爱在黎明破晓前 Before Sunrise(1995)【完整台词】
爱在黎明破晓前 Before Sunrise(1995) 全部台词 (当前第1页,一共 9 页)
(speaking German)
(German)
(German continues)
(German continues)
(German continues)
(both arguing)
(door opens)
(door closes)
Do you have any idea
what they were arguing about?
D-Do you speak English?
(French accent) Yeah. No, I'm sorry.
My German is not very good.
Have you heard that as couples get older,
they lose their ability to hear each other?
No.
Well, supposedly, men lose their ability
to hear higher-pitched sounds.
And women eventually
lose hearing on the low end.
- I guess they sort of nullify each other.
- I guess.
Nature's way of allowing couples to grow
old together without killing each other.
What are you reading?
Ah, yeah.
- How about you?
- Um...
- Mmm. (chuckles)
- Hmm.
(man, woman speaking German)
Look, I was thinking about going
to the lounge car sometime soon.
- Would you like to come with me?
- Yeah.
Okay.
So how do you speak such good English?
I went to school
for a summer in Los Angeles.
- Yeah?
- It's fine here?
Yeah, this is good.
Then I spent some time in London.
Uh, well...
How do you speak such good English?
Me? I'm American.
- You're American?
- Yeah.
- Are you sure?
- Yeah.
(laughing) No, I'm joking.
I knew you were American. And of course,
you don't speak any other language, right?
Yeah, yeah, yeah. I get it, I get it.
So I'm the crude, dumb, vulgar American
who doesn't speak any other languages,
who has no culture, right?
But I tried.
I took French for four years
in high school.
When I first got to Paris,
I stood in line at the Metro station,
I was practicing -
Une billet, s'il vous pláît.
- Une billet, s'il vous pláît.
- Un billet
Un, whatever - Un - Un -
Un billet, s'il vous pláit
Un billet, s'il vous pláit
And I get up there and I look at this woman
and my mind goes completely blank.
And I start saying, "Ah, listen, I need
a ticket to get to, um -"' You know.
So, anyway. Um -
So where are you headed?
Well, back to Paris.
My classes start next week.
- You're still in school? Where do you go?
- Yeah. La Sorbonne, you know?
Sure.
- Are you coming from Budapest?
- Yeah, I was visiting my grandmother.
Ah. How is she?
(laughing) She - She's okay.
- She's all right?
- She's fine, yeah.
- How about you? Where are you going?
- I'm going to Vienna.
- Vienna? What's there?
- I have no idea. I'm flying out of there tomorrow.
- Ah. You're on holiday?
- Uh...
- Uh, I don't really know what I'm on.
- Okay.
I'm just traveling around. I've been riding
the trains the past two, three weeks.
Mm-hmm. You were visiting friends
or just on your own?
- Yeah. I had a friend in Madrid, but, um -
- Madrid? That's nice.
Yeah, I got one of those
Eurail passes, is what I did.
That's great.
So, has this trip around Europe
been good for you?
Yeah, sure.
Yeah, it's been, um - It sucked.
- You know?
- What?
-(laughing) No, it's - It isn't -
-(laughing)
It's had its, um - Well, I'll tell you.
Sitting, you know, for weeks on end,
looking out the window
has actually been kinda great.
What do you mean?
Well, uh, you know, for inst -
You have ideas
that you ordinarily wouldn't have.
- What kind of ideas?
- You wanna hear one?
- Yeah, tell me.
- All right.
- Uh, I have this idea, okay?
- Mm-hmm.
For a television show. Some friends of mine
are these cable access producers.
Do you know what that is, cable acc...
Anybody can produce a show real cheap,
and they have to put it on. Right?
I have this idea for this show that would last
24 hours a day, for a year straight, right?
What you do is you get 365 people
from cities all over the world
to do these 24-hour documents of real time,
capturing life as it's lived.
You know, it would start
with a guy waking up in the morning
and, uh, you know, taking a long shower,
um, eating a little breakfast,
making a little coffee,
you know, and, uh, reading the paper.
Wait, wait, all those mundane, boring things
everybody has to do
every day of their fucking life?
I was gonna say
"the poetry of day-to-day life."
But you say it the way you say it,
I'll say it the way I say it.
- Who's gonna want to watch this?
- But think about it like this -
Why is it that a dog
sleeping in the sun is so beautiful?
You know? It is. It's beautiful.
But a guy standing at a bank machine,
trying to take some money out,
looks like a complete moron.
So it's like a National Geographic program,
but on people.
- Yeah.
- Hmm.
- What do you think?
- I can - I can see it -
Like 24 boring hours. Sorry.
And, like, a three-minute sex scene
where he falls asleep right after, no?
Yeah! You know -
-I mean, that would be a great episode.
- Yeah.
- People would talk about that episode.
-(laughing)
You and your friends
could do one in Paris if you wanted to.
Oh, sure.
The key - The thing that kinda
haunts me is, uh - is the distribution.
Getting these tapes from town to town,
city to city, so that it would play continuously.
