Saturday, November 30, 2013

Friday, November 29, 2013

Why Care about the NSA?

Brian Knappenberger | Why Care about the NSA? | Nov 25, 2013 |

NSA & surveillance ... made simple

The Guardian - Made Simple | The NSA and surveillance - Video Animation | Nov 2013 | animation

Thursday, November 28, 2013

NNT: Stanford Seminar

Nassim Nicholas Taleb | Stanford Seminar | Apr 10, 2013 | 网页:网页:网页:网页:网页:谷歌:谷歌

Sunday, November 24, 2013

TED: Why Privacy Matters

I would like to tell you a story connecting the notorious privacy incident involving Adam and Eve, and the remarkable shift in the boundaries between public and private which has occurred in the past 10 years.

You know the incident. Adam and Eve one day in the Garden of Eden realize they are naked. They freak out. And the rest is history.

Nowadays, Adam and Eve would probably act differently.

[@Adam Last nite was a blast! loved dat apple LOL]

[@Eve yep.. babe, know what happened to my pants tho?]

We do reveal so much more information about ourselves online than ever before, and so much information about us is being collected by organizations. Now there is much to gain and benefit from this massive analysis of personal information, or big data, but there are also complex tradeoffs that come from giving away our privacy. And my story is about these tradeoffs.

We start with an observation which, in my mind, has become clearer and clearer in the past few years, that any personal information can become sensitive information. Back in the year 2000, about 100 billion photos were shot worldwide, but only a minuscule proportion of them were actually uploaded online. In 2010, only on Facebook, in a single month, 2.5 billion photos were uploaded, most of them identified. In the same span of time, computers' ability to recognize people in photos improved by three orders of magnitude. What happens when you combine these technologies together: increasing availability of facial data; improving facial recognizing ability by computers; but also cloud computing, which gives anyone in this theater the kind of computational power which a few years ago was only the domain of three-letter agencies; and ubiquitous computing, which allows my phone, which is not a supercomputer, to connect to the Internet and do there hundreds of thousands of face metrics in a few seconds? Well, we conjecture that the result of this combination of technologies will be a radical change in our very notions of privacy and anonymity.

To test that, we did an experiment on Carnegie Mellon University campus. We asked students who were walking by to participate in a study, and we took a shot with a webcam, and we asked them to fill out a survey on a laptop. While they were filling out the survey, we uploaded their shot to a cloud-computing cluster, and we started using a facial recognizer to match that shot to a database of some hundreds of thousands of images which we had downloaded from Facebook profiles. By the time the subject reached the last page on the survey, the page had been dynamically updated with the 10 best matching photos which the recognizer had found, and we asked the subjects to indicate whether he or she found themselves in the photo.

Do you see the subject? Well, the computer did, and in fact did so for one out of three subjects.

So essentially, we can start from an anonymous face, offline or online, and we can use facial recognition to give a name to that anonymous face thanks to social media data. But a few years back, we did something else. We started from social media data, we combined it statistically with data from U.S. government social security, and we ended up predicting social security numbers, which in the United States are extremely sensitive information.

Do you see where I'm going with this? So if you combine the two studies together, then the question becomes, can you start from a face and, using facial recognition, find a name and publicly available information about that name and that person, and from that publicly available information infer non-publicly available information, much more sensitive ones which you link back to the face? And the answer is, yes, we can, and we did. Of course, the accuracy keeps getting worse. [27% of subjects' first 5 SSN digits identified (with 4 attempts)] But in fact, we even decided to develop an iPhone app which uses the phone's internal camera to take a shot of a subject and then upload it to a cloud and then do what I just described to you in real time: looking for a match, finding public information, trying to infer sensitive information, and then sending back to the phone so that it is overlaid on the face of the subject, an example of augmented reality, probably a creepy example of augmented reality. In fact, we didn't develop the app to make it available, just as a proof of concept.

In fact, take these technologies and push them to their logical extreme. Imagine a future in which strangers around you will look at you through their Google Glasses or, one day, their contact lenses, and use seven or eight data points about you to infer anything else which may be known about you. What will this future without secrets look like? And should we care?

We may like to believe that the future with so much wealth of data would be a future with no more biases, but in fact, having so much information doesn't mean that we will make decisions which are more objective. In another experiment, we presented to our subjects information about a potential job candidate. We included in this information some references to some funny, absolutely legal, but perhaps slightly embarrassing information that the subject had posted online. Now interestingly, among our subjects, some had posted comparable information, and some had not. Which group do you think was more likely to judge harshly our subject? Paradoxically, it was the group who had posted similar information, an example of moral dissonance.

Now you may be thinking, this does not apply to me, because I have nothing to hide. But in fact, privacy is not about having something negative to hide. Imagine that you are the H.R. director of a certain organization, and you receive résumés, and you decide to find more information about the candidates. Therefore, you Google their names and in a certain universe, you find this information. Or in a parallel universe, you find this information. Do you think that you would be equally likely to call either candidate for an interview? If you think so, then you are not like the U.S. employers who are, in fact, part of our experiment, meaning we did exactly that. We created Facebook profiles, manipulating traits, then we started sending out résumés to companies in the U.S., and we detected, we monitored, whether they were searching for our candidates, and whether they were acting on the information they found on social media. And they were. Discrimination was happening through social media for equally skilled candidates.

Now marketers like us to believe that all information about us will always be used in a manner which is in our favor. But think again. Why should that be always the case? In a movie which came out a few years ago, "Minority Report," a famous scene had Tom Cruise walk in a mall and holographic personalized advertising would appear around him. Now, that movie is set in 2054, about 40 years from now, and as exciting as that technology looks, it already vastly underestimates the amount of information that organizations can gather about you, and how they can use it to influence you in a way that you will not even detect.

So as an example, this is another experiment actually we are running, not yet completed. Imagine that an organization has access to your list of Facebook friends, and through some kind of algorithm they can detect the two friends that you like the most. And then they create, in real time, a facial composite of these two friends. Now studies prior to ours have shown that people don't recognize any longer even themselves in facial composites, but they react to those composites in a positive manner. So next time you are looking for a certain product, and there is an ad suggesting you to buy it, it will not be just a standard spokesperson. It will be one of your friends, and you will not even know that this is happening.

Now the problem is that the current policy mechanisms we have to protect ourselves from the abuses of personal information are like bringing a knife to a gunfight. One of these mechanisms is transparency, telling people what you are going to do with their data. And in principle, that's a very good thing. It's necessary, but it is not sufficient. Transparency can be misdirected. You can tell people what you are going to do, and then you still nudge them to disclose arbitrary amounts of personal information.

So in yet another experiment, this one with students, we asked them to provide information about their campus behavior, including pretty sensitive questions, such as this one. [Have you ever cheated in an exam?] Now to one group of subjects, we told them, "Only other students will see your answers." To another group of subjects, we told them, "Students and faculty will see your answers." Transparency. Notification. And sure enough, this worked, in the sense that the first group of subjects were much more likely to disclose than the second. It makes sense, right? But then we added the misdirection. We repeated the experiment with the same two groups, this time adding a delay between the time we told subjects how we would use their data and the time we actually started answering the questions.

How long a delay do you think we had to add in order to nullify the inhibitory effect of knowing that faculty would see your answers? Ten minutes? Five minutes? One minute? How about 15 seconds? Fifteen seconds were sufficient to have the two groups disclose the same amount of information, as if the second group now no longer cares for faculty reading their answers.

Now I have to admit that this talk so far may sound exceedingly gloomy, but that is not my point. In fact, I want to share with you the fact that there are alternatives. The way we are doing things now is not the only way they can done, and certainly not the best way they can be done. When someone tells you, "People don't care about privacy," consider whether the game has been designed and rigged so that they cannot care about privacy, and coming to the realization that these manipulations occur is already halfway through the process of being able to protect yourself. When someone tells you that privacy is incompatible with the benefits of big data, consider that in the last 20 years, researchers have created technologies to allow virtually any electronic transactions to take place in a more privacy-preserving manner. We can browse the Internet anonymously. We can send emails that can only be read by the intended recipient, not even the NSA. We can have even privacy-preserving data mining. In other words, we can have the benefits of big data while protecting privacy. Of course, these technologies imply a shifting of cost and revenues between data holders and data subjects, which is why, perhaps, you don't hear more about them.

Which brings me back to the Garden of Eden. There is a second privacy interpretation of the story of the Garden of Eden which doesn't have to do with the issue of Adam and Eve feeling naked and feeling ashamed. You can find echoes of this interpretation in John Milton's "Paradise Lost." In the garden, Adam and Eve are materially content. They're happy. They are satisfied. However, they also lack knowledge and self-awareness. The moment they eat the aptly named fruit of knowledge, that's when they discover themselves. They become aware. They achieve autonomy. The price to pay, however, is leaving the garden. So privacy, in a way, is both the means and the price to pay for freedom.

Again, marketers tell us that big data and social media are not just a paradise of profit for them, but a Garden of Eden for the rest of us. We get free content. We get to play Angry Birds. We get targeted apps. But in fact, in a few years, organizations will know so much about us, they will be able to infer our desires before we even form them, and perhaps buy products on our behalf before we even know we need them.

Now there was one English author who anticipated this kind of future where we would trade away our autonomy and freedom for comfort. Even more so than George Orwell, the author is, of course, Aldous Huxley. In "Brave New World," he imagines a society where technologies that we created originally for freedom end up coercing us. However, in the book, he also offers us a way out of that society, similar to the path that Adam and Eve had to follow to leave the garden. In the words of the Savage, regaining autonomy and freedom is possible, although the price to pay is steep. So I do believe that one of the defining fights of our times will be the fight for the control over personal information, the fight over whether big data will become a force for freedom, rather than a force which will hiddenly manipulate us.

Right now, many of us do not even know that the fight is going on, but it is, whether you like it or not. And at the risk of playing the serpent, I will tell you that the tools for the fight are here, the awareness of what is going on, and in your hands, just a few clicks away.

Thank you.

(Applause)
TED | Why Privacy Matters | Oct 2013 | Alessandro Acquisti

TED: How the NSA betrayed the World

The two most likely largest inventions of our generation are the Internet and the mobile phone. They've changed the world. However, largely to our surprise, they also turned out to be the perfect tools for the surveillance state. It turned out that the capability to collect data, information and connections about basically any of us and all of us is exactly what we've been hearing throughout of the summer through revelations and leaks about Western intelligence agencies, mostly U.S. intelligence agencies, watching over the rest of the world.

We've heard about these starting with the revelations from June 6. Edward Snowden started leaking information, top secret classified information, from the U.S. intelligence agencies, and we started learning about things like PRISM and XKeyscore and others. And these are examples of the kinds of programs U.S. intelligence agencies are running right now, against the whole rest of the world.

And if you look back about the forecasts on surveillance by George Orwell, well it turns out that George Orwell was an optimist. (Laughter) We are right now seeing a much larger scale of tracking of individual citizens than he could have ever imagined.

And this here is the infamous NSA data center in Utah. Due to be opened very soon, it will be both a supercomputing center and a data storage center. You could basically imagine it has a large hall filled with hard drives storing data they are collecting. And it's a pretty big building. How big? Well, I can give you the numbers -- 140,000 square meters -- but that doesn't really tell you very much. Maybe it's better to imagine it as a comparison. You think about the largest IKEA store you've ever been in. This is five times larger. How many hard drives can you fit in an IKEA store? Right? It's pretty big. We estimate that just the electricity bill for running this data center is going to be in the tens of millions of dollars a year. And this kind of wholesale surveillance means that they can collect our data and keep it basically forever, keep it for extended periods of time, keep it for years, keep it for decades. And this opens up completely new kinds of risks to us all. And what this is is that it is wholesale blanket surveillance on everyone.

Well, not exactly everyone, because the U.S. intelligence only has a legal right to monitor foreigners. They can monitor foreigners when foreigners' data connections end up in the United States or pass through the United States. And monitoring foreigners doesn't sound too bad until you realize that I'm a foreigner and you're a foreigner. In fact, 96 percent of the planet are foreigners.

(Laughter)

Right?

So it is wholesale blanket surveillance of all of us, all of us who use telecommunications and the Internet.

But don't get me wrong: There are actually types of surveillance that are okay. I love freedom, but even I agree that some surveillance is fine. If the law enforcement is trying to find a murderer, or they're trying to catch a drug lord or trying to prevent a school shooting, and they have leads and they have suspects, then it's perfectly fine for them to tap the suspect's phone, and to intercept his Internet communications. I'm not arguing that at all, but that's not what programs like PRISM are about. They are not about doing surveillance on people that they have reason to suspect of some wrongdoings. They're about doing surveillance on people they know are innocent.

So the four main arguments supporting surveillance like this, well, the first of all is that whenever you start discussing about these revelations, there will be naysayers trying to minimize the importance of these revelations, saying that we knew all this already, we knew it was happening, there's nothing new here. And that's not true. Don't let anybody tell you that we knew this already, because we did not know this already. Our worst fears might have been something like this, but we didn't know this was happening. Now we know for a fact it's happening. We didn't know about this. We didn't know about PRISM. We didn't know about XKeyscore. We didn't know about Cybertrans. We didn't know about DoubleArrow. We did not know about Skywriter -- all these different programs run by U.S. intelligence agencies. But now we do.

And we did not know that U.S. intelligence agencies go to extremes such as infiltrating standardization bodies to sabotage encryption algorithms on purpose. And what that means is that you take something which is secure, an encryption algorithm which is so secure that if you use that algorithm to encrypt one file, nobody can decrypt that file. Even if they take every single computer on the planet just to decrypt that one file, it's going to take millions of years. So that's basically perfectly safe, uncrackable. You take something which is that good and then you weaken it on purpose, making all of us less secure as an end result. A real-world equivalent would be that intelligence agencies would force some secret pin code into every single house alarm so they could get into every single house because, you know, bad people might have house alarms, but it will also make all of us less secure as an end result. Backdooring encryption algorithms just boggles the mind. But of course, these intelligence agencies are doing their job. This is what they have been told to do: do signals intelligence, monitor telecommunications, monitor Internet traffic. That's what they're trying to do, and since most, a very big part of the Internet traffic today is encrypted, they're trying to find ways around the encryption. One way is to sabotage encryption algorithms, which is a great example about how U.S. intelligence agencies are running loose. They are completely out of control, and they should be brought back under control.

So what do we actually know about the leaks? Everything is based on the files leaked by Mr. Snowden. The very first PRISM slides from the beginning of June detail a collection program where the data is collected from service providers, and they actually go and name the service providers they have access to. They even have a specific date on when the collection of data began for each of the service providers. So for example, they name the collection from Microsoft started on September 11, 2007, for Yahoo on the March 12, 2008, and then others: Google, Facebook, Skype, Apple and so on.

And every single one of these companies denies. They all say that this simply isn't true, that they are not giving backdoor access to their data. Yet we have these files. So is one of the parties lying, or is there some other alternative explanation? And one explanation would be that these parties, these service providers, are not cooperating. Instead, they've been hacked. That would explain it. They aren't cooperating. They've been hacked. In this case, they've been hacked by their own government. That might sound outlandish, but we already have cases where this has happened, for example, the case of the Flame malware which we strongly believe was authored by the U.S. government, and which, to spread, subverted the security of the Windows Update network, meaning here, the company was hacked by their own government. And there's more evidence supporting this theory as well. Der Spiegel, from Germany, leaked more information about the operations run by the elite hacker units operating inside these intelligence agencies. Inside NSA, the unit is called TAO, Tailored Access Operations, and inside GCHQ, which is the U.K. equivalent, it's called NAC, Network Analysis Centre. And these recent leaks of these three slides detail an operation run by this GCHQ intelligence agency from the United Kingdom targeting a telecom here in Belgium. And what this really means is that an E.U. country's intelligence agency is breaching the security of a telecom of a fellow E.U. country on purpose, and they discuss it in their slides completely casually, business as usual. Here's the primary target, here's the secondary target, here's the teaming. They probably have a team building on Thursday evening in a pub. They even use cheesy PowerPoint clip art like, you know, "Success," when they gain access to services like this. What the hell?

And then there's the argument that okay, yes, this might be going on, but then again, other countries are doing it as well. All countries spy. And maybe that's true. Many countries spy, not all of them, but let's take an example. Let's take, for example, Sweden. I'm speaking of Sweden because Sweden has a little bit of a similar law to the United States. When your data traffic goes through Sweden, their intelligence agency has a legal right by the law to intercept that traffic. All right, how many Swedish decisionmakers and politicians and business leaders use, every day, U.S.-based services, like, you know, run Windows or OSX, or use Facebook or LinkedIn, or store their data in clouds like iCloud or Skydrive or DropBox, or maybe use online services like Amazon web services or sales support? And the answer is, every single Swedish business leader does that every single day. And then we turn it around. How many American leaders use Swedish webmails and cloud services? And the answer is zero. So this is not balanced. It's not balanced by any means, not even close.

And when we do have the occasional European success story, even those, then, typically end up being sold to the United States. Like, Skype used to be secure. It used to be end-to-end encrypted. Then it was sold to the United States. Today, it no longer is secure. So once again, we take something which is secure and then we make it less secure on purpose, making all of us less secure as an outcome.

And then the argument that the United States is only fighting terrorists. It's the war on terror. You shouldn't worry about it. Well, it's not the war on terror. Yes, part of it is war on terror, and yes, there are terrorists, and they do kill and maim, and we should fight them, but we know through these leaks that they have used the same techniques to listen to phone calls of European leaders, to tap the email of residents of Mexico and Brazil, to read email traffic inside the United Nations Headquarters and E.U. Parliament, and I don't think they are trying to find terrorists from inside the E.U. Parliament, right? It's not the war on terror. Part of it might be, and there are terrorists, but are we really thinking about terrorists as such an existential threat that we are willing to do anything at all to fight them? Are the Americans ready to throw away the Constituion and throw it in the trash just because there are terrorists? And the same thing with the Bill of Rights and all the amendments and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the E.U. conventions on human rights and fundamental freedoms and the press freedom? Do we really think terrorism is such an existential threat, we are ready to do anything at all?

But people are scared about terrorists, and then they think that maybe that surveillance is okay because they have nothing to hide. Feel free to survey me if that helps. And whoever tells you that they have nothing to hide simply hasn't thought about this long enough.

(Applause)

Because we have this thing called privacy, and if you really think that you have nothing to hide, please make sure that's the first thing you tell me, because then I know that I should not trust you with any secrets, because obviously you can't keep a secret. But people are brutally honest with the Internet, and when these leaks started, many people were asking me about this. And I have nothing to hide. I'm not doing anything bad or anything illegal. Yet, I have nothing that I would in particular like to share with an intelligence agency, especially a foreign intelligence agency. And if we indeed need a Big Brother, I would much rather have a domestic Big Brother than a foreign Big Brother. And when the leaks started, the very first thing I tweeted about this was a comment about how, when you've been using search engines, you've been potentially leaking all that to U.S. intelligence. And two minutes later, I got a reply by somebody called Kimberly from the United States challenging me, like, why am I worried about this? What am I sending to worry about this? Am I sending naked pictures or something? And my answer to Kimberly was that what I'm sending is none of your business, and it should be none of your government's business either. Because that's what it's about. It's about privacy. Privacy is nonnegotiable. It should be built in to all the systems we use.

(Applause)

And one thing we should all understand is that we are brutally honest with search engines. You show me your search history, and I'll find something incriminating or something embarrassing there in five minutes. We are more honest with search engines than we are with our families. Search engines know more about you than your family members know about you. And this is all the kind of information we are giving away, we are giving away to the United States.

And surveillance changes history. We know this through examples of corrupt presidents like Nixon. Imagine if he would have had the kind of surveillance tools that are available today. And let me actually quote the president of Brazil, Ms. Dilma Rousseff. She was one of the targets of NSA surveillance. Her email was read, and she spoke at the United Nations Headquarters, and she said, "If there is no right to privacy, there can be no true freedom of expression and opinion, and therefore, there can be no effective democracy."

That's what it's about. Privacy is the building block of our democracies. And to quote a fellow security researcher, Marcus Ranum, he said that the United States is right now treating the Internet as it would be treating one of its colonies. So we are back to the age of colonization, and we, the foreign users of the Internet, we should think about Americans as our masters.

So Mr. Snowden, he's been blamed for many things. Some are blaming him for causing problems for the U.S. cloud industry and software companies with these revelations -- and blaming Snowden for causing problems for the U.S. cloud industry would be the equivalent of blaming Al Gore for causing global warming.

(Laughter)

(Applause)

So, what is there to be done? Should we worry. No, we shouldn't worry. We should be angry, because this is wrong, and it's rude, and it should not be done. But that's not going to really change the situation. What's going to change the situation for the rest of the world is to try to steer away from systems built in the United States. And that's much easier said than done. How do you do that? A single country, any single country in Europe cannot replace and build replacements for the U.S.-made operating systems and cloud services.

But maybe you don't have to do it alone. Maybe you can do it together with other countries. The solution is open source. By building together open, free, secure systems, we can go around such surveillance, and then one country doesn't have to solve the problem by itself. It only has to solve one little problem. And to quote a fellow security researcher, Haroon Meer, one country only has to make a small wave, but those small waves together become a tide, and the tide will lift all the boats up at the same time, and the tide we will build with secure, free, open-source systems, will become the tide that will lift all of us up and above the surveillance state.

Thank you very much.

(Applause)
TED | How the NSA betrayed the world's trust -- time to act | Oct 2013 | Mikko H. Hypponen

Saturday, November 23, 2013

Moyers & Company 112213

BILL MOYERS: This week on Moyers & Company…

HENRY GIROUX: What's at stake here is not just the fact that you have rich people who now control the economy and all the commanding institutions of society. What you have is basically a transgression against the very basic ideals of democracy. I mean, it's hard to imagine life beyond capitalism. You know, it's easier to imagine the death of the planet than it is to imagine the death of capitalism.

BILL MOYERS: And a farewell tribute to Nobel novelist Doris Lessing.

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BILL MOYERS: Welcome. A very wise teacher once told us, “If you want to change the world, change the metaphor.” Then he gave us some of his favorite examples. You think of language differently, he said, if you think of “words pregnant with celestial fire.” Or “words that weep and tears that speak.” Of course, the heart doesn’t physically separate into pieces when we lose someone we love, but “a broken heart” conveys the depth of loss. And if I say you are the “apple of my eye”, you know how special you are in my sight. In other words, metaphors cleanse the lens of perception and give us a fresh take on reality. In other words.

Recently I read a book and saw a film that opened my eyes to see differently the crisis of our times, and the metaphor used by both was, believe it or not, zombies. You heard me right, zombies. More on the film later, but this is the book: “Zombie Politics and Culture in the Age of Casino Capitalism”. Talk about “connecting the dots” -- read this, and the headlines of the day will, I think, arrange themselves differently in your head -- threading together ideas and experiences to reveal a pattern. The skillful weaver is Henry Giroux, a scholar, teacher and social critic with seemingly tireless energy and a broad range of interests. Here are just a few of his books: America's Education Deficit and the War on Youth, Twilight of the Social, Youth in a Suspect Society, Neoliberalism's War on Higher Education.

Henry Giroux is the son of working class parents in Rhode Island who now holds the Global TV Network Chair in English and Cultural Studies at McMaster University in Canada. Henry Giroux, welcome.

HENRY GIROUX: Pleasure. It’s great to be here.

BILL MOYERS: There's a great urgency in your recent books and in the essays you've been posting online, a fierce urgency, almost as if you are writing with the doomsday clock ticking. What accounts for that?

HENRY GIROUX: Well, for me democracy is too important to allow it to be undermined in a way in which every vital institution that matters from the political process to the schools to the inequalities that, to the money being put into politics, I mean, all those things that make a democracy viable are in crisis.

And the problem is the crisis, while we recognize in many ways is associated increasingly with the economic system, what we haven't gotten yet is that it should be accompanied by a crisis of ideas, that the stories that are being told about democracy are really about the swindle of fulfillment.

The swindle of fulfillment in that what the reigning elite in all of their diversity now tell the American people if not the rest of the world is that democracy is an excess. It doesn't really matter anymore, that we don't need social provisions, we don't need the welfare state, that the survival of the fittest is all that matters, that in fact society should mimic those values in ways that suggest a new narrative.

I mean you have a consolidation of power that is so overwhelming, not just in its ability to control resources and drive the economy and redistribute wealth upward, but basically to provide the most fraudulent definition of what a democracy should be.

I mean, the notion that profit making is the essence of democracy, the notion that economics is divorced from ethics, the notion that the only obligation of citizenship is consumerism, the notion that the welfare state is a pathology, that any form of dependency basically is disreputable and needs to be attacked, I mean, this is a vicious set of assumptions.

BILL MOYERS: Are we close to equating democracy with capitalism?

HENRY GIROUX: Oh, I mean, I think that's the biggest lie of all actually. The biggest lie of all is that capitalism is democracy. We have no way of understanding democracy outside of the market, just as we have no understanding of how to understand freedom outside of market values.

BILL MOYERS: Explain that. What do you mean "outside of market values?"

HENRY GIROUX: I mean you know, when Margaret Thatcher married Ronald Reagan--

BILL MOYERS: Metaphorically?

HENRY GIROUX: Metaphorically. Two things happened. 1) There was this assumption that the government was evil except when it regulated its power to benefit the rich. So it wasn't a matter of smashing the government as Reagan seemed to suggest, it was a matter of rearranging it and reconfiguring it so it served the wealthy, the elites and the corporate, of course, you know, those who run mega corporations. But Thatcher said something else that's particularly interesting in this discussion.

She said there's no such thing as society. There are only individuals and families. And so what we begin to see is the emergence of a kind of ethic, a survival of the fittest ethic that legitimates the most incredible forms of cruelty, that seems to suggest that freedom in this discourse of getting rid of society, getting rid of the social-- that discourse is really only about self-interest, that possessive individualism is now the only virtue that matters. So freedom, which is essential to any notion of democracy, now becomes nothing more than a matter of pursuing your own self interests. No society can survive under those conditions.

BILL MOYERS: So what is society? When you use it as an antithesis to what Margaret Thatcher said, what do you have in mind? What's the metaphor for--

HENRY GIROUX: I have in mind a society in which the wealth is shared, in which there is a mesh of organizations that are grounded in the social contract, that takes seriously the mutual obligations that people have to each other. But more than anything else-- I'm sorry, but I want to echo something that FDR once said,

When he said that, you know, you not only have to have personal freedoms and political freedoms, the right to vote the right to speak, you have to have social freedom. You have to have the freedom from want, the freedom from poverty, the freedom from-- that comes with a lack of health care.

