All language subtitles for The Pigeon Tunnel

af Afrikaans
ak Akan
sq Albanian
am Amharic
ar Arabic
hy Armenian
az Azerbaijani
eu Basque
be Belarusian
bem Bemba
bn Bengali
bh Bihari
bs Bosnian
br Breton
bg Bulgarian
km Cambodian
ca Catalan
ceb Cebuano
chr Cherokee
ny Chichewa
zh-CN Chinese (Simplified)
zh-TW Chinese (Traditional)
co Corsican
hr Croatian
da Danish
nl Dutch
en English
eo Esperanto
et Estonian
ee Ewe
fo Faroese
tl Filipino
fi Finnish
fr French
fy Frisian
gaa Ga
gl Galician
ka Georgian
de German
el Greek
gn Guarani
gu Gujarati
ht Haitian Creole
ha Hausa
haw Hawaiian
iw Hebrew
hi Hindi
hmn Hmong
hu Hungarian
is Icelandic
ig Igbo
id Indonesian
ia Interlingua
ga Irish
it Italian
ja Japanese
jw Javanese
kn Kannada
kk Kazakh
rw Kinyarwanda
rn Kirundi
kg Kongo
ko Korean
kri Krio (Sierra Leone)
ku Kurdish
ckb Kurdish (SoranĂ®)
ky Kyrgyz
lo Laothian
la Latin
lv Latvian
ln Lingala
lt Lithuanian
loz Lozi
lg Luganda
ach Luo
lb Luxembourgish
mk Macedonian
mg Malagasy
ms Malay
ml Malayalam
mt Maltese
mi Maori
mr Marathi
mfe Mauritian Creole
mo Moldavian
mn Mongolian
my Myanmar (Burmese)
sr-ME Montenegrin
ne Nepali
pcm Nigerian Pidgin
nso Northern Sotho
no Norwegian
nn Norwegian (Nynorsk)
oc Occitan
or Oriya
om Oromo
ps Pashto
fa Persian
pl Polish
pt-BR Portuguese (Brazil)
pt Portuguese (Portugal)
pa Punjabi
qu Quechua
rm Romansh
nyn Runyakitara
ru Russian
sm Samoan
gd Scots Gaelic
sr Serbian
sh Serbo-Croatian
st Sesotho
tn Setswana
crs Seychellois Creole
sn Shona
sd Sindhi
si Sinhalese
sk Slovak
sl Slovenian
so Somali
es Spanish
es-419 Spanish (Latin American)
su Sundanese
sw Swahili
sv Swedish
tg Tajik
ta Tamil
tt Tatar
te Telugu
th Thai
ti Tigrinya
to Tonga
lua Tshiluba
tum Tumbuka
tr Turkish
tk Turkmen
tw Twi
ug Uighur
uk Ukrainian
ur Urdu
uz Uzbek
vi Vietnamese
cy Welsh
wo Wolof
xh Xhosa
yi Yiddish
yo Yoruba
zu Zulu
Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:19,853 --> 00:00:24,482 [dramatic music] 2 00:00:24,483 --> 00:00:29,238 [Errol Morris] Usually, I have absolutely no idea of where to begin, 3 00:00:29,239 --> 00:00:31,865 but you gave me an idea of where to begin. 4 00:00:33,617 --> 00:00:34,826 And what was that? 5 00:00:36,537 --> 00:00:40,186 [Errol] You asked me about the nature of our relationship. 6 00:00:40,187 --> 00:00:43,836 It went further than that, I think. It said, "Who are you?" 7 00:00:43,837 --> 00:00:46,629 Because, I've looked at much of your work. 8 00:00:46,630 --> 00:00:51,635 Sometimes, you're a spectral figure, sometimes you're God. 9 00:00:51,636 --> 00:00:53,762 And sometimes you're present. 10 00:00:58,100 --> 00:01:03,146 I needed to know who I was talking to. Were you my friend across the fire? 11 00:01:03,147 --> 00:01:06,066 Were you a stranger on a bus? 12 00:01:06,817 --> 00:01:08,193 Who are you? 13 00:01:09,444 --> 00:01:11,612 This is a performance art. 14 00:01:11,613 --> 00:01:18,078 You need to know whether you're performing to a trade union, an elite audience. 15 00:01:20,080 --> 00:01:24,877 You need to know something about the ambitions of the people you're talking to. 16 00:01:25,836 --> 00:01:28,172 [Errol] And if I can't answer that question? 17 00:01:28,173 --> 00:01:30,841 Not that I won't, but maybe I can't. 18 00:01:31,884 --> 00:01:35,762 Then we'll struggle on and find out who you are. 19 00:01:35,763 --> 00:01:36,971 [chuckles] 20 00:01:36,972 --> 00:01:39,683 [wings flapping] 21 00:01:52,279 --> 00:01:54,655 [David] When I was first in Army Intelligence, 22 00:01:54,656 --> 00:01:58,951 I'd conducted a lot of interviews, which were also interrogations. 23 00:01:58,952 --> 00:02:04,416 Immediately, in the relationship, there is a dependence upon me, the interrogator. 24 00:02:05,834 --> 00:02:10,359 "Is your mother okay? Do you want me to make a call to your home?" 25 00:02:10,360 --> 00:02:14,885 It's the bonding, real or artificial, that opens the discussion. 26 00:02:16,053 --> 00:02:19,806 First of all, a statement that I'm the only person you've got. 27 00:02:20,933 --> 00:02:23,268 [Errol] Establishing a dependence? 28 00:02:24,144 --> 00:02:27,648 Establishing their dependence on the interrogator, yes. 29 00:02:29,149 --> 00:02:33,153 When you want something to be expressed that may not be true, 30 00:02:33,154 --> 00:02:36,907 and you know it's not true, that's a beginning. 31 00:02:39,993 --> 00:02:44,164 {\an8}[David] "There's scarcely a book of mine that didn't have The Pigeon Tunnel 32 00:02:44,165 --> 00:02:47,793 at some time or another as its working title." 33 00:02:50,838 --> 00:02:52,129 [muffled thud] 34 00:02:52,130 --> 00:02:54,883 [David] "Its origin is easily explained. 35 00:02:55,551 --> 00:02:58,929 I was in my mid-teens when my father decided to take me 36 00:02:58,930 --> 00:03:02,599 on one of his gambling sprees to Monte Carlo. 37 00:03:05,519 --> 00:03:08,981 Close by the old casino stood the sporting club." 38 00:03:08,982 --> 00:03:11,190 [wings flapping] 39 00:03:11,191 --> 00:03:13,755 [David] "At its base lay a stretch of lawn 40 00:03:13,756 --> 00:03:16,321 and a shooting range looking out to sea." 41 00:03:16,322 --> 00:03:17,614 [gunshot] 42 00:03:23,579 --> 00:03:24,580 [gunshot] 43 00:03:24,872 --> 00:03:26,415 [gunshot] 44 00:03:28,917 --> 00:03:32,838 {\an8}[David] "Under the lawn, ran small, parallel tunnels 45 00:03:32,839 --> 00:03:35,507 {\an8}that emerged in a row at the sea's edge. 46 00:03:40,179 --> 00:03:43,973 - Into them were inserted live pigeons..." - [pigeon coos] 47 00:03:43,974 --> 00:03:47,769 "...that had been hatched and trapped on the casino roof. 48 00:03:52,608 --> 00:03:56,653 Their job was to flutter their way along the pitch-dark tunnel 49 00:03:56,654 --> 00:03:59,655 until they emerged in the Mediterranean sky 50 00:03:59,656 --> 00:04:03,702 as targets for the well-lunched sporting gentlemen..." 51 00:04:03,703 --> 00:04:04,994 [Russian soldiers] "Halt! Halt!" 52 00:04:04,995 --> 00:04:08,248 "...who were standing in wait with their shotguns." 53 00:04:12,836 --> 00:04:13,837 [gunshot] 54 00:04:17,007 --> 00:04:18,049 [gunshot] 55 00:04:18,050 --> 00:04:21,093 "Pigeons who were missed or merely winged 56 00:04:21,094 --> 00:04:24,932 returned to the place of their birth on the casino roof, 57 00:04:24,933 --> 00:04:27,768 where the same traps awaited them. 58 00:04:31,063 --> 00:04:34,441 Quite why this image has haunted me for so long 59 00:04:35,609 --> 00:04:37,528 is something the listener..." 60 00:04:37,529 --> 00:04:38,486 [gunshot] 61 00:04:38,487 --> 00:04:41,698 "...is perhaps better able to judge than I am." 62 00:04:42,533 --> 00:04:43,742 [gunshot] 63 00:04:52,960 --> 00:04:57,339 [Errol] The name David Cornwell is probably unfamiliar to most of you. 64 00:04:57,340 --> 00:05:01,175 He's an expert on secrets, a former spy himself, 65 00:05:01,176 --> 00:05:04,888 and the author of two dozen books, virtually all of them best sellers, 66 00:05:04,889 --> 00:05:07,808 {\an8}written under the pen name of John le Carré. 67 00:05:09,393 --> 00:05:13,188 {\an8}[Errol] Cornwell has been living this double life for more than 50 years now 68 00:05:13,189 --> 00:05:14,606 {\an8}and rarely gives interviews. 69 00:05:16,984 --> 00:05:19,444 - [intriguing music] - [David] Betrayal fascinates me. 70 00:05:20,028 --> 00:05:23,824 I've lived through a period of endless betrayal. 71 00:05:26,243 --> 00:05:29,913 When I went into the secret world, I served in two successive services, 72 00:05:29,914 --> 00:05:32,416 both of which were betrayed to the hilt. 73 00:05:33,333 --> 00:05:35,794 I felt betrayed as a child, if you like. 74 00:05:37,462 --> 00:05:39,882 I felt that I had betrayed people myself. 75 00:05:48,223 --> 00:05:49,975 Like many artistic people, 76 00:05:51,351 --> 00:05:57,691 I have lived from early childhood inside an imaginative bubble. 77 00:06:00,235 --> 00:06:03,154 When I was in the secret world, it wasn't enough for me. 78 00:06:03,155 --> 00:06:07,325 I did very little of it. I was very junior, I wasn't told much. 79 00:06:07,326 --> 00:06:11,538 So, what I did was reinvent the secret world and fill my own people with it. 80 00:06:13,916 --> 00:06:19,922 [Errol] In many of the stories, there are dupes and string pullers. 81 00:06:22,216 --> 00:06:26,136 Those in control and those controlled by others. 82 00:06:28,805 --> 00:06:29,805 [camera shutter clicks] 83 00:06:29,806 --> 00:06:31,975 [David] Well, now we're talking about my childhood. 84 00:06:31,976 --> 00:06:34,186 [projector slide changes] 85 00:06:38,815 --> 00:06:41,527 My father was a confidence trickster. 86 00:06:41,528 --> 00:06:45,030 Life was a stage. 87 00:06:47,199 --> 00:06:49,159 Where pretense was everything. 88 00:06:50,494 --> 00:06:53,267 Being off stage was boring. 89 00:06:53,268 --> 00:06:56,040 And risk was attractive. 90 00:06:56,041 --> 00:07:00,379 But above all, what was attractive was the imprint of personality. 91 00:07:02,673 --> 00:07:04,799 Of truth, we didn't speak. 92 00:07:04,800 --> 00:07:07,114 Of conviction, we didn't speak. 93 00:07:07,115 --> 00:07:09,429 [Errol] So, you felt like a dupe? 94 00:07:10,764 --> 00:07:13,684 No, I joined. I joined. 95 00:07:16,061 --> 00:07:20,524 You polish your act, learn to tell funny stories. Show off. 96 00:07:22,109 --> 00:07:25,279 You discover early that there is no center to a human being. 97 00:07:27,906 --> 00:07:31,535 I wasn't a dupe. I was invited to dupe other people. 98 00:07:32,661 --> 00:07:36,790 If we moved from one place to another, didn't pay the bills. 99 00:07:36,791 --> 00:07:40,147 If we had to put the lights out on the house 100 00:07:40,148 --> 00:07:43,870 because somebody was after my father, Ronnie, 101 00:07:43,871 --> 00:07:47,593 that seemed at the time, the way people lived. 102 00:07:47,594 --> 00:07:49,970 Now, these are not hard luck stories. 103 00:07:50,721 --> 00:07:53,848 Graham Greene said, and I quote him often, 104 00:07:53,849 --> 00:07:57,414 "Childhood is the credit balance of the writer." 105 00:07:57,415 --> 00:08:00,981 It's not a lament, it's just a self-examination. 106 00:08:04,526 --> 00:08:07,487 [intriguing music] 107 00:08:08,739 --> 00:08:11,491 [David] "I have seen the house where I was born, 108 00:08:11,492 --> 00:08:14,744 but the house of my birth that I prefer 109 00:08:14,745 --> 00:08:18,582 is a different one built in my imagination. 110 00:08:20,959 --> 00:08:24,712 It's red brick and clattery and due for demolition, 111 00:08:24,713 --> 00:08:30,260 with broken windows, a 'For Sale' sign and an old bath in the garden. 112 00:08:30,261 --> 00:08:33,722 A place for kids to hide in rather than be born. 113 00:08:35,390 --> 00:08:39,645 But born there I was, or so my imagination insists." 114 00:08:40,395 --> 00:08:42,563 - [woman cries and pants] - "I was born in the attic 115 00:08:42,564 --> 00:08:44,565 among a stack of brown boxes 116 00:08:44,566 --> 00:08:48,320 that my father always carted round with him when he was on the run." 117 00:08:49,571 --> 00:08:52,698 [birds tweet] 118 00:08:52,699 --> 00:08:57,162 "My mother lies on a camp bed, pitifully doing her best, 119 00:08:57,163 --> 00:08:59,331 whatever her best may entail." 120 00:09:00,958 --> 00:09:02,334 [David's mother pants] 121 00:09:04,503 --> 00:09:08,215 [David's mother wails] 122 00:09:13,303 --> 00:09:15,596 - "So, I am born..." - [baby cries] 123 00:09:15,597 --> 00:09:18,808 "...and packed up with my mother's few possessions, 124 00:09:18,809 --> 00:09:22,062 for we have recently suffered another bailiffs' visitation 125 00:09:22,063 --> 00:09:23,814 and are travelling light." 