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Agatha Christie's Poirot playlist
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Category

😹
Fun
Transcript
00:00Reassuring, Hastings? Thank you. But we must not try to walk before we can jump. I will
00:11see the house now, Monsieur Waverley. By all means. Well, this is the sitting room. Opens
00:16out onto the terrace, through the French windows, there. And this is the south side of the house,
00:22yes? Exactly. And this room is communicating with
00:26the library. Thank you, Mr. Poirot. Thank you, Poirot. Thank you. All will be well,
00:37madame. Easy.
00:45Monsieur Poirot? Any time since its birth, Poirot? Any time since its birth, Poirot?
00:54Four years ago, Poirot? Four years ago? I don't see the tabby boxes as much. Au contraire.
01:01It advances us enormously, but enormously. We must ask ourselves why they make things
01:09so difficult by warning the Waverleys. Simple, and some are très compliqués, and some are
01:27très compliqués, but all are of interest, eh? Because all, you understand, rests solely
01:33on the character of the participants. Certainly. Forgive me, it's difficult to make casual
01:43conversation when tomorrow we may. Ready for bed now, Mrs. Waverley? Say goodnight, Johnny.
01:50Ah, so this is the famous Johnny Waverley. Goodnight, old chap. I can't. I say, that's
01:57rather fine. You see, Hastings, a fellow enthusiast. Come and tuck me up. Thank you, Mrs. Withers.
02:07Goodnight. Thank you, Mrs. Withers. Goodnight. Goodnight.
02:27Certainly, it will be all right. Certainly, it will be all right, madame. At noon tomorrow,
02:35Johnny will be surrounded by his friends, by his mother, his father, Hastings, by Poirot.
02:43No one will kidnap Johnny Waverley.
02:57No one will kidnap Johnny Waverley.
03:27It's Mrs. Waverley. She's been taken ill. Suddenly woke up with dreadful cramps. Doctor's with her now.
03:41Cramps? Must be something she's eaten. I'm sorry.
03:57You slept well?
04:25Fine.
04:26Excellent.
04:28Fine.
04:29Excellent.
04:31And now we enjoy the famous English breakfast.
04:35Well, you may.
04:38Rise. Can't find anything else in it.
04:49Breakfast.
04:50Well, didn't you notice the dinner last night? Just one potato each. Not a big one. One dinner
04:56Just one potato each. Not a big one. One cutlet.
04:59Mais oui. From an English dinner, one expects no more. But breakfast.
05:04I wonder if they're not short of money, you know. The fire wasn't lit in my room last night.
05:09Well, get them here. Now. This instant.
05:15Every man jack of them, Treadwell.
05:16Very good, sir.
05:19Oh, good morning.
05:20Bonjour, monsieur Waverley. And how is madame Waverley this morning?
05:24She's still weak. She won't be able to get up today.
05:26Ah.
05:27But there's worse.
05:33My bath? I wasn't more than ten minutes. When I got back, there it was, pinned to my pillow.
05:37More than ten minutes. When I got back, there it was, pinned to my pillow.
05:40Just three words at twelve o'clock.
05:42The nerve of the fellow.
05:44Precisely. There's a traitor somewhere. Someone on my staff.
05:50Well, I know a trick worth two of that.
05:52What are you going to do?
05:54Sack him. Sack the lot of them. Unless one of them owns up, of course.
05:59Treadwell will stay, of course. He's been here since I was a boy.
06:03And Miss Collins.
06:04I'm sorry, Miss Collins?
06:06My wife's secretary. Nothing wrong with her.
06:09By God.
06:11The staff are assembled, monsieur Waverley.
06:14Thank you, Treadwell.
06:15Assembled, monsieur Waverley.
06:16Thank you, Treadwell.
06:18Monsieur Waverley, I ask you to reconsider.
06:21The emptier a house is, the easier it will be for a miscreant to move about unseen.
06:26Nonsense.
06:28Mr. Poirot, you stick to your job, and I shall stick to mine.
06:31Then we shan't fall out.
06:33But to empty a house a few hours before the threatened abduction seems to me to be
06:37the height of folly.