Getting ahead cannot be the only motive that motivates people. You have to imagine what a good life is. But agency, the ability to do that, to have the capacity to basically be able to make decisions and learn how to govern and not just be governed--

BILL MOYERS: As a citizen.

HENRY GIROUX: As a citizen.

BILL MOYERS: A citizen is a moral agent of--

HENRY GIROUX: A citizen is a political and moral agent who in fact has a shared sense of hope and responsibility to others and not just to him or herself. Under this system, democracy is basically like the lotto. You know, go in, you put a coin in, and if you're lucky, you win something. If you don't, then you become something else.

BILL MOYERS: So then why when I talk about the urgency in your writing, your forthcoming book opens with this sentence, "America's descending into madness." Now, don't you think many people will read that as hyperbole?

HENRY GIROUX: Sometimes in the exaggerations there are great truths. And it seems to me that what’s unfortunate here is that's not an exaggeration.

BILL MOYERS: Well, madness can mean several things. It can mean insanity. It can mean lunacy. But it can also mean folly, foolishness, you know, look at that craziness over there. Which do you mean?

HENRY GIROUX: I mean, it's certainly not just about foolishness. It's about a kind of lunacy in which people lose themselves in a sense of power and greed and exceptionalism and nationalism in ways that so undercut the meaning of democracy and the meaning of justice that you have to sit back and ask yourself how could the following, for instance, take place?

How could people who allegedly believe in democracy and the American Congress cut $40 billion from a food stamp program, half of which those food stamps go to children? And you ask yourself how could that happen? I mean, how can you say no to a Medicaid program which is far from radical but at the same time offers poor people health benefits that could save their lives?

How do you shut down public schools and say that charter schools and private schools are better because education is really not a right, it's an entitlement? How do you get a discourse governing the country that seems to suggest that anything public, public health, public transportation, public values, you know, public engagement is a pathology?

BILL MOYERS: Let me answer that from the other side. They would say to you that we cut Medicaid or food stamps because they create dependency. We closed public schools because they aren't working, they aren't teaching. People are coming out not ready for life.

HENRY GIROUX: No, no, that's the answer that they give. I mean, and it's a mark of their insanity. I mean, that's precisely an answer that in my mind embodies a kind of psychosis that is so divorced-- is in such denial about power and how it works and is in such denial about their attempt at what I call individualize the social, in other words--

BILL MOYERS: Individualize?

HENRY GIROUX: Individualize the social, which means that all problems, if they exist, rest on the shoulders of individuals.

BILL MOYERS: You are responsible.

HENRY GIROUX: You are responsible.

BILL MOYERS: If you're poor, you're responsible if you're ignorant, you're responsible if--

HENRY GIROUX: Exactly.

BILL MOYERS: --you're sick?

HENRY GIROUX: That's right, that the government-- the larger social order, the society has no responsibility whatsoever so that-- you often hear this, I mean, if there--I mean, if you have an economic crisis caused by the hedge fund crooks, you know and millions of people are put out of work and they're all lining up for unemployment, what do we hear in the national media? We hear that maybe they don't know how to fill out unemployment forms, maybe it's about character. You know, maybe they're just simply lazy.

BILL MOYERS: This line struck me, "The ideology of hardness and cruelty runs through American culture like an electric current..."

HENRY GIROUX: Yeah, it sure does. I mean, to see poor people, their benefits being cut, to see pensions of Americans who have worked like my father, all their lives, and taken away, to see the rich just accumulating more and more wealth.

I mean, it seems to me that there has to be a point where you have to say, "No, this has to stop." We can't allow ourselves to be driven by those lies anymore. We can't allow those who are rich, who are privileged, who are entitled, who accumulate wealth to simply engage in a flight from social and moral and political responsibility by blaming the people who are victimized by those policies as the source of those problems.

BILL MOYERS: There's a new reality you write emerging in America in no small part because of the media, one that enshrines a politics of disposability in which growing numbers of people are considered dispensable and a drain on the body politic and the economy, not to mention you say an affront on the sensibilities of the rich and the powerful.

HENRY GIROUX: If somebody had to say to me-- ask me the question, "What exactly is new that we haven't seen before?" And I think that what we haven't seen before is an attack on the social contract, Bill, that is so overwhelming, so dangerous in the way in which its being deconstructed and being disassembled that you now have as a classic example, you have a whole generation of young people who are now seen as disposable.

They're in debt, they're unemployed. My friend, Zygmunt Bauman, calls them the zero generation: zero jobs, zero hope, zero possibilities, zero employment. And it seems to me when a country turns its back on its young people because they figure in investments not long term investments, they can't be treated as simply commodities that are going to in some way provide an instant payback and extend the bottom line, they represent something more noble than that. They represent an indication of how the future is not going to mimic the present and what obligations people might have, social, political, moral and otherwise to allow that to happen, and we've defaulted on that possibility.

BILL MOYERS: You actually call it-- there's the title of the book, “America's Education Deficit and the War on Youth.”

HENRY GIROUX: Oh, this is a war. It's a war that endlessly commercializes kids, both as commodities and as commodifiable.

BILL MOYERS: Example?

HENRY GIROUX: Example being that the young people can't turn anywhere without in some way being told that the only obligation of citizenship is to shop, is to be a consumer. You can't walk on a college campus today and walk into the student union and not see everybody represented there from the local banks to Disneyland to local shops, all selling things.

I mean, it's like the school has become a mall. It imitates the mall. And if you walk into schools as one example, I mean, you look at the buses, there are advertisements on the buses. You walk into the bathroom, there are advertisements above the stalls. I mean, and the curriculum is written by General Electric.

BILL MOYERS: We're all branded--

HENRY GIROUX: They're branded, they're branded.

BILL MOYERS: --everything is branded?

HENRY GIROUX: Where are the public spaces for young people other learn a discourse that's not commodified, to be able to think about non-commodifiable values like trust, justice, honesty, integrity, caring for others, compassion. Those things, they're just simply absent, they're not part of those public spheres because those spheres have been commodified.

What does it mean to go to school all day and just be taking tests and learning how to teach for the test? Their minds are numb. I mean--the expression I get from them, they call school dead time, these kids. Say it's dead time. I call it their dis-imagination zones.

BILL MOYERS: Dis-imagination?

HENRY GIROUX: Yeah, yeah, they rob-- it's a form of learning that robs the mind of any possibility of being imaginative. The arts are cut out, right, so the questions are not being raised about what it means to be creative.

All of those things that speak to educating the imagination, to stretching it, the giving kids the knowledge, a sense of the traditions, the archives to take risks, to learn about the world, they're disappearing.

BILL MOYERS: I heard you respond to someone who asked you at a public session the other evening--"What would you do about what you've just described?" And your first response was start debating societies in high schools all across the country.

HENRY GIROUX: That's right. One of the things that I learned quickly as a result of the internet is I started getting a ton of letters from students who basically were involved in these debate societies. And they're saying like things, "We use your work. We love this work.”

And I actually got involved with one that was working with-- out of Brown University's working with a high school in the inner cities right, and I got involved with some of the students. But then I began to learn as a result of that involvement that these were the most radical kids in the country.

I mean, these were kids who embodied what a critical public sphere meant. They were going all over the country, different high schools, working class kids no less, debating major issues and getting so excited about in many ways winning these debates but doing it on the side of-- something they could believe in.

And I thought to myself, "Wow, here's a space." Here's a space where you're going to have a whole generation of kids who could be actually engaging in debate and dialogue. Every working class urban school in this country should put its resources as much as possible into a debate team.

BILL MOYERS: My favorite of your many books is this one, “Zombie Politics and Culture in the Age of Casino Capitalism.” Why that metaphor, zombie politics?

HENRY GIROUX: Because it's a politics that's informed by the machinery of social and civil death.

BILL MOYERS: Death?

HENRY GIROUX: Death. It's a death machine. It's a death machine because in my estimation it does everything it can to kill any vestige of a robust democracy. It turns people into zombies, people who basically are so caught up with surviving that they have no-- they become like the walking dead, you know, they lose their sense of agency-- I mean they lose their homes, they lose their jobs.

And so this zombie metaphor actually operated at two levels. I mean, at one level it spoke to people who have no visions, who exercise a form of political leadership that extends the politics of what I call war and the machineries of death, whether those machineries are at home or abroad, whether they're about the death of civil liberties or they're about making up horrendous lies to actually invade a country like Iraq.

So this-- the zombie metaphor is a way to sort of suggest that democracy is losing its oxygen, you know, it's losing its vitality, that we have a politics that really is about the organization of the production of violence.

It's losing its soul. It's losing its spirit. It's losing its ability to speak to itself in ways that would span the human spirit and the human possibility for justice and equality.

BILL MOYERS: Because we don't think of zombies as having souls?

HENRY GIROUX: They don't have souls.

BILL MOYERS: Right. You--

HENRY GIROUX: They're driven by lust.

BILL MOYERS: By lust?

HENRY GIROUX: The lust for money, the lust for power.

BILL MOYERS: Well, that's, I guess, why you mix your metaphors. Because you talk about casino capitalists, zombie politics, which you say in the book shapes every aspect--

HENRY GIROUX: Every aspect.

BILL MOYERS: --of society .

HENRY GIROUX: Yeah, at the current moment. This is what--

BILL MOYERS: How so?

HENRY GIROUX: Well, first, let's begin with an assumption. This casino capitalism as we talk about it, right, one of the things that it does that hasn't been done before, it doesn't just believe it can control the economy. It believes that it can govern all of social life. That's different.

That means it has to have its tentacles into every aspect of everyday life. Everything from the way schools are run to the way prisons are outsourced to the way the financial services are run to the way in which people have access to health care, it's an all-encompassing, it seems to me, political, cultural, educational apparatus.

And it basically has nothing to do with expanding the meaning and the substance of democracy itself. What it has to do is expanding-- what it means to get--a quick return, what it means to take advantage of a kind of casino logic in which the only thing that drives you is to go to that slot machine and somehow get more, just pump the machine, put as much money in as you can into it and walk out a rich man. That's what it's about.

BILL MOYERS: You say that casino capitalist, zombie politics views competition as a form of social combat, celebrates war as an extension of politics and legitimates a ruthless social Darwinism.

HENRY GIROUX: Oh, I mean, it is truly ruthless. I mean, imagine yourself on a reality TV program called “The Survivor”, you and I, we're all that's left. The ideology that drives that program is only one of us is going to win. I don't have any respect for you. I mean, all I'm trying to do is beat you. I just want to be the one that's left. I want to win the big prize.

And it seems to me that what's unfortunate is that reality now mimics reality TV. It is reality TV in terms of the consensus that drives it, that the shared fears are more important than shared responsibilities, that the social contract is the pathology because it basically suggests helping people is a strength rather than a weakness.

It believes that social bonds not driven by market values are basically bonds that we should find despicable. But even worse, in this ethic, the market has colonized pleasure in such a way that violence in many ways seems to be the only way left that people can actually experience pleasure whether it's in the popular medium, whether it's in the way in which we militarize local police to become SWAT teams that actually will break up poker games now in full gear or give away surplus material, equipment to a place like Ohio State University, who got an armored tank.

I mean, I guess-- I'm wondering what does it mean when you're on a campus and you see an armored tank, you know, by the university police? I mean, this is-- everything is a war zone. You know, Senator Graham--when Lindsey Graham, he said-- in talking about the terrorist laws, you know these horrible laws that are being put into place in which Americans can be captured, they can be killed and, you know--the kill list all of this, he basically says, "Everybody's a potential terrorist."

I mean, so that what happens here is that this notion of fear and this fear around the notion of security that is simply about protecting yourself, not about social security, not about protecting the commons, not about protecting the environment, turns everybody into a potential enemy. I mean, we cannot mediate our relationships it seems any longer in this culture in ways in which we would suggest and adhere to the notion that justice is a matter of caring for the other, that compassion matters.

BILL MOYERS: So this is why you write that America’s no longer recognizable as a democracy?

HENRY GIROUX: No. Look, as the social state is crippled, as the social state is in some way robbed, hollowed out and robbed of its potential and its capacities, what takes its place? The punishing state takes its place.

You get this notion of incarceration, this, what we call the governing through crime complex where governance now has been ceded to corporations who largely are basically about benefiting the rich, the ultra-rich, the big corporations and allowing the state to exercise its power in enormously destructive and limited ways.

And those ways are about militarizing the culture, criminalizing social--a wide swathe of social behavior and keeping people in check. What does it mean when you turn on the television in the United States and you see young kids, peaceful protestors, lying down with their hands locked and you got a guy with, you know, spraying them with pepper spray as if there's something normal about that, as if that's all it takes, that's how we solve problems? I mean, I guess the question here is what is it in a culture that would allow the public to believe that with almost any problem that arises, force is the first way to address it.

I mean, one has to recognize that in that kind of logic, something has happened in which the state is no longer in the service of democracy.

BILL MOYERS: Well, George Monbiot, who writes for “The Guardian,” wrote just the other day, "It's business that really rules us." And he says, "So I don't blame people for giving up on politics … When a state-corporate nexus of power has bypassed democracy and made a mockery of the voting process, when an unreformed political funding system ensures that parties can be bought and sold, when politicians of the main … parties stand and watch as public services are divvied up by a grubby cabal of privateers, what is left of the system that inspires us to participate?"

HENRY GIROUX: I mean, the real question is why aren't we more outraged?

HENRY GIROUX: Why aren't we in the streets?

HENRY GIROUX: I mean, that's the central question for the American public. I mean, and I think that question has to address something fundamental and that is what we have, while we have an economic system that in fact has caused a crisis in democracy. What we haven't addressed is the underlying consensus that informs that crisis. What you have is basically a transgression against the very basic ideals of democracy. We have lost what it means to be connected to democracy.

And I think that's coupled with a cultural apparatus, a culture, an educative culture, a mode of politics in which people now have gone through this for so long that it's become normalized. I mean, it's hard to imagine life beyond capitalism. You know, it's easier to imagine the death of the planet than it is to imagine the death of capitalism. I mean-- and so it seems to me--

BILL MOYERS: Well, don't you think people want to be capitalist? Don't you think people want capitalism? They want money?

HENRY GIROUX: I'm not sure if they want those things. I mean, I think when you--when you read all the surveys about what's important to people's lives, Bill, actually the things that they focus on are not about, you know, "I want to be about the Kardashian sisters," God forbid, right?

I mean, I think that what--they the same way we want--we need a decent education for our kids, we want, you know, real health care. I mean, we want the sense of equality in the country. We want to be able to control the political process so that we're not simply nameless and invisible and disposable.

I mean, they basically--they want women to be able to have the right to have some control over their own reproductive rights. I mean, they're talking about gay rights being a legitimate pursuit of justice.

And I think that what is missing from all of this are the basic, are those alternative public spheres, those cultural formations, what I call a formative culture that can bring people together and give those ideas, embody them in both a sense of hope, of vision and the organizations and strategies that would be necessary at the very least to start a third party, at the very least. I mean, to start a party that is not part of this establishment, to reconstruct a sense of where politics can go.

BILL MOYERS: Well, you write that the liberal center has failed us and for all of its discourse of helping the poor, of addressing inequality, it always ends up on the side of bankers and finance capital, right.

HENRY GIROUX: Are you talking about Obama?

BILL MOYERS: I'm talking about what you say.

HENRY GIROUX: I know, I know. I'm--

BILL MOYERS: But you do, I must be fair and say that you go on in that same chapter of one of these books to say isn't it time we forget trying to pressure Obama to do the right thing?

HENRY GIROUX: Obama to me is symptomatic to me of the liberal center. But the issue is much greater than him. I mean, the issue is in a system that is entirely broken. It's broken.

Elections are bought by big money. The political process is not in the hands of the people. It's in the hands of very few people. And it seems to me we have to ask ourselves what kind of formative culture needs to be put in place in which education becomes central to politics, in which politics can be used to help people to be able to see things differently, to get beyond this system that is so closed, so powerfully normalized.

I mean, the right since the 1970s has created a massive cultural apparatus, a slew of anti-public intellectuals. They've invaded the universities with think tanks. They have foundations. They have all kinds of money. And you know, it's interesting, the war they wage is a war on the mind.

The war on what it means to be able to dissent, the war on the possibility of alternative visions. And the left really has-- and progressives and liberals, we have nothing like that. I mean, we always seem to believe that all you have to do is tell the truth.

BILL MOYERS: You shall know the truth, the truth will set you free.

HENRY GIROUX: Yeah, and the truth will set you free. But I'm sorry, it doesn't work that way.

BILL MOYERS: Which brings me to the book you're now finishing and will be published next spring. You call it “The Violence of Organized Forgetting.” What are we forgetting?

HENRY GIROUX: We're forgetting the past. We're forgetting all those struggles that in fact offered a different story about the United States.

BILL MOYERS: How is it organized, this forgetting?

HENRY GIROUX: It's organized because it's systemic. It's organized because you have people controlling schools who are deleting those histories and making sure that they don't appear. In Tucson, Arizona they banished ethnic studies from the curriculum. This is the dis-imagination machine. That's the hardcore element.

BILL MOYERS: The suffocation of imagination?

HENRY GIROUX: The suffocation of imagination. And we kill the imagination by suggesting that the only kind of rationality that matters, the only kind of learning that matters is utterly instrumental, pragmatist.

So what we do is we collapse education into training, and we end up suggesting that not knowing much is somehow a virtue. And I'll and I think what's so disturbing about this is not only do you see it in the popular culture with the lowest common denominator now drives that culture, but you also see it coming from politicians who actually say things that suggest something about the policies they'd like to implement.

I mean, I know Rick Santorum is not-- is kind of a, you know, an obvious figure. But when he stands up in front of a body of Republicans and he says, the last thing we need in the Republican party are intellectuals. And I think it's kind of a template for the sort of idiocy that increasingly now dominates our culture.

BILL MOYERS: What is an intellectual, by the way? The atmosphere has been so poisoned, as you know, by what you've been describing, that many people bridle when they hear the term intellectual pursuit.

HENRY GIROUX: I mean, yeah, I think intellectuals are-- there are two ways we can describe intellectuals. In the most general sense, we can say, "Intellectuals are people who take pride in ideas. They work with ideas." I mean, they believe that ideas matter. They believe that there's no such thing as common sense, good sense or bad sense, but reflective sense.

That ideas offer the framework for gives us agency, what allows us to read the world critically, what allows us to be literate. What allows us to be civic literacy may be in some ways the high point of what it means to be an intellectual--

BILL MOYERS: Because?

HENRY GIROUX: Because it suggests that how we learn what we learn and what we do with the knowledge that we have is not just for ourselves. It's for the way in which we can expand and deepen the very processes of democracy in general, and address those problems and anti-democratic forces that work against it. Now some people make a living as a result of being intellectuals. But there are people who are intellectuals who don't function in that capacity. They're truck drivers. They're workers.

I grew up in a working class neighborhood. The smartest people I have ever met were in that neighborhood. We read books. We went to the library together. We drank on Friday nights. We talked about Gramsci. We drove to Boston--

BILL MOYERS: Gramsci being the Italian philosopher.

HENRY GIROUX: The Italian philosopher. I mean--

BILL MOYERS: The pessimism of the--

HENRY GIROUX: Of the intellect, and optimism of the will.

BILL MOYERS: Right.

HENRY GIROUX: Right? I mean, we--

BILL MOYERS: You see the world as it is, but then you act as if you can change the world.

HENRY GIROUX: Exactly. I mean, we tried to find ways to both enliven the neighborhoods we lived in. But at the same time, we knew that that wasn't enough. That one-- that there was a world beyond our neighborhood, and that world had all kinds of things for us to learn. And we were excited about that. I mean, we drank, danced and talked. That's what we did.

BILL MOYERS: And I assume there were some other more private activities.

HENRY GIROUX: And there was more private activity.

BILL MOYERS: You know, you are a buoyant man. And yet you describe what you call a shift away from the hope that accompanies the living, to a politics of cynicism and despair.

HENRY GIROUX: Yeah.

BILL MOYERS: What leads you to this?

HENRY GIROUX: What leads me to this is something that we mentioned earlier, and that is when you see policies being enacted today that are so cruel and so savage, wiping out a generation of young people, trying to eliminate public schools, eliminating health care, putting endless percentage of black and brown people in jail, destroying the environment and there's no public outrage.

There aren't people in the streets. You know, you have to ask yourself, "Has this market mentality, is it so powerful and that it's become so normalized, so taken for granted that the imagination, the collective imagination has been so stunted that it becomes difficult to challenge it anymore?" And I think that leads me to despair somewhat. But I've always felt that in the face of the worst tyrannies, people resist.

They're resisting now all over the world. And it seems to me history is open. I believe history is open. I don't believe that we have reached the finality of a system that is so destructive that all we have to do is look at the clock and say, "One minute left." I don't believe in those kinds of metaphors.

We have to acknowledge the realities that bear down on us, but it seems to me that if we really want to live in a world and be alive with compassion and justice, then we need educated hope. We need a hope that recognizes the problems and doesn't romanticize them, and also recognizes the need for vision, for social organizations, for strategies. We need institutions that provide the formative culture that give voice to those visions and those ideas.

BILL MOYERS: You've talked elsewhere or written elsewhere about the need for a militant, far-reaching, social movement to challenge the false claims that equate democracy and capitalism. Now, what do you mean "Militant and Far Reaching Social Movement?"

HENRY GIROUX: I mean, what we do know, we know this. We know that there are people working in local communities all over the United States around particular kinds of issues, whether it be gay rights, whether it be the environment, whether it be, you know the Occupy movement, helping people with Hurricane Sandy. We have a lot of fragmented movements.

And I think we probably have a lot more than we realize, because the press gives them no visibility, as you know. So, we don't really have a sense of the degree to which these-- how pronounced these really are. I think the real issue here is, you know, what would it mean to begin to do at least two things?

To say the very least, one is to develop cultural apparatuses that can offer a new vocabulary for people, where questions of freedom and justice and the problems that we're facing can be analyzed in ways that reach mass audiences in accessible language. We have to build a formative culture. We have to do that. Secondly, we've got to overcome the fractured nature of these movements. I mean the thing that plagues me about progressives in the left and liberals is they are all sort of ensconced in these fragmented movements that seem to suggest those movements constitute the totality of the system of oppression that we are facing. And they don’t.

Look, we have technologies in place now in which students all over the world are beginning to communicate with each other because they're realizing that the punishing logic of austerity has a certain kind of semblance that a certain normality that, in common ground, that is affecting students in Greece, students in Spain, students in France.

BILL MOYERS: And in this country?

HENRY GIROUX: And in this country. And it seems to me that while I may be too old to in any way begin to participate in this, I really believe that young people have recognized that they've been written out of the discourse of democracy. That they're in the grip of something so oppressive it will take away their future, their hopes, their possibilities and their sense of the future will be one that is less than what their parents had imagined.

And there's no going back. I mean, this has to be addressed. And it'll take time. They'll build the organizations. They'll get-- they'll work with the new technologies. And hopefully they'll have our generation to be able to assist in that, but it's not going to happen tomorrow. And it's not going to happen in a year. It's going to as you have to plant seeds. You have to believe that seeds matter.

But you need a different vocabulary and a different understanding of politics. Look, the right has one thing going for it that nobody wants to talk about. Power is global. And politics is local. They float. They have no allegiance to anyone. They don't care about the social contract, because if workers in the United States don't want to compromise, they'll get them in Mexico. So the notion of political concessions has died for this class. They don't care about it anymore. There are no political concessions.

BILL MOYERS: The financial class.

HENRY GIROUX: The financial class.

BILL MOYERS: The one percent.

HENRY GIROUX: The one percent. That's why they're so savage. They're so savage because there's nothing to give up. They don't have to compromise. The power is so arrogant, so over the top, so unlike anything we have seen in terms of its anti-democratic practices, policies, modes of governance and ideology.

That at some point, you know they feel they don't have to legitimate this anymore. I mean, it's because the contradictions are becoming so great, that I think all of a sudden a lot of young people are recognizing this language, this whole language, doesn't work. The language of liberalism doesn't work anymore.

No, let's just reform the system. Let's work within it. Let's just run people for office. My argument would be, you have one foot in and you have one foot out. I'm not willing to give up the school board. I'm not willing to give up all forms of electoral politics. But it seems to me at the local level we can do some of that thing, that people can get elected. They can make moderate changes.

But the real changes are not going to come there. The real changes are going to come in creating movements that are longstanding, that are organized, that basically take questions of governance and policy seriously and begin to spread out and become international. That is going to have to happen.

BILL MOYERS: But here's the contradiction I hear in what you're saying. That if you write about a turning toward despair and cynicism in politics. Can you get movements out of despair and cynicism? Can you get people who will take on the system when they have been told that the system is so powerful and so overwhelming that they've lost their, as you call it, moral and political agency?

HENRY GIROUX: Well let me put it this way. What we often find is we often find people who take for granted the systems that they live in. They take for granted the savagery-- the sort of things that you talked about. And it produces two kinds of rage. It produces an inner rage in which people blame themselves.

It’s so disturbing to me to see working class, middle class people blaming themselves when these bankers have actually caused the crisis. That's the first issue.

Then you have another expression of that rage, and that rage blames blacks. It blames immigrants. It blames young people. It says, "They're not--" it says about youth, it says, "Youth is not in trouble. They're the problem."

And so, all of a sudden that rage gets displaced. The question is not what do we-- the question is not just where's the outrage. The question is how do you mobilize the rage in ways in which it's not self-defeating, and in ways in which it doesn't basically scape-- be used to scapegoat other people. That's an educational issue. That should be at the center of any politics that matters.

BILL MOYERS: One of your intellectual mentors, the philosopher Ernst Bloch, said, "We must believe in the principle of hope." And you've written often about the language of hope. What does that mean, the principle of hope and the language of hope, and why are they important as you see it in creating this new paradigm, metaphor that you talk about?

HENRY GIROUX: Yeah, I mean, hope to me is a metaphor that speaks to the power of the imagination. I don't believe that anyone should be involved in politics in a progressive way if they can't understand that to act otherwise, you have to imagine otherwise.

What hope is predicated on is the assumption that life can be different than it is now. But to be different than it is now, rather than romanticizing hope and turning it into something Disney-like, right, it really has to involve the hard work of A) recognizing the structures of domination that we have to face, B) organizing collectively and somehow to change those, and C) believing it can be done, that it's worth the struggle.

That if the struggles are not believed in, if people don't have the faith to engage in these struggles, and that's the issue. I mean, that working class neighborhood that I talked to you about in the beginning of the program, I mean, it just resonates with such a sense of joy for me, the sense of solidarity, sociality.

