:47:01
Privileges?
:47:04
Offer me half the profit,
:47:06
Oh, I don't think so.
:47:08
I'm putting up all the dough
on a real long shot.
:47:11
I'm taking all the risk.
:47:13
What are you worried
about money for?
:47:14
What are you gonna
buy in here?
:47:17
You in here, too.
:47:19
Probably gonna die in here.
:47:21
What the money matter to you?
:47:23
You're gonna get ten percent.
:47:26
I know that fighters
usually get...
:47:28
fifty percent, minimum,
on the outside.
:47:30
Yeah, but we're not outside.
:47:34
I want more.
:47:37
I got a sister,
she got three kids...
:47:39
no job, no skills, no husband.
:47:42
Government gives her
a check once a month.
:47:45
I could send her the money.
:47:47
You're gonna get thirty percent
of everything we win.
:47:52
It's a deal?
:47:54
Forty percent.
:47:56
That's it.
:48:13
You wanted to see the Iceman?
:48:15
Mr. Ripstein thanks you
for bringing him...
:48:17
to this neutral location.
:48:23
The Iceman doesn't want
any disappointments.
:48:25
He expects to negotiate.
:48:30
You have to understand...
:48:31
that Mr. Ripstein is
a great boxing enthusiast...
:48:33
a great student of the art...
:48:35
a great historian
of the prize ring.
:48:38
Mr. Ripstein
believes the truest,,,
:48:40
purest expression
of the sport,,,
:48:42
was the bare-knuckle fights
of the Nineteenth Century...
:48:45
the Queensbury rules.
:48:47
Oh, no, no.
The London Prize Ring rules.
:48:50
Queensbury changed the rules
to the ones that we got now.
:48:55
Look, let's cut through
all this bullshit.
:48:57
I want out.
Otherwise, no fight.
:48:59
How you gonna pull it off?