Music From Another Room
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:26:03
Interesting.
:26:05
Yeah. Mr. Tambini, my teacher and mentor...
:26:09
...said that I have great potential,
potential to be a master tiler.

:26:13
Fascinating.
:26:14
- Do you ever do your own work?
- Just restoration at the moment.

:26:17
- You don't find that limiting?
- Actually, I do.

:26:19
So, basically you're a repairman.
:26:22
- Would you like some wine?
- You know, alcohol is poison.

:26:25
Please!
:26:26
Karen, you're the Ralph Nader of gastronomy.
:26:28
I'm just telling you the facts.
:26:30
I read once where they took a rat...
:26:32
...and injected him with alcohol
20 times a day for five years.

:26:35
- You know what it died of?
- Holes?

:26:40
- I like this guy.
- Why don't you have some parsley?

:26:42
Karen, please.
We have to find someone to read for Nina.

:26:45
I'm going to read Anna Karenina.
:26:48
That is the greatest love story ever written.
:26:51
- Don't talk about love while I'm eating.
- Father doesn't believe in love.

:26:56
Daniel's a romantic. I can tell.
:26:59
You've been in love, haven't you, Danny?
:27:02
Yes, I have, actually.
:27:04
You have? What's it like? Tell me.
:27:08
I'm all pins and needles.
:27:10
What's it like?
:27:14
All right.
:27:15
You know how...
:27:17
...when you listen to music
playing from another room...

:27:20
...and you're singing,
because it's a tune that you really love...

:27:23
...when a door closes or a train passes,
so you can't hear the music anymore...

:27:27
...but you sing along anyway.
:27:29
Then, no matter how much time passes...
:27:33
...when you hear the music again,
you're still in exact same time with it.

:27:39
That's what it's like.
:27:45
I think.
:27:51
Made my wife cry.
:27:54
Thank you, Daniel.
:27:55
That's a good introduction
to what I have to tell you.

:27:58
- I think I'm going to kill myself.
- Irene!


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