126 00:09:24,982 --> 00:09:27,150 [baby gurgles] 127 00:09:29,152 --> 00:09:31,405 "The lid of the boot is locked from the outside." 128 00:09:31,406 --> 00:09:33,073 [engine starts] 129 00:09:34,366 --> 00:09:39,705 "I'm already on the run. I've been on the run ever since." 130 00:09:46,253 --> 00:09:50,549 [distorted flapping wings] 131 00:09:50,550 --> 00:09:53,594 [pigeons coo] 132 00:10:00,142 --> 00:10:02,644 [David] My mother disappeared when I was five. 133 00:10:04,188 --> 00:10:06,398 I had no relationship with her at all. 134 00:10:07,900 --> 00:10:11,445 There were many substitute mothers who passed through my father's hands. 135 00:10:11,446 --> 00:10:15,616 {\an8}One particular stepmother, who in her own way was heroic, 136 00:10:15,617 --> 00:10:17,492 {\an8}steadied the ship for a while. 137 00:10:18,118 --> 00:10:20,120 [dramatic music] 138 00:10:24,875 --> 00:10:27,293 {\an8}[David] My mother was a mystery. 139 00:10:27,294 --> 00:10:31,006 {\an8}Because it was never properly revealed what had happened to her. 140 00:10:31,007 --> 00:10:33,050 Was she dead, was she alive? 141 00:10:38,639 --> 00:10:41,016 Ronnie didn't like hard truths. 142 00:10:46,855 --> 00:10:49,149 I met her again at 21. 143 00:10:51,735 --> 00:10:54,695 I wrote to her brother, he wrote back, saying, 144 00:10:54,696 --> 00:10:58,492 "Here's her address. Never tell her that I told you." 145 00:10:59,159 --> 00:11:01,578 So, I wrote to my mother, said, "Your brother tells me..." 146 00:11:01,579 --> 00:11:04,414 So, I felt completely unbound by this injunction. 147 00:11:09,002 --> 00:11:13,882 [Errol] Did you imagine her having regrets about leaving you and your brother? 148 00:11:15,092 --> 00:11:19,388 [David] Well, when I met her, [laughs] I asked how she felt about it. 149 00:11:20,264 --> 00:11:23,892 And she replied, and it was always her reply, 150 00:11:24,852 --> 00:11:27,645 that my father had been intolerable to live with, 151 00:11:27,646 --> 00:11:31,483 that she got sick of the trail of mistresses he was bringing to the house. 152 00:11:31,484 --> 00:11:34,527 That there was never any money passing through. 153 00:11:34,528 --> 00:11:37,948 And she didn't like all these crooks coming through his life. 154 00:11:37,949 --> 00:11:41,827 She said, if, if she had attempted any other measure, 155 00:11:41,828 --> 00:11:45,705 he knew so many wonderful lawyers, which indeed he did, 156 00:11:45,706 --> 00:11:49,438 that she would never have had a chance in the marital court. 157 00:11:49,439 --> 00:11:53,172 So, she gave up all that stuff and thought she'd just push off. 158 00:11:53,173 --> 00:11:55,799 [pigeons coo] 159 00:11:59,887 --> 00:12:02,472 [Errol] Do you remember the day she left? 160 00:12:02,473 --> 00:12:03,640 [David] No. 161 00:12:06,101 --> 00:12:10,355 If you are going to leave your children, that night, 162 00:12:11,690 --> 00:12:13,483 with your white suitcase packed, 163 00:12:15,485 --> 00:12:17,070 do you kiss them goodbye? 164 00:12:17,071 --> 00:12:18,238 [door creaks] 165 00:12:20,699 --> 00:12:24,453 Did she come into the room where we slept? Take a last look at us? 166 00:12:25,329 --> 00:12:26,580 [she sighs gently] 167 00:12:31,919 --> 00:12:35,923 [David] So, I imagine it. I imagine that she did. 168 00:12:40,135 --> 00:12:41,220 [she exhales] 169 00:12:46,558 --> 00:12:47,643 [door closes firmly] 170 00:12:48,936 --> 00:12:51,146 [footsteps echo] 171 00:12:56,276 --> 00:12:59,530 [Errol] You came into possession of this suitcase. 172 00:12:59,531 --> 00:13:01,031 [David] When she died, 173 00:13:01,865 --> 00:13:05,619 I spotted this beautiful white hide suitcase from Harrods 174 00:13:05,620 --> 00:13:07,954 lined with silk inside. 175 00:13:07,955 --> 00:13:12,751 {\an8}With her initials on the outside, "O.M.C.," Olive Moore Cornwell. 176 00:13:14,169 --> 00:13:20,133 {\an8}That must have been the suitcase into which she packed her clothes. 177 00:13:21,593 --> 00:13:25,222 I imagined the amazing flimsies that it would have contained. 178 00:13:27,140 --> 00:13:29,017 {\an8}And the most exquisite clothes. 179 00:13:34,648 --> 00:13:37,379 {\an8}She took it into a kind of poverty. 180 00:13:37,380 --> 00:13:39,746 She ran away with a chap who had no money. 181 00:13:39,747 --> 00:13:42,113 I imagined the suitcase being unpacked 182 00:13:42,114 --> 00:13:45,200 and the last of the luxury gradually fading away. 183 00:13:46,410 --> 00:13:48,787 I kept the suitcase. It's the only relic I have of her. 184 00:13:48,788 --> 00:13:51,748 Physical evidence that that thing happened. 185 00:13:53,166 --> 00:13:57,546 [Errol] What did the suitcase mean to you? Why keep it? 186 00:13:58,338 --> 00:14:01,925 I accused it in my mind of being, as it were, a conspirator 187 00:14:01,926 --> 00:14:05,012 in her secret departure from the house one night. 188 00:14:05,013 --> 00:14:07,034 [vehicle passes faintly] 189 00:14:07,035 --> 00:14:09,057 To me, it's historic. 190 00:14:13,353 --> 00:14:17,106 She was impenetrable emotionally. 191 00:14:17,107 --> 00:14:21,694 I never heard her express a serious feeling. 192 00:14:21,695 --> 00:14:26,950 But when she went to nursing home for her last year or so, 193 00:14:27,784 --> 00:14:31,412 then she created a fantasy with the nurses. 194 00:14:31,413 --> 00:14:37,586 She had painted to the nurses a picture of maternal loyalty to us. 195 00:14:37,587 --> 00:14:41,027 The long lives we had shared, all the fun we'd had. 196 00:14:41,028 --> 00:14:44,468 So, she'd filled in the gap years, if you like. 197 00:14:44,469 --> 00:14:47,262 And when I attended her dying, 198 00:14:49,348 --> 00:14:52,809 the irony of the moment was she mistook me for my father. 199 00:14:56,563 --> 00:14:59,524 [foreboding music] 200 00:14:59,525 --> 00:15:03,987 [David] She said, "You never brought me orchids." 201 00:15:05,864 --> 00:15:09,576 I think it was a reference to some other amour he had. 202 00:15:10,369 --> 00:15:11,703 I will never know. 203 00:15:13,038 --> 00:15:14,622 And I said, "What color do you like?" 204 00:15:14,623 --> 00:15:17,751 She said, "I don't care. I've never seen them. Bring me an orchid." 205 00:15:17,752 --> 00:15:20,087 [mysterious music] 206 00:15:25,342 --> 00:15:29,596 {\an8}[David] People loved Ronnie to the end of his days, even people he'd robbed. 207 00:15:33,934 --> 00:15:37,332 {\an8}[David] When he was on stage beguiling people, 208 00:15:37,333 --> 00:15:40,732 he absolutely believed in what he was doing and saying. 209 00:15:42,317 --> 00:15:47,154 {\an8}These spasms of immense charm 210 00:15:47,155 --> 00:15:52,952 and persuasiveness were his moments of feeling real. 211 00:15:52,953 --> 00:15:58,750 "Son? When I'm judged, as judged I shall surely be, 212 00:15:59,751 --> 00:16:04,715 I shall be judged on how I treated you and your brother Tony. 213 00:16:04,716 --> 00:16:06,174 That will be God's will." 214 00:16:06,175 --> 00:16:10,887 God was a big pal of his. [laughs] 215 00:16:10,888 --> 00:16:15,893 Whether he believed in God is mysterious, but he was certain God believed in him. 216 00:16:15,894 --> 00:16:18,270 [pigeons coo] 217 00:16:19,605 --> 00:16:23,545 These extraordinary, ingenious, confidence tricks 218 00:16:23,546 --> 00:16:27,487 were part of a conversation he was having with God. 219 00:16:29,823 --> 00:16:34,661 "If I do this, can I get away with it? If I do that, can I get away with it?" 220 00:16:34,662 --> 00:16:36,746 [Errol] Bargaining with God. 221 00:16:36,747 --> 00:16:40,917 Yeah, I think more betting with God. [laughs] 222 00:16:40,918 --> 00:16:44,004 "If I put this much on the table, how about that?" 223 00:16:47,299 --> 00:16:51,678 Ronnie always, whether he had to steal or borrow or bribe the headmaster, 224 00:16:51,679 --> 00:16:54,389 wanted me to have the posh education. 225 00:16:55,807 --> 00:17:00,395 I learned the manners and the attitudes of a class to which I did not belong. 226 00:17:04,858 --> 00:17:08,654 I studied and I frequently felt slighted. 227 00:17:14,117 --> 00:17:18,539 There were times when I hated the class to which I had been assigned. 228 00:17:18,540 --> 00:17:20,248 I was on enemy territory. 229 00:17:20,249 --> 00:17:23,626 But I learned to dress properly. I learned to speak properly. 230 00:17:23,627 --> 00:17:27,673 I turned myself into one of them, but I never felt like one of them. 231 00:17:31,593 --> 00:17:34,513 {\an8}[David] From a very early age I was a little spy. 232 00:17:37,015 --> 00:17:40,185 Whenever Ronnie left the house, I investigated. 233 00:17:43,105 --> 00:17:45,566 I did not know what the world held. 234 00:17:49,611 --> 00:17:54,241 When the debt collectors came in, my toys disappeared. 235 00:17:54,242 --> 00:17:56,827 The furniture disappeared. Women disappeared. 236 00:17:56,828 --> 00:17:58,370 {\an8}Mothers disappeared. 237 00:18:02,833 --> 00:18:04,709 When Ronnie was really frightened, 238 00:18:04,710 --> 00:18:07,004 and it was, "Black the house out, put the lights out, 239 00:18:07,005 --> 00:18:09,047 put the cars in the back garden." 240 00:18:09,923 --> 00:18:13,677 He wasn't afraid of the law, he was afraid of the mob. 241 00:18:13,678 --> 00:18:15,136 ["Jealous Heart" by Al Morgan] 242 00:18:15,137 --> 00:18:19,266 ♪ Jealous heart Oh, jealous heart ♪ 243 00:18:19,267 --> 00:18:20,809 ♪ Stop beating ♪ 244 00:18:22,519 --> 00:18:28,233 ♪ Can't you see the damage You have done... ♪ 245 00:18:29,526 --> 00:18:34,323 [David] When he died, he had offices in Jermyn Street. 246 00:18:35,824 --> 00:18:38,493 On the top floor lived ladies of the night. 247 00:18:41,747 --> 00:18:45,834 Who, as he put it, were always ready to cook some sausages for him. 248 00:18:45,835 --> 00:18:47,794 [woman laughs] 249 00:18:48,670 --> 00:18:51,756 He had two Ford Zephyr cars, 250 00:18:51,757 --> 00:18:56,428 a house in Henley, a house in Tite Street, Chelsea. 251 00:18:56,429 --> 00:18:58,472 For what purpose, I know not. 252 00:18:58,473 --> 00:19:00,516 And he had these offices. 253 00:19:01,683 --> 00:19:06,124 We could not find on his person, in the drawers of his desk, 254 00:19:06,125 --> 00:19:10,567 enough money to pay the staff until the end of the week. 255 00:19:10,568 --> 00:19:12,236 There was no money. 256 00:19:12,237 --> 00:19:14,111 [horse neighs] 257 00:19:14,112 --> 00:19:17,658 There was a horse in France at Maisons-Laffitte, 258 00:19:17,659 --> 00:19:19,910 a couple of horses in Ireland. 259 00:19:20,702 --> 00:19:22,995 [hooves pound] 260 00:19:22,996 --> 00:19:25,666 [Errol] You called them, "the never-was-ers." 261 00:19:25,667 --> 00:19:27,417 [David] The never-was-ers. 262 00:19:29,962 --> 00:19:33,549 He had a world champion jockey, Gordon Richards. 263 00:19:36,009 --> 00:19:41,348 When Gordon retired, he agreed to select horses at auction for Ronnie, 264 00:19:41,349 --> 00:19:43,188 and, at some point, he must have paid for them. 265 00:19:45,853 --> 00:19:50,440 His great joy was to appear at Ascot and have a horse in a race. 266 00:19:51,149 --> 00:19:54,152 [indistinct race track announcements] 267 00:19:54,153 --> 00:19:56,696 [bell rings] 268 00:19:56,697 --> 00:19:59,741 [indistinct race commentary] 269 00:20:00,534 --> 00:20:04,746 [David] Ronnie clearly reached a point where the fraternity of bookmakers 270 00:20:04,747 --> 00:20:07,499 would not have him on the course anymore, 271 00:20:07,500 --> 00:20:10,252 and they had enforcers that made that clear. 272 00:20:10,253 --> 00:20:12,003 [crowd cheers] 273 00:20:12,004 --> 00:20:14,882 [David] And you better look out if you show up at a race course, 274 00:20:14,883 --> 00:20:16,925 and you haven't paid your debts. 