And I think all the institutions that are being constructed under this market tyranny, this casino capitals is just the opposite. It's like that image of all these people at the bus stop, right. And they're all-- they're together, but they're alone. They're alone.

BILL MOYERS: If we have zombied politics, if we have as you say, metaphorically, zombies in the high levels of government, zombies in banks and financial centers and zombies in the military, can't you have a zombie population? I mean, you say the stories that are being told through the commercial corporate entertainment media are all the more powerful because they seem to defy the public's desire for rigorous accountability, critical interrogation and openness.

Now if that's what the public wants, why isn't the market providing them? Isn't that what the market's supposed to do? Provide what people want?

HENRY GIROUX: The market doesn't want that at all. I mean, the market wants the people, the apostles of this market logic, I mean, they actually the first rule of the market is make sure you have power that’s unaccountable. That's what they want.

And I think that, I mean, what we see for the first time in history is a war on the ability to produce meanings that hold power accountable. A war on the possibility of an education that enables people to think critically, a war on cultural apparatuses that entertain by simply engaging in this spectacle of violence and not producing programs that really are controversial, that make people think, that make people alive through the possibilities of, you know, the imagination itself.

I mean, my argument is the formative culture that produces those kinds of intellectual and creative and imaginative abilities has been under assault since the 1980s in a very systemic way. So that the formative culture that takes its place is a business culture. It's a culture run by accountants, not by visionaries. It's a culture run by the financial services. It's a culture run by people who believe that data is more important than knowledge.

BILL MOYERS: You paint a very grim picture of the state of democracy, and yet you don't seem contaminated by cynicism yourself.

HENRY GIROUX: No, I'm not.

BILL MOYERS: How do we understand that?

HENRY GIROUX: Because I refuse to become a part of it.

Become I refuse to become complicitous. I refuse to say--I refuse to be alive and to watch institutions being handed over to right wing zealots. I refuse to be alive and watch the planet be destroyed.

I mean, when you mentioned-- you talk about the collective imagination, you know, I mean that imagination emerges when people find strength in collective organizations, when they find strength in each other.

Believing that we can work together to produce commons in which we can share that raises everybody up and not just some people, that contributes to the world in a way that-- and I really don't mean to be romanticizing here, but a world that is we recognize is never just enough. Justice is never done. It's an endless struggle. And that there's joy in that struggle, because there's a sense of solidarity that brings us together around the most basic, most elemental and the most important of democratic values.

BILL MOYERS: Henry Giroux, thank you, very much for talking to me.

HENRY GIROUX: Thank you, Bill.

BILL MOYERS: Henry Giroux and I spoke of how zombies are an appropriate metaphor for a society whose political, media, and financial institutions are without a soul. They walk a world in which the lust for power and wealth corrupts absolutely and sucks away real life.

We know a lot about zombies here at Moyers & Company. Not that there are any on our production team -- that we know of -- but because one of our editors, our friend and colleague Rob Kuhns, has made a mesmerizing documentary about the creation of George A. Romero’s movie classic “Night of the Living Dead.” It's the granddaddy of all the zombie movies and TV shows so popular today.

What’s striking about the documentary, entitled “Birth of the Living Dead,” is how Rob Kuhns places the 1968 movie in its particular place and time, when civil unrest and violence gave the nation nightmares, and zombies were a metaphor for an American public deeply troubled and distressed.

GALE ANNE HURD in Birth of the Living Dead: In the time that “Night of the Living Dead” came out, you don't feel safe in your home anymore. There are things that are overtaking us over which we have no control and there's that fear and I think that the zombie apocalypse takes inspiration from that fear and it's why audiences connect with it in a way that is not quite obvious on the surface but is really in the subtext.

MARK HARRIS in Birth of the Living Dead: It’s an unsettling element of the movie that the people who seem most likely to be able to thwart this incursion of the living dead, it looked like a lynch mob. The resonance for people who would have spent the last 10 years watching, you know, white southerners vow to prevent the desegregation of schools, for instance, it would’ve been really pretty clear.

And dogs in Night of the Living Dead there’s a very specific cultural resonance. You know, black men being chased by dogs is one of the ugliest images of the civil rights movement, and was very much part of the national visual vocabulary of any moviegoer other than a very little kid who would have gone to see this movie. And again it connects to this idea that it’s not as simple as the good guys versus the undead. There are the good guys, the not good guys and the living dead.

LARRY FESSENDEN in Birth of the Living Dead: They seem to be getting a certain amount of pleasure out of putting down these monsters and being able to go out and hunt people and lynch people.

SAM POLLARD in Birth of the Living Dead: They seemed really real to me. They felt real, those guys. I wasn't sure they were actors.

MARK HARRIS in Birth of the Living Dead: It's a really interesting, squirmy, political aspect of the movie that's intentionally unsettling. I think Romero wants you to feel uncomfortable with the fact that the so-called victors at the end of the movie are exactly the kind of people you're inclined not to root for.

BILL MOYERS: You can find out how to see the entire Birth of the Living Dead, and learn more about it, at our website, BillMoyers.com.

We end as we began this week, with a metaphor; in this case, the phoenix—that great bird of ancient Greek mythology—reborn and rising from its own ashes, a bright and colorful symbol of renewal. That’s how the Nobel Prize-winning writer Doris Lessing described the storyteller she believed is deep inside each one of us. “It is the storyteller, the dream-maker, the myth-maker that is our phoenix,” she said, “that represents us at our best, and at our most creative.” Doris Lessing died last Sunday, age 94. “There is no doubt fiction makes a better job of the truth,” she wrote, and so she proved in her master work, “The Golden Notebook,” and the many other novels written throughout a literary career that spanned six decades. She was an iconoclast. She didn’t suffer fools; she said what she meant and meant what she said, with no holds barred and no subject off limits. I spoke with her ten years ago as she described growing up in Africa and her one great love, the written word.

BILL MOYERS in NOW: Do you never stop writing?

DORIS LESSING in NOW: No. I'm compulsive. And I deeply think that it has to be something very neurotic. And I'm not joking. It has to be. Because if I've finished a book, and this wonderful release, which I'm now feeling. It's off, it's in a parcel, it's gone to a publisher. Bliss and happiness. I don't have to do anything. Nothing. I can just sit around. But, suddenly it starts, you see. This terrible feeling that I am just wasting my life, I'm useless, I'm no good. Now, it's a fact that if I spend a day busy as a little kitten, racing around. I do this, I do that. But I haven't written, so it's a wasted day, and I'm no good. How do you account for that nonsense?

BILL MOYERS in NOW: Was there what we call an ah-ha moment, a eureka moment, when you knew that you were going to spend your life writing, rather successfully or not. Was there such a moment?

DORIS LESSING in NOW: Well, I was writing all my childhood. And I wrote two novels when I was 17, which were terrible. And I'm not sorry I threw them out. So, I wrote. I had to write. You know, the thing was, I had no education.

BILL MOYERS in NOW: You left school at age 14, right?

DORIS LESSING in NOW: Fourteen. Yeah. And I wasn't trained for anything. BILL MOYERS in NOW: What was there in a young girl, you know, 12, 13, 14 or 15, that said "I want to write?"

DORIS LESSING in NOW: I was, at that time, being what we now called an au pair. I was a nursemaid. And it was pretty boring. So I thought, "Well, let's try and write a novel." I wrote two. I went back to the farm, and wrote two novels.

BILL MOYERS in NOW: In Africa.

DORIS LESSING in NOW: This was in Africa.

BILL MOYERS in NOW: Where did that idea come from? Had you read a lot? Had somebody--

DORIS LESSING in NOW: I never stopped reading. You know. I read and read and read. And it was what saved me. And educated me. So, writing a novel seemed to be a way out.

BILL MOYERS in NOW: As you talk I think of the traumatic century you lived through, all those events. You were born right at the end of the first Great War. You lived through the Great Depression. You lived through the Second World War. You lived through the nuclear era, the Cold War, genocide, the collapse of the British Empire. I mean, does anything remain of the world you knew when you were young?

DORIS LESSING in NOW: Nothing. Nothing at all. The World War I-- I'm a child of World War I. And I really know about the children of war. Because both my parents were both badly damaged by the war. My father, physically, and both, mentally and emotionally. So, I know exactly what it's like to be brought up in an atmosphere of a continual harping on the war.

BILL MOYERS in NOW: He couldn’t stop talking about it? Your father couldn't stop talking about it?

DORIS LESSING in NOW: No. He was obsessed with it. It was terrible, you know? These men were — had been so traumatized. Though, of course, outwardly, they were very civilized and good and kind and everything. But in actual fact, they were war victims.

BILL MOYERS in NOW: We keep having wars despite the fact that great novelists tell us the truth about wars.

DORIS LESSING in NOW: Well, we don't have much effect, do we? Do you know when I first recognized that horrible truth, I was standing in Southern Rhodesia. I was very young, and watching the night's bag of prisoners, the Africans who were being caught out without passes. Hand cuffed, walking down the street. With the jailers, white, in front and back. And I looked at that and I thought, “Right, well, this is described in Tolstoy and Dostoyevsky and all the others. So what have they achieved?” is what I thought. Didn't stop me writing novels, though. I think we might have a limited effect on a small number of people. I hope a good one.

BILL MOYERS in NOW: But you keep writing.

DORIS LESSING in NOW: Yes I do. I have to.

BILL MOYERS: You can see my entire conversation with Doris Lessing at our website, BillMoyers.com. I’ll see you there and I’ll see you here, next time.

M&C | Full Show: Zombie Politics and Casino Capitalism | Nov 22, 2013 | vm:网址:网址:PR

Friday, November 22, 2013

V for Vendetta

Remember, remember
The 5th of November


The gunpowder treason and plot

I know of no reason
Why the gunpowder treason


Should ever be forgot

But what of the man?

I know his name was Guy Fawkes...

...and I know in 1605, he attempted
to blow up the Houses of Parliament.


But who was he really?

What was he like?

We are told to remember the idea
and not the man.


Because a man can fail.

He can be caught,
he can be killed and forgotten.


But 400 years later...

...an idea can still change the world.

I have witnessed firsthand
the power of ideas.


I've seen people kill
in the name of them...


...and die defending them.

But you cannot kiss an idea...

...cannot touch it or hold it.

Ideas do not bleed.
They do not feel pain.


They do not love.

And it is not an idea that I miss.

It is a man.

A man that made me remember
the 5th of November.


A man that I will never forget.

26
00:03:17,463 --> 00:03:22,901
So I read that the former United States
is so desperate for medical supplies...

27
00:03:23,068 --> 00:03:28,096
...that they have allegedly sent several
containers filled with wheat and tobacco.

28
00:03:28,273 --> 00:03:31,709
A gesture, they said, of goodwill.

29
00:03:32,077 --> 00:03:33,738
You wanna know what I think?

30
00:03:34,747 --> 00:03:37,545
Well, you're listening to my show,
so I will assume you do.

31
00:03:37,716 --> 00:03:41,083
It's high time we let the colonies know
what we really think of them.

32
00:03:41,253 --> 00:03:45,519
I think it's payback time for a little tea party
they threw for us a few hundred years ago.

33
00:03:45,691 --> 00:03:48,888
I say we go down to those docks tonight
and dump that crap...

34
00:03:49,061 --> 00:03:52,360
...where everything from
the Ulcered Sphincter of Ass-erica belongs!

35
00:03:52,531 --> 00:03:54,931
Who's with me? Who's bloody with me?!

36
00:03:56,235 --> 00:03:57,702
Did you like that?

37
00:03:57,870 --> 00:04:02,034
U.S.A., Ulcered Sphincter of Ass-erica.
I mean, what else can you say?

38
00:04:02,207 --> 00:04:05,768
Here was a country that had everything,
absolutely everything...

39
00:04:05,944 --> 00:04:08,276
...and now, 20 years later, is what?

40
00:04:08,447 --> 00:04:12,110
The world's biggest leper colony. Why?

41
00:04:13,051 --> 00:04:14,382
Godlessness.

42
00:04:14,553 --> 00:04:16,145
Let me say that again.

43
00:04:16,321 --> 00:04:17,618
Godlessness.

44
00:04:17,923 --> 00:04:21,324
It wasn't the war they started.
It wasn't the plague they created.

45
00:04:21,760 --> 00:04:23,751
It was Judgment.

46
00:04:23,929 --> 00:04:28,059
No one escapes their past.
No one escapes Judgment.

47
00:04:29,601 --> 00:04:31,466
You think he's not up there?

48
00:04:31,637 --> 00:04:34,128
You think he's not watching over
this country?

49
00:04:34,306 --> 00:04:38,504
How else can you explain it?
He tested us, but we came through.

50
00:04:38,677 --> 00:04:40,110
We did what we had to do.

51
00:04:40,446 --> 00:04:44,348
Islington. Enfield.
I was there. I saw it all.

52
00:04:44,516 --> 00:04:46,916
Immigrants, Muslims...

53
00:04:47,252 --> 00:04:49,812
...homosexuals, terrorists.

54
00:04:49,988 --> 00:04:53,924
Disease-ridden degenerates.
They had to go.

55
00:04:54,092 --> 00:04:57,255
Strength through unity.
Unity through faith.

56
00:04:57,429 --> 00:05:01,388
I am a God-fearing Englishman,
and I'm goddamn proud of it!

57
00:05:01,567 --> 00:05:03,933
That's quite enough of that,
thank you very much.

58
00:05:05,704 --> 00:05:07,331
Oh, shit.

59
00:05:09,641 --> 00:05:13,236
A yellow-coded curfew is now in effect.

60
00:05:13,412 --> 00:05:16,711
Any unauthorized personnel
will be subject to arrest.

61
00:05:16,882 --> 00:05:19,407
This is for your protection.

62
00:05:19,585 --> 00:05:22,850
A yellow-coded curfew is now in effect.

63
00:05:23,021 --> 00:05:26,479
Any unauthorized personnel
will be subject to arrest.

64
00:05:26,658 --> 00:05:28,091
This is for your protection.

65
00:05:30,395 --> 00:05:32,192
- Excuse me.
- Sorry, I didn't see you...

66
00:05:32,364 --> 00:05:34,025
- In a hurry, are we?
- I was just...

67
00:05:34,199 --> 00:05:36,895
- It's past curfew, you know.
- My uncle, he's very sick.

68
00:05:37,069 --> 00:05:40,664
- Sick uncle? What you think on that, Willy?
- It's a load of bollocks.

69
00:05:40,839 --> 00:05:43,740
I made a mistake. I shouldn't be out
after curfew. I know that.

70
00:05:43,909 --> 00:05:47,276
Maybe you could look after us
before getting back to your uncle.

71
00:05:47,446 --> 00:05:49,573
See, my friend, he's kind of sick.
Ain't you?

72
00:05:49,748 --> 00:05:52,581
Real sick. Bad case of the blues.
You can feel them.

73
00:05:52,751 --> 00:05:56,448
- Don't touch me!
- Look, Willy, kitty's got claws.

74
00:05:56,622 --> 00:05:59,386
- She just threatened us.
- That she did, that she did.

75
00:05:59,558 --> 00:06:01,150
You know what that means,
don't you?

76
00:06:01,326 --> 00:06:04,056
It means that we exercise
our own judicial discretion.

77
00:06:04,463 --> 00:06:06,090
And you get to swallow it.

78
00:06:06,265 --> 00:06:08,392
- You're Fingermen.
- She's getting the picture.

79
00:06:08,567 --> 00:06:10,296
No, please, I didn't know. I'm sorry.

80
00:06:10,469 --> 00:06:12,460
Not yet you're not. But you will be.

81
00:06:12,638 --> 00:06:16,165
By sunup, if you're not the sorriest
piece of ass in all of London...

82
00:06:16,675 --> 00:06:18,734
...then you'll certainly be the sorest.

83
00:06:22,481 --> 00:06:24,449
Oh, God, no. Please don't do this.

84
00:06:24,616 --> 00:06:27,141
I'll go home.
I won't do it again, I swear! Please!

85
00:06:27,319 --> 00:06:30,550
- What do you think, lads?
- Spare the rod, spoil the child.

86
00:06:30,722 --> 00:06:32,314
Help me! Someone help!

87
00:06:32,491 --> 00:06:35,824
The multiplying villainies of nature
do swarm upon him.

88
00:06:37,129 --> 00:06:39,029
- What the hell?!
- Bugger off!

89
00:06:39,197 --> 00:06:41,256
Disdaining fortune,
with his brandish'd steel...

90
00:06:41,433 --> 00:06:43,298
...which smoked with bloody execution.

91
00:06:43,468 --> 00:06:44,958
We're Fingermen, pal.

92
00:07:20,305 --> 00:07:21,863
Jesus Christ! Mercy!

93
00:07:22,040 --> 00:07:24,201
We are oft to blame in this...
'Tis too much proved.

94
00:07:24,376 --> 00:07:28,210
- That with devotion's visage and pious action
we do sugar o'er the devil himself.

95
00:07:28,380 --> 00:07:31,042
- What's that mean?
- Spare the rod.

96
00:07:36,989 --> 00:07:38,718
I can assure you, I mean you no harm.

97
00:07:38,890 --> 00:07:40,551
- Who are you?
- Who?

98
00:07:40,726 --> 00:07:43,160
Who is but the form
following the function of what...

99
00:07:43,328 --> 00:07:45,159
...and what I am is a man in a mask.

100
00:07:45,330 --> 00:07:47,389
- Oh, I can see that.
- Of course you can.

101
00:07:47,566 --> 00:07:49,693
I'm not questioning your powers
of observation.

102
00:07:49,868 --> 00:07:53,964
I'm merely remarking upon the paradox
of asking a masked man who he is.

103
00:07:55,574 --> 00:07:58,771
- Right.
- But on this most auspicious of nights...

104
00:07:58,944 --> 00:08:02,243
...permit me then, in lieu of
the more commonplace sobriquet...

105
00:08:02,414 --> 00:08:05,542
...to suggest the character
of this dramatis persona.

106
00:08:06,752 --> 00:08:08,310
Voilà!

107
00:08:08,487 --> 00:08:10,478
In view, a humble vaudevillian veteran...

108
00:08:10,656 --> 00:08:14,820
...cast vicariously as both victim and villain
by the vicissitudes of fate.

109
00:08:14,993 --> 00:08:17,689
This visage, no mere veneer of vanity...

110
00:08:17,863 --> 00:08:21,355
...is a vestige of the vox populi,
now vacant, vanished.

111
00:08:21,533 --> 00:08:25,902
However, this valorous visitation
of a bygone vexation stands vivified...

112
00:08:26,071 --> 00:08:29,802
...and has vowed to vanquish these venal
and virulent vermin vanguarding vice...

113
00:08:29,975 --> 00:08:33,775
...and vouchsafing the violently vicious
and voracious violation of volition.

114
00:08:39,918 --> 00:08:43,046
The only verdict is vengeance,
a vendetta...

115
00:08:43,221 --> 00:08:46,918
...held as a votive not in vain,
for the value and veracity of such...

116
00:08:47,092 --> 00:08:50,391
...shall one day vindicate the vigilant
and the virtuous.

117
00:08:53,665 --> 00:08:56,896
Verily, this vichyssoise of verbiage
veers most verbose.

118
00:08:57,069 --> 00:09:00,004
So let me simply add that it's
my very good honor to meet you...

119
00:09:00,172 --> 00:09:01,867
...and you may call me V.

120
00:09:04,142 --> 00:09:06,133
Are you, like, a crazy person?

121
00:09:06,311 --> 00:09:08,336
I am quite sure they will say so.

122
00:09:08,513 --> 00:09:10,481
But to whom, might I ask, am I speaking?

123
00:09:12,317 --> 00:09:14,512
- I'm Evey.
- Evey?

124
00:09:14,686 --> 00:09:17,052
E-vey. Of course you are.

125
00:09:17,589 --> 00:09:19,921
- What does that mean?
- It means that I, like God...

126
00:09:20,092 --> 00:09:23,323
...do not play with dice
and do not believe in coincidence.

127
00:09:23,495 --> 00:09:25,326
Are you hurt?

128
00:09:25,497 --> 00:09:27,158
No, I'm fine.

129
00:09:27,966 --> 00:09:31,026
- Thanks to you.
- Oh, I merely played my part.

130
00:09:31,203 --> 00:09:34,900
- But tell me, do you enjoy music, Evey?
- I suppose.

131
00:09:35,073 --> 00:09:37,098
You see, I'm a musician of sorts...

132
00:09:37,275 --> 00:09:39,675
...and on my way to give
a very special performance.

133
00:09:39,845 --> 00:09:41,403
What kind of musician?

134
00:09:41,580 --> 00:09:43,445
Percussion instruments
are my speciality.

135
00:09:43,615 --> 00:09:46,948
But tonight I intend to call upon
the entire orchestra for this event...

136
00:09:47,119 --> 00:09:49,144
...and would be honored
if you could join me.

137
00:09:49,321 --> 00:09:51,448
I don't think so.
I should be getting home.

138
00:09:51,623 --> 00:09:54,183
I promise you, it'll be like
nothing you've ever seen.

139
00:09:54,359 --> 00:09:57,123
And afterwards,
you'll return home safely.

140
00:09:59,498 --> 00:10:00,590
All right.

141
00:10:02,601 --> 00:10:03,966
It's beautiful up here.

142
00:10:04,469 --> 00:10:08,530
A more perfect stage
could not be asked for.

143
00:10:08,707 --> 00:10:10,197
I don't see any instruments.

144
00:10:10,375 --> 00:10:13,276
Your powers of observation
continue to serve you well.

145
00:10:14,012 --> 00:10:18,676
But wait. It is to Madame Justice
that I dedicate this concerto...

146
00:10:18,850 --> 00:10:22,149
...in honor of the holiday she seems
to have taken from these parts...

147
00:10:22,320 --> 00:10:26,347
...and in recognition of the imposter
that stands in her stead.

148
00:10:27,225 --> 00:10:29,750
Tell me, do you know
what day it is, Evey?

149
00:10:31,096 --> 00:10:34,293
- November the 4th?
- Not anymore.

150
00:10:40,172 --> 00:10:43,733
Remember, remember
The 5th of November

151
00:10:43,909 --> 00:10:46,969
The gunpowder treason and plot

152
00:10:47,145 --> 00:10:50,114
I know of no reason
Why the gunpowder treason

153
00:10:50,282 --> 00:10:52,807
Should ever be forgot

154
00:10:56,688 --> 00:10:59,521
First, the overture.

155
00:11:00,492 --> 00:11:02,585
Yes.

156
00:11:03,361 --> 00:11:05,022
Yes, the strings.

157
00:11:06,932 --> 00:11:08,661
Listen carefully, can you hear it?

158
00:11:09,868 --> 00:11:11,927
Now the brass.

159
00:11:12,103 --> 00:11:13,832
I can hear it!

160
00:11:19,778 --> 00:11:22,906
Look outside, Mommy!
They're playing music!

161
00:11:27,586 --> 00:11:29,747
- How do you do that?
- Wait.

162
00:11:29,921 --> 00:11:31,855
Here comes the crescendo!

163
00:11:39,598 --> 00:11:41,930
How beautiful, is it not?

164
00:11:53,511 --> 00:11:57,777
Gentlemen, you have had four hours.
You had better have results. Mr. Creedy.

165
00:11:59,150 --> 00:12:00,879
The Bailey area is quarantined.

166
00:12:01,052 --> 00:12:03,282
All significant witnesses
have been detained.

167
00:12:03,455 --> 00:12:04,683
Good. Mr. Etheridge?

168
00:12:04,856 --> 00:12:08,883
A recording device was found wired into
the central emergency-broadcast system.

169
00:12:09,060 --> 00:12:11,824
The DCD was Tchaikovsky's
1812 Overture.

170
00:12:11,997 --> 00:12:14,431
Add it to the blacklist.
I never want to hear that again.

171
00:12:14,599 --> 00:12:15,827
Yes, sir.

172
00:12:16,001 --> 00:12:19,732
We also doubled our random sweeps
and are monitoring phone surveillance...

173
00:12:19,905 --> 00:12:23,466
...indicating a high percentage of
conversation concerned with the explosion.

174
00:12:23,642 --> 00:12:25,610
Mr. Dascomb,
what are we doing about that?

175
00:12:25,777 --> 00:12:28,177
We're calling it an emergency demolition.

176
00:12:28,346 --> 00:12:31,372
We have spin coverage on the network
and throughout the InterLink.

177
00:12:31,549 --> 00:12:35,747
Several experts have been lined up to testify
against the Bailey's structural integrity.

178
00:12:35,921 --> 00:12:38,890
I want Prothero to speak on
the dangers of these old buildings...

179
00:12:39,057 --> 00:12:42,515
...and how we must avoid clinging
to the edifice of a decadent past.

180
00:12:42,694 --> 00:12:46,357
He should conclude that the New Bailey
will become the symbol of our time...

181
00:12:46,531 --> 00:12:49,659
...and the future
that our conviction has rewarded us.

182
00:12:49,834 --> 00:12:51,062
Mr. Heyer.

183
00:12:51,236 --> 00:12:54,433
Our surveillance cameras captured
several images of the terrorist...

184
00:12:54,606 --> 00:12:57,973
...though the mask obviously makes
retinal identification impossible.

185
00:12:58,143 --> 00:13:03,308
We also managed to get a picture of the girl
that Creedy's men were detaining.

186
00:13:03,481 --> 00:13:05,779
- Who is she, Mr. Finch?
- Not sure yet, sir.

187
00:13:05,951 --> 00:13:08,476
- But we're working on several leads.
- Anything else?

188
00:13:08,687 --> 00:13:10,450
We located the fireworks launch...

189
00:13:10,622 --> 00:13:13,489
...and found traces
of the explosives used at both sites.

190
00:13:13,658 --> 00:13:18,925
Unfortunately it appears that
despite the heavy level of sophistication...

191
00:13:19,097 --> 00:13:22,794
...these devices were homemade
with over-the-counter chemicals...

192
00:13:22,968 --> 00:13:25,459
...making them very difficult to trace.

193
00:13:26,705 --> 00:13:29,469
Whoever he is, chancellor,
he's very good.

194
00:13:29,674 --> 00:13:33,007
Spare us your professional annotations,
Mr. Finch. They are irrelevant.

195
00:13:33,178 --> 00:13:34,907
Apologies, chancellor.

196
00:13:35,080 --> 00:13:36,707
Gentlemen, this is a test.

197
00:13:36,881 --> 00:13:39,509
Moments such as these
are matters of faith.

