Bicentennial Man
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:26:03
No refund. No replacement.
:26:07
How much do you want?
:26:10
l don't think l understand.
:26:12
Clearly you realise if word of this gets out,
we'll have to recall our entire line.

:26:17
We're in people's homes, sir,
with their children.

:26:20
lf it is doing what you say,
it can also run amuck.

:26:24
One is not qualified to run mucks.
:26:28
All right, sir. lf l let you have Andrew,
you'll what?

:26:31
You'll disassemble him, will you?
:26:34
Carefully, yes. We would need to trace
the course of Andrew's neural pathways...

:26:40
...replace the positronic brain and...
:26:43
...put it...
:26:45
...him back together
and return him to you good as new.

:26:50
Now, these neural pathways are
presumably fragile.

:26:53
lsn't it possible,
in the course of these procedures...

:26:56
...that something might go wrong?
:26:59
We would make every conceivable effort.
:27:02
ln the unlikely event that something did go
wrong you'd, of course, replace Andrew.

:27:07
Of course.
:27:09
Even though he's unique and irreplaceable.
:27:13
''He.'' ''His.''
:27:18
lt's a natural error. lt has human form,
therefore you...

:27:21
...read mechanical failure
as eccentricity and anthropomorphise it.

:27:27
lt is a household appliance
and yet you act like it is a man.

:27:32
We're leaving. Come on, Andrew.
:27:34
Please, l beg you to reconsider, Mr. Martin.
:27:36
Let us examine Andrew.
Talk to your wife. Name your price!

:27:41
Now listen to me.
:27:42
There is no price for individuality.
:27:45
He is for better or for worse, my robot...
:27:48
...and you'll never lay your hands on him.
Do you understand?

:27:54
All in good time.
:27:55
You see sooner or later,
you'll have to bring it in for repairs.


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