275 00:20:19,887 --> 00:20:23,098 I was dispatched with a suitcase full of money 276 00:20:25,475 --> 00:20:28,394 to distribute among the bookmakers. 277 00:20:28,395 --> 00:20:31,690 [commentator] Wow! It's Rupert. He's pulling away now! 278 00:20:33,108 --> 00:20:35,777 [David] He had a horse named after my half-brother, 279 00:20:35,778 --> 00:20:38,238 and it ran in the Cesarewitch. 280 00:20:38,239 --> 00:20:42,034 [indistinct commentary] 281 00:20:42,035 --> 00:20:44,077 [crowd chatter] 282 00:20:48,665 --> 00:20:52,002 [David] All of a sudden, we had a real harvest of cash. 283 00:20:52,920 --> 00:20:54,213 Thank you, boys. 284 00:20:58,592 --> 00:21:00,636 [David] I sat on the train with it. 285 00:21:02,304 --> 00:21:05,307 [footsteps] 286 00:21:12,689 --> 00:21:14,816 [David] A big man came up to me. 287 00:21:24,535 --> 00:21:26,245 You're Ronnie Cornwell's son, aren't you? 288 00:21:34,920 --> 00:21:37,381 Don't do that again, sonny. 289 00:21:39,883 --> 00:21:42,094 [David] And he just touched my nose. 290 00:21:43,929 --> 00:21:47,516 And when I got back, Ronnie was waiting. 291 00:21:54,356 --> 00:21:56,650 And he counted and counted, 292 00:21:57,985 --> 00:22:00,654 and he couldn't believe I hadn't kept some. 293 00:22:00,655 --> 00:22:02,051 [Ronnie] Come on, boy. 294 00:22:02,052 --> 00:22:03,447 Show me your pockets. 295 00:22:03,448 --> 00:22:05,409 Come on, show me what you've done. 296 00:22:10,497 --> 00:22:13,917 [David] Then I think I got a fiver at the end of it for being a good boy. 297 00:22:16,295 --> 00:22:20,841 [Errol] Was this a disappointment to your father, this lack of larceny? 298 00:22:20,842 --> 00:22:23,968 It was puzzlement that... [laughs] 299 00:22:23,969 --> 00:22:27,556 "You can't be that good," he thought. [laughs] 300 00:22:27,557 --> 00:22:31,017 "No one is. This isn't human nature." 301 00:22:31,018 --> 00:22:34,437 [Errol] But this is such a romantic childhood, is it not? 302 00:22:34,438 --> 00:22:37,858 Well that... yes. I-I really need to get that across, 303 00:22:37,859 --> 00:22:41,277 that whatever revelations came to me later, 304 00:22:41,278 --> 00:22:47,242 and whatever deprivals I seem to have suffered, mothers and things, 305 00:22:47,243 --> 00:22:49,161 it was terribly exciting. 306 00:22:49,162 --> 00:22:52,706 [suspenseful music] 307 00:22:54,124 --> 00:22:55,458 [projector slide changes] 308 00:22:55,459 --> 00:22:59,880 [David] We haven't mentioned the fact that I was destined to become a barrister. 309 00:23:00,881 --> 00:23:03,967 And my elder brother was destined to become a solicitor. 310 00:23:06,094 --> 00:23:12,142 I was determined to go to Oxford, and they offered me a place. 311 00:23:14,311 --> 00:23:17,105 Ronnie demanded to know what he was paying for. 312 00:23:19,733 --> 00:23:23,695 In cowardice, I said that I would be studying Law. 313 00:23:24,863 --> 00:23:30,952 And when he heard on the grapevine that I was reading Modern Languages, 314 00:23:30,953 --> 00:23:36,250 he descended on my tutor and demanded to know how the hell this had happened. 315 00:23:37,209 --> 00:23:39,127 Was it their fault or mine? 316 00:23:41,672 --> 00:23:44,675 My mentor, Vivian Green, showed him the door. 317 00:23:52,057 --> 00:23:54,101 {\an8}So, I went on reading Modern Languages. 318 00:23:59,106 --> 00:24:03,402 And in the middle of the second year, he made a really dramatic bankruptcy. 319 00:24:03,403 --> 00:24:06,321 It was massive, for a million and a quarter pounds. 320 00:24:09,533 --> 00:24:14,997 The Westminster Bank in Oxford, then, for reasons of its own, 321 00:24:14,998 --> 00:24:17,624 refused to keep my account and closed it. 322 00:24:20,377 --> 00:24:27,134 I had been very close to my girlfriend at the time, so we decided to marry. 323 00:24:31,054 --> 00:24:35,017 {\an8}I went and taught at a low life private prep school. 324 00:24:36,393 --> 00:24:39,437 And that was the same preparatory school which, in my mind, 325 00:24:39,438 --> 00:24:42,482 I put at the beginning of Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy. 326 00:24:45,819 --> 00:24:48,362 We lived in real poverty 327 00:24:48,363 --> 00:24:51,909 with an outside loo and that stuff, and a tin bath. 328 00:24:51,910 --> 00:24:54,702 And then, to my mind, heroically, 329 00:24:54,703 --> 00:24:58,498 Vivian Green inspired the college to call me back. 330 00:25:01,043 --> 00:25:03,462 And they would somehow find the money for me. 331 00:25:04,922 --> 00:25:07,758 So, we went back and they found us a grand flat to live in. 332 00:25:07,759 --> 00:25:09,801 Life had changed completely. 333 00:25:10,969 --> 00:25:13,846 The institutional allure returned 334 00:25:13,847 --> 00:25:17,433 when Eton invited me to come and teach the top class. 335 00:25:17,434 --> 00:25:20,729 I thought I'd be an Eton schoolmaster for the rest of my life. 336 00:25:22,439 --> 00:25:25,025 Then, after two years, I was fed up with it. 337 00:25:25,817 --> 00:25:29,821 And the spies lured me, and I thought I would be a spy for the rest of my life. 338 00:25:29,822 --> 00:25:34,408 [mysterious music] 339 00:25:34,409 --> 00:25:38,163 [David] It's terribly difficult to recruit for a secret service. 340 00:25:38,164 --> 00:25:41,667 In the end, you're looking for somebody who's a bit bad, 341 00:25:43,752 --> 00:25:45,754 but at the same time, loyal. 342 00:25:48,799 --> 00:25:55,347 There's a type they were looking for in my day, and I fit it perfectly. 343 00:25:57,975 --> 00:26:00,227 Separated early from the nest. 344 00:26:02,771 --> 00:26:04,147 Boarding school. 345 00:26:06,233 --> 00:26:08,443 Early independence of spirit. 346 00:26:11,029 --> 00:26:14,074 But looking for institutional embrace. 347 00:26:15,534 --> 00:26:21,248 I can see my own life still as a succession of embraces and escapes. 348 00:26:21,249 --> 00:26:23,750 [wings flutter] 349 00:26:29,715 --> 00:26:34,052 [David] I joined one intelligence service, went sour on it. 350 00:26:34,761 --> 00:26:37,264 {\an8}Moved to a second, went sour on it. 351 00:26:38,265 --> 00:26:43,248 I was disenchanted by the Cold War itself, which was easy to be 352 00:26:43,249 --> 00:26:48,233 when you saw all those Nazis wandering around in West Germany. 353 00:26:48,234 --> 00:26:50,569 And indeed in East Germany. 354 00:26:50,570 --> 00:26:52,904 What had we really fought for? 355 00:26:52,905 --> 00:26:55,282 [Errol] As if the war had never happened? 356 00:26:56,366 --> 00:26:57,533 It felt like that. 357 00:26:57,534 --> 00:27:04,534 The power of enforced forgetting was extraordinary. 358 00:27:06,710 --> 00:27:11,715 I was posted under diplomatic cover to West Germany. 359 00:27:13,133 --> 00:27:16,010 And it was one of the great good fortunes of my life, 360 00:27:16,011 --> 00:27:18,889 because I was there for the erection of the Berlin Wall. 361 00:27:21,642 --> 00:27:26,730 The standoff between East and West was exemplified in Berlin. 362 00:27:26,731 --> 00:27:29,983 Tension was constant. It affected everybody. 363 00:27:30,609 --> 00:27:31,609 [jet engine whines] 364 00:27:31,610 --> 00:27:34,988 [male announcer] The attention of an anxious world is focused on Berlin. 365 00:27:34,989 --> 00:27:38,366 The last great exodus of refugees from the East is processed 366 00:27:38,367 --> 00:27:41,702 as the Communist German regime moves to close their border. 367 00:27:41,703 --> 00:27:44,915 The flow of those seeking asylum here on the fringe of freedom 368 00:27:44,916 --> 00:27:46,959 has reached 1,500 a day. 369 00:27:49,253 --> 00:27:53,632 [David] I went to Berlin and saw for myself what was going on. 370 00:27:55,676 --> 00:28:01,013 The big dramas occurred before the wall was built. 371 00:28:01,014 --> 00:28:06,770 West German firemen were spreading their trampolines below the building. 372 00:28:08,063 --> 00:28:10,691 People were jumping into these things. 373 00:28:18,407 --> 00:28:22,035 Sights which were heart-breaking. 374 00:28:25,163 --> 00:28:26,956 [roaring] 375 00:28:26,957 --> 00:28:28,417 [muffled explosion] 376 00:28:36,091 --> 00:28:39,803 {\an8}[Errol] What was your emotional response to seeing this thing? 377 00:28:39,804 --> 00:28:46,685 A mixture of anger, disgust and empathy. 378 00:28:46,686 --> 00:28:50,021 It was for me a milestone. 379 00:28:50,022 --> 00:28:54,109 It was the impetus that produced The Spy Who Came in from the Cold. 380 00:28:55,903 --> 00:28:58,739 [Errol] A crucible for your understanding of the world? 381 00:29:01,658 --> 00:29:05,621 [David] More like confirmation of my understanding of the world. 382 00:29:09,541 --> 00:29:15,923 [David] This was the most obscene symbol of the insanity of the human struggle. 383 00:29:15,924 --> 00:29:17,382 [gunshot] 384 00:29:23,430 --> 00:29:28,184 I felt that on both sides, East and West, 385 00:29:28,185 --> 00:29:32,940 were inventing the enemy that they needed. 386 00:29:34,858 --> 00:29:39,863 The seamless transition from anti-Nazism to anti-Communism. 387 00:29:46,828 --> 00:29:48,955 [David] I came back from Berlin. 388 00:29:48,956 --> 00:29:52,835 I knew that I wanted to write a strong novel about the thing. 389 00:29:52,836 --> 00:29:55,546 It was summer. I think I worked mainly in the garden. 390 00:29:56,296 --> 00:29:57,798 The kids were around. 391 00:30:00,050 --> 00:30:02,886 I would maybe start at four or five in the morning. 392 00:30:04,012 --> 00:30:06,807 And I had this rush of blood and anger. 393 00:30:07,307 --> 00:30:12,562 Found, as it were, a fable that served my purposes 394 00:30:12,563 --> 00:30:14,480 and that was, The Spy Who Came in from the Cold. 395 00:30:14,481 --> 00:30:16,900 [Richard Burton] What the hell do you think spies are? 396 00:30:16,901 --> 00:30:18,861 Moral philosophers measuring everything they do 397 00:30:18,862 --> 00:30:21,070 against the word of God or Karl Marx? 398 00:30:21,071 --> 00:30:25,117 They're not. They're just a bunch of seedy, squalid bastards like me. 399 00:30:25,118 --> 00:30:28,202 Little men, drunkards, queers, henpecked husbands, 400 00:30:28,203 --> 00:30:32,457 civil servants playing Cowboys and Indians to brighten their rotten little lives. 401 00:30:32,458 --> 00:30:35,419 Do you think they sit like monks in a cell balancing right against wrong? 402 00:30:35,420 --> 00:30:39,339 The author who is the biggest sensation right now, 403 00:30:39,340 --> 00:30:42,049 his real name is David Cornwell, 404 00:30:42,050 --> 00:30:45,345 but he's much better known to us as John le Carré. 405 00:30:46,180 --> 00:30:48,724 How many did The Spy Who Came in from the Cold sell? 406 00:30:49,308 --> 00:30:53,562 I think in all editions, book club, paperback, all over the world, 407 00:30:53,563 --> 00:30:57,316 they say somewhere around twelve, fifteen million. 408 00:30:57,317 --> 00:30:58,629 [whistles] 409 00:30:58,630 --> 00:30:59,942 [mouthing] 410 00:30:59,943 --> 00:31:01,778 [audience laughs] 411 00:31:05,157 --> 00:31:10,746 {\an8}[Errol] I take it that the success of Spy was a surprise. 412 00:31:13,540 --> 00:31:17,961 [David] I think it was no surprise to me in the sense that I felt 413 00:31:17,962 --> 00:31:20,880 that when I'd finished it, I'd written something 414 00:31:20,881 --> 00:31:23,800 that was profoundly expressive of my own feelings, 415 00:31:23,801 --> 00:31:25,802 and that it might have legs. 416 00:31:30,224 --> 00:31:34,561 The early rumbles from agent and publisher suggested it really did have legs. 417 00:31:34,562 --> 00:31:37,564 You have to remember the context in which it was published. 