198
00:13:39,684 --> 00:13:42,881
To fail is to invite doubt
into everything we believe...

199
00:13:43,054 --> 00:13:44,749
...everything we have fought for.

200
00:13:44,923 --> 00:13:49,860
Doubt will plunge this country back
into chaos, and I will not let that happen.

201
00:13:50,028 --> 00:13:52,553
Gentlemen, I want this terrorist found...

202
00:13:52,731 --> 00:13:57,065
...and I want him to understand
what terror really means.

203
00:13:57,268 --> 00:13:58,701
England prevails.

204
00:13:59,170 --> 00:14:01,434
England prevails.

205
00:14:07,679 --> 00:14:10,944
- You think people will buy this?
- Why not?

206
00:14:11,116 --> 00:14:13,016
This is the BTN.

207
00:14:13,184 --> 00:14:15,914
Our job is to report the news,
not fabricate it.

208
00:14:16,688 --> 00:14:18,588
That's the government's job.

209
00:14:20,091 --> 00:14:21,854
On the lighter side of things...

210
00:14:22,027 --> 00:14:25,519
...seems that the crew responsible for
the demolition of the Old Bailey...

211
00:14:25,697 --> 00:14:28,757
...wanted to give the old girl a grand,
albeit improvised, sendoff.

212
00:14:30,235 --> 00:14:32,829
Although the demolition had been
planned for some time...

213
00:14:33,004 --> 00:14:36,064
...the music and the fireworks were,
according to the crew chief...

214
00:14:36,241 --> 00:14:39,108
..."definitely not on the schedule."
- We'll be right back.

215
00:14:39,277 --> 00:14:43,111
Do you believe that load of bollocks?
I mean, there was no bloody demolition.

216
00:14:43,281 --> 00:14:44,748
I saw it, the whole thing.

217
00:14:45,216 --> 00:14:47,616
- Did you see it?
- No. Last night I was...

218
00:14:47,786 --> 00:14:51,085
Yeah, that's right. You went
to see Daddy Deitrich, didn't you?

219
00:14:51,856 --> 00:14:53,756
Evey, there you are.

220
00:14:53,925 --> 00:14:56,086
- You are still working for me.
- Sorry, Patricia.

221
00:14:56,261 --> 00:14:58,627
I need two espressos and three coffees.

222
00:14:58,797 --> 00:15:00,788
And Deitrich is ready for his tea.

223
00:15:03,034 --> 00:15:04,262
I don't get it.

224
00:15:04,436 --> 00:15:08,497
Why does he wear a Guy Fawkes mask?
Didn't Fawkes try to blow up Parliament?

225
00:15:08,673 --> 00:15:12,632
It's not too late.
He's still got another 16 hours.

226
00:15:13,078 --> 00:15:15,069
Maybe he's just getting started.

227
00:15:16,881 --> 00:15:18,314
Yeah?

228
00:15:18,817 --> 00:15:20,808
Okay. A lead on the girl.

229
00:15:21,019 --> 00:15:23,920
Look, don't get me wrong, I love it.
A cow getting crucified.

230
00:15:24,322 --> 00:15:27,257
It's hysterical.
But you'll never get it approved.

231
00:15:27,425 --> 00:15:30,121
You've got to rewrite it, okay?
Gotta go.

232
00:15:31,162 --> 00:15:33,858
I don't recall getting stood up
by a more attractive woman.

233
00:15:34,032 --> 00:15:35,795
- Mr. Deitrich...
- Gordon, please.

234
00:15:35,967 --> 00:15:38,527
I don't need "mister" to make
this body feel any older.

235
00:15:38,703 --> 00:15:40,330
Gordon...

236
00:15:40,505 --> 00:15:43,440
...I was on my way last night,
but there were Fingermen...

237
00:15:43,608 --> 00:15:45,200
...and I got scared and went home.

238
00:15:45,376 --> 00:15:49,870
Sadly, after last night,
I think our curfew will only get worse.

239
00:16:07,465 --> 00:16:08,693
Gotcha.

240
00:16:12,003 --> 00:16:14,028
- Hey, Fred.
- All that been x-rayed?

241
00:16:14,205 --> 00:16:16,070
Nope. They're filled with bombs.

242
00:16:16,241 --> 00:16:18,505
Well, wait till commercials
to set them off, okay?

243
00:16:19,911 --> 00:16:22,004
- I can't believe you watch that shit.
- What?

244
00:16:22,180 --> 00:16:24,114
Laser Lass is banging.

245
00:16:37,962 --> 00:16:38,986
What's all that?

246
00:16:39,164 --> 00:16:42,258
Not sure. They just arrived.
Marked for Stage 3.

247
00:16:42,433 --> 00:16:44,094
Must be Prothero.

248
00:16:44,269 --> 00:16:48,603
I wish someone had the balls to tell
that brat this station ain't his playground.

249
00:16:50,675 --> 00:16:52,233
What the hell is this?

250
00:16:53,878 --> 00:16:58,076
Just put them over there
until I can figure out what they're for.

251
00:16:58,650 --> 00:17:02,552
This looks serious.
Her parents were political activists.

252
00:17:02,720 --> 00:17:05,883
- They were detained when she was 12.
- What happened to her?

253
00:17:06,057 --> 00:17:08,389
Juvenile Reclamation Project...

254
00:17:08,560 --> 00:17:09,720
...for five years.
- Shit.

255
00:17:09,894 --> 00:17:12,260
We're gonna need backup,
but keep it minimal.

256
00:17:12,430 --> 00:17:13,761
You sure about that, sir?

257
00:17:13,932 --> 00:17:18,096
I want a chance to talk to her before she
disappears into one of Creedy's black bags.

258
00:17:30,248 --> 00:17:31,476
Who's that?

259
00:17:31,649 --> 00:17:35,483
Don't piss me about. You show me ID,
or I'll get Storm Saxon on your ass.

260
00:17:41,593 --> 00:17:42,821
Fucking hell.

261
00:17:45,663 --> 00:17:47,358
Come on, let's move!

262
00:18:07,051 --> 00:18:09,918
You two, cover these elevators.
The rest of you follow me.

263
00:18:10,088 --> 00:18:11,749
Attention. Attention.

264
00:18:13,758 --> 00:18:17,717
Will all personnel please
evacuate the building.

265
00:18:18,029 --> 00:18:19,656
This is not a drill.

266
00:18:20,331 --> 00:18:22,856
Will all personnel evacuate the building.

267
00:18:28,940 --> 00:18:30,134
What the hell's going on?

268
00:18:30,308 --> 00:18:32,333
- It's jammed.
- Break it down.

269
00:18:38,082 --> 00:18:39,515
Dominic!

270
00:18:40,485 --> 00:18:41,952
Police! Out of the way!

271
00:18:44,122 --> 00:18:45,180
Get out the way!

272
00:18:52,864 --> 00:18:54,195
Damn it!

273
00:18:57,669 --> 00:19:00,137
I'll tell you what I know.
I'll tell you what I know.

274
00:19:00,305 --> 00:19:02,967
I'll tell you what I know.
England prevails.

275
00:19:05,877 --> 00:19:07,708
- Clear the halls.
- Sir.

276
00:19:09,080 --> 00:19:10,911
Help, Storm, help!

277
00:19:22,327 --> 00:19:23,521
Don't touch it.

278
00:19:23,695 --> 00:19:25,822
Dad, what's wrong with the telly?

279
00:19:41,879 --> 00:19:43,540
Good evening, London.

280
00:19:44,015 --> 00:19:47,007
- Allow me first to apologize...
- That's the emergency channel!

281
00:19:47,218 --> 00:19:51,314
I do, like many of you, appreciate
the comforts of the everyday routine...

282
00:19:51,489 --> 00:19:55,482
...the security of the familiar,
the tranquility of repetition.

283
00:19:55,660 --> 00:19:56,752
Bloody hell.

284
00:19:56,928 --> 00:20:00,420
I enjoy them as much as any bloke.
But in the spirit of commemoration...

285
00:20:00,598 --> 00:20:01,656
Who's that, Mum?

286
00:20:01,833 --> 00:20:03,733
- Whereby important events of the past...

287
00:20:03,901 --> 00:20:07,928
...usually associated with someone's death
or the end of some awful, bloody struggle...

288
00:20:08,106 --> 00:20:10,700
...are celebrated with a nice holiday...

289
00:20:10,908 --> 00:20:13,399
...I thought we could mark
this November the 5th...

290
00:20:13,611 --> 00:20:15,875
...a day that is, sadly,
no longer remembered...

291
00:20:16,314 --> 00:20:20,648
...by taking some time out of our daily lives
to sit down and have a little chat.

292
00:20:20,818 --> 00:20:23,810
There are, of course,
those who do not want us to speak.

293
00:20:23,988 --> 00:20:25,250
Let me think, let me think.

294
00:20:25,423 --> 00:20:27,914
Even now, orders are being shouted
into telephones...

295
00:20:28,092 --> 00:20:30,287
...and men with guns
will soon be on their way.

296
00:20:30,461 --> 00:20:32,292
- It's Chancellor Sutler.
- Damn it!

297
00:20:32,463 --> 00:20:36,832
Why? Because while the truncheon
may be used in lieu of conversation...

298
00:20:37,001 --> 00:20:39,799
...words will always retain their power.

299
00:20:39,971 --> 00:20:42,439
Words offer the means to meaning...

300
00:20:42,607 --> 00:20:45,804
...and, for those who will listen,
the enunciation of truth.

301
00:20:45,977 --> 00:20:47,376
And the truth is...

302
00:20:47,545 --> 00:20:50,946
...there is something terribly wrong
with this country, isn't there?

303
00:20:51,115 --> 00:20:54,516
You designed it, wanted it foolproof.
You said every television in London!

304
00:20:54,685 --> 00:20:58,280
Cruelty and injustice,
intolerance and oppression.

305
00:20:58,456 --> 00:21:00,788
And where once
you had the freedom to object...

306
00:21:00,958 --> 00:21:02,755
...to think and speak as you saw fit...

307
00:21:02,927 --> 00:21:06,158
...you now have censors and surveillance
coercing your conformity...

308
00:21:06,330 --> 00:21:09,163
...and soliciting submission.
- Cameras. We need cameras.

309
00:21:09,367 --> 00:21:11,995
How did this happen? Who's to blame?

310
00:21:12,537 --> 00:21:15,438
Certainly there are those
who are more responsible than others.

311
00:21:15,606 --> 00:21:17,506
And they will be held accountable.

312
00:21:17,675 --> 00:21:20,644
But again, truth be told,
if you're looking for the guilty...

313
00:21:21,145 --> 00:21:23,545
...you need only look into a mirror.

314
00:21:24,182 --> 00:21:25,843
I know why you did it.

315
00:21:26,017 --> 00:21:27,712
I know you were afraid.

316
00:21:27,885 --> 00:21:31,412
Who wouldn't be? War, terror, disease.

317
00:21:31,589 --> 00:21:34,285
There were a myriad of problems
which conspired...

318
00:21:34,459 --> 00:21:37,826
...to corrupt your reason
and rob you of your common sense.

319
00:21:37,995 --> 00:21:39,587
Fear got the best of you.

320
00:21:39,764 --> 00:21:43,996
And in your panic, you turned to
the now High Chancellor Adam Sutler.

321
00:21:44,168 --> 00:21:46,693
He promised you order,
he promised you peace...

322
00:21:46,904 --> 00:21:50,635
...and all he demanded in return
was your silent, obedient consent.

323
00:21:50,808 --> 00:21:54,574
- Inspector, they're almost through.
- Last night, I sought to end that silence.

324
00:21:54,745 --> 00:21:57,043
Last night,
I destroyed the Old Bailey...

325
00:21:57,248 --> 00:22:00,581
...to remind this country
of what it has forgotten.

326
00:22:01,385 --> 00:22:06,084
More than 400 years ago, a great citizen
wished to imbed the 5th of November...

327
00:22:06,257 --> 00:22:07,724
...forever in our memory.

328
00:22:07,892 --> 00:22:11,555
His hope was to remind the world
that fairness, justice and freedom...

329
00:22:11,729 --> 00:22:13,720
...are more than words.

330
00:22:13,898 --> 00:22:15,490
They are perspectives.

331
00:22:15,666 --> 00:22:17,531
So if you've seen nothing...

332
00:22:17,702 --> 00:22:21,468
...if the crimes of this government
remain unknown to you...

333
00:22:21,639 --> 00:22:25,905
...then I would suggest that you allow
the 5th of November to pass unmarked.

334
00:22:26,077 --> 00:22:29,205
But if you see what I see...

335
00:22:29,380 --> 00:22:33,942
...if you feel as I feel,
and if you would seek as I seek...

336
00:22:34,118 --> 00:22:37,019
...then I ask you to stand beside me,
one year from tonight...

337
00:22:37,188 --> 00:22:39,349
...outside the gates of Parliament.

338
00:22:39,557 --> 00:22:42,253
And together, we shall give them
a 5th of November...

339
00:22:42,460 --> 00:22:45,623
...that shall never, ever be forgot.

340
00:22:51,869 --> 00:22:53,928
Kerosene fog.
He's using our smoke machines.

341
00:22:54,105 --> 00:22:55,629
Cover the exits.

342
00:22:55,806 --> 00:22:58,570
No one gets out.
The rest of you, follow me.

343
00:23:01,979 --> 00:23:03,207
Left.

344
00:23:03,381 --> 00:23:04,780
You go right.

345
00:23:04,949 --> 00:23:06,576
Spread out.

346
00:23:13,824 --> 00:23:16,292
Don't shoot! Please don't shoot!

347
00:23:18,563 --> 00:23:20,155
Hold your fire!

348
00:23:26,771 --> 00:23:28,295
He put masks on all of us.

349
00:23:28,472 --> 00:23:29,734
Jesus.

350
00:23:29,907 --> 00:23:31,397
- Don't shoot!
- Wait!

351
00:23:31,609 --> 00:23:33,133
- Wait!
- Hold your fire!

352
00:23:33,311 --> 00:23:35,472
Freeze! Nobody move!

353
00:23:35,680 --> 00:23:37,910
If you're wearing a mask,
get down on your knees!

354
00:23:43,354 --> 00:23:45,254
- Get their masks off.
- Please hurry!

355
00:23:47,158 --> 00:23:48,955
There's a bomb in the control booth.

356
00:23:49,126 --> 00:23:50,753
Oh, no.

357
00:23:51,829 --> 00:23:55,094
- Jones, get anyone not wearing a mask out.
- Yes, sir.

358
00:23:55,266 --> 00:23:57,632
- Marshal, help carry this man.
- Sir.

359
00:23:57,802 --> 00:23:59,360
Everyone else, let's go.

360
00:24:08,279 --> 00:24:09,303
Good God.

361
00:24:09,480 --> 00:24:11,880
Hurry up, you lot! Come on!
Everybody out!

362
00:24:20,925 --> 00:24:22,688
Dascomb.

363
00:24:22,860 --> 00:24:26,728
Have you any idea how long
it would take to rebuild this facility?

364
00:24:26,897 --> 00:24:28,956
Do you have any idea what you're doing?

365
00:24:29,133 --> 00:24:30,293
Wait, wait!

366
00:24:31,502 --> 00:24:33,970
Don't shoot me, please! It's him! It's him!

367
00:24:35,072 --> 00:24:37,632
On your knees! On your knees!

368
00:24:38,509 --> 00:24:40,204
Please! Please don't hurt me!

369
00:25:07,238 --> 00:25:08,899
Here we go.

370
00:25:14,712 --> 00:25:15,940
I did it.

371
00:25:16,313 --> 00:25:17,541
I did it.

372
00:25:22,386 --> 00:25:23,717
Freeze!

373
00:25:23,888 --> 00:25:26,686
Get your hands on your head.
Do it now or I shoot.

374
00:25:28,426 --> 00:25:33,125
I must say that I am rather astonished
by the response time of London's finest.

375
00:25:33,998 --> 00:25:37,365
I hadn't expected you to be
quite so Johnny-on-the-spot.

376
00:25:37,535 --> 00:25:40,129
We were here before you even started.
Bad luck, chummy.

377
00:25:40,304 --> 00:25:41,601
I don't know about that.

378
00:25:56,087 --> 00:26:00,421
We're interrupting your regularly scheduled
program to bring you this terrifying report...

379
00:26:00,591 --> 00:26:04,220
...of a terrorist takeover of Jordan Tower
which ended only moments ago.

380
00:26:04,395 --> 00:26:07,626
A psychotic terrorist,
identified only as the letter V...

381
00:26:07,798 --> 00:26:11,757
...attacked the control booth with
high-powered explosives and weapons...

382
00:26:11,936 --> 00:26:16,066
...that he used against unarmed civilians
in order to broadcast a message of hate.

383
00:26:16,574 --> 00:26:20,840
We've just received this footage
of a daring police raid.

384
00:26:21,779 --> 00:26:26,648
Stop! Stop, stay where you are,
or we'll shoot! Stay where you are!

385
00:26:28,686 --> 00:26:31,154
Now, this is only an initial report...

386
00:26:31,655 --> 00:26:35,318
...but at this time, it's believed
that during this heroic raid...

387
00:26:35,493 --> 00:26:37,324
...the terrorist was shot and killed.

388
00:26:37,495 --> 00:26:38,723
Bollocks.

389
00:26:38,896 --> 00:26:42,354
Again, from what we've been told
by authorities, the danger is now over.

390
00:26:42,533 --> 00:26:44,160
The terrorist is dead.

391
00:26:48,172 --> 00:26:51,039
Right there. What's he thinking?

392
00:26:51,509 --> 00:26:53,670
Is he considering leaving her?

393
00:26:54,945 --> 00:26:57,277
After she just saved him?

394
00:26:58,415 --> 00:27:02,511
He's a terrorist. You can't expect him
to act like you or me.

395
00:27:02,686 --> 00:27:04,745
Some part of him's human.

396
00:27:05,523 --> 00:27:08,856
And, for better or worse,
she's stuck with him.

397
00:28:35,813 --> 00:28:38,441
- You scared me.
- My apologies.

398
00:28:39,016 --> 00:28:41,541
- Are you feeling all right?
- Yes, thank you.

399
00:28:41,719 --> 00:28:44,153
- What is this place?
- It's my home.

400
00:28:44,321 --> 00:28:47,779
- I call it the Shadow Gallery.
- It's beautiful.

401
00:28:47,958 --> 00:28:50,893
- Where did you get all this stuff?
- Oh, here and there.

402
00:28:51,061 --> 00:28:54,656
Much of it from the vaults of
the Ministry of Objectionable Materials.

403
00:28:54,832 --> 00:28:56,766
- You stole them?
- Heavens, no.

404
00:28:56,934 --> 00:28:58,799
Stealing implies ownership.

405
00:28:58,969 --> 00:29:02,132
You can't steal from the censor.
I merely reclaimed them.

406
00:29:02,306 --> 00:29:04,069
God, if they ever find this place...

407
00:29:04,241 --> 00:29:08,200
I suspect if they do, a few bits of art
will be the least of my worries.

408
00:29:08,379 --> 00:29:10,643
You mean, after what you've done.

409
00:29:11,282 --> 00:29:13,477
God, what have I done?

410
00:29:13,651 --> 00:29:15,778
I Maced that detective.
Why did I do that?

411
00:29:15,953 --> 00:29:19,514
- You did what you thought was right.
- No, I shouldn't have done that.

412
00:29:19,690 --> 00:29:21,624
I must have been out of my mind.

413
00:29:21,792 --> 00:29:25,023
Is that what you really think,
or what they'd want you to think?

414
00:29:25,529 --> 00:29:27,019
I think I should go.

415
00:29:27,197 --> 00:29:29,256
- May I ask where?
- Home. I have to go home.

416
00:29:29,433 --> 00:29:33,369
They're looking for you. If they know
where you work, they know where you live.

417
00:29:33,537 --> 00:29:38,372
- I have friends, I could stay with them.
- I'm afraid that won't work either.

418
00:29:38,542 --> 00:29:41,670
You have to understand, Evey,
I didn't want this for either of us...

419
00:29:41,845 --> 00:29:43,506
...but I couldn't see any other way.

420
00:29:43,681 --> 00:29:45,945
You were unconscious
and I had to make a decision.

421
00:29:46,116 --> 00:29:50,314
If I had left you there, right now you'd be
in one of Creedy's interrogation cells.

422
00:29:50,487 --> 00:29:54,389
They'd imprison you, torture you,
and, in all probability, kill you...

423
00:29:54,558 --> 00:29:56,526
...in the pursuit of finding me.

424
00:29:56,694 --> 00:29:59,094
After what you did,
I couldn't let that happen...

425
00:29:59,263 --> 00:30:03,256
...so I picked you up and carried you
to the only place I knew you'd be safe:

426
00:30:03,434 --> 00:30:05,026
Here, to my home.

427
00:30:05,602 --> 00:30:08,969
I won't tell anyone, I swear.
You know you can trust me.

428
00:30:09,139 --> 00:30:11,573
I'm sorry, but I can't take that risk.

429
00:30:11,742 --> 00:30:13,733
But I don't even know where this is.

430
00:30:13,911 --> 00:30:16,903
You know it's underground.
You know the color of the stone.

431
00:30:17,081 --> 00:30:21,108
- That'd be enough for a clever man.
- Are you saying that I have to stay here?

432
00:30:21,285 --> 00:30:24,652
Only until I'm done.
After the 5th, I no longer think it'll matter.

433
00:30:24,822 --> 00:30:26,790
You mean a year from now?

434
00:30:26,957 --> 00:30:28,754
I have to stay here for a year?

435
00:30:28,926 --> 00:30:31,895
Sorry, Evey.
I didn't know what else to do.

436
00:30:32,062 --> 00:30:33,723
You should've left me alone.

437
00:30:33,897 --> 00:30:36,263
Why didn't you just leave me alone?!

438
00:30:39,103 --> 00:30:42,266
- Anything else on the parents?
- Yeah, it ain't good.

439
00:30:42,439 --> 00:30:44,464
They were interned at Belmarsh.

440
00:30:44,641 --> 00:30:46,336
- Oh, no.
- Yeah.

441
00:30:46,510 --> 00:30:49,911
She died in a hunger strike.
He died when the military retook the shed.

442
00:30:50,314 --> 00:30:53,374
And that ain't the worst of it.
Her brother was at St. Mary's.

443
00:30:54,018 --> 00:30:56,714
- Christ.
- It's nothing but bad luck here.

444
00:30:57,154 --> 00:31:00,590
So we know her story. Now we need his.

445
00:31:22,379 --> 00:31:23,607
V?

446
00:31:26,383 --> 00:31:29,841
I just wanted to apologize
for my reaction last night.

447
00:31:30,521 --> 00:31:34,685
I understand what you did for me,
and I want you to know I am grateful.

448
00:31:35,759 --> 00:31:37,226
Your hands.

449
00:31:38,829 --> 00:31:40,194
Yes.

450
00:31:44,401 --> 00:31:46,164
There, that's better.

451
00:31:46,336 --> 00:31:48,395
I hope I didn't put you off your appetite.

452
00:31:48,572 --> 00:31:52,338
- No, please. It's just... Are you all right?
- Yes, yes, yes, I'm fine.

453
00:31:52,509 --> 00:31:53,942
Can I ask what happened?

454
00:31:54,945 --> 00:31:58,005
There was a fire. A long time ago.

455
00:31:58,182 --> 00:32:00,309
Ancient history, for some.

456
00:32:00,484 --> 00:32:02,349
Not really very good table conversation.

457
00:32:02,519 --> 00:32:05,181
Now, would you care for a cup of tea
with your egg?

458
00:32:05,622 --> 00:32:08,955
- Yes, thank you. I'm starving, actually.
- Have a seat.

459
00:32:16,934 --> 00:32:19,664
- It's delicious.
- Good.

460
00:32:19,837 --> 00:32:22,931
God, I haven't had real butter
since I was a little girl.

461
00:32:23,107 --> 00:32:24,335
Where did you get it?

462
00:32:24,508 --> 00:32:27,705
A government supply train
on its way to Chancellor Sutler.

463
00:32:28,679 --> 00:32:31,580
- You stole this from Chancellor Sutler?
- Yes.

464
00:32:31,748 --> 00:32:32,976
You're insane.

465
00:32:33,150 --> 00:32:37,018
I dare do all that may become a man.
Who dares more is none.

466
00:32:37,187 --> 00:32:39,621
- Macbeth.
- Very good.

467
00:32:39,790 --> 00:32:42,725
My mum, she used to
read all his plays to me...

468
00:32:42,893 --> 00:32:45,157
...and ever since,
I've always wanted to act.

469
00:32:45,329 --> 00:32:47,729
Be in plays, movies.

470
00:32:47,898 --> 00:32:51,459
When I was 9, I played Viola
in Twelfth Night. Mum was very proud.

471
00:32:51,635 --> 00:32:53,694
Where is your mother now?

472
00:32:53,871 --> 00:32:55,668
She's dead.

473
00:32:55,839 --> 00:32:57,067
I'm sorry.

474
00:32:59,409 --> 00:33:01,877
- Can I ask about what you said on the telly?
- Yes.

475
00:33:02,045 --> 00:33:03,637
- Did you mean it?
- Every word.

476
00:33:03,814 --> 00:33:07,750
You really think blowing up Parliament's
going to make this country a better place?

477
00:33:07,918 --> 00:33:10,216
There's no certainty, only opportunity.

478
00:33:10,387 --> 00:33:12,947
You can be pretty certain
that if anyone does show up...

479
00:33:13,123 --> 00:33:15,023
...Creedy'll black-bag every one of them.

480
00:33:15,325 --> 00:33:17,759
People should not be afraid
of their governments.

481
00:33:17,928 --> 00:33:19,793
Governments should be afraid
of their people.

482
00:33:19,963 --> 00:33:22,363
And you'll make that happen
by blowing up a building?

483
00:33:23,634 --> 00:33:27,070
The building is a symbol,
as is the act of destroying it.

484
00:33:27,237 --> 00:33:29,000
Symbols are given power by people.

485
00:33:29,606 --> 00:33:32,939
Alone, a symbol is meaningless,
but with enough people...

486
00:33:33,110 --> 00:33:35,772
...blowing up a building
can change the world.

487
00:33:36,580 --> 00:33:38,707
I wish I believed that was possible.

488
00:33:39,149 --> 00:33:43,415
But every time I've seen this world change,
it's always been for the worse.

489
00:33:43,587 --> 00:33:47,580
I'll tell you what I know.
I know this is not a man.

490
00:33:47,758 --> 00:33:50,750
- What is he?
- A man does not wear a mask.

