:32:00
I took off my belt,
made a noose
:32:08
and put it around your neck
to hang you.
:32:13
It's okey, Martha,
we're just talking.
:32:17
He wanted to strangle you. - He
was just explaining something.
:32:20
Comrade Luka, do you want
some coffee? - Lf it's possible.
:32:23
Well, it's not possible.
They just arrested the cook.
:32:27
Teja, he's crazy.
Should I call the police?
:32:30
No, no... They arrested
Jelena, the cook?
:32:32
- They're taking her away now.
- Why did they arrest her?
:32:35
She poured hot coffee into
the doorman's eyes...
:32:40
- I'll make you coffee.
- No sugar for me, please.
:32:44
Don't worry.
Everything's under control.
:32:48
Is it possible that you wanted
to hang me in the bathroom
:32:52
and make it look
like a suicide?
:32:55
There were many
questionable suicides.
:32:57
Dostoevsky wrote about that
when the old Karamazov...
:33:01
Wait a minute.
You are not a policeman.
:33:04
You doubt that I'm a policeman?
Is that a compliment?
:33:08
You don't talk like a policeman.
Your knowledge about Chekov,
:33:11
Dostoevski, about literature
don't become a policeman.
:33:15
My dear Mister Teja!
:33:18
If you only knew how hard
it was for me to comprehend
:33:21
the basic concepts of that
literary world of yours.
:33:26
I was convinced that Aristotle,
Kafka, Nietzsche, Hegel
:33:30
were all agents of foreign
intelligence services.
:33:35
I even came across similar
names in police files
:33:38
of embassies employees.
When you quoted Sartre,
:33:43
I was sure he was the
French military attaché.
:33:47
His name was also Jean-Paul,
only he wasn't a philosopher.
:33:52
So I added in his file:
"And a philosopher".
:33:58
What could I do?
Of all foreign names