418 00:31:37,565 --> 00:31:40,067 We were sated with James Bond at that time. 419 00:31:40,817 --> 00:31:44,154 {\an8}I admire your luck, Mister... 420 00:31:44,155 --> 00:31:47,740 Bond. James Bond. 421 00:31:47,741 --> 00:31:51,702 The reality that had been offered by the news 422 00:31:51,703 --> 00:31:54,915 and by all the events that were happening around us 423 00:31:54,916 --> 00:31:58,669 was spies as a shabby army of lonely deciders. 424 00:31:58,670 --> 00:32:01,712 I happened to deliver the antidote. 425 00:32:01,713 --> 00:32:07,469 What was wrong about it, and I lived with that problem still to this day, 426 00:32:07,470 --> 00:32:11,306 was that it painted the secret services as so bloody brilliant. 427 00:32:11,307 --> 00:32:16,394 Whereas, by that time, we were a crippled organization 428 00:32:16,395 --> 00:32:21,483 that could very well have been scrapped to begin again. 429 00:32:27,573 --> 00:32:30,784 {\an8}[David] "If your mission in life is to obtain traitors, 430 00:32:30,785 --> 00:32:33,245 to win them over to your cause, 431 00:32:33,912 --> 00:32:37,748 {\an8}you can hardly complain when one of your own 432 00:32:37,749 --> 00:32:41,128 {\an8}turns out to have been obtained by somebody else. 433 00:32:42,045 --> 00:32:45,944 When I came to write Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy, 434 00:32:45,945 --> 00:32:49,845 it was Kim Philby's murky lamp that lit my path." 435 00:32:49,846 --> 00:32:51,345 [camera shutter clicks] 436 00:32:51,346 --> 00:32:55,601 "MI6's brilliant former head of counterintelligence. 437 00:32:56,268 --> 00:33:01,940 Once tipped to become chief of the service, who was also a Russian spy." 438 00:33:08,822 --> 00:33:12,910 [David] Halfway through my tenure in West Germany, 439 00:33:12,911 --> 00:33:15,579 Philby's defection was announced. 440 00:33:18,582 --> 00:33:25,214 His disappearance from Beirut and his appearance on the Moscow stage. 441 00:33:27,382 --> 00:33:32,095 That was shocking to the ethic of the secret services at that time. 442 00:33:32,930 --> 00:33:35,974 [suspenseful music] 443 00:33:53,283 --> 00:33:55,077 [in Russian] Someone is following. 444 00:34:02,918 --> 00:34:08,257 [David] The question is whether MI5, MI6 wanted him to go. 445 00:34:09,550 --> 00:34:14,346 Nobody wanted that exposure. You have an extraordinary problem. 446 00:34:14,847 --> 00:34:19,934 Very substantial former spy coming up for trial. 447 00:34:19,935 --> 00:34:24,565 It would do great national damage and achieve very little. 448 00:34:29,945 --> 00:34:34,116 In sober reflection, the powers that be said, "Thank God." 449 00:34:36,451 --> 00:34:39,621 [Errol] "Thank God"? So, they let him escape? 450 00:34:40,496 --> 00:34:41,748 [David] Yeah. 451 00:34:49,797 --> 00:34:51,842 [muffled ship's horn] 452 00:34:55,721 --> 00:34:58,515 [in Russian] Thank you, comrade. 453 00:35:04,438 --> 00:35:08,150 [David] Philby's defection went straight to the heart 454 00:35:08,151 --> 00:35:10,527 of the establishment of the day. 455 00:35:13,947 --> 00:35:15,949 He was a Westminster boy. 456 00:35:17,201 --> 00:35:20,078 Part of the inner circle of English society. 457 00:35:28,378 --> 00:35:29,420 [slurps] 458 00:35:29,421 --> 00:35:33,091 [David] People kind of overlooked, on those grounds, 459 00:35:33,092 --> 00:35:37,054 the rather evident past that Philby had. 460 00:35:41,767 --> 00:35:43,726 It would not have been difficult to establish 461 00:35:43,727 --> 00:35:47,147 that he had early associations with Communist people. 462 00:35:47,148 --> 00:35:49,858 {\an8}He'd married a Communist woman in Vienna. 463 00:35:51,902 --> 00:35:55,989 Those things could be swept aside because he's... he's one of us. 464 00:35:55,990 --> 00:35:57,281 He's one of us. 465 00:35:57,282 --> 00:36:00,035 So, if you'd really gone into Philby's background, 466 00:36:00,036 --> 00:36:02,475 you would have said this chap is... 467 00:36:02,476 --> 00:36:04,914 He's a bit sniffy. We don't want that. 468 00:36:04,915 --> 00:36:07,584 But quite the contrary, he was Mister Charm, 469 00:36:08,418 --> 00:36:10,671 and he loved to deceive. 470 00:36:11,421 --> 00:36:12,422 [camera shutter clicks] 471 00:36:17,261 --> 00:36:22,266 {\an8}[David] "Enter now, Nicholas Elliott, Philby's most loyal friend, confidant, 472 00:36:22,267 --> 00:36:27,311 devoted brother-in-arms in war and peace. Child of Eton. 473 00:36:27,312 --> 00:36:32,901 Son of its former headmaster, adventurer, alpinist and dupe." 474 00:36:32,902 --> 00:36:34,735 [elevator squeaks] 475 00:36:34,736 --> 00:36:39,491 "Among the many extraordinary things that Elliott had done in his life, 476 00:36:40,492 --> 00:36:45,747 and undoubtedly the most painful, was to sit face to face in Beirut 477 00:36:45,748 --> 00:36:50,419 with his close friend, colleague and mentor, Kim Philby, 478 00:36:50,420 --> 00:36:54,443 and hear him admit that he had been a Soviet spy 479 00:36:54,444 --> 00:36:58,468 for all the years that they had known each other." 480 00:37:07,186 --> 00:37:13,358 Nick Elliott told me that when he went out to interview Philby in Beirut 481 00:37:13,359 --> 00:37:17,112 and to obtain from Philby the confession. 482 00:37:17,821 --> 00:37:22,159 He said that really, when he wasn't playing a double game, 483 00:37:22,951 --> 00:37:25,494 that he was extremely lonely. 484 00:37:25,495 --> 00:37:28,206 He found life had gone flat for him, 485 00:37:28,207 --> 00:37:32,127 so the addiction to betrayal was essential to him. 486 00:37:33,587 --> 00:37:38,133 And he betrayed everybody, really, from childhood onward. 487 00:37:39,301 --> 00:37:42,846 {\an8}[Nicholas Elliott] There's an awful lot of misuse of the word "double agent." 488 00:37:42,847 --> 00:37:47,309 {\an8}Philby is often described in the press as a double agent. 489 00:37:47,310 --> 00:37:49,895 In point of fact, Philby was a straightforward, 490 00:37:49,896 --> 00:37:52,168 high-level, disreputable traitor. 491 00:37:52,169 --> 00:37:54,440 What's the difference, exactly? 492 00:37:54,441 --> 00:37:57,193 Well, I mean, he was a straightforward spy for the Russians. 493 00:37:57,194 --> 00:37:59,905 If he'd been a double agent, he'd have been a spy for the Russians. 494 00:37:59,906 --> 00:38:02,032 But we'd have been playing back against the Russians. 495 00:38:03,951 --> 00:38:07,871 [David] I knew Elliott pretty well. And he was this tall figure. 496 00:38:08,747 --> 00:38:12,668 The hollowed-out body, waistcoats, spectacles. 497 00:38:13,627 --> 00:38:17,672 An Etonian voice, the son of an Etonian headmaster, 498 00:38:17,673 --> 00:38:21,718 long line of Etonians behind him, very aristocratic. 499 00:38:21,719 --> 00:38:24,867 [Errol] Can you do his voice? 500 00:38:24,868 --> 00:38:28,016 Yes. I said to him, "Nick, 501 00:38:29,685 --> 00:38:32,896 when you went to see Kim, what kind of sanctions did you have?" 502 00:38:32,897 --> 00:38:36,108 [as Elliott] "Sanctions, old boy? What do you mean by that?" 503 00:38:36,109 --> 00:38:37,817 [normal] "How could you threaten him? 504 00:38:37,818 --> 00:38:40,486 Could you have him sandbagged and brought back to London?" 505 00:38:40,487 --> 00:38:43,282 [as Elliott] "Oh," he said, "my dear chap, nobody wanted him in London." 506 00:38:43,283 --> 00:38:46,368 [normal] I said, "Well, what could you threaten him with? 507 00:38:46,369 --> 00:38:49,954 Nick, come on, come clean." He said, 508 00:38:49,955 --> 00:38:53,375 [as Elliott] "I told him, if he didn't come clean, 509 00:38:53,376 --> 00:38:57,086 there wouldn't be a legation, an embassy, 510 00:38:57,087 --> 00:39:00,132 a business, or a club in the whole of the Middle East 511 00:39:00,133 --> 00:39:02,175 who'd have a first damn thing to do with him." 512 00:39:02,176 --> 00:39:04,136 [normal] So, I said, "Well, that must have frightened him." 513 00:39:04,137 --> 00:39:06,013 [as Elliott] "It did." [laughs] 514 00:39:07,264 --> 00:39:09,473 He played the English bloody fool, 515 00:39:09,474 --> 00:39:13,270 whether he was one, as many maintain, I don't know. 516 00:39:14,980 --> 00:39:18,275 [Errol] You do have that line in what you wrote. 517 00:39:18,859 --> 00:39:22,361 {\an8}"Philby was adept at deceiving others. 518 00:39:22,362 --> 00:39:26,074 {\an8}Elliott was equally adept at deceiving himself." 519 00:39:26,909 --> 00:39:28,202 {\an8}[David] I'm glad I said that. 520 00:39:30,829 --> 00:39:33,080 It was always my argument 521 00:39:33,081 --> 00:39:37,628 that it was instinct rather than reason that drove Philby to do what he did. 522 00:39:38,837 --> 00:39:44,843 That thrill of stepping into the street knowing what you know and they don't. 523 00:39:44,844 --> 00:39:50,599 It's the joy of self-imposed schizophrenia that the secret agent loves. 524 00:39:52,518 --> 00:39:55,187 [Errol] "Self-imposed schizophrenia." 525 00:39:56,063 --> 00:39:59,149 [chuckles gently] The duality all the time. 526 00:39:59,150 --> 00:40:02,236 Of being the opposite of your outward self. 527 00:40:02,903 --> 00:40:07,491 [Errol] But isn't there some joy that you are actually making policy? 528 00:40:09,535 --> 00:40:11,954 Yes, I think the joy is voluptuous. 529 00:40:15,082 --> 00:40:17,291 A sensual journey 530 00:40:17,292 --> 00:40:22,548 of constantly challenging your luck and surviving. 531 00:40:25,050 --> 00:40:28,344 Making a real difference too, absolutely. 532 00:40:28,345 --> 00:40:32,890 To feel you're the hub of the universe is wonderful for the vanity. 533 00:40:32,891 --> 00:40:39,523 To be passing that, that pure gold, to the Soviet Union, to your masters. 534 00:40:40,357 --> 00:40:43,902 "Now, do you love me? If I give you this, will you love me?" 535 00:40:45,529 --> 00:40:50,742 I can imagine that voluptuous instinct very well. 536 00:40:50,743 --> 00:40:53,370 Not in myself, but in him. 537 00:40:55,163 --> 00:40:58,457 Mister le Carré, you've described Kim Philby as, 538 00:40:58,458 --> 00:41:01,752 "The avenger who destroyed the citadel from within." 539 00:41:01,753 --> 00:41:05,048 Well, I think he's one of those strange people who was born into privilege 540 00:41:05,049 --> 00:41:09,198 and, in some way, resented the advantages with which he was born. 541 00:41:09,199 --> 00:41:13,347 A person who, on the one hand, felt that he was better than society 542 00:41:13,348 --> 00:41:17,311 and, on the other hand, couldn't forgive society for putting him in that position. 543 00:41:17,312 --> 00:41:19,479 He was very much at war with himself, I think. 544 00:41:19,480 --> 00:41:22,024 [suspenseful music] 545 00:41:27,279 --> 00:41:33,535 When I finally went to Moscow in 1988, 546 00:41:34,828 --> 00:41:39,917 I was at a party given by the Union of Soviet Writers. 547 00:41:42,711 --> 00:41:45,547 There was a big man called Genrikh Borovik. 548 00:41:46,673 --> 00:41:50,009 Borovik came up to me and said, 549 00:41:50,010 --> 00:41:56,892 [as Borovik] "David, I would like you to meet a very good friend of mine. 550 00:41:56,893 --> 00:41:58,810 Keen admirer from your books. 551 00:42:00,812 --> 00:42:02,021 Kim Philby." 552 00:42:02,022 --> 00:42:06,068 [normal] I replied, sick to the heart as I felt, 553 00:42:07,236 --> 00:42:11,114 that I'm soon to have dinner with our ambassador, 554 00:42:12,199 --> 00:42:17,746 and I can't see myself having dinner with the Queen's representative one night, 555 00:42:17,747 --> 00:42:21,103 and dinner with the Queen's traitor the next. 556 00:42:21,104 --> 00:42:24,461 I just thought there is such a thing as evil. 557 00:42:27,422 --> 00:42:33,220 Somebody who had blindly served Stalin for so long. 558 00:42:33,762 --> 00:42:38,350 {\an8}How he could go on serving such a person, such a cause, 559 00:42:39,184 --> 00:42:41,770 {\an8}as Soviet communism, was beyond me. 560 00:42:42,604 --> 00:42:45,190 He knew better than anyone what he was doing. 