:29:03
Just so.
:29:17
Why don't you take a picture?
lll last longer.
:29:21
Thas exactly
what I'm going to do.
:29:24
Yeah.
:29:35
Is just like
being at the doctor.
:29:37
You have to remain perfectly still
while I examine and scrutinize you.
:29:46
Dripping.
:29:48
Huh?
:29:53
Do you ever eat dripping
in this country?
:29:57
The fats
from roast and such...
:29:59
kept congealed in a jar...
:30:01
and then used like butter
on bread and toast.
:30:04
Sounds like something
you'd feed the dog.
:30:06
Yes, it is.
Only the poorest families ever et it.
:30:09
We used to keep ours
in a large, blue crockery jar.
:30:14
Your family ate,
uh, dripping?
:30:18
Oh, of course not.
No, no.
:30:20
As I said,
only the poorest families.
:30:24
Oh, God, is ironic.
:30:29
What is?
:30:30
I've spent much of my life
outrunning the past,
:30:36
and now it floods
all over me.
:30:39
There's something about
the openness of your face that
makes me want to tell the truth.
:30:43
Yes, our family
et dripping.
:30:47
Beef dripping.
:30:50
And four to a bed.
:30:52
And a privy out back
in the alley.
:30:55
Are you also from the slums,
Mr. Boone?
:30:58
Well, we weren't rich,
but w-w-we weren't poor either.