'Cause it'd have to play all the time
or else it just wouldn't work.
Thank you.
Thanks.
You know what?
They're not service-oriented.
(chuckles)
Just an observation about Europe.
My parents have never really spoken
of the possibility of my falling in love
or getting married or having children.
Even as a little girl,
they wanted me to think as a future career
as a, you know, interior designer
or lawyer or something like that.
I'd say to my Dad, "I want to be a writer,"
and he'd say, "Journalist."
I'd say I wanted to have a refuge for stray cats
and he'd say, "Veterinarian."
I'd say I wanted to be an actress
and he'd say, "TV newscaster."
It was this constant conversion
of my fanciful ambition
into these practical,
moneymaking ventures.
Mmm.
I always had a pretty good
bullshit detector when I was a kid.
I always knew when they were
lying to me, you know?
By the time I was in high school,
I was dead set on listening to what
everybody thought I should be doing with my life
and just kinda. . . doing the opposite.
Nobody was ever mean about it.
It's just I could never get very excited
about other people's ambitions for my life.
Hmm. But you know what?
If your parents never really
fully contradict you about anything
-and are basically nice and supportive -
- Right.
It makes it even harder
to officially complain.
You know, even when they're wrong.
It's this passive-aggressive shit.
You know what I mean? It's...
I hate it.
- I really hate it.
-(chuckling)
Well, you know, despite all that kind
of bullshit that comes along with it,
I remember childhood as this...
you know, this magical time.
I do.
I remember when, uh, my mother
first told me about death.
My great-grandmother had just died,
and my whole family
had just visited them in Florida.
I was about three,
three and a half years old.
Anyway, I was in the backyard, playing,
and my sister had just taught me
how to take the garden hose
and do it in such a way that,
uh, it sprayed into the sun
and it would make a rainbow.
Right?
So I was doing that,
and through the mist,
I could see my grandmother.
You know? And she was
just standing there, smiling at me.
And, uh, I held it there for a long time
and I looked at her,
and then finally I-l let go of the nozzle.
You know? And then I dropped the hose.
And she disappeared.
So I run back inside
and I tell my parents.
And they, uh, sit me down
and give me this big rap
on how, when people die, you never
see them again and how I'd imagined it.
But I knew what I'd seen.
I was just glad that I saw it.
I've never seen anything like that since.
But I don't know.
It just kinda let me know
how ambiguous everything was.
You know? Even death.
You're really lucky you can
have this attitude toward death.
I think I'm afraid of death
24 hours a day.
I swear.
That's why I'm in a train right now.
I could have flown to Paris, but I'm too scared.
- Oh, come on.
- I can't help it. I can't help it.
(German)
(German continues)
(German continues)
(German continues)
(both arguing)
(door opens)
(door closes)
Do you have any idea
what they were arguing about?
D-Do you speak English?
(French accent) Yeah. No, I'm sorry.
My German is not very good.
Have you heard that as couples get older,
they lose their ability to hear each other?
No.
Well, supposedly, men lose their ability
to hear higher-pitched sounds.
And women eventually
lose hearing on the low end.
- I guess they sort of nullify each other.
- I guess.
Nature's way of allowing couples to grow
old together without killing each other.
What are you reading?
Ah, yeah.
- How about you?
- Um...
- Mmm. (chuckles)
- Hmm.
(man, woman speaking German)
Look, I was thinking about going
to the lounge car sometime soon.
- Would you like to come with me?
- Yeah.
Okay.
So how do you speak such good English?
I went to school
for a summer in Los Angeles.
- Yeah?
- It's fine here?
Yeah, this is good.
Then I spent some time in London.
Uh, well...
How do you speak such good English?
Me? I'm American.
- You're American?
- Yeah.
- Are you sure?
- Yeah.
(laughing) No, I'm joking.
I knew you were American. And of course,
you don't speak any other language, right?
Yeah, yeah, yeah. I get it, I get it.
So I'm the crude, dumb, vulgar American
who doesn't speak any other languages,
who has no culture, right?
But I tried.
I took French for four years
in high school.
When I first got to Paris,
I stood in line at the Metro station,
I was practicing -
Une billet, s'il vous pláît.
- Une billet, s'il vous pláît.
- Un billet
Un, whatever - Un - Un -
Un billet, s'il vous pláit
Un billet, s'il vous pláit
And I get up there and I look at this woman
and my mind goes completely blank.
And I start saying, "Ah, listen, I need
a ticket to get to, um -"' You know.
So, anyway. Um -
So where are you headed?
Well, back to Paris.
My classes start next week.
- You're still in school? Where do you go?
- Yeah. La Sorbonne, you know?
Sure.
- Are you coming from Budapest?
- Yeah, I was visiting my grandmother.
Ah. How is she?
(laughing) She - She's okay.
- She's all right?
- She's fine, yeah.
- How about you? Where are you going?
- I'm going to Vienna.
- Vienna? What's there?
- I have no idea. I'm flying out of there tomorrow.
- Ah. You're on holiday?
- Uh...
- Uh, I don't really know what I'm on.