491
00:33:50,928 --> 00:33:54,193
- What is he?
- A man does not threaten innocent civilians.

492
00:33:54,598 --> 00:33:57,829
He's what every gutless,
freedom-hating terrorist is:

493
00:33:58,001 --> 00:34:00,231
A goddamn coward!

494
00:34:03,273 --> 00:34:04,740
There will be no negotiation.

495
00:34:04,908 --> 00:34:07,399
When I arrive in the morning,
the Paddy will be gone.

496
00:34:07,578 --> 00:34:11,070
I'm looking at the tape right now,
and he has no idea how to light me.

497
00:34:11,248 --> 00:34:13,944
My nose looks like Big fucking Ben.

498
00:34:14,117 --> 00:34:17,575
Listen to me, you bleeding sod,
England prevails because I say it does!

499
00:34:17,754 --> 00:34:20,552
So does every lazy cunt on this show,
and that includes you.

500
00:34:20,724 --> 00:34:23,989
Find another DOP
or find yourself another job.

501
00:34:26,530 --> 00:34:28,054
I'll tell you what I wish.

502
00:34:28,565 --> 00:34:30,192
I wish I'd been there.

503
00:34:30,367 --> 00:34:32,460
I wish I'd had the chance
for a face-to-face.

504
00:34:32,636 --> 00:34:34,433
Just one chance, that's all I'd need.

505
00:34:39,810 --> 00:34:43,746
This so-called V and his accomplice,
Evey Hammond...

506
00:34:43,914 --> 00:34:47,213
...neo-demagogues,
spouting their message of hate.

507
00:34:47,384 --> 00:34:51,946
A delusional and aberrant voice
delivering a terrorist's ultimatum.

508
00:34:52,122 --> 00:34:55,819
An ultimatum that was met
with swift and surgically precise justice.

509
00:34:55,993 --> 00:34:58,791
- No mercy!
- The moral, ladies and gentlemen, is:

510
00:34:58,962 --> 00:35:01,157
Good guys win, bad guys lose...

511
00:35:01,331 --> 00:35:04,732
...and, as always, England prevails!

512
00:35:06,770 --> 00:35:08,670
Holy Christ! Jesus!

513
00:35:10,040 --> 00:35:11,940
Good evening, Commander Prothero.

514
00:35:12,109 --> 00:35:14,669
Oh, my God! How did you get in here?

515
00:35:14,845 --> 00:35:17,973
Don't worry, I've made sure
our reunion won't be disturbed by...

516
00:35:18,148 --> 00:35:20,378
...any pesky late-night phone calls,
commander.

517
00:35:20,550 --> 00:35:22,347
Stop. Why do you keep calling me that?

518
00:35:22,719 --> 00:35:27,281
That was your title, remember?
When we first met, all those years ago.

519
00:35:27,457 --> 00:35:29,186
You wore a uniform in those days.

520
00:35:32,396 --> 00:35:33,954
You.

521
00:35:35,332 --> 00:35:38,824
- It is you.
- The Ghost of Christmas Past.

522
00:35:47,244 --> 00:35:50,270
- Yeah?
- Finch, it's Dascomb.

523
00:35:51,114 --> 00:35:53,548
- Dascomb.
- I've already called the chancellor.

524
00:35:53,717 --> 00:35:57,551
- We have to get control of the situation.
- What situation?

525
00:35:59,122 --> 00:36:03,115
Chancellor Sutler agreed, for obvious
reasons, we have to keep this discreet.

526
00:36:03,293 --> 00:36:05,853
In the wrong light,
the loss of the Voice of London...

527
00:36:06,029 --> 00:36:08,054
...could be devastating to our credibility.

528
00:36:09,399 --> 00:36:11,026
Perhaps a stroke?

529
00:36:11,568 --> 00:36:13,968
No, no, it's too horrific.

530
00:36:14,137 --> 00:36:17,868
A quiet, dignified death in his sleep.

531
00:36:19,142 --> 00:36:21,804
- We got any eyes or ears on this?
- No, camcos were cut.

532
00:36:21,978 --> 00:36:26,472
It's the same m.o. As before.
But we got an elevator log ID.

533
00:36:26,650 --> 00:36:30,051
- Let me guess.
- She's in deep, inspector.

534
00:36:31,121 --> 00:36:32,110
V?

535
00:36:39,096 --> 00:36:41,064
My fat, metal friend.

536
00:36:53,710 --> 00:36:55,610
Mondego.

537
00:37:01,585 --> 00:37:04,315
Oh, God. I hope I didn't wake you.

538
00:37:04,855 --> 00:37:08,154
No, I just thought you were fighting.
I mean, for real.

539
00:37:08,325 --> 00:37:09,622
My favorite film:

540
00:37:09,793 --> 00:37:14,253
The Count of Monte Cristo,
with Robert Donat as Edmond Dantes.

541
00:37:14,431 --> 00:37:17,662
It is not my sword, Mondego,
but your past that disarmed you.

542
00:37:19,069 --> 00:37:20,434
It gets me every time.

543
00:37:20,837 --> 00:37:22,634
- Never seen it.
- Really?

544
00:37:23,340 --> 00:37:26,070
- Would you like to?
- Does it have a happy ending?

545
00:37:26,410 --> 00:37:28,503
As only celluloid can deliver.

546
00:37:28,879 --> 00:37:30,369
Okay.

547
00:37:31,181 --> 00:37:32,512
Put the sword away.

548
00:37:33,049 --> 00:37:34,949
Forensics just wrapped.

549
00:37:35,485 --> 00:37:38,784
No prints, no hair, no fibers.
The guy is like a ghost.

550
00:37:38,955 --> 00:37:40,786
You won't believe
what they found on Prothero.

551
00:37:40,957 --> 00:37:43,016
- Drugs?
- Could've started his own hospital.

552
00:37:43,193 --> 00:37:44,751
- Interesting.
- Why?

553
00:37:44,928 --> 00:37:48,329
Did you know Lewis Prothero was
one of the richest men in the country...

554
00:37:48,498 --> 00:37:50,261
...before he was
the Voice of London?

555
00:37:50,434 --> 00:37:52,902
- Drugs?
- Legal ones.

556
00:37:53,069 --> 00:37:55,833
Major stockholder
in Viadoxic Pharmaceutical.

557
00:37:56,006 --> 00:38:00,238
Viadoxic and St. Mary's
in less than a week. Coincidence?

558
00:38:00,410 --> 00:38:03,937
When you're at this as long as I've been,
you stop believing in coincidence.

559
00:38:04,748 --> 00:38:06,443
May we come up?

560
00:38:07,484 --> 00:38:10,146
- You find your own tree.
- You find your own tree.

561
00:38:15,559 --> 00:38:17,652
- Did you like it?
- Yeah.

562
00:38:18,428 --> 00:38:21,659
- But it made me feel sorry for Mercedes.
- Why?

563
00:38:22,799 --> 00:38:25,666
Because he cared more about revenge
than he did about her.

564
00:38:27,537 --> 00:38:30,370
- Nationwide were devastated
as news of the most popular...

565
00:38:30,540 --> 00:38:31,768
Wait. What's this?

566
00:38:31,942 --> 00:38:34,638
- Most awarded stars
in the history of the BTN...

567
00:38:34,811 --> 00:38:37,905
...a man known to the entire nation
as "The Voice of London"...

568
00:38:38,081 --> 00:38:40,879
...passed away late last night
from apparent heart failure.

569
00:38:42,319 --> 00:38:45,311
- She's lying.
- How do you know?

570
00:38:45,489 --> 00:38:48,481
She blinks a lot when she does a story
she knows is false.

571
00:38:48,658 --> 00:38:50,819
It came as no surprise
to those who knew him...

572
00:38:50,994 --> 00:38:52,723
...that his body was at his office...

573
00:38:52,896 --> 00:38:56,627
...where he often worked long hours
after everyone else had gone home.

574
00:38:56,800 --> 00:38:59,325
Lewis, you will be sorely missed.

575
00:39:05,809 --> 00:39:09,006
V, yesterday I couldn't find my ID.

576
00:39:09,179 --> 00:39:10,874
You didn't take it, did you?

577
00:39:11,448 --> 00:39:14,076
Would you prefer a lie or the truth?

578
00:39:15,852 --> 00:39:18,013
Did you have anything to do with that?

579
00:39:18,188 --> 00:39:21,123
- Yes, I killed him.
- You...

580
00:39:21,291 --> 00:39:22,758
- Oh, God.
- You're upset.

581
00:39:22,926 --> 00:39:25,394
I'm upset?
You just said you killed Lewis Prothero.

582
00:39:25,562 --> 00:39:28,963
I might have killed the Fingermen that
attacked you. I heard no objection.

583
00:39:29,132 --> 00:39:31,600
- What?
- Violence can be used for good.

584
00:39:31,968 --> 00:39:34,528
- What are you talking about?
- Justice.

585
00:39:37,340 --> 00:39:40,969
Oh, I see.

586
00:39:41,311 --> 00:39:43,939
There's no court in this country
for men like Prothero.

587
00:39:45,415 --> 00:39:47,440
And are you going to kill more people?

588
00:39:48,852 --> 00:39:50,251
Yes.

589
00:39:50,887 --> 00:39:52,718
Take a look at this.

590
00:39:52,889 --> 00:39:55,357
Prothero's military record.

591
00:39:56,259 --> 00:39:57,692
What do you see?

592
00:39:58,595 --> 00:40:04,830
Iraq, Kurdistan, Syria,
before and after, Sudan.

593
00:40:05,001 --> 00:40:06,593
- Busy boy.
- But after all that...

594
00:40:06,770 --> 00:40:10,433
...they put him in charge
of a detention facility at Larkhill.

595
00:40:10,607 --> 00:40:13,405
Well, no good deed goes unpunished.

596
00:40:14,644 --> 00:40:17,545
You think there's a connection
between our boy and Larkhill?

597
00:40:17,714 --> 00:40:21,582
It might explain the connection
between him and the Hammond girl.

598
00:40:21,952 --> 00:40:26,082
Problem is, I can't find
any other record of it.

599
00:40:26,256 --> 00:40:31,592
Larkhill? Larkhill? I cannot recall
that particular facility, inspector.

600
00:40:31,761 --> 00:40:35,128
- You're welcome to review our records.
- We've been through your records.

601
00:40:35,298 --> 00:40:38,825
All it says is that there was
a detention facility at Larkhill...

602
00:40:39,002 --> 00:40:41,527
...approximately 10 miles
north of Salisbury.

603
00:40:41,705 --> 00:40:42,831
Well, there you have it.

604
00:40:44,808 --> 00:40:47,333
This is a matter of some urgency, major.

605
00:40:47,510 --> 00:40:50,673
We need to know if there was anything
different about this facility.

606
00:40:51,014 --> 00:40:53,175
I'm sorry, inspector,
I simply cannot recall.

607
00:40:53,350 --> 00:40:56,114
Was there a specific profile
for those being sent there?

608
00:40:56,653 --> 00:40:59,383
- Usual undesirables, I should think.
- But do you know?

609
00:40:59,556 --> 00:41:02,457
- Of course not. I wasn't stationed there.
- Do you know who was?

610
00:41:02,626 --> 00:41:05,823
I cannot recall specific names,
but if you look through our records...

611
00:41:05,996 --> 00:41:10,524
Your records are either deleted,
omitted or missing.

612
00:41:10,700 --> 00:41:12,634
As head of the Detention Program
at that...

613
00:41:12,802 --> 00:41:16,670
Before you go any further, let me remind you
things were very chaotic back then.

614
00:41:17,307 --> 00:41:19,537
Now we don't have the problems
we had back then.

615
00:41:19,709 --> 00:41:22,303
We all did what we had to do.

616
00:41:22,479 --> 00:41:25,710
And in those circumstances,
we did the best we could.

617
00:41:25,882 --> 00:41:27,713
That's all I have to say about that.

618
00:41:33,957 --> 00:41:35,822
You can do this.

619
00:41:45,969 --> 00:41:47,402
Hi.

620
00:41:48,571 --> 00:41:50,562
I've been thinking...

621
00:41:52,142 --> 00:41:53,905
There's something I want to ask you...

622
00:41:54,077 --> 00:41:57,911
...but I don't think you'll understand why
unless you know a few things about me.

623
00:42:00,283 --> 00:42:03,684
My father was a writer.
You would have liked him.

624
00:42:04,587 --> 00:42:07,021
He used to say artists used lies
to tell the truth...

625
00:42:07,190 --> 00:42:09,624
...while politicians used them
to cover the truth up.

626
00:42:09,793 --> 00:42:11,954
A man after my own heart.

627
00:42:12,128 --> 00:42:14,790
He always told the best stories.

628
00:42:16,032 --> 00:42:18,262
Until my brother died.

629
00:42:20,704 --> 00:42:22,569
That was when everything changed.

630
00:42:23,440 --> 00:42:26,898
My brother was one of the students
at St. Mary's.

631
00:42:27,077 --> 00:42:30,911
After he died,
my parents became political.

632
00:42:32,849 --> 00:42:36,478
They protested the war
and the Reclamation.

633
00:42:36,653 --> 00:42:41,317
When Sutler was appointed high chancellor,
they were at the riot in Leeds.

634
00:42:41,491 --> 00:42:43,459
I watched on the television...

635
00:42:43,626 --> 00:42:46,060
...thinking I was going
to see my parents killed.

636
00:42:46,629 --> 00:42:49,097
I remember them arguing at night.

637
00:42:49,265 --> 00:42:52,598
Mum wanted to leave the country.
Dad refused.

638
00:42:52,769 --> 00:42:55,795
He said if we ran away, they would win.

639
00:42:55,972 --> 00:42:57,769
Win, like...

640
00:42:57,941 --> 00:42:59,636
...it was a game.

641
00:43:01,911 --> 00:43:03,276
Evey, quick, hide!

642
00:43:18,261 --> 00:43:20,195
- Mummy!
- Evey!

643
00:43:20,363 --> 00:43:21,762
I never saw them again.

644
00:43:22,298 --> 00:43:26,098
It was like those black bags erased them
from the face of the earth.

645
00:43:26,469 --> 00:43:28,027
I'm sorry, Evey.

646
00:43:28,204 --> 00:43:30,798
No, I'm the one that's sorry.

647
00:43:30,974 --> 00:43:33,272
Sorry I'm not a stronger person.

648
00:43:33,443 --> 00:43:36,435
Sorry I'm not like my parents.
I wish I was...

649
00:43:37,814 --> 00:43:39,304
...but I'm not.

650
00:43:40,016 --> 00:43:43,179
I wish I wasn't afraid all the time...

651
00:43:44,954 --> 00:43:46,319
...but I am.

652
00:43:46,489 --> 00:43:50,050
I know this world is screwed up.
Believe me, I know it better than most.

653
00:43:50,226 --> 00:43:55,027
Which is why I wanted to ask, if there is
anything I can do to help make it right...

654
00:43:56,299 --> 00:43:58,164
...please let me know.

655
00:43:58,334 --> 00:43:59,995
If you wish.

656
00:44:07,644 --> 00:44:10,204
Do you really think
you'll find something here?

657
00:44:10,380 --> 00:44:11,904
Worth a shot.

658
00:44:12,649 --> 00:44:14,844
One thing is true of all governments:

659
00:44:15,018 --> 00:44:18,818
The most reliable records
are tax records.

660
00:44:25,328 --> 00:44:28,627
It appears that the original
electronic records have all been lost.

661
00:44:28,798 --> 00:44:32,700
Probably during the Reclamation.
A lot of things went missing back then.

662
00:44:32,869 --> 00:44:36,862
But I found this hard copy
filed in the cold vault.

663
00:44:37,040 --> 00:44:39,304
Everything we've got on Larkhill
is in there.

664
00:44:39,475 --> 00:44:41,943
Thanks. This is a great help.

665
00:44:53,356 --> 00:44:56,883
"By the power of truth, I, while living,
have conquered the universe."

666
00:44:57,060 --> 00:45:00,188
- Personal motto?
- From Faust.

667
00:45:00,363 --> 00:45:02,797
That's about trying
to cheat the devil, isn't it?

668
00:45:02,966 --> 00:45:05,127
It is. And speaking of the devil...

669
00:45:05,301 --> 00:45:08,065
...I was wondering if your offer to help
was still standing.

670
00:45:08,238 --> 00:45:10,570
- Of course.
- It appears unforeseen circumstances...

671
00:45:10,740 --> 00:45:13,538
...have accelerated my original plan.

672
00:45:13,710 --> 00:45:17,441
As a result, I'm in need of someone
with some theatrical skill.

673
00:45:17,614 --> 00:45:18,876
I'll do my best.

674
00:45:19,382 --> 00:45:21,145
I believe you will.

675
00:45:24,487 --> 00:45:29,618
Another doctor. Why does
a detention facility need so many doctors?

676
00:45:29,792 --> 00:45:31,692
I don't know, but this is interesting.

677
00:45:31,861 --> 00:45:35,319
The highest-paid person
at the camp was a priest.

678
00:45:35,498 --> 00:45:38,592
- Really?
- Yeah, Father Lilliman.

679
00:45:38,768 --> 00:45:42,602
- Lilliman.
- Was paid almost 200 grand a month.

680
00:45:43,439 --> 00:45:44,997
Now, that is interesting.

681
00:45:46,509 --> 00:45:49,569
Looks like he was promoted.
He's a bishop now.

682
00:45:52,982 --> 00:45:54,950
- Your Grace.
- Oh, Denis.

683
00:45:55,118 --> 00:45:56,813
- Has everything been arranged?
- Yes.

684
00:45:56,986 --> 00:45:59,113
I've just received your InterLink itinerary.

685
00:45:59,289 --> 00:46:02,156
You should arrive in Perth
in time for Mass.

686
00:46:02,325 --> 00:46:03,815
You're most diligent, Denis...

687
00:46:03,993 --> 00:46:07,952
...a noble example for all those
who labor in the name of our Lord, but...

688
00:46:08,131 --> 00:46:10,691
- Your Grace?
- It wasn't labor I was speaking of.

689
00:46:10,867 --> 00:46:13,893
It was, rather, my final remittance
that I was interested in.

690
00:46:14,570 --> 00:46:16,299
My last little joy.

691
00:46:16,472 --> 00:46:18,235
I'm sorry, Your Grace.

692
00:46:19,442 --> 00:46:22,741
She has arrived, but there was
some confusion at the agency.

693
00:46:22,912 --> 00:46:26,143
They've sent a new girl who,
I'm afraid, is a little older than usual.

694
00:46:26,316 --> 00:46:27,715
Older?

695
00:46:27,884 --> 00:46:30,045
Oh, dear. She's not too old, I trust?

696
00:46:30,219 --> 00:46:32,449
That is for Your Grace to decide.

697
00:46:44,600 --> 00:46:47,228
- Oh, my.
- Your Grace.

698
00:46:48,838 --> 00:46:53,832
To think that I doubted your loveliness
for an instant.

699
00:46:55,778 --> 00:46:58,440
Mea culpa, my child.

700
00:46:58,614 --> 00:46:59,876
Mea culpa.

701
00:47:05,521 --> 00:47:08,922
Your Grace, we don't have much time
and I have to tell you something.

702
00:47:09,092 --> 00:47:13,119
A confession?
I love the confessional game.

703
00:47:13,629 --> 00:47:15,187
Tell me your sins.

704
00:47:15,365 --> 00:47:17,196
This isn't a game, Your Grace.

705
00:47:17,367 --> 00:47:19,665
Someone's coming.
I think he means to kill you.

706
00:47:19,936 --> 00:47:21,597
- I'm sorry?
- I'm telling you this...

707
00:47:21,771 --> 00:47:24,331
...because I want some kind
of protection or amnesty.

708
00:47:24,507 --> 00:47:28,170
I had nothing to do with the Bailey
and made a mistake in the Jordan Tower.

709
00:47:28,344 --> 00:47:31,438
- I think this should balance it out.
- What are you talking about?

710
00:47:31,614 --> 00:47:33,479
I'm Evey Hammond. I'm...

711
00:47:33,649 --> 00:47:36,846
I've been the prisoner of the terrorist V
for the past several weeks.

712
00:47:37,020 --> 00:47:40,319
I'm telling you that any moment,
he's going to come through that door.

713
00:47:40,523 --> 00:47:43,856
I unlocked the window in the room
where Denis told me to get ready.

714
00:47:44,027 --> 00:47:46,325
Wonderful!

715
00:47:46,496 --> 00:47:48,794
It's a game I've never played!

716
00:47:48,965 --> 00:47:52,924
What a delightful mind you have.
I hope the rest of you is just as interesting.

717
00:47:53,102 --> 00:47:56,367
- No, please, you have to believe me.
- Oh, I do, I do, I do.

718
00:47:56,539 --> 00:47:58,632
Let me show you
the firmness of my beliefs.

719
00:47:58,808 --> 00:48:00,241
Stop it! Get off of me!

720
00:48:00,543 --> 00:48:02,534
Seems I've captured
a dangerous terrorist.

721
00:48:02,712 --> 00:48:04,805
Now, how best to procure
her confession?

722
00:48:06,916 --> 00:48:09,885
You little bitch. You fucking little whore!

723
00:48:12,822 --> 00:48:14,414
- Reverend.
- Oh, my God.

724
00:48:14,590 --> 00:48:16,285
She wasn't lying. It is you.

725
00:48:16,459 --> 00:48:18,484
I'm sorry.

726
00:48:18,661 --> 00:48:20,356
- I had to.
- Evey!

727
00:48:25,134 --> 00:48:27,261
And thus I clothe my naked villainy...

728
00:48:27,437 --> 00:48:30,463
...with old odd ends
stolen forth from holy writ...

729
00:48:30,640 --> 00:48:33,768
...and seem a saint,
when most I play the devil.

730
00:48:33,943 --> 00:48:35,911
Oh, please, have mercy.

731
00:48:36,112 --> 00:48:38,012
Oh, not tonight, Bishop.

732
00:48:38,181 --> 00:48:39,876
Not tonight.

733
00:48:42,418 --> 00:48:43,976
Don't do this, I beg of you.

734
00:48:44,153 --> 00:48:46,314
Well, then. Children's hour at the abbey.

735
00:48:46,489 --> 00:48:48,480
Open your mouth
and stick out your tongue.

736
00:48:48,658 --> 00:48:51,991
- What the...?
- I don't want to die!

737
00:48:52,829 --> 00:48:55,423
This is Surveillance 109.
We have an emergency.

738
00:48:58,134 --> 00:49:01,900
Run every name in that file.
I want the whereabouts of all of them.

739
00:49:02,071 --> 00:49:03,732
- Tonight.
- Yes, sir.

740
00:49:04,107 --> 00:49:06,473
Pucker up, here comes the Finger.

741
00:49:07,243 --> 00:49:09,939
Yeah. Get going. I'll handle him.

742
00:49:14,650 --> 00:49:16,083
Creedy.

743
00:49:16,385 --> 00:49:17,613
What are you doing here?

744
00:49:18,588 --> 00:49:22,649
Several prominent party members
have been murdered, chief inspector.

745
00:49:22,825 --> 00:49:27,057
This is no ordinary situation and requires
more than your ordinary attention.

746
00:49:27,230 --> 00:49:30,028
The chancellor demanded
my immediate involvement.

747
00:49:30,199 --> 00:49:33,225
It'll be hard to investigate
if you're detaining all my witnesses.

748
00:49:33,402 --> 00:49:36,599
The security of information
is paramount.

749
00:49:37,140 --> 00:49:38,607
In these volatile times...

750
00:49:38,774 --> 00:49:41,607
...mistakes like Jordan Tower
can no longer be tolerated...

751
00:49:41,777 --> 00:49:44,143
...if, indeed,
Jordan Tower was an accident.

752
00:49:44,313 --> 00:49:46,577
- What does that mean?
- Terrorist seems to have...

753
00:49:46,749 --> 00:49:49,343
...a rather intimate understanding
of our system.

754
00:49:49,519 --> 00:49:52,317
The chancellor suspects
there might be an informer.

755
00:49:52,722 --> 00:49:55,020
Are you saying I'm under surveillance,
Mr. Creedy?

756
00:49:55,191 --> 00:49:56,954
At this time, it would behoove you...

757
00:49:57,126 --> 00:50:02,120
...to cease any investigation of matters
that have long since passed...

758
00:50:02,298 --> 00:50:05,699
...and concentrate on the concerns
of our present.

759
00:50:06,369 --> 00:50:07,666
You mean Larkhill?

760
00:50:07,837 --> 00:50:11,398
Major Wilson is a friend
of the high chancellor.

761
00:50:11,574 --> 00:50:14,839
- His loyalty is not in question.
- But mine is?

762
00:50:16,045 --> 00:50:18,946
Your mother was Irish, wasn't she?

763
00:50:19,615 --> 00:50:22,743
Terrible what St. Mary's
did to Ireland, wasn't it?

764
00:50:24,387 --> 00:50:26,617
I've been a party member for 27 years.

765
00:50:26,789 --> 00:50:29,087
If I were you, chief inspector...

766
00:50:29,258 --> 00:50:31,419
...l'd find the terrorist...

767
00:50:31,594 --> 00:50:33,562
...and I'd find him soon.

768
00:50:36,899 --> 00:50:38,423
Please.

769
00:50:42,672 --> 00:50:44,731
Evey? Good God!

770
00:50:44,907 --> 00:50:47,432
I'm sorry. I didn't know where else to go.

771
00:50:49,412 --> 00:50:52,404
Yes, well, you better come inside
before someone sees you.

772
00:51:00,923 --> 00:51:03,551
- Cheers.
- I know every cop's looking for me.

773
00:51:03,726 --> 00:51:06,388
I know it's horrible of me
to put you in this situation.

774
00:51:06,562 --> 00:51:08,962
- Evey...
- You could be in terrible trouble.

775
00:51:09,131 --> 00:51:10,621
Evey, listen to me.

776
00:51:10,800 --> 00:51:14,668
If the government ever searched my house,
you would be the least of my problems.

777
00:51:18,874 --> 00:51:20,501
You trusted me.

778
00:51:20,676 --> 00:51:23,736
It would be terrible manners
for me not to trust you.

779
00:51:37,026 --> 00:51:39,517
Oh, my God.
That's God Save the Queen.

780
00:51:39,695 --> 00:51:42,391
My parents took me to it
when they hung it at Gallery 12.

781
00:51:42,598 --> 00:51:46,625
- I thought Sutler had it destroyed.
- He believes he did.

782
00:51:46,802 --> 00:51:49,600
Cost me more than this house,
but no matter how bad I feel...