561 00:42:49,111 --> 00:42:53,385 It was the addiction, it was the fun of betrayal that got to him. 562 00:42:53,386 --> 00:42:57,775 It was the feeling that he was playing both ends against the middle. 563 00:42:57,776 --> 00:43:02,165 He was the center of the earth. He was playing the world's game. 564 00:43:02,166 --> 00:43:05,085 It had precious little to do, in the end, with ideology. 565 00:43:05,086 --> 00:43:06,711 It may have begun as ideology. 566 00:43:06,712 --> 00:43:09,339 After that, it became an addiction, the betrayal. 567 00:43:09,965 --> 00:43:12,926 If you'd given him your cat to look after for a couple of weeks, 568 00:43:12,927 --> 00:43:15,012 he'd have betrayed the cat somehow. 569 00:43:23,854 --> 00:43:27,983 I had some inner relationship with Philby. 570 00:43:30,027 --> 00:43:31,987 The temptation, somehow, 571 00:43:34,698 --> 00:43:38,160 to turn your back on everything you've been taught and picked up 572 00:43:38,161 --> 00:43:39,703 and go your own route. 573 00:43:40,746 --> 00:43:43,624 I can understand how that happened to Philby. 574 00:43:44,666 --> 00:43:47,877 And I've felt that thank God I never went in that direction. 575 00:43:47,878 --> 00:43:52,549 But there came a point in my life where I seemed to be offered the crossroads. 576 00:43:52,550 --> 00:43:55,551 I could have become a really bad guy. 577 00:43:55,552 --> 00:43:59,056 And mercifully, I found a home for my larceny. 578 00:44:00,974 --> 00:44:04,520 {\an8}[David archive] A writer is slightly out of tune. He is different. 579 00:44:05,103 --> 00:44:09,399 {\an8}His methods of creation are the methods of a lonely person 580 00:44:09,400 --> 00:44:12,318 who is borrowing, abstracting experiences here and there, 581 00:44:12,319 --> 00:44:15,948 and putting them together and trying to make a parcel, if you like, 582 00:44:15,949 --> 00:44:17,887 which you can then offer to the public. 583 00:44:17,888 --> 00:44:19,825 In that sense, he's an illusionist. 584 00:44:19,826 --> 00:44:22,371 And if people are constantly trying to look up his sleeve, 585 00:44:22,372 --> 00:44:24,748 then he's going to spoil his trick. 586 00:44:24,749 --> 00:44:25,999 [camera shutter clicks] 587 00:44:27,125 --> 00:44:32,172 For me, writing is a journey of self-discovery every time. 588 00:44:32,173 --> 00:44:35,926 How characters behave, how they emerge, who they are, 589 00:44:35,927 --> 00:44:37,385 what appetites they have, 590 00:44:37,386 --> 00:44:40,847 they deliver themselves on the blank page 591 00:44:40,848 --> 00:44:43,475 and they tell me a little bit about who I am. 592 00:44:46,144 --> 00:44:49,167 {\an8}In writing about George Smiley, of course, 593 00:44:49,168 --> 00:44:52,192 I'm writing about the ideal father I never had. 594 00:44:55,779 --> 00:44:58,365 These are attempts at self-knowledge. 595 00:44:59,700 --> 00:45:03,245 Little glimpses along the way of who one really is. 596 00:45:03,246 --> 00:45:05,329 I have never submitted to analysis. 597 00:45:05,330 --> 00:45:10,210 I feel if I knew any secrets about myself, I'd deprive myself of writing. 598 00:45:12,171 --> 00:45:13,338 [chuckles gently] 599 00:45:15,632 --> 00:45:18,427 [Errol] What did you learn about yourself from Bill Haydon? 600 00:45:20,846 --> 00:45:24,516 [David] Well, that was something I guess I already knew. 601 00:45:24,517 --> 00:45:26,977 It was something I knew of Philby, too. 602 00:45:27,519 --> 00:45:31,398 And obviously Haydon is to some extent modelled on Philby. 603 00:45:31,399 --> 00:45:34,400 An instinct that is latent in me, 604 00:45:34,401 --> 00:45:38,030 which I have never to my knowledge deployed, used, fallen for, 605 00:45:38,031 --> 00:45:43,618 it's to be king of the world, as Haydon thought he was. 606 00:45:43,619 --> 00:45:49,541 There was a time when the very pleasure of being in the secret world 607 00:45:49,542 --> 00:45:52,419 close to what was going on, what was really going on, 608 00:45:52,420 --> 00:45:54,922 {\an8}filled me with a sense of exultation. 609 00:45:56,924 --> 00:46:01,678 This is, in the Faustian sense, what the world contains at its inmost point. 610 00:46:01,679 --> 00:46:05,057 [mysterious music] 611 00:46:17,945 --> 00:46:21,365 "Was die Welt im Innersten zusammenhält", is the line. 612 00:46:30,290 --> 00:46:34,378 [Errol] Then there's that despairing line in The Secret Pilgrim, 613 00:46:34,379 --> 00:46:36,797 "Knowing that the inmost room..." 614 00:46:37,881 --> 00:46:39,715 "...doesn't contain anything." Yes. 615 00:46:39,716 --> 00:46:43,136 Somehow, we believe that there is an inmost room 616 00:46:43,137 --> 00:46:45,847 where policy is being conceived. 617 00:46:45,848 --> 00:46:48,600 I think it's being played completely ad hoc, 618 00:46:48,601 --> 00:46:51,186 from day to day, from hour to hour. 619 00:46:51,187 --> 00:46:52,770 [Errol] History is chaos! 620 00:46:52,771 --> 00:46:58,861 History is chaos, and therefore to imagine, as I might have done 621 00:46:58,862 --> 00:47:01,613 in my perpetual innocence, 622 00:47:02,364 --> 00:47:08,745 that there was some great secret to the nature of human behavior. 623 00:47:08,746 --> 00:47:09,830 There is none. 624 00:47:17,713 --> 00:47:22,759 {\an8}[David] "'Spying is eternal, ' Smiley announced simply. 625 00:47:25,804 --> 00:47:31,351 'There's no career on Earth more cockeyed than the one you've picked. 626 00:47:34,521 --> 00:47:39,276 {\an8}You'll be at your most postable while you're least experienced. 627 00:47:41,195 --> 00:47:45,199 And by the time you've learned the ropes, no one will be able to send you anywhere 628 00:47:45,200 --> 00:47:48,202 without a trade description round your necks. 629 00:47:53,999 --> 00:47:59,463 Old athletes know they've played their best games when they're in their prime. 630 00:48:02,883 --> 00:48:05,969 Spies in their prime are on the shelf.'" 631 00:48:06,553 --> 00:48:08,555 [slow, echoing footsteps] 632 00:48:10,599 --> 00:48:13,644 "'And then, at a certain age, 633 00:48:15,896 --> 00:48:17,856 you want the answer.' 634 00:48:21,401 --> 00:48:25,155 'You want the rolled-up parchment in the inmost room 635 00:48:26,532 --> 00:48:30,244 that tells you who runs your lives and why. 636 00:48:39,419 --> 00:48:41,671 The trouble is, that by then, 637 00:48:41,672 --> 00:48:44,466 you're the very people who know best... 638 00:48:46,885 --> 00:48:49,930 ...that the inmost room is bare.'" 639 00:48:59,940 --> 00:49:04,528 [Errol] When I read it, I took it as more deeply existential. 640 00:49:05,445 --> 00:49:10,450 Is the inmost room ourselves? Maybe there's nothing there? 641 00:49:13,370 --> 00:49:17,457 In my case that is true, yes. I can't speak for everybody else. 642 00:49:17,458 --> 00:49:19,626 [suspenseful music] 643 00:49:23,589 --> 00:49:27,383 [David] I think we, all of us, live partly in a clandestine situation 644 00:49:27,384 --> 00:49:32,556 in relation to our bosses, in relation to our families, our wives, our children. 645 00:49:33,807 --> 00:49:36,810 We frequently affect attitudes to which we subscribe, 646 00:49:36,811 --> 00:49:39,229 perhaps intellectually, but not emotionally. 647 00:49:40,981 --> 00:49:43,358 We hardly know ourselves. 648 00:49:44,234 --> 00:49:46,819 The figure of the spy does seem to me 649 00:49:46,820 --> 00:49:50,865 to be almost infinitely capable of exploitation, 650 00:49:50,866 --> 00:49:55,704 for purposes of articulating all sorts of submerged things in our society. 651 00:50:05,797 --> 00:50:09,383 [Errol] The experience that I have reading le Carré is, 652 00:50:09,384 --> 00:50:12,971 "Am I in a world of fiction? Am I in a world of fact? 653 00:50:12,972 --> 00:50:16,225 Am I in some strange blend of the two?" 654 00:50:19,603 --> 00:50:21,229 [gunshot] 655 00:50:21,230 --> 00:50:25,442 [David] I really don't think any artist, whether he's a writer, 656 00:50:25,443 --> 00:50:28,070 a painter, or anybody else, 657 00:50:28,862 --> 00:50:32,949 I don't think he has to explain his work beyond a certain point. 658 00:50:32,950 --> 00:50:37,079 If it's raised those questions in you, you're already having a good time. 659 00:50:37,080 --> 00:50:39,830 I have tried, over these conversations, 660 00:50:39,831 --> 00:50:44,378 to talk about the process of abstraction from real life. 661 00:50:44,379 --> 00:50:46,964 Now, I very consciously wrote a book, 662 00:50:47,923 --> 00:50:49,466 A Perfect Spy... 663 00:50:51,426 --> 00:50:57,140 {\an8}...which gave a parallel version, if you like, of much that had happened to me. 664 00:50:58,058 --> 00:51:02,938 For Ronnie, read Rick, for me, read Magnus. 665 00:51:04,022 --> 00:51:07,233 I cannot define for you 666 00:51:07,234 --> 00:51:13,282 where reality goes through the secret door into fiction. 667 00:51:15,033 --> 00:51:19,997 I would much rather go back to the notion that I painted of, 668 00:51:19,998 --> 00:51:23,959 "I live in that bubble, and I import stuff." 669 00:51:35,304 --> 00:51:38,682 It is a kind of solitude in the sense that 670 00:51:39,391 --> 00:51:42,019 {\an8}you're not sharing your thoughts with anyone. 671 00:51:42,686 --> 00:51:43,936 [page turns] 672 00:51:43,937 --> 00:51:48,817 You're composing in secret from the elements you see around you. 673 00:51:50,402 --> 00:51:56,200 A fictional entity which is rational, which makes order out of chaos. 674 00:51:56,201 --> 00:51:58,201 I think that's such a normal process. 675 00:51:58,202 --> 00:52:00,495 If I were a painter, I'd be feeling the same way. 676 00:52:00,496 --> 00:52:02,496 I'd be taking the light, the window 677 00:52:02,497 --> 00:52:07,503 and I would try to make an image of how I feel now. 678 00:52:09,421 --> 00:52:13,675 [Errol] I was going to ask you how you do feel now, but that seems silly. 679 00:52:13,676 --> 00:52:15,760 Errol, I feel very comfortable. 680 00:52:15,761 --> 00:52:20,807 I enjoy very much talking about things I haven't talked about before. 681 00:52:20,808 --> 00:52:25,499 I saw this prospect, at my great age, as something definitive. 682 00:52:25,500 --> 00:52:30,192 I knew that I was not going to lie. I wasn't going to fabricate. 683 00:52:30,193 --> 00:52:33,110 I'm not even interested in self-defense, 684 00:52:33,111 --> 00:52:36,406 because I really don't know what the accusation is in the air. 685 00:52:40,619 --> 00:52:44,289 [David] "Sir Magnus, you have in the past betrayed me, 686 00:52:45,207 --> 00:52:49,043 but more important, you have betrayed yourself. 687 00:52:49,044 --> 00:52:52,881 Even when you are telling the truth, you lie. 688 00:52:52,882 --> 00:52:57,218 You have loyalty and you have affection. 689 00:52:57,219 --> 00:53:00,180 - But to what? To whom?" - [Axel echoing] To what? To whom? 690 00:53:00,764 --> 00:53:02,348 I don't know. 691 00:53:02,349 --> 00:53:04,309 One day, maybe you will tell me. 692 00:53:06,019 --> 00:53:12,234 What I am saying, Sir Magnus, you are a perfect spy. 693 00:53:13,443 --> 00:53:15,445 [faint chatter] 694 00:53:21,493 --> 00:53:25,622 [David] Characters don't actually work until they've got a bit of you in them. 695 00:53:27,583 --> 00:53:29,418 They're just paper men. 696 00:53:30,878 --> 00:53:34,673 I voice my characters. I read them to myself. 697 00:53:36,049 --> 00:53:38,551 That's terribly important, how they speak. 