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Joan Bennett, Charles Bickford, and Robert Ryan in Die Frau am Strand (1947)

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Die Frau am Strand

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  • Tod: Peggy, did it ever occur to you that to me you'll always be young and beautiful? No matter how old you grow - I'll always remember you as you were the last day I saw you - young, beautiful, bright, exciting. No one who can see can say that to you. - - Peg, you're so beautiful... so beautiful outside, so rotten inside.
  • Peggy: You're no angel.
  • Tod: No. I guess we're two of a kind.
  • Scott: Give in? What happens to you?
  • Peggy: You find a kind of peace. You don't care anymore.
  • Tod: Nice young fellow. Don't you think so?
  • Peggy: Yes, he is. I like him.
  • Tod: A little dull though.
  • Peggy: Strong outdoor type.
  • Tod: You like that, don't you Peg? You always admired virility.
  • Peggy: We used to - drink a lot. We lived in a sort of strange state of excitement, always off balance, high pitched, tense, always just at the breaking point.
  • Scott: Answer me Peggy, was there anything between you and Bill?
  • Peggy: Oh, for heaven's sake, Scott, what of it? You're not my husband.
  • Scott: Peggy, you're nothing but a...
  • Peggy: Go on. Say it - I'm a tramp. You're just finding that out?
  • Scott: You know, I don't understand much about paintings.
  • Tod: There's nothing to understand! It hasn't anything to do with the brain - its the eye. A painting's like a woman - she either thrills you or she doesn't.
  • Scott: Well, in that case, its easy.
  • Peggy: I was so proud of you: the great Tod Butler - fiery American painter who approached his canvas' like a prizefighter.
  • Tod: Don't try to get away. I can sense every move you make. I can sense you like an animal. My eyes don't see, but I have hands and ears and a nose. I can even smell your hate!
  • Scott: You know, when they let me out of the hospital, they said Lieutenant your wounds are all healed - you're sound in body and mind. But, my head is - ! Well, let's face it, I'm not well!
  • Peggy: [to Scott, who's clutching a dead man's life jacket he has found] If you're so afraid about ghosts, Lieutenant, what about that jacket you're holding?
  • Scott: [Admiring the paintings] These must be worth a fortune now that you're...
  • [Scott hesitates to say 'blind.']
  • Tod: Since you're convinced I'm blind, go ahead... say it, but you're right. Now that I can't paint anymore, this stuff of mine gets more valuable every day. There's an old saying in my trade: a man never gets rich until he's dead. I assure you a blind painter's just the same as a dead man.
  • Mrs. Wernecke: I tell you what I'll do, I'll wash your hair for you this afternoon! I bought some new fancy shampoo stuff.
  • Scott: What do you mean about - ghosts?
  • Peggy: I was merely suggesting you might be afraid of them.
  • Peggy: You even looked at me as if I were a ghost.
  • Scott: Well, what are you, anyway?
  • Scott: The hard thing, I guess, is to - know yourself.
  • Peggy: Yes, that is difficult. Anyway, what's the use?
  • Scott: Do you love him?
  • Peggy: Love him? I hate him.
  • Eve: Do I have to pay this invoice to get the ten day discount or do I wait for the statement at the end of the month?
  • Scott: Well, you wouldn't expect a - beach cowboy like me to know much about invoices, would you?
  • Scott: You know, you people are all trying to take care of me, but nobody tries to understand what - Well, you think I'm sick? That's it, isn't it?
  • Scott: You're pretty well acquainted with this house, aren't you?
  • Peggy: Oh, I've been here before. Such a lovely place - a canary and everything. So domestic and - so dull.
  • Tod: You know, I never really started to paint well until just before the lights went out. But, I think this is one of my best. There's something about the effects of the hair and the skin texture. Of course, nudes were never my strong suit; but, here I had a particularly beautiful subject. As you can see, this is a portrait of Peggy.
  • Scott: Why, excuse me Tod, I-I think you have the wrong painting. This is a picture of some roses and a newspaper.
  • Peggy: I wish I'd never heard of painting - or artists.
  • Peggy: If you would sell the paintings, you wouldn't have to worry about writing.
  • Tod: Peg, I've never been able to make you understand that those paintings are my eyes! Everything I saw in life, I set down on canvas. If I let them go I lose the last connection to the past - strong and alive.
  • Tod: I like Scott. I like him because he's good and straight. That's why he's dangerous.
  • Tod: Peggy, I'm going to keep you. No matter what I have to do, I'm going to keep you as long as I live. No other man can ever take my place. Remember that.
  • Mrs. Wernecke: [off camera, young kids are being unruly] Now, if you break anything, I'm gonna' warm your pants!
  • Tod: [dictating some text to Peggy, who is typing it out for him] The theory that man is inherently good is bunk. Pure bunk. Each individual possesses a split personality, which...
  • [pauses]
  • Tod: Oh, that's pretty dull stuff, isn't it?
  • Peggy: Yes, it is.
  • Tod: Thanks... That bad?
  • Peggy: Mm-hmm.
  • Tod: Oh, what's the use of kidding. I can't write.
  • Peggy: Tod, please listen!
  • Tod: I've listened to you enough. I listen to you tiptoeing in the dark, and sighing in your sleep. You think I need eyes to tell me you want to get rid of me? You murderous little sneak!
  • Peggy: Tod...
  • Tod: So, you wanna' be free? You'll get away when I choose to let you go! And I'm not ready yet - not quite!
  • Peggy: Have you ever had everything and suddenly had nothing? Nothing but ghosts? Oh, why should I bore you with this.
  • Scott: You're not! I think I understand. We're pretty much alike, aren't we?
  • Peggy: Yes. Yes, perhaps we are.
  • Scott: You're the first one who seems to know what I feel.

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