, the
1:08:45
Japanese are geniuses, aren't they?
1:08:47
Certainly.
1:08:50
All these houses, all these houses ...
1:08:54
All these houses, my dear Judge Diaz?
1:08:58
Do you know since when they've
1:08:59
been going downhill? - No idea.
1:09:02
Since April 9, 1948,
1:09:05
when Jorge Eliécer Gaitán
1:09:07
was murdered.
1:09:08
Don't interrupt me.
1:09:10
Excuse me.
1:09:11
Since that day,
1:09:13
the decent people who lived here and
1:09:16
wanted to move further
north took advantage
1:09:19
of the confusion and chaos
1:09:21
to abandon these houses.
1:09:24
Those who stayed turned them
1:09:26
into criminal hangouts.
1:09:28
You want to evict them
1:09:30
to get your houses back?
1:09:32
Frankly, Diaz,
1:09:35
I don't know if the Casa Uribe can be
1:09:37
restored as an architectural work,
1:09:40
a national landmark or a historical
1:09:43
monument of our former Bogotá.
1:09:45
I really don't care.
1:09:47
What matters to me, without discussion,
1:09:49
is that I have every right to dispose
1:09:52
of my family estate as I see fit, and the
1:09:55
house's fate should be decided by
1:09:57
the rightful owner and not by these