783
00:51:49,772 --> 00:51:51,603
...it always cheers me up.

784
00:51:53,743 --> 00:51:57,770
- What is that?
- It's a copy of the Koran, 14th century.

785
00:51:57,947 --> 00:52:00,108
- Are you a Muslim?
- No, I'm in television.

786
00:52:00,916 --> 00:52:02,315
But why would you keep it?

787
00:52:02,485 --> 00:52:05,716
I don't have to be Muslim to find
the images beautiful, poetry moving.

788
00:52:05,888 --> 00:52:07,856
Is it worth it?
If they found that here...

789
00:52:08,024 --> 00:52:10,322
I told you,
you'd be the least of my worries.

790
00:52:10,960 --> 00:52:12,928
Thank you, Gordon.

791
00:52:13,095 --> 00:52:15,222
- Thank you so much.
- It's all right.

792
00:52:15,398 --> 00:52:18,856
This whole thing started the night
he blew up the Old Bailey.

793
00:52:19,035 --> 00:52:21,230
I was on my way here, and...

794
00:52:23,039 --> 00:52:24,506
Yes.

795
00:52:27,710 --> 00:52:30,235
You see, we are both fugitives
in our own way.

796
00:52:31,113 --> 00:52:32,546
- But...
- You're wondering why...

797
00:52:32,715 --> 00:52:35,275
...you were invited here to supper
in the first place...

798
00:52:35,451 --> 00:52:39,512
...if my appetites were
for less conventional fare.

799
00:52:39,689 --> 00:52:43,250
Unfortunately, a man in my position
is expected to entertain...

800
00:52:43,426 --> 00:52:46,020
...young and attractive ladies
like yourself.

801
00:52:46,228 --> 00:52:49,994
Because in this world,
if I were to invite who I desired...

802
00:52:50,166 --> 00:52:54,125
...I would undoubtedly find myself
without a home, let alone a television show.

803
00:52:54,303 --> 00:52:57,272
- I'm sorry.
- Not as sorry as I am.

804
00:52:58,607 --> 00:53:00,472
The truth is, after so many years...

805
00:53:00,643 --> 00:53:04,079
...you begin to lose
more than just your appetite.

806
00:53:04,246 --> 00:53:08,273
You wear a mask for so long,
you forget who you were beneath it.

807
00:53:09,819 --> 00:53:14,085
I'm sorry, chief inspector.
Same basic toxicology as Prothero.

808
00:53:14,256 --> 00:53:17,282
You could get these poisons
from any house in London.

809
00:53:18,494 --> 00:53:20,018
Thanks, Delia.

810
00:53:20,830 --> 00:53:24,197
Any leads on finding this guy?

811
00:53:24,367 --> 00:53:27,700
Nothing yet. But there's something else
you can help me with.

812
00:53:30,473 --> 00:53:33,499
You started as a botanist, didn't you?

813
00:53:34,977 --> 00:53:37,377
It's... It's a Scarlet Carson.

814
00:53:38,881 --> 00:53:41,213
They're believed to be extinct.

815
00:53:42,718 --> 00:53:44,310
He leaves them at the crime scenes.

816
00:53:44,954 --> 00:53:47,184
I'd appreciate it
if you could have a look at it.

817
00:53:47,390 --> 00:53:49,915
Any information could be helpful.

818
00:53:50,726 --> 00:53:52,250
Of course.

819
00:53:53,662 --> 00:53:55,061
Excuse me.

820
00:53:55,831 --> 00:53:57,025
Yeah?

821
00:53:57,199 --> 00:54:01,465
I just finished going through the file,
inspector. You better get back here.

822
00:54:01,637 --> 00:54:03,104
Yeah, okay.

823
00:54:04,874 --> 00:54:07,968
- My God. He's killed them all.
- All but one.

824
00:54:09,111 --> 00:54:11,602
- Who is she?
- Not sure.

825
00:54:11,781 --> 00:54:14,341
She's clearly one of the people
in charge at Larkhill.

826
00:54:14,517 --> 00:54:18,009
But after they shut it down,
she disappeared for two years.

827
00:54:18,187 --> 00:54:20,781
Till she applied for an overseas visa,
which was denied.

828
00:54:21,390 --> 00:54:22,823
Running away?

829
00:54:22,992 --> 00:54:27,156
Probably, because after that,
all record of her seems to stop.

830
00:54:27,329 --> 00:54:29,729
- She changed her name.
- That's what I'm guessing.

831
00:54:29,899 --> 00:54:32,959
I put a call in to the registry,
but I haven't heard back.

832
00:54:33,135 --> 00:54:36,468
- It's late, or early.
- Call them again. I want that name.

833
00:54:48,851 --> 00:54:50,250
What? Are you sure about that?

834
00:54:50,753 --> 00:54:52,152
Okay. Thank you.

835
00:54:53,122 --> 00:54:56,523
Dr. Diana Stanton changed her name
to Delia Surridge.

836
00:54:56,859 --> 00:54:58,952
- The coroner?
- Yeah.

837
00:54:59,762 --> 00:55:01,229
Jesus, I just saw her.

838
00:55:10,272 --> 00:55:12,103
It's you, isn't it?

839
00:55:12,775 --> 00:55:15,835
- You've come to kill me.
- Yes.

840
00:55:17,313 --> 00:55:19,213
Thank God.

841
00:55:21,350 --> 00:55:23,818
I'm sorry, I can't get a response
from that number.

842
00:55:23,986 --> 00:55:25,920
There's a problem with the connection.

843
00:55:26,088 --> 00:55:27,919
Jesus Christ.

844
00:55:28,457 --> 00:55:29,890
He's there.

845
00:55:30,960 --> 00:55:34,361
After what happened,
after what they did...

846
00:55:34,797 --> 00:55:36,856
...I thought about killing myself.

847
00:55:39,168 --> 00:55:42,228
But I knew that one day
you'd come for me.

848
00:55:43,539 --> 00:55:45,734
I didn't know what
they were going to do.

849
00:55:46,542 --> 00:55:48,134
I swear to you.

850
00:55:48,477 --> 00:55:49,944
Read my journal.

851
00:55:50,112 --> 00:55:53,343
What they did was only possible
because of you.

852
00:55:55,050 --> 00:55:58,816
Oppenheimer was able to change
more than the course of a war.

853
00:55:58,988 --> 00:56:01,821
He changed the entire course
of human history.

854
00:56:03,058 --> 00:56:05,652
Is it wrong to hold on
to that kind of hope?

855
00:56:05,861 --> 00:56:08,989
I have not come
for what you hoped to do.

856
00:56:09,164 --> 00:56:11,029
I've come for what you did.

857
00:56:12,601 --> 00:56:13,829
It's funny.

858
00:56:14,003 --> 00:56:16,836
I was given one of your roses today.

859
00:56:18,073 --> 00:56:21,304
I wasn't sure you were the terrorist
until I saw it.

860
00:56:23,479 --> 00:56:27,142
What a strange coincidence,
that I should be given one today.

861
00:56:28,217 --> 00:56:30,811
There are no coincidences, Delia.

862
00:56:30,986 --> 00:56:33,955
Only the illusion of coincidence.

863
00:56:34,123 --> 00:56:36,114
I have another rose.

864
00:56:37,326 --> 00:56:39,658
And this one is for you.

865
00:56:45,234 --> 00:56:49,170
- You're going to kill me now?
- I killed you 10 minutes ago...

866
00:56:49,939 --> 00:56:51,736
...while you slept.

867
00:56:52,775 --> 00:56:55,471
- Is there any pain?
- No.

868
00:56:55,744 --> 00:56:57,109
Thank you.

869
00:56:59,515 --> 00:57:02,643
Is it meaningless to apologize?

870
00:57:03,085 --> 00:57:04,177
Never.

871
00:57:05,387 --> 00:57:07,355
I'm so sorry.

872
00:57:28,978 --> 00:57:30,707
Damn it.

873
00:57:33,215 --> 00:57:36,048
The terrorist obviously
wanted us to have it.

874
00:57:36,218 --> 00:57:39,779
He wanted us to know the story,
or at least a part of it.

875
00:57:39,955 --> 00:57:42,981
Am I to understand that you have read
this document, inspector?

876
00:57:43,192 --> 00:57:45,251
- Yes, sir.
- Has anyone else read it?

877
00:57:45,427 --> 00:57:48,294
- No, sir.
- Then let me make this perfectly clear to you.

878
00:57:48,497 --> 00:57:51,955
The contents of this document
are a matter of national security...

879
00:57:52,134 --> 00:57:56,002
...constituting an assault on the character
of several important party members...

880
00:57:56,372 --> 00:57:59,637
...as well as a blatant violation
of the Articles of Allegiance.

881
00:57:59,808 --> 00:58:02,709
As the authenticity of this document
cannot be verified...

882
00:58:02,878 --> 00:58:06,712
...it could be an elaborate forgery
created by the terrorist...

883
00:58:06,882 --> 00:58:10,579
...as easily as it could be the deranged
fantasy of a former party member...

884
00:58:10,753 --> 00:58:12,914
...who resigned
for psychological reasons.

885
00:58:13,422 --> 00:58:15,982
Any discussion of this document
or its contents...

886
00:58:16,158 --> 00:58:19,093
...will be regarded, at the very least,
as an act of sedition...

887
00:58:19,261 --> 00:58:21,729
...if not a willful act of treason.

888
00:58:21,897 --> 00:58:25,230
- Is that understood, Mr. Finch?
- Yes, sir.

889
00:58:25,401 --> 00:58:28,097
You would do well, inspector...

890
00:58:28,270 --> 00:58:30,670
...to put it out of your mind.

891
00:58:39,815 --> 00:58:41,578
May 23rd.

892
00:58:42,951 --> 00:58:45,818
My first batch of subjects arrived today...

893
00:58:46,855 --> 00:58:49,722
...and I have to admit
that I'm very excited.

894
00:58:52,861 --> 00:58:55,694
This could be the dawn of a new age.

895
00:58:56,699 --> 00:58:58,633
Nuclear power is meaningless...

896
00:58:58,801 --> 00:59:01,770
...in a world where a virus
can kill an entire population...

897
00:59:01,937 --> 00:59:03,996
...and leave its wealth intact.

898
00:59:04,173 --> 00:59:07,301
- Stay together!
- Come on, move!

899
00:59:07,776 --> 00:59:09,767
May 27th.

900
00:59:09,945 --> 00:59:13,073
Commander Prothero toured the lab
with a priest, Father Lilliman...

901
00:59:13,248 --> 00:59:17,082
...who I was told is here to monitor
for Rules and Rights violations.

902
00:59:17,252 --> 00:59:21,518
It made me nervous, but the commander
assured me there wouldn't be a problem.

903
00:59:21,724 --> 00:59:23,555
June 2nd.

904
00:59:24,193 --> 00:59:27,924
I keep wondering if these people knew
how they might be helping their country...

905
00:59:28,097 --> 00:59:30,429
...if they would act any differently.

906
00:59:30,599 --> 00:59:34,535
They're so weak and pathetic.
They never look you in the eye.

907
00:59:34,703 --> 00:59:37,171
I find myself hating them.

908
00:59:40,275 --> 00:59:42,209
August the 18th.

909
00:59:42,377 --> 00:59:46,143
Of the original four dozen,
over 75 percent are now deceased.

910
00:59:48,650 --> 00:59:51,915
No controllable pattern has yet emerged.

911
00:59:53,622 --> 00:59:55,419
September the 18th.

912
00:59:55,591 --> 00:59:58,651
There is one case that continues
to give me hope.

913
00:59:58,827 --> 01:00:03,491
He exhibits none of the immune-system
pathologies the other subjects developed.

914
01:00:03,665 --> 01:00:08,159
I've discovered cellular anomalies in his
blood that I've been unable to categorize.

915
01:00:08,337 --> 01:00:10,168
The mutations seem to have triggered...

916
01:00:10,339 --> 01:00:14,298
...the abnormal development
of basic kinesthesia and reflexes.

917
01:00:14,476 --> 01:00:16,637
The subject said
he could no longer remember...

918
01:00:16,812 --> 01:00:19,542
...who he was or where he was from.

919
01:00:19,715 --> 01:00:23,481
Whoever he was,
he is now the key to our dream...

920
01:00:23,652 --> 01:00:27,179
...and the hope that all of this
will not have been in vain.

921
01:00:28,457 --> 01:00:29,947
November the 5th.

922
01:00:32,427 --> 01:00:35,590
It started last night, around midnight.

923
01:00:35,764 --> 01:00:39,632
The first explosions tore open
the entire medical section.

924
01:00:40,836 --> 01:00:43,634
All my work, gone.

925
01:00:43,806 --> 01:00:47,833
I was trying to understand how
it could've happened when I saw him.

926
01:00:48,010 --> 01:00:50,240
The man from room 5.

927
01:00:50,412 --> 01:00:51,640
He looked at me.

928
01:00:51,814 --> 01:00:55,250
Not with eyes. There were no eyes.

929
01:00:55,417 --> 01:00:57,942
But I know he was looking at me
because I felt it.

930
01:01:05,494 --> 01:01:07,519
Oh, God...

931
01:01:07,696 --> 01:01:09,425
...what have I done?

932
01:01:41,563 --> 01:01:42,996
What is that you're making?

933
01:01:43,165 --> 01:01:45,690
We called it "eggie in the basket."
My mum made them.

934
01:01:45,868 --> 01:01:47,699
- This is weird.
- What?

935
01:01:47,870 --> 01:01:51,328
The first morning I was with him,
he made me eggs just like this.

936
01:01:51,506 --> 01:01:53,804
- Really?
- I swear.

937
01:01:53,976 --> 01:01:58,743
That is a strange coincidence.
Although there's an obvious explanation.

938
01:01:58,914 --> 01:02:00,848
- There is?
- Yes, Evey.

939
01:02:01,183 --> 01:02:02,844
I am V.

940
01:02:03,018 --> 01:02:04,485
At last you know the truth.

941
01:02:04,987 --> 01:02:06,352
You're stunned, I know.

942
01:02:06,521 --> 01:02:10,150
Hard to believe, isn't it, that beneath
this wrinkled, well-fed exterior...

943
01:02:10,325 --> 01:02:15,524
...there lies a dangerous killing machine
with a fetish for Fawkesian masks.

944
01:02:17,432 --> 01:02:18,831
That is not funny, Gordon.

945
01:02:19,001 --> 01:02:21,663
Yeah, I know.
I'm useless without a studio audience.

946
01:02:22,271 --> 01:02:24,398
I've seen people go to jail
for less than that.

947
01:02:24,573 --> 01:02:26,473
Of course, he was right, wasn't he?

948
01:02:27,609 --> 01:02:30,009
There is something wrong
with this country.

949
01:02:46,094 --> 01:02:47,584
Morning, inspector.

950
01:02:49,331 --> 01:02:51,094
You're at it early.

951
01:02:52,668 --> 01:02:56,331
Is something wrong?
You don't look so good, sir.

952
01:03:04,613 --> 01:03:07,104
I wanna ask a question, Dominic.

953
01:03:08,483 --> 01:03:10,849
I don't care if you answer me or not.

954
01:03:11,820 --> 01:03:14,015
I just wanna say this aloud.

955
01:03:15,290 --> 01:03:19,056
But I need to know that this question
will not leave this office.

956
01:03:19,227 --> 01:03:21,525
Yeah, of course, inspector, but...

957
01:03:22,631 --> 01:03:24,030
Because of the terrorist?

958
01:03:25,500 --> 01:03:26,831
No.

959
01:03:28,003 --> 01:03:31,097
So, what is it, chief? What's going on?

960
01:03:33,875 --> 01:03:37,367
The question I want to ask
is about St. Mary's...

961
01:03:38,313 --> 01:03:39,678
...and Three Waters.

962
01:03:41,850 --> 01:03:46,253
The question that's kept me up
for the last 24 hours...

963
01:03:46,421 --> 01:03:49,219
...the question I have to ask, is:

964
01:03:50,759 --> 01:03:53,626
What if the worst...

965
01:03:54,329 --> 01:03:57,890
...the most horrifying biological attack
in this country's history...

966
01:03:58,066 --> 01:04:01,832
...was not the work
of religious extremists?

967
01:04:02,004 --> 01:04:05,667
Well, I don't understand. We know it was.
They were caught. They confessed.

968
01:04:05,841 --> 01:04:07,968
And they were executed. I know.

969
01:04:08,143 --> 01:04:11,135
And maybe that's really what happened.

970
01:04:13,482 --> 01:04:16,076
But I see this chain of events...

971
01:04:17,419 --> 01:04:21,116
...these coincidences,
and I have to ask:

972
01:04:21,289 --> 01:04:25,885
What if that isn't what happened?
What if someone else unleashed that virus?

973
01:04:26,061 --> 01:04:30,122
What if someone else
killed all those people?

974
01:04:30,298 --> 01:04:32,596
Would you really wanna know
who it was?

975
01:04:33,602 --> 01:04:35,035
Sure.

976
01:04:35,203 --> 01:04:37,535
Even if it was someone
working for this government?

977
01:04:39,474 --> 01:04:41,032
That's my question.

978
01:04:41,510 --> 01:04:44,274
If our own government was responsible...

979
01:04:44,446 --> 01:04:48,746
...for what happened at St. Mary's
and Three Waters...

980
01:04:50,719 --> 01:04:57,090
...if our own government was responsible
for the deaths of almost 100,000 people...

981
01:05:00,062 --> 01:05:01,723
...would you really wanna know?

982
01:05:02,130 --> 01:05:04,360
This has to be the bloody coldest
March in years.

983
01:05:04,533 --> 01:05:06,933
Keep talking like that,
we'll lose our party status.

984
01:05:07,102 --> 01:05:10,833
- They're a pack of lying, greedy hypocrites!
- Keep it down, will you?

985
01:05:14,743 --> 01:05:17,974
Based on random audio sweeps,
I've projected that right now...

986
01:05:18,180 --> 01:05:21,377
...80 percent of the public
believe the terrorist is still alive.

987
01:05:22,117 --> 01:05:24,312
We're also showing
a 12-percent increase...

988
01:05:24,486 --> 01:05:27,944
...over last month's positive mention
in all four quadrants.

989
01:05:28,123 --> 01:05:31,615
- Mr. Creedy?
- We're handling it as best we can.

990
01:05:31,793 --> 01:05:34,455
Arrests are as high as they've been
since the Reclamation.

991
01:05:34,629 --> 01:05:37,097
I want more than arrests. I want results.

992
01:05:40,969 --> 01:05:43,494
- What's all this about?
- I'm celebrating.

993
01:05:43,672 --> 01:05:45,799
Celebrating what?

994
01:05:45,974 --> 01:05:49,000
I think this could be
the best show we've ever done.

995
01:05:49,177 --> 01:05:50,974
Very good evening,
ladies and gentlemen.

996
01:05:52,180 --> 01:05:55,445
Listen, we've got an extraordinary
show for you tonight.

997
01:05:55,750 --> 01:05:59,015
You're not gonna believe it.
As a matter of fact, I don't think I do.

998
01:05:59,187 --> 01:06:01,678
Will you please give
a very warm welcome...

999
01:06:01,857 --> 01:06:05,258
...to our own Chancellor Adam Sutler!

1000
01:06:09,764 --> 01:06:11,322
- No way!
- No, it can't be!

1001
01:06:13,168 --> 01:06:16,695
We threw out the censor-approved script
and shot one I wrote this morning.

1002
01:06:16,905 --> 01:06:18,463
Oh, my God.

1003
01:06:30,986 --> 01:06:32,749
Chancellor, chancellor, chancellor...

1004
01:06:32,921 --> 01:06:35,754
...I understand you've been under
tremendous strain lately...

1005
01:06:35,924 --> 01:06:39,052
...since the beginning
of this whole terrorism business...

1006
01:06:39,227 --> 01:06:43,323
...and we thought it would be a nice idea
to try and help you relax. Girls?

1007
01:06:49,504 --> 01:06:52,769
Warm milk. There's nothing better.

1008
01:06:52,941 --> 01:06:55,967
I understand you enjoy a glass
every night, chancellor.

1009
01:06:56,144 --> 01:06:57,941
Since I was a boy.

1010
01:06:59,014 --> 01:07:00,606
But you're wrong, Mr. Deitrich.

1011
01:07:00,782 --> 01:07:04,548
- The terrorist was never a serious concern.
- Oh, really?

1012
01:07:04,719 --> 01:07:06,949
- Chancellor, chancellor...
- It's him.

1013
01:07:07,122 --> 01:07:10,353
Are you saying that he's not still alive
and active?

1014
01:07:10,525 --> 01:07:13,187
The terrorist has been neutralized.

1015
01:07:14,863 --> 01:07:17,559
Oh, my God! Chancellor, look!

1016
01:07:17,732 --> 01:07:19,359
The terrorist!

1017
01:07:19,935 --> 01:07:21,459
The terrorist!

1018
01:07:23,205 --> 01:07:24,900
Get him!

1019
01:07:27,342 --> 01:07:29,435
Oh, dear.

1020
01:07:48,663 --> 01:07:50,221
At last!

1021
01:07:50,398 --> 01:07:54,334
And now, for all the world to see.

1022
01:07:55,503 --> 01:07:56,731
It's him!

1023
01:07:57,906 --> 01:08:01,899
Unhand me! I am your chancellor!

1024
01:08:02,077 --> 01:08:05,774
How dare you! I am the chancellor!

1025
01:08:06,081 --> 01:08:08,015
Imposter!

1026
01:08:14,456 --> 01:08:16,651
Soldiers! That man is the terrorist!

1027
01:08:16,825 --> 01:08:19,760
- I order you to shoot that traitor!
- Liar!

1028
01:08:19,928 --> 01:08:20,952
- Faker!
- Fraud!

1029
01:08:21,129 --> 01:08:22,994
- Ready!
- Aim!

1030
01:08:23,164 --> 01:08:24,631
- Fire!
- Fire!

1031
01:08:36,511 --> 01:08:38,502
What are they gonna do, fine us?

1032
01:08:38,680 --> 01:08:42,138
Big deal. We've got
the most-watched show on air.

1033
01:08:42,317 --> 01:08:44,808
Well, you're my agent,
that's what I pay you for.

1034
01:08:44,986 --> 01:08:46,851
Protect me.

1035
01:08:47,022 --> 01:08:48,853
I should've hired him
to be my mother.

1036
01:08:49,024 --> 01:08:51,788
- You're mad.
- Either that or I wasn't breast-fed.

1037
01:08:51,960 --> 01:08:54,952
- Is everything a joke to you?
- Only the things that matter.

1038
01:08:55,130 --> 01:08:58,361
- What if they come after you?
- I tell you what's gonna happen.

1039
01:08:58,533 --> 01:09:01,730
I'll have to make some kind of apology,
do some boring fundraiser.

1040
01:09:01,903 --> 01:09:06,966
In the meantime, our ratings will go
through the roof. It'll be fine. Trust me.

1041
01:09:14,518 --> 01:09:15,746
Gordon?

1042
01:09:18,288 --> 01:09:20,017
Quick, Evey, hide!

1043
01:09:35,038 --> 01:09:38,337
Not so funny now, is it, funnyman?

1044
01:10:28,759 --> 01:10:30,351
- Gotcha.
- No, no.

1045
01:10:43,740 --> 01:10:46,937
Do you know why you're here,
Evey Hammond?

1046
01:10:48,211 --> 01:10:49,439
Please.

1047
01:10:49,613 --> 01:10:52,013
You've been charged
with three counts of murder...

1048
01:10:52,549 --> 01:10:56,041
...the bombing of government property,
conspiracy to commit terrorism...

1049
01:10:56,219 --> 01:11:01,122
...treason and sedition, the penalty
for which is death by firing squad.

1050
01:11:02,359 --> 01:11:07,729
You have one chance,
and only one chance, to save your life.

1051
01:11:07,898 --> 01:11:11,857
You must tell us the identity
or whereabouts...

1052
01:11:12,035 --> 01:11:13,900
...of code name V.

1053
01:11:14,604 --> 01:11:17,198
If your information leads
to his capture...

1054
01:11:17,374 --> 01:11:21,174
...you will be released
from this facility immediately.

1055
01:11:21,344 --> 01:11:23,938
Do you understand
what I'm telling you?

1056
01:11:24,114 --> 01:11:27,208
You can return to your life,
Miss Hammond.

1057
01:11:28,318 --> 01:11:31,719
All you have to do is cooperate.

1058
01:11:36,159 --> 01:11:37,717
Process her.

1059
01:13:44,454 --> 01:13:48,185
I know there's no way I can convince you
this is not one of their tricks...

1060
01:13:48,358 --> 01:13:49,757
...but I don't care.

1061
01:13:49,926 --> 01:13:51,723
I am me.

1062
01:13:51,895 --> 01:13:53,624
My name is Valerie.

1063
01:13:53,797 --> 01:13:58,825
I don't think I'll live much longer,
and I wanted to tell someone about my life.

1064
01:13:59,002 --> 01:14:03,405
This is the only autobiography
that I will ever write and, God...

1065
01:14:03,907 --> 01:14:06,307
...I'm writing it on toilet paper.

1066
01:14:08,712 --> 01:14:11,977
I was born in Nottingham in 1985.

1067
01:14:12,148 --> 01:14:16,949
I don't remember much of those early years,
but I do remember the rain.

1068
01:14:17,120 --> 01:14:19,588
My grandmother owned a farm
in Tottle Brook...

1069
01:14:19,756 --> 01:14:22,623
...and she used to tell me
that God was in the rain.

1070
01:14:22,792 --> 01:14:25,556
I passed my 11 Plus
and went to girls' grammar.

1071
01:14:25,729 --> 01:14:28,459
It was at school
that I met my first girlfriend.

1072
01:14:28,632 --> 01:14:30,224
Her name was Sarah.

1073
01:14:30,834 --> 01:14:32,426
It was her wrists.

1074
01:14:32,602 --> 01:14:34,229
They were beautiful.

1075
01:14:36,873 --> 01:14:39,171
I thought we would
love each other forever.

1076
01:14:39,876 --> 01:14:42,037
I remember our teacher telling us...

1077
01:14:42,212 --> 01:14:44,908
...that it was an adolescent phase
that people outgrew.

1078
01:14:45,081 --> 01:14:46,639
Sarah did.

1079
01:14:48,184 --> 01:14:50,015
I didn't.

1080
01:14:50,220 --> 01:14:54,350
In 2002, I fell in love
with a girl named Christina.

1081
01:14:54,524 --> 01:14:56,719
That year I came out to my parents.