698 00:53:38,552 --> 00:53:43,182 After that, they kind of tell you who they are, how they dress, how they move. 699 00:53:55,277 --> 00:54:00,699 [David] That's the emergence of character as you write, page after page. 700 00:54:03,744 --> 00:54:07,039 {\an8}Gradually, this fellow emerges and is yours. 701 00:54:09,750 --> 00:54:12,460 My natural instinct when I meet people 702 00:54:12,461 --> 00:54:15,505 is to consider the possibilities of their characters. 703 00:54:15,506 --> 00:54:18,674 I begin to invest them with things they probably don't possess. 704 00:54:18,675 --> 00:54:23,138 Curiously, in the end product, those features may not be there anymore. 705 00:54:23,847 --> 00:54:26,225 But that's the beginning of the story. 706 00:54:28,769 --> 00:54:31,855 And then I discuss, what do these people want? 707 00:54:32,856 --> 00:54:38,403 And out of discerning contrary appetites, you get the essence of conflict. 708 00:54:38,987 --> 00:54:43,158 [Errol] You've written, "The cat sat on the mat is not a story, 709 00:54:43,159 --> 00:54:46,495 but the cat sat on the dog's mat is." 710 00:54:46,496 --> 00:54:47,578 That's right. 711 00:54:47,579 --> 00:54:50,290 [Errol] And then I have my le Carré version. 712 00:54:50,291 --> 00:54:51,290 [they laugh] 713 00:54:51,291 --> 00:54:56,046 [Errol] "The cat betrayed the dog by sitting on his mat." 714 00:54:56,047 --> 00:55:00,592 I think the cat was a double. [laughs] 715 00:55:16,775 --> 00:55:20,070 {\an8}[Errol] Why is betrayal an important concept to you? 716 00:55:22,489 --> 00:55:25,492 {\an8}[David] Well, it has a long family background. 717 00:55:28,912 --> 00:55:33,417 Reality did not exist in my childhood, performance did. 718 00:55:37,129 --> 00:55:42,467 I felt, observing life, that much of what people said overtly 719 00:55:42,468 --> 00:55:44,635 was not what they thought inwardly. 720 00:55:44,636 --> 00:55:48,849 You have to remember that in each of the secret services 721 00:55:48,850 --> 00:55:51,685 where I was ineffective but employed. 722 00:55:54,146 --> 00:55:56,439 {\an8}[David] They were the decades of betrayal. 723 00:55:56,440 --> 00:55:58,734 {\an8}You just wondered who was gonna pop out next. 724 00:56:02,821 --> 00:56:09,821 We received, at MI5, very strong representations from the Americans 725 00:56:09,828 --> 00:56:13,373 to clean up our act and get rid of the communists in our midst. 726 00:56:13,374 --> 00:56:16,543 A man appeared 727 00:56:17,044 --> 00:56:20,130 and he had some kind of authority, which he made clear to you, 728 00:56:20,131 --> 00:56:22,716 and he would say, "Come around, have a drink." 729 00:56:22,717 --> 00:56:23,799 [birds tweet] 730 00:56:23,800 --> 00:56:27,930 And he had a most extraordinary wall with live birds behind it. 731 00:56:28,639 --> 00:56:30,933 They silently flitted about. 732 00:56:35,646 --> 00:56:37,939 I think he was a fool, I may add. 733 00:56:37,940 --> 00:56:41,692 Must have been some kind of analyst, psychologist. 734 00:56:41,693 --> 00:56:46,073 He would question you in a sort of fatuous schoolmasterly... 735 00:56:46,074 --> 00:56:48,032 "Getting on all right with your wife, are you?" 736 00:56:48,033 --> 00:56:52,079 We were all being examined as potential communist spies. 737 00:56:54,331 --> 00:56:59,794 The comedy in my case was that I had, for MI5, 738 00:56:59,795 --> 00:57:04,633 entered the communist community at my university at Oxford. 739 00:57:07,970 --> 00:57:11,389 I was picked up and wooed, sat in the Soviet embassy, 740 00:57:11,390 --> 00:57:14,810 watched the Battleship Potemkin about six times, 741 00:57:14,811 --> 00:57:17,229 was fed with vodka and then dropped. 742 00:57:17,855 --> 00:57:19,230 [Errol] It's a good movie. 743 00:57:19,231 --> 00:57:23,652 It's a good movie, except that it has no happy ending. [laughs] 744 00:57:32,035 --> 00:57:33,287 [gunshot] 745 00:57:34,371 --> 00:57:39,501 [Errol] Wait a second. Is the desire to be a double agent from the very beginning? 746 00:57:40,085 --> 00:57:41,252 Yes. 747 00:57:41,253 --> 00:57:44,172 It was an extremely exciting thought at the time. 748 00:57:44,173 --> 00:57:47,050 [Errol] It's not just an agent, it's a double a... 749 00:57:47,051 --> 00:57:49,928 It happens all the time with every security service 750 00:57:49,929 --> 00:57:52,555 and every offensive intelligence service. 751 00:57:52,556 --> 00:57:57,059 That you put people up alongside the recruiter, 752 00:57:57,060 --> 00:58:01,690 hope he will recruit, and then you own the person he has recruited. 753 00:58:01,691 --> 00:58:06,445 That's, as the Germans would say, normal. 754 00:58:10,240 --> 00:58:13,075 Out of that came the very painful relationship 755 00:58:13,076 --> 00:58:18,957 {\an8}with the secret head of the communist group at Oxford at the time, 756 00:58:18,958 --> 00:58:22,794 {\an8}a most innocent man, Stanley Mitchell. 757 00:58:25,380 --> 00:58:29,343 {\an8}We were in the same college, he was reading Russian and German. 758 00:58:30,552 --> 00:58:32,846 He was of Russian-Jewish extraction. 759 00:58:35,098 --> 00:58:38,227 And we went on a walking holiday together in Dorset. 760 00:58:38,228 --> 00:58:41,479 He had all the names of students 761 00:58:41,480 --> 00:58:45,651 who were members of the Communist Party at that time. 762 00:58:46,860 --> 00:58:51,323 My job for MI5 was to identify these people. 763 00:58:52,908 --> 00:58:57,788 And of course, it's horrific. I was betraying Stanley. 764 00:58:59,289 --> 00:59:01,124 [Axel shouts in distance] 765 00:59:02,042 --> 00:59:07,381 Although, I squirm and I'm horrified by my behavior now, 766 00:59:07,382 --> 00:59:10,174 I still think it had to be done. 767 00:59:10,175 --> 00:59:14,972 Stanley, in later years, made the very simple deduction 768 00:59:14,973 --> 00:59:16,889 that I was that person in his life. 769 00:59:16,890 --> 00:59:21,270 It upset him terribly. "It was you, Judas. You swine. 770 00:59:22,980 --> 00:59:27,484 How could anybody do it? How could anybody be as foul as you?" 771 00:59:29,403 --> 00:59:30,946 [Errol] And your defense? 772 00:59:31,947 --> 00:59:35,701 Was, "Well, sorry, Stanley, but you belong to a revolutionary movement 773 00:59:35,702 --> 00:59:38,953 which was determined to destabilize our country. 774 00:59:38,954 --> 00:59:44,168 We were, at that time, technically at war with the Soviet Union. 775 00:59:44,169 --> 00:59:45,919 You were on the wrong side." 776 00:59:49,298 --> 00:59:51,924 [Errol] Can you be so sure that you're on the right side 777 00:59:51,925 --> 00:59:55,762 - as opposed to the wrong side? - Of course not. No. Of course not. 778 01:00:06,732 --> 01:00:11,236 [Errol] In A Perfect Spy, why the need to have the son kill himself? 779 01:00:14,865 --> 01:00:18,911 {\an8}[David] Firstly, because he knew that as a double agent, he was rumbled. 780 01:00:22,247 --> 01:00:25,125 He could have cut a deal, I suppose, in the real world. 781 01:00:25,751 --> 01:00:28,337 I think he also found life insupportable. 782 01:00:29,922 --> 01:00:34,051 And he was ashamed in the eyes of his child. 783 01:00:36,011 --> 01:00:38,555 [Errol] Did Ronnie have a sense of shame? 784 01:00:39,348 --> 01:00:40,681 I really don't believe so. 785 01:00:40,682 --> 01:00:44,603 I've heard him do it, kind of through the keyhole, 786 01:00:45,562 --> 01:00:47,689 to the first of my stepmothers. 787 01:00:49,066 --> 01:00:52,402 Howling he would never do something again. 788 01:00:52,903 --> 01:00:54,445 I don't know that he did shame, 789 01:00:54,446 --> 01:00:57,282 I don't know how he could live with himself. 790 01:00:57,283 --> 01:01:01,035 Living with his fantasies, 791 01:01:01,036 --> 01:01:04,998 which didn't necessarily begin as criminal plans 792 01:01:04,999 --> 01:01:08,292 but it... it was like writing a novel, 793 01:01:08,293 --> 01:01:12,506 in the sense that he would hear the right line, 794 01:01:12,507 --> 01:01:16,176 or spot in the crowd some clue. 795 01:01:16,718 --> 01:01:19,429 And that would be the beginning of a scam. 796 01:01:19,430 --> 01:01:24,518 [pensive music] 797 01:01:25,644 --> 01:01:30,440 [David] "I am in the city of Exeter, walking across a patch of wasteland. 798 01:01:32,109 --> 01:01:35,195 I'm holding the hand of my mother, Olive. 799 01:01:35,904 --> 01:01:40,137 As she was wearing gloves, there is no fleshly contact 800 01:01:40,138 --> 01:01:44,371 and indeed, so far as I recall, there never was any. 801 01:01:47,332 --> 01:01:51,879 At the far side of the wasteland is a grim, flat-fronted building 802 01:01:51,880 --> 01:01:54,965 with barred windows and no light inside them." 803 01:01:54,966 --> 01:01:57,092 [pigeon coos softly] 804 01:02:01,138 --> 01:02:03,639 "And in one of these barred windows, 805 01:02:03,640 --> 01:02:08,770 looking exactly like a Monopoly convict, stands my father. 806 01:02:09,521 --> 01:02:12,732 I wave at Ronnie high up in the wall 807 01:02:12,733 --> 01:02:15,569 and Ronnie waves the way he always waved." 808 01:02:16,320 --> 01:02:17,946 [young David] Daddy, Daddy! 809 01:02:20,282 --> 01:02:22,826 [David] "On Olive's hand, I march back to the car, 810 01:02:22,827 --> 01:02:24,786 feeling thoroughly pleased with myself. 811 01:02:27,247 --> 01:02:31,460 Not every small boy, after all, has his mother to himself 812 01:02:31,461 --> 01:02:33,754 and keeps his father in a cage." 813 01:02:33,755 --> 01:02:35,088 [cell door slams] 814 01:02:40,093 --> 01:02:43,387 "But according to my father, none of this happened. 815 01:02:43,388 --> 01:02:46,266 The notion that I might have seen him in any of his prisons 816 01:02:46,267 --> 01:02:48,477 offended him very much." 817 01:02:50,771 --> 01:02:54,149 [Ronnie] Sheer invention from start to finish, son. 818 01:02:54,816 --> 01:02:58,152 Anyone who knows the inside of Exeter jail 819 01:02:58,153 --> 01:03:03,033 knows perfectly well you can't see the road from the cells. 820 01:03:05,494 --> 01:03:07,349 [cell door clanks, slams] 821 01:03:07,350 --> 01:03:09,206 [David] "And I believe him. 822 01:03:10,749 --> 01:03:12,708 I'm wrong and he was right. 823 01:03:12,709 --> 01:03:15,879 He was never at that window and I never waved to him. 824 01:03:16,463 --> 01:03:18,924 But what's the truth? What's memory? 825 01:03:19,633 --> 01:03:21,259 We should find another name 826 01:03:21,260 --> 01:03:25,055 for the way we see past events that are still alive in us." 827 01:03:32,062 --> 01:03:36,483 [Errol] I don't think confronting you is the right way to put it. 828 01:03:37,609 --> 01:03:41,280 But there was something that you said that I found curious 829 01:03:42,406 --> 01:03:45,492 and worth further examination. 830 01:03:46,410 --> 01:03:50,581 Maybe this is an interrogation. Maybe I am self-deceived. 831 01:03:52,374 --> 01:03:56,170 I can't imagine that as an interrogator or an interviewer, 832 01:03:56,171 --> 01:03:59,089 you aren't also in part looking for yourself. 833 01:04:00,007 --> 01:04:03,343 I don't think that we really can penetrate people very much, 834 01:04:04,970 --> 01:04:09,057 but we can form imaginings about them and then we relate to them. 835 01:04:16,815 --> 01:04:22,529 [Errol] You hired private detectives [laughing] to investigate your father. 836 01:04:23,780 --> 01:04:28,535 [David] One fat, one thin. I asked my solicitor, 837 01:04:28,536 --> 01:04:29,994 "How can I get hold of these people?" 838 01:04:29,995 --> 01:04:32,663 He said, "Well, don't tell them I told you, 839 01:04:32,664 --> 01:04:35,584 but these are about the most ruthless men [laughing] I know." 840 01:04:35,585 --> 01:04:38,962 {\an8}I hired them, at an absurdly large sum of money. 