06:39How dare you, sir? You call me a fool?
06:42I'm doing what I consider best for the defence of my son.
06:45Allow me to be the judge of that.
06:47I cannot prevent you, monsieur.
06:48Quite.
06:57He is stubborn, that one, he thinks.
07:18Oh, no!
07:25Mon Dieu, wonders will never stop.
07:28The Chief Inspector Jap.
07:30Line up in a straight line.
07:33A change of path, Chief Inspector?
07:36Yes, you might say that, Mr. Poirot.
07:38Or you might say I don't want to see some poor amateur get himself in a fix.
07:42Ah, you are too kind, Chief Inspector Jap.
07:45Your great heart will be your downfall.
07:46True, true.
07:48Now then, where's the simple country squire?
07:53You'll find him in the hall, sacking all his stuff.
07:56Oh, dear. Got out of bed the wrong side, didn't he?
07:59Perhaps.
08:01Bonne chance.
08:16KILOBITOS
08:25KILOBITOS
08:26MILES
08:30KILOBITOS
08:31MILES
08:33BITOS
08:34MILES
08:37... must be back before 12.
08:41I will not be treated in this manner.
08:43There is nothing more to be said, Mrs. Withers.
08:44There is a great deal more to be said, Mr. Waverley.
08:47You may pack your bag and collect a week's wages from Miss Collins.
08:51And what am I supposed to tell Johnny?
08:54You will say nothing to him.
08:56He is in Miss Collins' care for the moment.
08:59You may go, Mrs. Withers.
09:07I've brought some men down with me.
09:10I'll disperse them around the house.
09:14You know the house about Scribble, do you, sir?
09:16You were doing the building work up at Waverley, were you?
09:19Will be again soon.
09:21That's all he keeps telling me, Ted.
09:23I'll believe it when I see it.
09:25I don't reckon she cares about the house, that sort of thing.
09:28Really?
09:30No. The whole place could fall down as far as she's concerned.
09:35She's the one with the money.
09:37Though you'd never know it, the way she carries on.
09:40Ted.
09:41Right. One man at the head of the path that leads to the stables there.
09:45Right. Beecham, at the head of the stables.
09:47Sir?
09:48One man by the main door, of course.
09:50Osborne, by the front door.
09:51Yes, sir.
09:53Two on the perimeter.
09:54George Smith.
09:55Yes, sir.
09:56And a couple here by the...
09:58Servants' quarters.
09:59That's it.
10:04Do you have sausages?
10:06Oh, yes, sir.
10:07Deborah, kidneys?
10:08Kidneys, yes. What about bacon, sir?
10:09Crisp.
10:10Of course.
10:11And tea?
10:12Or a nice pint of home brew?
10:14Beer?
10:15For breakfast?
10:16Two pints, please.
10:18But, Hastings, we've got to be back before 12.
10:21Plenty of time.
10:24Well, gentlemen.
10:28So, Hastings.
10:29The renovations at Waverley Court...
10:32The renovations at Waverley Court will continue.
10:34I didn't trust that builder, you know, Poirot.
10:37Seems to me he resents the Waverleys.
10:40Perhaps.
10:50Oh, wentamoe, a meadow, a meadow
10:55Two men wentamoe, wentamoe, a meadow
11:00Two men wentamoe, wentamoe, a meadow
11:04Two men, one man and his dog wentamoe, a meadow
11:08Two men, one man and his dog wentamoe, a meadow
11:12Three men wentamoe, wentamoe, a meadow
11:16Three men, two men, one man and his dog wentamoe, a meadow
11:21Four men wentamoe, wentamoe, a meadow
11:25Four men, three men
11:27Four men, three men
11:34Four men, three men
11:43Evening.
11:44With perhaps you here by the windows.
11:46Perhaps you here by the windows. Good.
11:48And Poirot guarding the door into the hall.
11:50I don't know about that, sir.
11:52If there was to be any rough stuff, I don't know if Mr Poirot would be the first person I'd think of.
11:56Brainwork, yes. Rough stuff.
11:58Dubious.
11:59What about his colleague, Hastings?
12:02That'd be more like it, sir.

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