1082
01:14:56,893 --> 01:15:00,556
I couldn't have done it
without Chris holding my hand.

1083
01:15:00,730 --> 01:15:05,895
My father wouldn't look at me.
He told me to go and never come back.

1084
01:15:06,069 --> 01:15:07,730
My mother said nothing.

1085
01:15:08,672 --> 01:15:12,631
But I'd only told them the truth.
Was that so selfish?

1086
01:15:13,243 --> 01:15:17,612
Our integrity sells for so little,
but it is all we really have.

1087
01:15:17,781 --> 01:15:19,942
It is the very last inch of us.

1088
01:15:20,784 --> 01:15:22,684
But within that inch...

1089
01:15:22,852 --> 01:15:24,080
...we are free.

1090
01:15:26,790 --> 01:15:28,417
It ends whenever you want it to.

1091
01:15:28,591 --> 01:15:31,185
- Just tell us where he is.
- I don't know.

1092
01:16:07,864 --> 01:16:10,264
I'd always known
what I wanted to do with my life...

1093
01:16:10,433 --> 01:16:15,632
...and in 2015 I starred in my first film,
The Salt Flats.

1094
01:16:16,973 --> 01:16:20,602
It was the most important role of my life.
Not because of my career...

1095
01:16:20,777 --> 01:16:22,768
...but because that was how I met Ruth.

1096
01:16:25,115 --> 01:16:26,707
The first time we kissed...

1097
01:16:27,384 --> 01:16:31,650
...I knew I never wanted to kiss
any other lips but hers again.

1098
01:16:38,094 --> 01:16:40,927
We moved to a small flat
in London together.

1099
01:16:41,097 --> 01:16:43,622
She grew Scarlet Carsons for me
in our window box...

1100
01:16:44,634 --> 01:16:47,364
...and our place always smelt of roses.

1101
01:16:49,272 --> 01:16:51,866
Those were the best years of my life.

1102
01:16:55,578 --> 01:17:00,015
But America's war grew worse and worse,
and eventually came to London.

1103
01:17:00,183 --> 01:17:03,311
The bill proposed by the Undersecretary
for Defense, Adam Sutler...

1104
01:17:03,486 --> 01:17:06,421
...to close the remaining tube stations
passed with...

1105
01:17:06,589 --> 01:17:09,422
After that, there were no roses anymore.

1106
01:17:10,026 --> 01:17:11,323
Not for anyone.

1107
01:17:11,494 --> 01:17:13,587
You won't last much longer.

1108
01:17:13,763 --> 01:17:15,424
You're gonna die here.

1109
01:17:15,598 --> 01:17:18,658
Why protect someone
who doesn't give a shit about you?

1110
01:17:29,512 --> 01:17:32,879
I remember how the meaning of words
began to change.

1111
01:17:34,084 --> 01:17:39,579
How unfamiliar words like "collateral"
and "rendition" became frightening...

1112
01:17:40,223 --> 01:17:45,024
...while things like "Norsefire" and the
"Articles of Allegiance" became powerful.

1113
01:17:45,462 --> 01:17:48,920
I remember how "different"
became dangerous.

1114
01:17:49,099 --> 01:17:51,624
I still don't understand it...

1115
01:17:51,801 --> 01:17:53,860
...why they hate us so much.

1116
01:17:59,709 --> 01:18:02,303
They took Ruth
while she was out buying food.

1117
01:18:05,014 --> 01:18:07,608
I've never cried so hard in my life.

1118
01:18:09,219 --> 01:18:11,380
It wasn't long till they came for me.

1119
01:18:19,195 --> 01:18:23,222
It seems strange that my life should end
in such a terrible place.

1120
01:18:23,399 --> 01:18:28,803
But for three years,
I had roses and apologized to no one.

1121
01:18:31,641 --> 01:18:33,233
I shall die here.

1122
01:18:33,409 --> 01:18:36,936
Every inch of me shall perish.

1123
01:18:37,113 --> 01:18:38,808
Every inch...

1124
01:18:39,415 --> 01:18:40,677
...but one.

1125
01:18:44,821 --> 01:18:46,482
An inch.

1126
01:18:47,257 --> 01:18:49,817
It is small, and it is fragile...

1127
01:18:49,993 --> 01:18:53,690
...and it is the only thing
in the world worth having.

1128
01:18:53,863 --> 01:18:58,960
We must never lose it or give it away.
We must never let them take it from us.

1129
01:18:59,736 --> 01:19:04,105
I hope that, whoever you are,
you escape this place.

1130
01:19:04,274 --> 01:19:07,471
I hope that the world turns
and that things get better.

1131
01:19:08,978 --> 01:19:12,573
But what I hope most of all
is that you understand what I mean...

1132
01:19:12,749 --> 01:19:15,946
...when I tell you that
even though I do not know you...

1133
01:19:16,119 --> 01:19:18,849
...and even though
I may never meet you...

1134
01:19:19,022 --> 01:19:22,287
...laugh with you, cry with you...

1135
01:19:22,458 --> 01:19:24,392
...or kiss you...

1136
01:19:24,827 --> 01:19:26,658
...I love you.

1137
01:19:26,829 --> 01:19:29,354
With all my heart...

1138
01:19:29,632 --> 01:19:31,566
...I love you.

1139
01:19:33,203 --> 01:19:34,636
Valerie.

1140
01:19:47,350 --> 01:19:52,083
I'm instructed to inform you that you
have been convicted by special tribunal...

1141
01:19:52,255 --> 01:19:57,215
...and that unless you are ready to offer
your cooperation, you are to be executed.

1142
01:19:57,393 --> 01:20:01,159
Do you understand what I'm telling you?

1143
01:20:02,198 --> 01:20:04,996
- Yes.
- Are you ready to cooperate?

1144
01:20:08,171 --> 01:20:11,072
- No.
- Very well.

1145
01:20:13,142 --> 01:20:15,906
Escort Miss Hammond back to her cell.

1146
01:20:17,046 --> 01:20:18,536
Arrange a detail of six men...

1147
01:20:18,715 --> 01:20:21,684
...and take her out behind
the chemical shed and shoot her.

1148
01:20:37,667 --> 01:20:38,929
It's time.

1149
01:20:40,637 --> 01:20:42,036
I'm ready.

1150
01:20:43,740 --> 01:20:46,470
Look, all they want
is one little piece of information.

1151
01:20:46,643 --> 01:20:48,907
Just give them something, anything.

1152
01:20:49,846 --> 01:20:51,279
Thank you...

1153
01:20:51,447 --> 01:20:54,439
...but I'd rather die
behind the chemical sheds.

1154
01:20:54,617 --> 01:20:58,917
Then you have no fear anymore.
You're completely free.

1155
01:21:05,028 --> 01:21:06,256
What?

1156
01:22:30,513 --> 01:22:32,003
Hello, Evey.

1157
01:22:33,583 --> 01:22:34,845
You.

1158
01:22:37,019 --> 01:22:39,852
- It was you?
- Yeah.

1159
01:22:40,256 --> 01:22:41,951
That wasn't real?

1160
01:22:44,394 --> 01:22:48,387
- Is Gordon...?
- I'm sorry, but Mr. Deitrich's dead.

1161
01:22:48,598 --> 01:22:49,997
I thought they'd arrest him...

1162
01:22:50,166 --> 01:22:53,431
...but when they found a Koran
in his house, they had him executed.

1163
01:22:54,070 --> 01:22:55,594
Oh, God.

1164
01:22:56,272 --> 01:22:59,833
- Fortunately, I got to you before they did.
- You got to me?

1165
01:23:01,577 --> 01:23:03,408
You did this to me?

1166
01:23:05,014 --> 01:23:06,447
You cut my hair?

1167
01:23:08,084 --> 01:23:09,381
You tortured me?

1168
01:23:10,219 --> 01:23:12,050
You tortured me.

1169
01:23:13,589 --> 01:23:14,817
Why?

1170
01:23:15,992 --> 01:23:20,429
You said you wanted to live without fear.
I wish there'd been an easier way...

1171
01:23:20,596 --> 01:23:22,655
...but there wasn't.
- Oh, my God.

1172
01:23:22,832 --> 01:23:24,732
I know you may never forgive me...

1173
01:23:25,301 --> 01:23:27,963
...but nor will you understand
how hard it was for me.

1174
01:23:28,137 --> 01:23:31,197
Every day, I saw in myself
everything you see in me now.

1175
01:23:31,607 --> 01:23:33,768
Every day, I wanted to end it.

1176
01:23:33,943 --> 01:23:37,538
But each time you refused to give in,
I knew I couldn't.

1177
01:23:37,713 --> 01:23:40,443
You're sick! You're evil!

1178
01:23:41,083 --> 01:23:44,075
You could have ended it.
You could have given in, but you didn't.

1179
01:23:44,787 --> 01:23:47,221
- Why?
- Leave me alone! I hate you!

1180
01:23:47,423 --> 01:23:50,950
That's it! See, at first,
I thought it was hate too.

1181
01:23:51,127 --> 01:23:53,687
Hate was all I knew.
It built my world, imprisoned me...

1182
01:23:53,863 --> 01:23:56,354
...taught me how to eat,
how to drink, how to breathe.

1183
01:23:56,532 --> 01:24:00,093
I thought I'd die
with all the hate in my veins.

1184
01:24:00,269 --> 01:24:02,203
But then something happened.

1185
01:24:02,371 --> 01:24:04,771
It happened to me
just as it happened to you.

1186
01:24:04,941 --> 01:24:07,808
Shut up! I don't want to hear your lies!

1187
01:24:07,977 --> 01:24:11,743
Your own father said
that artists use lies to tell the truth.

1188
01:24:11,914 --> 01:24:13,677
Yes, I created a lie.

1189
01:24:13,850 --> 01:24:17,445
But because you believed it,
you found something true about yourself.

1190
01:24:17,620 --> 01:24:21,021
- No.
- What was true in that cell is true now.

1191
01:24:21,190 --> 01:24:24,250
What you felt in there
has nothing to do with me.

1192
01:24:24,427 --> 01:24:27,021
I can't feel anything anymore!

1193
01:24:27,196 --> 01:24:30,927
Don't run from it, Evey.
You've been running all your life.

1194
01:24:32,101 --> 01:24:33,898
I can't... Can't breathe.

1195
01:24:34,437 --> 01:24:38,771
Asthma. When I was little...

1196
01:24:40,843 --> 01:24:42,435
Listen to me, Evey.

1197
01:24:43,112 --> 01:24:46,206
This may be the most important moment
of your life. Commit to it.

1198
01:24:48,284 --> 01:24:51,811
They took your parents from you.
They took your brother from you.

1199
01:24:52,788 --> 01:24:57,851
They put you in a cell and took everything
they could take except your life.

1200
01:24:58,027 --> 01:25:00,928
And you believed that was all
there was, didn't you?

1201
01:25:01,097 --> 01:25:03,827
The only thing you had left
was your life, but it wasn't.

1202
01:25:04,000 --> 01:25:07,663
- Oh, please.
- You found something else.

1203
01:25:07,837 --> 01:25:11,671
In that cell, you found something
that mattered more to you than life.

1204
01:25:11,841 --> 01:25:15,174
When they threatened to kill you
unless you gave what they wanted...

1205
01:25:16,112 --> 01:25:18,205
...you told them you'd rather die.

1206
01:25:18,781 --> 01:25:20,305
You faced your death, Evey.

1207
01:25:20,750 --> 01:25:23,446
You were calm. You were still.

1208
01:25:23,619 --> 01:25:26,019
Try to feel now what you felt then.

1209
01:25:32,194 --> 01:25:34,162
Oh, God.

1210
01:25:36,666 --> 01:25:37,997
I felt...

1211
01:25:38,668 --> 01:25:40,101
Yes?

1212
01:25:42,038 --> 01:25:43,869
I'm dizzy.

1213
01:25:44,040 --> 01:25:46,133
I need air.

1214
01:25:46,309 --> 01:25:49,540
Please, I need to be outside.

1215
01:25:49,712 --> 01:25:51,771
There's a lift.
It'll take us to the roof.

1216
01:26:10,366 --> 01:26:11,833
God is in the rain.

1217
01:27:16,599 --> 01:27:18,032
V.

1218
01:27:19,068 --> 01:27:20,535
I'm leaving.

1219
01:27:22,972 --> 01:27:26,533
There are 872 songs in here.

1220
01:27:27,443 --> 01:27:30,606
I've listened to them all,
but I've never danced to any of them.

1221
01:27:30,780 --> 01:27:33,908
- Did you hear me?
- Yes.

1222
01:27:34,083 --> 01:27:35,550
I can't stay here.

1223
01:27:37,086 --> 01:27:38,610
I know.

1224
01:27:39,889 --> 01:27:43,325
Well, you won't find
any more locked doors here.

1225
01:27:44,293 --> 01:27:46,454
I thought about keeping this...

1226
01:27:46,629 --> 01:27:50,121
...but it didn't seem right,
knowing you wrote it.

1227
01:27:56,138 --> 01:27:57,571
I didn't.

1228
01:27:59,709 --> 01:28:01,802
May I show you something
before you go?

1229
01:28:12,555 --> 01:28:15,149
- She was real.
- Yes.

1230
01:28:15,324 --> 01:28:17,053
She's beautiful.

1231
01:28:18,194 --> 01:28:20,355
- Did you know her?
- No.

1232
01:28:20,730 --> 01:28:23,198
She wrote the letter
just before she died.

1233
01:28:23,365 --> 01:28:26,232
And I delivered it to you
as it had been delivered to me.

1234
01:28:26,602 --> 01:28:28,331
Then it really happened, didn't it?

1235
01:28:29,038 --> 01:28:31,563
- Yes.
- You were in the cell next to her.

1236
01:28:34,210 --> 01:28:36,770
And that's what this is all about.

1237
01:28:36,946 --> 01:28:40,040
You're getting back at them
for what they did to her.

1238
01:28:40,683 --> 01:28:43,914
- And to you.
- What was done to me created me.

1239
01:28:44,086 --> 01:28:45,986
It's a basic principle of the universe...

1240
01:28:46,155 --> 01:28:49,090
...that every action will create
an equal and opposing reaction.

1241
01:28:49,258 --> 01:28:50,657
Is that how you see it?

1242
01:28:50,826 --> 01:28:53,294
- Like an equation?
- What was done to me was monstrous.

1243
01:28:53,462 --> 01:28:55,521
And they created a monster.

1244
01:29:06,108 --> 01:29:09,202
- Do you know where you'll go?
- No.

1245
01:29:10,246 --> 01:29:12,874
That would have scared me before...

1246
01:29:13,048 --> 01:29:14,743
...but I suppose I should thank you.

1247
01:29:26,328 --> 01:29:27,955
Thank you.

1248
01:29:30,499 --> 01:29:32,091
Goodbye.

1249
01:29:34,270 --> 01:29:35,965
Evey...

1250
01:29:36,972 --> 01:29:39,941
...may I ask you for something?

1251
01:29:40,109 --> 01:29:44,910
If I had one wish, I would wish
to see you again, if only once...

1252
01:29:45,114 --> 01:29:46,809
...before the 5th.

1253
01:29:49,251 --> 01:29:51,719
- All right.
- Thank you.

1254
01:30:13,876 --> 01:30:16,674
Chancellor, I know no one seems
to want to discuss this...

1255
01:30:16,846 --> 01:30:19,280
...but if we're to be prepared
for any eventuality...

1256
01:30:19,448 --> 01:30:22,349
...then it can't be ignored any longer.

1257
01:30:22,518 --> 01:30:27,046
The red report in front of you has been
vetted by several demolition specialists.

1258
01:30:27,223 --> 01:30:28,656
Now, it concludes that...

1259
01:30:28,824 --> 01:30:32,225
...the most logical delivery system
for the terrorist to use...

1260
01:30:32,394 --> 01:30:34,794
...would be an airborne attack.

1261
01:30:34,964 --> 01:30:36,591
A separate report has been filed...

1262
01:30:36,765 --> 01:30:40,599
...suggesting a train, despite the fact
that the tunnels surrounding Parliament...

1263
01:30:40,769 --> 01:30:42,327
...have been sealed shut.

1264
01:30:42,504 --> 01:30:44,472
Who filed that report?

1265
01:30:45,641 --> 01:30:47,199
Chief Inspector Finch.

1266
01:30:47,376 --> 01:30:50,277
Do you have any evidence
to support this conclusion, Mr. Finch?

1267
01:30:50,479 --> 01:30:53,004
No, sir. Just a feeling.

1268
01:30:53,182 --> 01:30:55,150
If I am sure of anything, inspector...

1269
01:30:55,317 --> 01:30:59,481
...it is that this government will not survive
if it is to be subject to your feelings.

1270
01:30:59,655 --> 01:31:02,590
Mr. Dascomb,
what we need right now...

1271
01:31:02,758 --> 01:31:05,818
...is a clear message
to the people of this country.

1272
01:31:05,995 --> 01:31:08,327
This message must be read
in every newspaper...

1273
01:31:08,497 --> 01:31:11,022
...heard on every radio,
seen on every television.

1274
01:31:11,200 --> 01:31:15,227
This message must resound
throughout the entire InterLink!

1275
01:31:15,404 --> 01:31:18,805
I want this country to realize
that we stand on the edge of oblivion.

1276
01:31:18,974 --> 01:31:23,240
I want every man, woman and child
to understand how close we are to chaos.

1277
01:31:23,412 --> 01:31:25,346
I want everyone...

1278
01:31:25,547 --> 01:31:29,244
...to remember why they need us!

1279
01:31:29,418 --> 01:31:33,946
In the former United States, civil war
continues to devastate the Midwest.

1280
01:31:34,123 --> 01:31:38,423
Scientists attribute this water shortage
to the lack of rainfall the last two years.

1281
01:31:38,594 --> 01:31:41,722
Ministry officials expect
water coupon prices to rise.

1282
01:31:41,931 --> 01:31:43,865
Police have arrested nine suspects...

1283
01:31:44,033 --> 01:31:47,799
Can you believe this shit?
Been going on all summer.

1284
01:31:47,970 --> 01:31:51,929
Outside the quarantine zone, a new
airborne pathogen has killed 27 people.

1285
01:31:52,474 --> 01:31:56,433
Authorities uncovered new evidence linking
the terrorist organization called V...

1286
01:31:56,979 --> 01:32:00,915
...to the St. Mary's viral attack
on London 14 years ago.

1287
01:32:12,928 --> 01:32:15,453
My friend inside the Finger
came up with something.

1288
01:32:15,798 --> 01:32:17,527
There were three men.

1289
01:32:17,700 --> 01:32:19,497
Covert intel.

1290
01:32:19,668 --> 01:32:21,932
Original black-baggers, all under Creedy.

1291
01:32:22,972 --> 01:32:26,806
Alan Percy, Robert Keyes,
William Rookwood.

1292
01:32:26,976 --> 01:32:29,069
The day after
the St. Mary's outbreak...

1293
01:32:29,244 --> 01:32:32,645
...Percy gives his Beretta a blowjob,
Keyes dies in a fire...

1294
01:32:32,815 --> 01:32:34,305
Rookwood goes missing.

1295
01:32:34,483 --> 01:32:37,418
Bloody coincidences
are making me sick to my stomach.

1296
01:32:37,586 --> 01:32:39,349
Rookwood.

1297
01:32:39,521 --> 01:32:41,352
How do I know that name?

1298
01:32:48,564 --> 01:32:51,556
Shit. He must have had a hidden trip
on his file at the Finger.

1299
01:32:51,767 --> 01:32:53,997
But how'd he know it was you?

1300
01:32:55,604 --> 01:32:57,128
What do we do?

1301
01:32:58,340 --> 01:33:01,138
I'm a cop. I have to know.

1302
01:33:09,618 --> 01:33:12,951
I came when they opened it.
It gave me the collywobbles.

1303
01:33:14,623 --> 01:33:16,250
Still does.

1304
01:33:26,502 --> 01:33:28,493
That's close enough, inspector.

1305
01:33:30,072 --> 01:33:31,300
We're not wired.

1306
01:33:32,341 --> 01:33:35,833
I'm sorry, but a man in my position
survives by taking every precaution.

1307
01:33:36,011 --> 01:33:39,276
- You have information for us?
- No, you already have the information.

1308
01:33:39,448 --> 01:33:41,507
All the names and dates
are inside your head.

1309
01:33:41,683 --> 01:33:44,151
What you want,
what you really need, is a story.

1310
01:33:44,319 --> 01:33:46,310
A story can be true or false.

1311
01:33:46,989 --> 01:33:50,015
I leave such judgments to you, inspector.

1312
01:33:50,859 --> 01:33:54,295
Our story begins,
as these stories often do...

1313
01:33:54,463 --> 01:33:57,591
...with a young,
up-and-coming politician.

1314
01:33:57,766 --> 01:34:01,725
He's a deeply religious man
and a member of the Conservative Party.

1315
01:34:01,904 --> 01:34:06,273
He's completely single-minded
and has no regard for the political process.

1316
01:34:06,442 --> 01:34:09,605
The more power he attains,
the more obvious his zealotry...

1317
01:34:09,778 --> 01:34:12,372
...and the more aggressive
his supporters become.

1318
01:34:13,282 --> 01:34:18,379
Eventually, his party launches a special
project in the name of national security.

1319
01:34:18,587 --> 01:34:21,954
At first it's believed to be a search
for biological weapons...

1320
01:34:22,124 --> 01:34:24,888
...and it's pursued without regard
to its cost.

1321
01:34:25,060 --> 01:34:28,791
However, the true goal
of this project is power.

1322
01:34:28,964 --> 01:34:31,728
Complete and total
hegemonic domination.

1323
01:34:31,900 --> 01:34:34,460
The project, however, ends violently.

1324
01:34:35,871 --> 01:34:38,431
But the efforts of those involved
are not in vain...

1325
01:34:38,607 --> 01:34:43,635
...for a new ability to wage war is born
from the blood of one of the victims.

1326
01:34:43,812 --> 01:34:47,407
Imagine a virus,
the most terrifying virus you can...

1327
01:34:47,583 --> 01:34:50,609
...and then imagine that you
and you alone have the cure.

1328
01:34:50,786 --> 01:34:55,689
But if your ultimate goal is power,
how best to use such a weapon?

1329
01:34:55,891 --> 01:34:59,486
Well, it's at this point in our story
that along comes a spider.

1330
01:35:00,262 --> 01:35:02,162
A man seemingly
without a conscience...

1331
01:35:02,331 --> 01:35:04,595
...for whom the ends
always justify the means.

1332
01:35:04,766 --> 01:35:08,361
He suggests that their target
should not be an enemy of the country...

1333
01:35:08,537 --> 01:35:10,402
...but rather, the country itself.

1334
01:35:10,973 --> 01:35:13,806
Three targets are chosen
to maximize the effect of the attack:

1335
01:35:13,976 --> 01:35:16,968
A school, a tube station
and a water-treatment plant.

1336
01:35:17,146 --> 01:35:19,740
Several hundred die
within the first few weeks.

1337
01:35:19,915 --> 01:35:22,247
Three Waters has, in fact,
been contaminated.

1338
01:35:22,451 --> 01:35:25,079
Authorities are attempting to control
its deadly spread.

1339
01:35:25,254 --> 01:35:27,245
- Sent destruction
through the Underground.

1340
01:35:28,690 --> 01:35:31,284
Fueled by the media,
fear and panic spread quickly...

1341
01:35:31,460 --> 01:35:36,693
...fracturing and dividing the country until,
at last, the true goal comes into view.

1342
01:35:36,865 --> 01:35:38,298
Before the St. Mary's crises...

1343
01:35:38,467 --> 01:35:42,665
...no one would have predicted the results
of the election that year. No one.

1344
01:35:42,838 --> 01:35:47,298
And then not long after the election,
lo and behold, a miracle.

1345
01:35:47,476 --> 01:35:50,001
Some believed it was the work
of God himself.

1346
01:35:50,179 --> 01:35:53,945
But it was a pharmaceutical company
controlled by certain party members...

1347
01:35:54,116 --> 01:35:57,347
...that made them all obscenely rich.

1348
01:35:57,553 --> 01:36:01,683
A year later, several extremists are tried,
found guilty and executed...

1349
01:36:01,857 --> 01:36:05,156
...while a memorial is built
to canonize their victims.

1350
01:36:06,195 --> 01:36:10,962
But the end result,
the true genius of the plan, was the fear.

1351
01:36:11,133 --> 01:36:13,465
Fear became the ultimate tool
of this government.

1352
01:36:13,635 --> 01:36:16,263
Through it, our politician
was ultimately appointed...

1353
01:36:16,438 --> 01:36:20,397
...to the newly created position
of high chancellor.

1354
01:36:20,576 --> 01:36:23,170
The rest, as they say, is history.

1355
01:36:25,147 --> 01:36:29,243
- Can you prove any of this?
- Why do you think I'm still alive?

1356
01:36:31,820 --> 01:36:35,756
All right. We'd like to take you into
protective custody, Mr. Rookwood.

1357
01:36:35,924 --> 01:36:37,789
I'm sure you would.

1358
01:36:37,960 --> 01:36:42,863
But if you want that recording,
you'll do what I tell you to do.

1359
01:36:43,031 --> 01:36:46,000
Put Creedy under 24-hour surveillance.

1360
01:36:46,168 --> 01:36:49,035
When I feel safe he can't pick his nose
without you knowing...

1361
01:36:49,204 --> 01:36:50,671
...l'll contact you again.

1362
01:36:50,839 --> 01:36:53,103
Till then, cheerio.

1363
01:36:54,776 --> 01:36:56,107
Rookwood...

1364
01:36:57,779 --> 01:36:59,610
...why didn't you come forward before?

1365
01:37:00,682 --> 01:37:02,047
What were you waiting for?

1366
01:37:02,217 --> 01:37:04,412
Well, for you, inspector.

1367
01:37:04,586 --> 01:37:06,383
I needed you.

1368
01:37:33,649 --> 01:37:35,742
What's he doing in the dark there?

1369
01:37:35,917 --> 01:37:38,442
Creepy Creedy. Not sure I wanna know.

1370
01:37:38,620 --> 01:37:42,215
Sutler can no longer trust you,
can he, Mr. Creedy?

1371
01:37:42,391 --> 01:37:44,552
And we both know why.

1372
01:37:45,227 --> 01:37:47,593
After I destroy Parliament...

1373
01:37:47,763 --> 01:37:51,665
...his only chance will be to offer them
someone else, some other piece of meat.

1374
01:37:51,833 --> 01:37:53,061
And who will that be?

1375
01:37:53,302 --> 01:37:55,463
You, Mr. Creedy.