841 01:04:42,299 --> 01:04:44,676 [David] Really, they came on very little. 842 01:04:51,683 --> 01:04:58,482 {\an8}A much more reliable source for Ronnie's first criminal case and imprisonment 843 01:04:58,483 --> 01:05:00,817 {\an8}is the local press of the day. 844 01:05:04,947 --> 01:05:09,159 He got, I think, a four-year sentence for fraud at a very young age, 845 01:05:09,160 --> 01:05:11,911 but then he was taken out in mid-sentence 846 01:05:11,912 --> 01:05:15,374 and given a second sentence, uh, with hard labor. 847 01:05:15,375 --> 01:05:17,750 I once said, "How bad was it?" 848 01:05:17,751 --> 01:05:20,003 He said, "Well, the Gypsies were the worst." 849 01:05:20,004 --> 01:05:22,089 And he's talking about handicuffs. 850 01:05:22,840 --> 01:05:29,471 {\an8}Ronnie had a big chest. I think he was capable of being very physical himself. 851 01:05:34,226 --> 01:05:41,149 {\an8}[David] I was in Chicago promoting a British week, riding on London buses, 852 01:05:41,900 --> 01:05:45,445 pretending to make phone calls from telephone kiosks. 853 01:05:52,119 --> 01:05:55,455 The British consul-general then handed me a telegram 854 01:05:55,456 --> 01:05:59,251 {\an8}he'd received from the embassy in Jakarta. 855 01:06:03,297 --> 01:06:08,594 Saying Ronnie was in prison, it would take so much money to get him out. 856 01:06:08,595 --> 01:06:10,929 Would I agree to pay it? 857 01:06:14,808 --> 01:06:17,936 It wasn't an enormous sum, but it was quite painful all the same, 858 01:06:17,937 --> 01:06:20,313 and that got him out. 859 01:06:20,314 --> 01:06:23,650 And we never talked about it until I did much later and he said, 860 01:06:23,651 --> 01:06:26,235 "Oh, it was nothing, just currency stuff." 861 01:06:26,236 --> 01:06:29,530 We now know that he was engaged in arms dealing 862 01:06:29,531 --> 01:06:35,078 at a time when Indonesia was just recovering from a huge genocide. 863 01:06:40,292 --> 01:06:44,629 But then the last time, to my knowledge, that he was in prison, 864 01:06:44,630 --> 01:06:48,967 he was in the Bezirksgefängnis, the district prison in Zurich 865 01:06:48,968 --> 01:06:50,927 for swindling hotels. 866 01:06:50,928 --> 01:06:53,846 He was allowed a reverse charge call to me. 867 01:06:53,847 --> 01:06:58,060 He said, "I can't do any more jail, son. Get me out." 868 01:06:59,186 --> 01:07:00,686 And that was money again. 869 01:07:00,687 --> 01:07:04,942 I mean, it wasn't big money, but it was extremely painful to me. 870 01:07:04,943 --> 01:07:06,275 [cell door slams] 871 01:07:06,276 --> 01:07:12,407 I still have nightmare visions of this hugely active physical man, caged. 872 01:07:14,409 --> 01:07:17,246 In the aggregate, I don't know how much prison he did. 873 01:07:18,455 --> 01:07:21,500 Probably altogether no more than six or seven years. 874 01:07:22,543 --> 01:07:26,171 But what effect it had on him, I can't imagine. 875 01:07:26,172 --> 01:07:28,089 [unsettling music] 876 01:07:28,090 --> 01:07:30,592 [indistinct prisoners chatter] 877 01:07:36,557 --> 01:07:38,809 [Errol] By the way, Ronnie sued you! 878 01:07:39,977 --> 01:07:45,566 [David] Yes, he did. I gave an interview to London Weekend Television. 879 01:07:47,067 --> 01:07:50,988 I omitted to say that I owed everything to him. 880 01:07:52,865 --> 01:07:55,284 I didn't want to give Ronnie the credit. 881 01:07:57,035 --> 01:08:00,205 Why should I find a line that said I owed it all to my father? 882 01:08:00,206 --> 01:08:06,503 But the reality probably is, in many ways, that I do. 883 01:08:18,390 --> 01:08:20,767 [David archive] I've never felt I belonged anywhere, 884 01:08:20,768 --> 01:08:22,998 I've been very lucky in that respect. 885 01:08:22,999 --> 01:08:25,229 I've had a very rich life. 886 01:08:25,939 --> 01:08:29,484 And I've seen a lot of institutions and a lot of things. 887 01:08:30,569 --> 01:08:33,946 I've led a lot of lives, in an odd way. 888 01:08:33,947 --> 01:08:36,491 I don't feel that I belong to any of them. 889 01:08:37,117 --> 01:08:41,705 What I am left with is a sense of being on my own. 890 01:08:47,085 --> 01:08:49,754 [Errol] Was your father tortured by the fact 891 01:08:49,755 --> 01:08:54,009 that you became rich and successful and he did not? 892 01:08:56,303 --> 01:08:57,513 [David] I don't know. 893 01:08:59,680 --> 01:09:03,976 The principal effect of my success upon him 894 01:09:03,977 --> 01:09:08,272 was to create in him a sense of entitlement. 895 01:09:08,273 --> 01:09:12,778 He bought huge quantities of my books, usually on credit, signed them, 896 01:09:12,779 --> 01:09:14,946 "From the author's father." 897 01:09:14,947 --> 01:09:17,115 Gave them around like confetti. 898 01:09:23,121 --> 01:09:29,795 I met the hard-edge, the real edge, I suppose, when he summoned me to Vienna. 899 01:09:33,590 --> 01:09:34,841 "Son, 900 01:09:35,884 --> 01:09:38,385 I've worked out what your education cost me. 901 01:09:38,386 --> 01:09:41,807 And I have some idea of the kind of money you're making." 902 01:09:43,225 --> 01:09:45,559 And then he went on to make a pitch. 903 01:09:45,560 --> 01:09:49,898 "Son, all I've ever wanted in my life is pigs and cattle, 904 01:09:49,899 --> 01:09:52,943 and then a little piece of Dorset. Pigs and cattle. 905 01:09:53,484 --> 01:09:57,739 Somewhere nice to live, nice lady to live with, and I'll be all right. 906 01:09:58,699 --> 01:10:01,618 So, what I need is..." And he named an enormous sum of money. 907 01:10:01,619 --> 01:10:05,414 "Father, I can't do that. It makes no sense to me. 908 01:10:05,998 --> 01:10:10,377 What I will do, if that's really what you want, with your pigs and cattle, 909 01:10:10,378 --> 01:10:13,171 is I will buy a house and own it and put you into it. 910 01:10:13,172 --> 01:10:15,966 I will make an allowance to you for running your farm. 911 01:10:15,967 --> 01:10:18,176 I don't trust you for one second." 912 01:10:18,177 --> 01:10:22,806 He actually had appointed me a mark. He was going to con me. 913 01:10:23,348 --> 01:10:27,269 And I'd join the club of people on the roadside. 914 01:10:27,270 --> 01:10:28,789 And I wasn't going to let that happen. 915 01:10:30,230 --> 01:10:32,982 We were in Sachers, in Vienna, 916 01:10:32,983 --> 01:10:36,528 the most refined, excellent restaurant in those days. 917 01:10:37,237 --> 01:10:41,033 He let out the most awful feral howl. 918 01:10:41,825 --> 01:10:46,496 And shouted, "You're paying your own father to sit on his arse!" 919 01:10:46,497 --> 01:10:50,813 In a voice that could have been heard across the street. 920 01:10:50,814 --> 01:10:55,130 And then he emitted this howl, howl, half rose to his feet, 921 01:10:55,131 --> 01:11:00,176 and I put my arm round his very ample back, 922 01:11:00,177 --> 01:11:06,808 and we hobbled to the front door of the... of the hotel, 923 01:11:08,227 --> 01:11:13,398 down some steps, then there was a cab and he looked up at me in supplicant's face, 924 01:11:13,399 --> 01:11:15,776 "How am I going to pay for this cab?" 925 01:11:16,985 --> 01:11:19,404 And I gave the driver some money. 926 01:11:20,072 --> 01:11:21,697 And off he went. 927 01:11:21,698 --> 01:11:26,286 I could've accepted his pitch, at least given him some money. 928 01:11:27,329 --> 01:11:32,167 But I was so angry that it was a pain to pay for the cab. 929 01:11:32,960 --> 01:11:36,046 [Errol] But it's a feeling of being betrayed. 930 01:11:36,672 --> 01:11:41,552 Yes, it is. There was quite a bit of that in it. "How can you do this to me?" 931 01:11:41,553 --> 01:11:42,719 [melancholy music] 932 01:11:48,058 --> 01:11:50,811 [Guillam] Come on, old friend. It's bedtime. 933 01:11:52,563 --> 01:11:55,399 George? You won. 934 01:11:58,902 --> 01:11:59,987 [Smiley] Did I? 935 01:12:02,114 --> 01:12:03,198 Yes. 936 01:12:04,825 --> 01:12:06,410 Yes, I suppose I did. 937 01:12:14,960 --> 01:12:16,587 [Errol] Did you love Ronnie? 938 01:12:17,421 --> 01:12:19,526 I really don't know what love is. 939 01:12:19,527 --> 01:12:21,633 I must have loved him as a child. 940 01:12:22,134 --> 01:12:25,971 But then, the consequences of his life became clear to me. 941 01:12:26,805 --> 01:12:31,226 Later in life, when he wanted everything I had, like my money. 942 01:12:33,187 --> 01:12:36,857 I was able to pull out the necessary stops. 943 01:12:36,858 --> 01:12:39,317 I could do affection with him. 944 01:12:39,318 --> 01:12:43,530 I could do indifference and, secretly, I could do hatred. 945 01:12:43,531 --> 01:12:45,531 Those things exist, actually, 946 01:12:45,532 --> 01:12:48,159 in any father-son relationship at different times. 947 01:12:48,160 --> 01:12:52,331 They're like seasons. I had to muster hatred in order to escape him. 948 01:13:02,841 --> 01:13:04,885 {\an8}[David] They had three funerals for him. 949 01:13:06,678 --> 01:13:08,263 {\an8}I went to the first one. 950 01:13:09,389 --> 01:13:12,476 {\an8}I was urged to make a speech and declined. 951 01:13:12,477 --> 01:13:15,394 And then there was another funeral 952 01:13:15,395 --> 01:13:18,232 and then, God help us, there was a memorial service. 953 01:13:18,233 --> 01:13:20,275 But I didn't go to either of those. 954 01:13:22,778 --> 01:13:26,907 I wanted to believe that my feelings were dead. 955 01:13:27,908 --> 01:13:29,451 And I've never seen his grave. 956 01:13:31,828 --> 01:13:33,997 [birds sing] 957 01:13:35,457 --> 01:13:37,835 [Errol] But you paid for the funerals. 958 01:13:38,919 --> 01:13:40,419 I'm sure I did, yes. 959 01:13:40,420 --> 01:13:42,797 I paid for everybody's funerals. [chuckles] 960 01:13:42,798 --> 01:13:46,030 I paid for my mother's funeral. I mean, I paid for them. 961 01:13:46,031 --> 01:13:49,263 What... What the hell does that mean? I'm well off, I paid. 962 01:13:51,723 --> 01:13:55,726 The most loyal of his servants, 963 01:13:55,727 --> 01:13:59,439 who had done jail for him, was a man called Arthur Lowe. 964 01:13:59,440 --> 01:14:03,819 All these people have monosyllables as surnames. 965 01:14:03,820 --> 01:14:05,696 There was a Mister Bent, believe it or not. 966 01:14:07,781 --> 01:14:12,618 I went to Jermyn Street immediately upon hearing of his death 967 01:14:12,619 --> 01:14:16,957 to see whether there was anything there to be redeemed and to be present. 968 01:14:17,916 --> 01:14:23,422 Arthur said, "Let's all go and have a bit of a blowout. Do us good. 969 01:14:23,423 --> 01:14:26,216 Let's go to Jules Bar across the road." 970 01:14:28,093 --> 01:14:30,803 So, about eight of us went, and Arthur presided. 971 01:14:30,804 --> 01:14:34,516 We had champagne and oysters, w-w-whatever the hell we wanted. 972 01:14:34,517 --> 01:14:36,934 We thought we'd cheer ourselves up. Or Arthur did. 973 01:14:36,935 --> 01:14:42,399 Very graciously, he paid. And it was his party, it was fine. 974 01:14:43,066 --> 01:14:47,321 {\an8}It's my party, George. I'll get the bill when I'm ready. 975 01:14:51,074 --> 01:14:53,826 Two days later, I got the receipt in the post. 976 01:14:53,827 --> 01:14:57,164 "Will I please [laughs] adjust as soon as possible?" 977 01:14:57,165 --> 01:14:59,248 Ronnie never had money. 978 01:14:59,249 --> 01:15:05,422 He made killings, but as soon as he made a killing, on the... the sound principle, 979 01:15:05,423 --> 01:15:11,053 that expenditure always exceeds income... it was gone again. 980 01:15:14,556 --> 01:15:18,142 He was some kind of crisis addict. 