- Okay.
I'm just traveling around. I've been riding
the trains the past two, three weeks.
Mm-hmm. You were visiting friends
or just on your own?
- Yeah. I had a friend in Madrid, but, um -
- Madrid? That's nice.
Yeah, I got one of those
Eurail passes, is what I did.
That's great.
So, has this trip around Europe
been good for you?
Yeah, sure.
Yeah, it's been, um - It sucked.
- You know?
- What?
-(laughing) No, it's - It isn't -
-(laughing)
It's had its, um - Well, I'll tell you.
Sitting, you know, for weeks on end,
looking out the window
has actually been kinda great.
What do you mean?
Well, uh, you know, for inst -
You have ideas
that you ordinarily wouldn't have.
- What kind of ideas?
- You wanna hear one?
- Yeah, tell me.
- All right.
- Uh, I have this idea, okay?
- Mm-hmm.
For a television show. Some friends of mine
are these cable access producers.
Do you know what that is, cable acc...
Anybody can produce a show real cheap,
and they have to put it on. Right?
I have this idea for this show that would last
24 hours a day, for a year straight, right?
What you do is you get 365 people
from cities all over the world
to do these 24-hour documents of real time,
capturing life as it's lived.
You know, it would start
with a guy waking up in the morning
and, uh, you know, taking a long shower,
um, eating a little breakfast,
making a little coffee,
you know, and, uh, reading the paper.
Wait, wait, all those mundane, boring things
everybody has to do
every day of their fucking life?
I was gonna say
"the poetry of day-to-day life."
But you say it the way you say it,
I'll say it the way I say it.
- Who's gonna want to watch this?
- But think about it like this -
Why is it that a dog
sleeping in the sun is so beautiful?
You know? It is. It's beautiful.
But a guy standing at a bank machine,
trying to take some money out,
looks like a complete moron.
So it's like a National Geographic program,
but on people.
- Yeah.
- Hmm.
- What do you think?
- I can - I can see it -
Like 24 boring hours. Sorry.
And, like, a three-minute sex scene
where he falls asleep right after, no?
Yeah! You know -
-I mean, that would be a great episode.
- Yeah.
- People would talk about that episode.
-(laughing)
You and your friends
could do one in Paris if you wanted to.
Oh, sure.
The key - The thing that kinda
haunts me is, uh - is the distribution.
Getting these tapes from town to town,
city to city, so that it would play continuously.
'Cause it'd have to play all the time
or else it just wouldn't work.
Thank you.
Thanks.
You know what?
They're not service-oriented.
(chuckles)
Just an observation about Europe.
My parents have never really spoken
of the possibility of my falling in love
or getting married or having children.
Even as a little girl,
they wanted me to think as a future career
as a, you know, interior designer
or lawyer or something like that.
I'd say to my Dad, "I want to be a writer,"
and he'd say, "Journalist."
I'd say I wanted to have a refuge for stray cats
and he'd say, "Veterinarian."
I'd say I wanted to be an actress
and he'd say, "TV newscaster."
It was this constant conversion
of my fanciful ambition
into these practical,
moneymaking ventures.
Mmm.
I always had a pretty good
bullshit detector when I was a kid.
I always knew when they were
lying to me, you know?
By the time I was in high school,
I was dead set on listening to what
everybody thought I should be doing with my life
and just kinda. . . doing the opposite.
Nobody was ever mean about it.
It's just I could never get very excited
about other people's ambitions for my life.
Hmm. But you know what?
If your parents never really
fully contradict you about anything
-and are basically nice and supportive -
- Right.
It makes it even harder
to officially complain.
You know, even when they're wrong.
It's this passive-aggressive shit.
You know what I mean? It's...
I hate it.
- I really hate it.
-(chuckling)
Well, you know, despite all that kind
of bullshit that comes along with it,
I remember childhood as this...
you know, this magical time.
I do.
I remember when, uh, my mother
first told me about death.
My great-grandmother had just died,
and my whole family
had just visited them in Florida.
I was about three,
three and a half years old.
Anyway, I was in the backyard, playing,
and my sister had just taught me
how to take the garden hose
and do it in such a way that,
uh, it sprayed into the sun
and it would make a rainbow.
Right?
So I was doing that,
and through the mist,
I could see my grandmother.
You know? And she was
just standing there, smiling at me.
And, uh, I held it there for a long time
and I looked at her,
and then finally I-l let go of the nozzle.
You know? And then I dropped the hose.
And she disappeared.
So I run back inside
and I tell my parents.
And they, uh, sit me down
and give me this big rap
on how, when people die, you never
see them again and how I'd imagined it.
But I knew what I'd seen.
I was just glad that I saw it.
I've never seen anything like that since.
But I don't know.
It just kinda let me know
how ambiguous everything was.
You know? Even death.
You're really lucky you can
have this attitude toward death.
I think I'm afraid of death
24 hours a day.
I swear.
That's why I'm in a train right now.
I could have flown to Paris, but I'm too scared.
- Oh, come on.
- I can't help it. I can't help it.
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