1376
01:37:55,637 --> 01:37:59,129
A man as smart as you
has probably considered this.

1377
01:37:59,308 --> 01:38:03,108
A man as smart as you
probably has a plan.

1378
01:38:03,278 --> 01:38:06,441
That plan is the reason
Sutler no longer trusts you.

1379
01:38:06,615 --> 01:38:09,106
It's the reason why
you're being watched right now...

1380
01:38:09,284 --> 01:38:12,082
...why there are eyes and ears
in every room of this house...

1381
01:38:12,254 --> 01:38:14,814
...and a tap on every phone.
- Bollocks.

1382
01:38:14,990 --> 01:38:19,427
Oh, a man as smart as you, I think,
knows otherwise.

1383
01:38:19,594 --> 01:38:22,586
- What do you want?
- Sutler.

1384
01:38:24,166 --> 01:38:26,760
Come, now, Mr. Creedy,
you knew this was coming.

1385
01:38:26,935 --> 01:38:28,926
You knew that one day
it'd be you or him.

1386
01:38:29,104 --> 01:38:32,437
That's why Sutler's been kept
underground for security purposes.

1387
01:38:32,607 --> 01:38:35,770
That's why there are several
of your men close to Sutler...

1388
01:38:35,944 --> 01:38:39,744
...men that can be counted on.
All you have to do is say the word.

1389
01:38:39,915 --> 01:38:42,816
- What do I get out of this deal?
- Me.

1390
01:38:44,653 --> 01:38:47,816
If you accept,
put an X on your front door.

1391
01:38:49,958 --> 01:38:51,858
Why should I trust you?

1392
01:38:52,060 --> 01:38:55,223
Because it's the only way
you're ever going to stop me.

1393
01:39:03,138 --> 01:39:06,665
It is not my sword, Mondego,
but your past that disarmed you.

1394
01:39:08,477 --> 01:39:09,876
May we come up?

1395
01:39:11,246 --> 01:39:13,476
You find your own tree.

1396
01:39:24,593 --> 01:39:27,391
We got Creepy pinned
like a butterfly for weeks.

1397
01:39:28,063 --> 01:39:30,429
Still no word. What's he waiting for?

1398
01:39:33,602 --> 01:39:36,036
Yeah? Inspector, it's for you.

1399
01:39:38,707 --> 01:39:40,675
- Yeah.
- Is that Chief Inspector Finch?

1400
01:39:40,842 --> 01:39:42,639
- It is.
- This is Captain Clark...

1401
01:39:42,811 --> 01:39:44,904
...of the 137th Ward at Southend.

1402
01:39:45,080 --> 01:39:46,308
- We found him.
- Found who?

1403
01:39:46,481 --> 01:39:48,540
William Rookwood,
the one you're looking for.

1404
01:39:48,717 --> 01:39:52,517
I saw your report a couple weeks back,
thought I'd run it through our John Does.

1405
01:39:52,687 --> 01:39:54,587
I hooked him. Perfect dental match.

1406
01:39:54,756 --> 01:39:58,692
A floater. Fishermen picked him up.
No ID, never solved. Till now, that is.

1407
01:39:58,860 --> 01:40:02,626
- William Rookwood is dead?
- I'd say so. Twenty years now.

1408
01:40:06,168 --> 01:40:07,362
Goddamn it!

1409
01:40:07,736 --> 01:40:10,034
That son of a bitch sat there...

1410
01:40:10,205 --> 01:40:13,902
...and spoon-fed me that bullshit,
and I ate it up!

1411
01:40:14,810 --> 01:40:16,744
So, what do we do now, inspector?

1412
01:40:16,912 --> 01:40:19,278
We do what we should have been doing.

1413
01:40:20,048 --> 01:40:21,379
We find him.

1414
01:40:43,104 --> 01:40:46,005
Every day, gentlemen.

1415
01:40:46,174 --> 01:40:50,201
Every day that brings us closer
to November...

1416
01:40:50,378 --> 01:40:53,108
...every day that man remains free...

1417
01:40:53,482 --> 01:40:55,973
...is one more failure.

1418
01:40:56,151 --> 01:40:58,585
Three hundred and forty-seven days,
gentlemen.

1419
01:40:58,753 --> 01:41:01,153
Three hundred and forty-seven failures!

1420
01:41:01,323 --> 01:41:04,019
Chancellor, we do not have
the adequate force...

1421
01:41:04,192 --> 01:41:10,153
We are being buried beneath the avalanche
of your inadequacies, Mr. Creedy!

1422
01:41:27,649 --> 01:41:28,877
I'll get it.

1423
01:41:30,252 --> 01:41:32,550
- Eric Finch?
- Yeah.

1424
01:41:37,425 --> 01:41:38,653
Bloody hell.

1425
01:41:40,428 --> 01:41:42,055
How many went out?

1426
01:41:42,230 --> 01:41:43,925
So far we count eight boxcars.

1427
01:41:44,099 --> 01:41:46,897
- Several hundred thousand, at least.
- Christ.

1428
01:41:48,470 --> 01:41:52,531
I want anyone caught
with one of those masks arrested!

1429
01:41:52,707 --> 01:41:55,505
Give me the money!
Give me the fucking money!

1430
01:41:55,677 --> 01:41:58,669
We're under siege here.
The whole city's gone mad.

1431
01:41:59,414 --> 01:42:01,814
- This is exactly what he wants.
- What?

1432
01:42:01,983 --> 01:42:05,680
- Anarchy in the UK!
- Chaos.

1433
01:42:05,854 --> 01:42:11,087
Mr. Creedy, I am holding you
personally responsible for this situation.

1434
01:42:13,528 --> 01:42:17,931
The problem is that he knows us
better than we know ourselves.

1435
01:42:19,668 --> 01:42:22,831
That's why I went to Larkhill
last night.

1436
01:42:23,004 --> 01:42:26,440
- That's outside quarantine.
- I had to see it.

1437
01:42:28,109 --> 01:42:29,736
There wasn't much left.

1438
01:42:30,712 --> 01:42:33,875
But when I was there, it was strange.

1439
01:42:34,049 --> 01:42:37,712
I suddenly had this feeling
that everything was connected.

1440
01:42:43,391 --> 01:42:45,018
Like I could see the whole thing.

1441
01:42:45,360 --> 01:42:50,229
One long chain of events that stretched
all the way back before Larkhill.

1442
01:42:52,267 --> 01:42:55,600
I felt like I could see everything
that had happened...

1443
01:43:01,743 --> 01:43:03,711
...and everything that
was going to happen.

1444
01:43:04,379 --> 01:43:05,903
Hey, you!

1445
01:43:07,949 --> 01:43:12,249
It was like a perfect pattern
laid out in front of me...

1446
01:43:13,588 --> 01:43:16,079
...and I realized that
we were all a part of it...

1447
01:43:20,695 --> 01:43:22,492
...and all trapped by it.

1448
01:43:29,871 --> 01:43:31,736
So do you know what's gonna happen?

1449
01:43:32,540 --> 01:43:35,600
No. It was a feeling.

1450
01:43:37,612 --> 01:43:39,239
But I can guess.

1451
01:43:41,216 --> 01:43:44,743
With so much chaos,
someone will do something stupid.

1452
01:43:49,057 --> 01:43:50,615
And when they do...

1453
01:43:50,792 --> 01:43:52,760
...things will turn nasty.

1454
01:44:07,375 --> 01:44:09,070
Rioters were arrested in Brixton.

1455
01:44:09,277 --> 01:44:13,714
And then Sutler will be forced to do
the only thing he knows how to do.

1456
01:44:16,885 --> 01:44:22,221
At which point,
all V needs to do is keep his word.

1457
01:44:23,491 --> 01:44:24,822
And then...

1458
01:45:29,057 --> 01:45:31,685
Tonight's your big night.

1459
01:45:32,694 --> 01:45:34,389
You ready for it?

1460
01:45:36,664 --> 01:45:38,791
Are we ready for it?

1461
01:46:12,033 --> 01:46:13,660
I missed this song.

1462
01:46:14,569 --> 01:46:16,628
I didn't think you'd come.

1463
01:46:17,705 --> 01:46:19,138
I said I would.

1464
01:46:23,077 --> 01:46:24,669
You look well.

1465
01:46:24,846 --> 01:46:26,279
Thank you.

1466
01:46:27,916 --> 01:46:32,444
May I inquire as to how
you've avoided detection?

1467
01:46:32,620 --> 01:46:35,589
A fake ID works better
than a Guy Fawkes mask.

1468
01:46:37,192 --> 01:46:41,128
I must confess, every time I heard a siren,
I worried about you.

1469
01:46:41,296 --> 01:46:44,629
I worried about myself for a while.

1470
01:46:44,799 --> 01:46:47,563
But then, one day, I was at a market...

1471
01:46:47,735 --> 01:46:51,796
...and a friend, someone I had worked
with at the BTN, got in line behind me.

1472
01:46:52,974 --> 01:46:57,138
I was so nervous that when the cashier
asked me for my money, I dropped it.

1473
01:46:58,413 --> 01:47:00,779
My friend picked it up...

1474
01:47:00,949 --> 01:47:03,008
...and handed it to me.

1475
01:47:03,718 --> 01:47:06,084
She looked at me right in the eyes...

1476
01:47:07,088 --> 01:47:08,953
...didn't recognize me.

1477
01:47:11,292 --> 01:47:14,352
Whatever you did to me worked better
than I'd have imagined.

1478
01:47:20,335 --> 01:47:22,860
I have a gift for you, Evey...

1479
01:47:23,037 --> 01:47:28,031
...but before I give it to you,
I'd like to ask you something.

1480
01:47:28,209 --> 01:47:31,178
Would you dance with me?

1481
01:47:32,213 --> 01:47:35,705
Now? On the eve of your revolution?

1482
01:47:35,884 --> 01:47:39,376
A revolution without dancing
is a revolution not worth having.

1483
01:47:40,989 --> 01:47:42,217
I'd love to.

1484
01:47:43,691 --> 01:47:46,819
Tonight, I will speak directly
to these people...

1485
01:47:46,995 --> 01:47:49,429
...and make the situation
perfectly clear to them.

1486
01:47:49,597 --> 01:47:55,160
The security of this nation depends
on complete and total compliance.

1487
01:47:55,336 --> 01:47:59,864
Tonight, any protestor,
any instigator or agitator...

1488
01:48:00,041 --> 01:48:02,771
...will be made example of!

1489
01:48:05,046 --> 01:48:08,015
Chancellor, there is a contingency
that has not been addressed.

1490
01:48:08,182 --> 01:48:10,013
And what is that, Mr. Dascomb?

1491
01:48:10,184 --> 01:48:12,379
- Should the terrorist succeed...
- He won't.

1492
01:48:12,553 --> 01:48:16,080
I understand that it is highly unlikely,
but if he does...

1493
01:48:16,257 --> 01:48:20,023
If he does, and something happens
to that building...

1494
01:48:20,194 --> 01:48:23,459
...the only thing that will change,
the only difference it will make...

1495
01:48:23,631 --> 01:48:26,361
...is that tomorrow morning,
instead of a newspaper...

1496
01:48:26,534 --> 01:48:30,402
...I will be reading
Mr. Creedy's resignation!

1497
01:48:35,243 --> 01:48:39,373
You've been busy.
They're very scared right now.

1498
01:48:39,547 --> 01:48:43,608
I heard Sutler's going to make
a public statement tonight.

1499
01:48:43,785 --> 01:48:45,480
It's nearly time.

1500
01:48:45,653 --> 01:48:48,315
The masks were ingenious.

1501
01:48:48,489 --> 01:48:51,322
It was strange to suddenly see
your face everywhere.

1502
01:48:51,492 --> 01:48:54,586
Conceal me what I am,
and be my aid...

1503
01:48:54,762 --> 01:48:58,129
...for such disguise as haply shall become
the form of my intent.

1504
01:48:58,299 --> 01:49:01,166
- Twelfth Night.
- Viola.

1505
01:49:01,336 --> 01:49:04,066
- I don't understand.
- What?

1506
01:49:04,238 --> 01:49:07,639
How you can be one of the most important
things that has happened to me...

1507
01:49:07,809 --> 01:49:10,243
...and yet I know
almost nothing about you.

1508
01:49:10,411 --> 01:49:13,209
I don't know where you were born,
who your parents were...

1509
01:49:13,381 --> 01:49:15,815
...if you had any brothers or sisters.

1510
01:49:15,984 --> 01:49:19,112
I don't even know
what you really look like.

1511
01:49:19,287 --> 01:49:21,312
Evey, please.

1512
01:49:22,557 --> 01:49:24,752
There is a face beneath this mask...

1513
01:49:24,926 --> 01:49:26,757
...but it's not me.

1514
01:49:26,928 --> 01:49:30,295
I'm no more that face than I am
the muscles beneath it...

1515
01:49:30,465 --> 01:49:32,126
...or the bones beneath them.

1516
01:49:34,369 --> 01:49:35,597
I understand.

1517
01:49:36,804 --> 01:49:38,396
Thank you.

1518
01:49:39,140 --> 01:49:40,903
There isn't much time.

1519
01:49:41,075 --> 01:49:43,270
I have something I must give you.

1520
01:49:43,544 --> 01:49:45,603
I went by Parliament.

1521
01:49:45,780 --> 01:49:50,615
Never seen anything like it.
Tanks, anti-aircraft, infantry.

1522
01:49:51,486 --> 01:49:54,421
Makes you wish that no one
would show up tonight.

1523
01:49:56,391 --> 01:49:59,019
But if they do,
what do you think will happen?

1524
01:49:59,794 --> 01:50:02,354
What usually happens
when people without guns...

1525
01:50:02,530 --> 01:50:05,226
...stand up to people with guns.

1526
01:50:06,501 --> 01:50:07,525
Pull over here.

1527
01:50:07,702 --> 01:50:11,194
We've searched these tunnels for weeks.
You think you're gonna find him now?

1528
01:50:14,609 --> 01:50:16,008
Inspector.

1529
01:50:16,811 --> 01:50:18,676
It's all gone wrong, hasn't it?

1530
01:50:27,488 --> 01:50:31,288
The Underground?
I thought they closed this all down.

1531
01:50:31,459 --> 01:50:32,687
They did.

1532
01:50:32,860 --> 01:50:36,660
It took nearly 10 years to clear the tracks
and lay a bit of my own.

1533
01:50:38,633 --> 01:50:40,157
Let me show you.

1534
01:50:56,317 --> 01:50:58,182
These tracks lead to Parliament.

1535
01:50:58,486 --> 01:50:59,885
Yes.

1536
01:51:00,588 --> 01:51:02,579
Then it's really going to happen, isn't it?

1537
01:51:02,757 --> 01:51:06,056
It will if you want it to.

1538
01:51:06,561 --> 01:51:08,688
- What?
- This is my gift to you, Evey.

1539
01:51:09,263 --> 01:51:14,724
Everything that I have: My home,
my books, the gallery, this train...

1540
01:51:14,902 --> 01:51:17,871
...l'm leaving to you to do with
what you will.

1541
01:51:18,039 --> 01:51:19,438
Is this another trick, V?

1542
01:51:19,607 --> 01:51:23,976
No. No more tricks. No more lies.

1543
01:51:24,145 --> 01:51:26,045
Only truth.

1544
01:51:26,214 --> 01:51:29,377
And the truth is, you made me
understand that I was wrong...

1545
01:51:29,884 --> 01:51:34,787
...that the choice to pull this lever
is not mine to make.

1546
01:51:34,956 --> 01:51:37,754
- Why?
- Because this world...

1547
01:51:37,925 --> 01:51:42,385
...the world that I'm a part of and
that I helped shape, will end tonight.

1548
01:51:43,431 --> 01:51:45,456
And tomorrow,
a different world will begin...

1549
01:51:45,633 --> 01:51:50,730
...that different people will shape,
and this choice belongs to them.

1550
01:51:53,741 --> 01:51:55,675
Where are you going?

1551
01:51:55,910 --> 01:51:58,242
The time has come for me
to meet my maker...

1552
01:51:58,412 --> 01:52:01,745
...and to repay him in kind
for all that he's done.

1553
01:52:01,916 --> 01:52:04,680
V, wait!
Please, you don't have to do this.

1554
01:52:04,852 --> 01:52:07,412
You could let it go.
We could leave here together.

1555
01:52:07,588 --> 01:52:10,557
No. You were right about what I am.

1556
01:52:10,992 --> 01:52:12,983
I have no tree waiting for me.

1557
01:52:13,461 --> 01:52:17,955
All I want, all I deserve,
is at the end of that tunnel.

1558
01:52:18,132 --> 01:52:19,895
That's not true.

1559
01:52:46,494 --> 01:52:47,859
I can't.

1560
01:52:56,904 --> 01:52:58,565
My fellow Englishmen...

1561
01:52:59,140 --> 01:53:01,131
...tonight, our country...

1562
01:53:01,309 --> 01:53:02,833
...that which we stand for...

1563
01:53:03,044 --> 01:53:04,636
...and all that we hold dear...

1564
01:53:04,812 --> 01:53:08,578
...faces a grave and terrible threat.

1565
01:53:08,749 --> 01:53:10,216
The area's clean, sir.

1566
01:53:10,818 --> 01:53:14,584
This violent and unparalleled assault
to our security...

1567
01:53:14,755 --> 01:53:16,518
...will not go undefended.

1568
01:53:16,691 --> 01:53:17,988
Where is he?

1569
01:53:18,159 --> 01:53:19,148
Or unpunished.

1570
01:53:19,327 --> 01:53:21,488
Penny for the Guy.

1571
01:53:21,662 --> 01:53:25,655
Our enemy is an insidious one,
seeking to divide us...

1572
01:53:26,267 --> 01:53:30,704
...and destroy the very foundation
of our great nation.

1573
01:53:30,871 --> 01:53:34,932
I have kept my side of the bargain,
but have you kept yours?

1574
01:53:35,109 --> 01:53:36,269
Bring him down.

1575
01:53:36,444 --> 01:53:38,674
Tonight we must remain steadfast.

1576
01:53:39,180 --> 01:53:41,011
We must remain determined.

1577
01:53:41,182 --> 01:53:44,379
But most of all,
we must remain united.

1578
01:53:47,655 --> 01:53:51,284
Those caught tonight
in violation of curfew...

1579
01:53:51,459 --> 01:53:54,087
...will be considered in league
with our enemy...

1580
01:53:54,262 --> 01:53:57,527
...and prosecuted as a terrorist
without leniency or exception.

1581
01:53:57,698 --> 01:53:59,188
I want to see his face.

1582
01:53:59,367 --> 01:54:02,825
Tonight I give you
my most solemn vow...

1583
01:54:03,004 --> 01:54:05,404
...that justice will be swift...

1584
01:54:05,573 --> 01:54:08,041
...it will be righteous...

1585
01:54:08,209 --> 01:54:10,473
...and it will be without mercy.

1586
01:54:12,613 --> 01:54:14,808
Oh, God. No.

1587
01:54:14,982 --> 01:54:18,884
At last, we finally meet.

1588
01:54:21,422 --> 01:54:23,788
I have something for you, chancellor.

1589
01:54:24,058 --> 01:54:25,855
A farewell gift.

1590
01:54:26,027 --> 01:54:29,622
For all the things you've done,
for the things you might have done...

1591
01:54:29,797 --> 01:54:31,822
...and for the only thing you have left.

1592
01:54:34,168 --> 01:54:36,102
Goodbye, chancellor.

1593
01:54:37,104 --> 01:54:38,298
Mr. Creedy.

1594
01:54:40,675 --> 01:54:42,438
Disgusting.

1595
01:54:55,222 --> 01:54:57,349
Now that's done with...

1596
01:54:57,525 --> 01:55:01,359
...it's time to have a look at your face.

1597
01:55:01,896 --> 01:55:03,420
Take off your mask.

1598
01:55:03,731 --> 01:55:04,959
No.

1599
01:55:20,381 --> 01:55:22,008
Defiant to the end, huh?

1600
01:55:23,984 --> 01:55:27,579
You won't cry like him, will you?
You're not afraid of death.

1601
01:55:27,755 --> 01:55:28,881
You're like me.

1602
01:55:29,056 --> 01:55:33,493
The only thing you and I have in common,
Mr. Creedy, is we're both about to die.

1603
01:55:35,129 --> 01:55:36,892
How do you imagine
that's gonna happen?

1604
01:55:37,164 --> 01:55:39,359
With my hands around your neck.

1605
01:55:41,635 --> 01:55:42,761
Bollocks.

1606
01:55:43,871 --> 01:55:46,101
What are you gonna do, huh?

1607
01:55:46,273 --> 01:55:48,366
We've swept this place.
You've got nothing.

1608
01:55:48,542 --> 01:55:52,945
Nothing but your bloody knives
and your fancy karate gimmicks.

1609
01:55:53,114 --> 01:55:54,672
We have guns.

1610
01:55:54,849 --> 01:55:58,114
No, you have bullets and the hope
that when your guns are empty...

1611
01:55:58,285 --> 01:56:00,412
...l'm no longer standing,
because if I am...

1612
01:56:01,222 --> 01:56:03,349
...you'll all be dead
before you've reloaded.

1613
01:56:03,691 --> 01:56:05,852
That's impossible!

1614
01:56:08,262 --> 01:56:09,320
Kill him.

1615
01:56:33,988 --> 01:56:35,080
My turn.

1616
01:57:46,760 --> 01:57:48,955
Die! Die!

1617
01:57:49,864 --> 01:57:52,025
Why won't you die?!

1618
01:57:52,967 --> 01:57:54,332
Why won't you die?

1619
01:57:56,203 --> 01:57:59,297
Beneath this mask
there is more than flesh.

1620
01:57:59,473 --> 01:58:02,271
Beneath this mask there is an idea,
Mr. Creedy.

1621
01:58:03,644 --> 01:58:05,839
And ideas are bulletproof.

1622
01:58:57,565 --> 01:59:00,659
This is perimeter one.
Whitehall is secure. Over.

1623
01:59:00,834 --> 01:59:02,096
This is General Ackroyd.

1624
01:59:02,536 --> 01:59:04,060
Keep communication tight.

1625
01:59:04,238 --> 01:59:07,503
I won't have this getting any more
bollixed up than it already is.

1626
01:59:11,412 --> 01:59:12,743
V!

1627
01:59:17,384 --> 01:59:19,909
Oh, God, we have to stop your bleeding.

1628
01:59:20,087 --> 01:59:24,217
Please, don't. I'm finished and glad of it.

1629
01:59:24,625 --> 01:59:26,217
Don't say that.

1630
01:59:26,727 --> 01:59:29,594
I told you, only truth.

1631
01:59:33,133 --> 01:59:36,569
For 20 years I sought only this day.

1632
01:59:36,737 --> 01:59:38,864
Nothing else existed...

1633
01:59:40,941 --> 01:59:42,932
...until I saw you.

1634
01:59:44,111 --> 01:59:46,375
Then everything changed.

1635
01:59:47,781 --> 01:59:49,715
I fell in love with you, Evey...

1636
01:59:51,285 --> 01:59:54,482
...like I no longer believed I could.

1637
01:59:54,655 --> 01:59:57,123
V, I don't want you to die.

1638
01:59:59,893 --> 02:00:03,659
That's the most beautiful thing...

1639
02:00:03,831 --> 02:00:06,425
...you could have ever given me.

1640
02:00:13,974 --> 02:00:15,441
V?

1641
02:00:16,677 --> 02:00:17,939
V?!

1642
02:00:28,389 --> 02:00:31,358
Eyes and ears have detected movement
heading to Trafalgar Square.

1643
02:00:31,525 --> 02:00:33,550
This is perimeter one.
We have enemy contact.

1644
02:01:05,793 --> 02:01:07,886
Hold it. Stop right there.

1645
02:01:11,298 --> 02:01:12,788
You're Evey Hammond, aren't you?

1646
02:01:20,808 --> 02:01:22,070
Then it's over?

1647
02:01:22,543 --> 02:01:23,771
Almost.

1648
02:01:23,944 --> 02:01:26,378
Stop. Get your hand off that lever.

1649
02:01:28,749 --> 02:01:29,807
No.

1650
02:01:30,617 --> 02:01:32,983
Enemy is approaching fast.
Requesting orders.

1651
02:01:33,153 --> 02:01:35,383
- What shall we do?
- No response from Command.

1652
02:01:36,824 --> 02:01:39,156
Or from Party Leader Creedy.

1653
02:01:39,326 --> 02:01:40,623
Or from the high chancellor.

1654
02:01:41,528 --> 02:01:42,756
Why are you doing this?

1655
02:01:43,297 --> 02:01:45,663
- Because he was right.
- About what?

1656
02:01:45,833 --> 02:01:50,327
That this country needs more than
a building right now. It needs hope.

1657
02:01:55,375 --> 02:01:57,866
Bloody hell, stand down! Stand down!

1658
02:02:24,671 --> 02:02:27,071
Jesus bloody Christ.

1659
02:02:52,366 --> 02:02:53,458
It's time.

1660
02:03:14,855 --> 02:03:16,152
Tell me...

1661
02:03:17,191 --> 02:03:19,682
...do you like music, Mr. Finch?

1662
02:03:39,279 --> 02:03:41,270
That music?

1663
02:03:41,782 --> 02:03:43,215
Yes.

1664
02:03:43,650 --> 02:03:45,208
His music.

1665
02:04:17,150 --> 02:04:18,708
Who was he?

1666
02:04:19,987 --> 02:04:21,215
He was Edmond Dantes.

1667
02:04:23,390 --> 02:04:25,790
And he was my father...

1668
02:04:25,959 --> 02:04:27,893
...and my mother.

1669
02:04:28,795 --> 02:04:30,228
My brother.

1670
02:04:32,232 --> 02:04:34,097
My friend.

1671
02:04:35,035 --> 02:04:37,026
He was you...

1672
02:04:39,106 --> 02:04:40,573
...and me.

1673
02:04:42,676 --> 02:04:44,541
He was all of us.

1674
02:05:14,041 --> 02:05:16,441
No one will ever forget that night...

1675
02:05:16,610 --> 02:05:19,272
...and what it meant for this country.

1676
02:05:19,780 --> 02:05:22,214
But I will never forget the man...

1677
02:05:22,382 --> 02:05:24,043
...and what he meant to me.

1678
02:13:21,361 --> 02:13:23,352
[ENGLISH]
V for Vendetta | 2005 | Español | 字幕:12:Ян:56:搜狗:新浪:9le8:9le8:9le8:9le8:56:us | 百科:Script