981 01:15:18,143 --> 01:15:21,313 I think he had to be living on the edge all the time. 982 01:15:23,065 --> 01:15:25,566 And I think he certainly persuaded himself 983 01:15:25,567 --> 01:15:29,571 that this was an honorable and valuable contribution to the community 984 01:15:29,572 --> 01:15:33,033 and they would be happy and he would be mountainously rich. 985 01:15:33,034 --> 01:15:36,495 And mind you, he was within a whisker of that happening. 986 01:15:40,499 --> 01:15:43,794 I'm not making a case for him, I'm just trying to tell you 987 01:15:43,795 --> 01:15:49,466 how close he was to being a successful man. 988 01:15:50,050 --> 01:15:53,178 And how absolutely absurd were his fantasies. 989 01:15:53,179 --> 01:15:55,347 - [slamming] - [pigeon coos] 990 01:16:04,815 --> 01:16:06,983 [Errol] But the world runs on fantasy. 991 01:16:06,984 --> 01:16:12,030 [David] I agree. The membrane between what he does or failed to do, 992 01:16:12,031 --> 01:16:16,034 and enormously wealthy and successful and honored people 993 01:16:16,035 --> 01:16:18,579 that membrane was very, very feeble. 994 01:16:19,246 --> 01:16:22,958 [traffic hums] 995 01:16:25,002 --> 01:16:28,463 [David] "Ronnie is dead and I am revisiting Vienna 996 01:16:29,673 --> 01:16:31,549 in order to breathe the city air 997 01:16:31,550 --> 01:16:35,304 while I write him into the semi-autobiographical novel 998 01:16:35,305 --> 01:16:37,472 I am at last free to ponder. 999 01:16:42,144 --> 01:16:43,687 Not the Sacher again. 1000 01:16:44,229 --> 01:16:46,439 I have a dread that the waiters will remember 1001 01:16:46,440 --> 01:16:51,486 Ronnie crashing down onto the table and me half carrying him out. 1002 01:16:53,405 --> 01:16:56,073 My plane into Schwechat is delayed 1003 01:16:56,074 --> 01:16:59,828 and the reception desk of the hotel that I have chosen at random 1004 01:16:59,829 --> 01:17:02,873 is in the charge of an elderly night porter. 1005 01:17:06,376 --> 01:17:10,047 He looks on silently as I fill in the registration form. 1006 01:17:10,964 --> 01:17:16,303 Then he speaks in soft, venerable Viennese German. 1007 01:17:18,347 --> 01:17:21,558 'Your father was a great man, ' he says. 1008 01:17:21,559 --> 01:17:24,019 'You treated him disgracefully.'" 1009 01:17:28,941 --> 01:17:32,735 [Errol] I keep hearing again and again and again 1010 01:17:32,736 --> 01:17:37,365 that I have not pressed you hard enough about betrayal. 1011 01:17:37,366 --> 01:17:41,994 I have failed in my interviewer's or interrogator's job. 1012 01:17:41,995 --> 01:17:47,750 Well, I feel that you got the last drop out of the sponge on that subject. 1013 01:17:47,751 --> 01:17:53,507 But I'll answer any question you wish me to answer, as truthfully as I can. 1014 01:17:53,508 --> 01:17:56,218 [Errol] Do they want you to break down and sob? 1015 01:17:56,219 --> 01:17:59,846 And weep? Yeah. I... I can do that. 1016 01:17:59,847 --> 01:18:03,474 Like I can do bird noises. [chuckles] 1017 01:18:03,475 --> 01:18:08,438 I'm not going to talk about my sex life, any more, I trust, than you would. 1018 01:18:08,439 --> 01:18:10,898 It seems to be an intensely private matter. 1019 01:18:10,899 --> 01:18:15,132 My love life has been a very difficult passage, as you would imagine, 1020 01:18:15,133 --> 01:18:19,366 but it's resolved itself wonderfully, and that's enough on that subject. 1021 01:18:21,451 --> 01:18:24,705 [Errol] So, what do people want? 1022 01:18:25,581 --> 01:18:31,503 They want to think that I am duplicitous, 1023 01:18:32,880 --> 01:18:34,797 false-tongued, 1024 01:18:34,798 --> 01:18:39,011 that I use my charm as a wreckers' light 1025 01:18:40,053 --> 01:18:42,806 and probably that I torture my children. 1026 01:18:43,557 --> 01:18:46,350 They want to unmask me as something, 1027 01:18:46,351 --> 01:18:50,230 but I need to know what is behind the mask first. 1028 01:18:51,398 --> 01:18:54,193 You have all I am, as far as I know. 1029 01:18:59,615 --> 01:19:04,286 {\an8}[Errol] In your memoir, you say none of it's true, it's as I imagined it. 1030 01:19:07,289 --> 01:19:12,836 [David] Inside the bubble, I am abstracting from non-fiction 1031 01:19:12,837 --> 01:19:14,338 and fictionalizing it. 1032 01:19:15,297 --> 01:19:20,302 I want to take tidy stories out of the perceived reality around me. 1033 01:19:23,639 --> 01:19:28,101 {\an8}But I didn't do any of that derring-do stuff that is reported in my books. 1034 01:19:30,229 --> 01:19:35,025 [Errol] But why tell people that a story is false right at the very beginning? 1035 01:19:36,360 --> 01:19:39,446 [David] If you and I had witnessed the same car accident, 1036 01:19:40,489 --> 01:19:43,283 each would have his version of what had happened. 1037 01:19:44,243 --> 01:19:45,911 So, what is truth? 1038 01:19:47,329 --> 01:19:52,125 Objective truth is perceived by some absent third party, 1039 01:19:53,085 --> 01:19:56,338 but otherwise, truth is subjective. 1040 01:19:58,674 --> 01:20:03,094 [Errol] Who is that third party? God? 1041 01:20:03,095 --> 01:20:07,558 There is some kind of factual record which we'll never get our hands on. 1042 01:20:09,101 --> 01:20:10,561 [footsteps echo] 1043 01:20:11,562 --> 01:20:16,420 My business has been to try to make credible fables 1044 01:20:16,421 --> 01:20:21,280 out of the worlds that I visited or visited me. 1045 01:20:32,708 --> 01:20:35,752 The journey for me has been one of the imagination. 1046 01:20:37,004 --> 01:20:39,715 The imaginative refuge from reality. 1047 01:20:42,551 --> 01:20:45,429 The recreation of chaos. 1048 01:20:47,055 --> 01:20:51,435 Not in an orderly way, but in a comprehensible, individualized way 1049 01:20:52,895 --> 01:20:59,895 that makes people feel not à la James Bond, 1050 01:20:59,902 --> 01:21:01,403 "I wish this was me." 1051 01:21:02,196 --> 01:21:07,242 But more kind of, "Jesus, I hope this isn't me." 1052 01:21:08,035 --> 01:21:10,621 [mysterious music] 1053 01:21:17,252 --> 01:21:20,463 [David] "When I was a young and carefree spy, 1054 01:21:20,464 --> 01:21:25,677 it was only natural that I should believe that the nation's hottest secrets 1055 01:21:25,678 --> 01:21:29,430 were housed in a chipped, green Chubbsafe 1056 01:21:29,431 --> 01:21:34,144 that was tucked away at the end of a labyrinth of dingy corridors... 1057 01:21:35,729 --> 01:21:38,649 on the top floor of 54 Broadway... 1058 01:21:39,942 --> 01:21:44,738 ...in the private office occupied by the Chief of the Secret Service. 1059 01:21:46,657 --> 01:21:50,618 {\an8}I had heard that there existed documents so secret 1060 01:21:50,619 --> 01:21:54,581 {\an8}that they were only ever touched by the Chief himself. 1061 01:21:57,918 --> 01:22:00,253 And now the sad day is upon us 1062 01:22:00,254 --> 01:22:04,633 when the final curtain will be run down on Broadway Buildings. 1063 01:22:07,261 --> 01:22:10,012 Is the Chief's safe exempt? 1064 01:22:10,013 --> 01:22:13,976 Will cranes, crowbars, and silent men convey it bodily 1065 01:22:13,977 --> 01:22:17,688 to the next stage along its life's long journey? 1066 01:22:19,940 --> 01:22:23,068 It is reluctantly ruled that the safe will be opened." 1067 01:22:23,069 --> 01:22:24,152 [keys jingle] 1068 01:22:26,238 --> 01:22:28,489 [shouts] So, who's got the bloody key? 1069 01:22:28,490 --> 01:22:30,409 [David] "Not the reigning chief, apparently." 1070 01:22:30,410 --> 01:22:31,534 [Chief] Ah! 1071 01:22:31,535 --> 01:22:34,621 [David] "He has made a point of never venturing inside the safe. 1072 01:22:36,164 --> 01:22:38,458 What you don't know, you can't reveal." 1073 01:22:40,210 --> 01:22:41,545 [Chief] Useless! 1074 01:22:42,296 --> 01:22:44,047 Send for Burglar Bill. 1075 01:22:45,299 --> 01:22:48,510 [David] "The Service has picked a few locks in its day, 1076 01:22:48,511 --> 01:22:51,263 so it looks like time to pick another." 1077 01:23:05,777 --> 01:23:06,945 [lock clunks] 1078 01:23:11,658 --> 01:23:13,368 [dial clicks] 1079 01:23:18,916 --> 01:23:20,709 [David] "The lock yields." 1080 01:23:20,710 --> 01:23:21,919 [lock clunks] 1081 01:23:22,711 --> 01:23:25,214 [David] "The safe is empty. Bare. 1082 01:23:25,964 --> 01:23:29,843 Innocent of even the most mundane secret." 1083 01:23:30,677 --> 01:23:31,803 Wait! 1084 01:23:32,679 --> 01:23:37,726 Is it a decoy safe to protect an inner sanctum? 1085 01:23:42,022 --> 01:23:45,108 [David] "The safe is gently prized from the wall. 1086 01:23:47,361 --> 01:23:49,905 The Chief peers behind it." 1087 01:23:49,906 --> 01:23:51,156 [Chief grunts] 1088 01:23:52,449 --> 01:23:57,996 [David] "And extracts a very thick, very old pair of trousers, 1089 01:23:59,289 --> 01:24:01,166 with a label attached to them. 1090 01:24:01,834 --> 01:24:08,465 The typed inscription declares that these are the trousers worn by Rudolf Hess..." 1091 01:24:09,049 --> 01:24:10,050 [thunder] 1092 01:24:10,551 --> 01:24:14,136 "...Adolf Hitler's deputy when he flew to Scotland 1093 01:24:14,137 --> 01:24:18,433 to negotiate a separate peace with the Duke of Hamilton. 1094 01:24:19,309 --> 01:24:24,648 In the mistaken belief that the Duke shared his fascist views." 1095 01:24:28,986 --> 01:24:31,989 [aircraft engine thrums] 1096 01:24:32,990 --> 01:24:35,117 [engine rattles] 1097 01:25:01,018 --> 01:25:04,813 [David] "Beneath the inscription runs a handwritten scrawl." 1098 01:25:06,440 --> 01:25:08,108 [aircraft roars] 1099 01:25:09,318 --> 01:25:11,445 "Please analyze. 1100 01:25:12,529 --> 01:25:18,619 May give an idea of the state of the German textile industry." 1101 01:25:20,287 --> 01:25:23,457 [Chief laughs] 1102 01:25:25,375 --> 01:25:28,462 [he continues to laugh] 1103 01:25:30,255 --> 01:25:36,053 [David] That was a story about men from a diminished imperial power 1104 01:25:36,054 --> 01:25:39,555 looking into a false reflection of themselves. 1105 01:25:39,556 --> 01:25:44,394 Still guarding a great nation, still playing the world's game. 1106 01:25:45,646 --> 01:25:51,151 And in fact, they were a tragically reduced crowd 1107 01:25:52,236 --> 01:25:54,321 driven by their own nostalgia. 1108 01:25:55,739 --> 01:25:57,991 [Errol] And when you look in the mirror? 1109 01:25:59,618 --> 01:26:00,994 Now? Today? 1110 01:26:01,620 --> 01:26:06,270 I'm much more at ease with myself now, in age. 1111 01:26:06,271 --> 01:26:09,992 More reconciled to who I was. And who I was not. 1112 01:26:09,993 --> 01:26:13,715 So, I'm not too unhappy when I look in the mirror, 1113 01:26:13,716 --> 01:26:16,009 unless I've got a dreadful hangover. 1114 01:26:16,844 --> 01:26:21,473 [Errol] I look at you as an exquisite poet of self-hatred. 1115 01:26:21,474 --> 01:26:24,517 Yeah, I would go with that. [laughs] 1116 01:26:24,518 --> 01:26:30,899 I think that it's only in the last few years that I feel I've found my freedom, 1117 01:26:30,900 --> 01:26:33,943 and I love being what I am best at. 1118 01:26:33,944 --> 01:26:38,260 Not just being a writer, that's incidental, but writing. 1119 01:26:38,261 --> 01:26:42,578 Without the creative life, I have very little identity. 1120 01:26:42,579 --> 01:26:45,913 I'm like an actor without a part. 1121 01:26:45,914 --> 01:26:51,879 With the work, I am as near as I get to being a happy man. 1122 01:26:52,838 --> 01:26:54,798 And I love, I love writing. 1123 01:26:55,674 --> 01:26:57,342 So, I am that animal. 1124 01:26:58,260 --> 01:27:03,807 And I dare hardly use the claim, but I'll make it here, I'm an artist. 1125 01:27:03,808 --> 01:27:06,163 [somber music] 1126 01:27:06,164 --> 01:27:08,520 [pigeons coo] 97527

Can't find what you're looking for?
Get subtitles in any language from opensubtitles.com, and translate them here.