:29:00
- Then you marry her.
- Me?
:29:03
What's so funny?
:29:05
If I got married, I'd have to take
a Dictaphone, two secretaries
:29:09
and four corporation counsellors
along on the honeymoon.
:29:13
I'd be unfaithful to my wife
every night
:29:16
with vice presidents, boards of
directors, slide-rule accountants...
:29:20
This... this is my home.
No wife would ever understand it.
:29:24
Nor me. You've got all the money
in the world.
:29:27
Making money isn't the main point
of business. Money is a by-product.
:29:33
- What's the main objective? Power?
- Ah! That's become a dirty word.
:29:38
What's the urge? You're going into
plastics. What will that prove?
:29:42
Prove? Nothing much.
:29:45
A new product has been found,
something of use to the world.
:29:48
A new industry moves into
an undeveloped area.
:29:51
Factories go up, machines go in
and you're in business.
:29:55
It's coincidental that people who've
never seen a dime now have a dollar
:29:59
and barefooted kids wear shoes
and have their faces washed.
:30:03
What's wrong with an urge
:30:04
that gives people libraries,
hospitals, baseball diamonds
:30:08
and movies on a Saturday night?
:30:10
- Send in the secretaries.
- Yes, Mr Larrabee.
:30:12
You make me feel like a heel.
:30:14
If I don't marry her, some kid
will run around Puerto Rico barefoot!
:30:19
Look at this stuff.
Planes and suits will be made of it
:30:23
and you'll probably be able
to eat it.
:30:26
We're organising Larrabee Plastics.
Larrabee Construction has the plans.
:30:30
Larrabee Shipping bought nine more
freighters to handle the traffic.
:30:33
- The wheels are in motion already?
- That's what I mean.
:30:37
Would you demonstrate the weight test
to Mr David, please?
:30:41
- Linus, I believe you.
- Up you go.
:30:44
I want you to see
how resilient it is.
:30:47
Bounce, please, ladies.
:30:51
Some plastic, eh?
:30:54
We'd like a summer wedding
to get in on this year's sugar crop.
:30:58
Yeah.