老无所依 No Country for Old Men (2007)【完整台词】
老无所依 No Country for Old Men (2007) 全部台词 (当前第1页,一共 6 页)
I was sheriff of this county
when I was 25 years old.
Hard to believe.
My grandfather was a lawman.
Father, too.
Me and him was sheriffs
at the same time,
him up in Plano and me out here.
I think he's pretty proud of that.
I know I was.
Some of the old-time sheriffs
never even wore a gun.
A lot of folks find that hard to believe.
Jim Scarborough never carried one.
That's the younger Jim.
Gaston Boykins wouldn't wear one
up in Comanche County.
I always liked to hear about
the old-timers.
Never missed a chance to do so.
You can't help but compare yourself
against the old-timers.
Can't help but wonder how
they'd have operated these times.
There's this boy
I sent to the electric chair
at Huntsville here a while back.
My arrest and my testimony.
He killed a 14-year-old girl.
Paper said it was a crime of passion,
but he told me
there wasn't any passion to it.
Told me he'd been planning
to kill somebody
for about as long
as he could remember.
Said if they turned him out,
he'd do it again.
Said he knew he was going to hell.
Be there in about 15 minutes.
I don't know what to make of that.
I sure do don't.
The crime you see now,
it's hard to even take its measure.
It's not that I'm afraid of it.
I always knew you had to be willing
to die to even do this job.
But I don't want
to push my chips forward
and go out and meet something
I don't understand.
Man would have
to put his soul at hazard.
He'd have to say, "Okay.
"I'll be part Of this world."
Yes, sir, I just walked in the door.
Sheriff, he had some sort
of thing on him,
like a oxygen tank for emphysema
or something
and a hose that run down his sleeve.
Oxygen tank?
What the hell's he got that for?
You got me.
Well, you can look at it when you get in.
I'll be down there in a bit.
Yes, sir, I got it under control.
- Howdy. What's this about?
- Step out of the car, please, sir.
- What is that?
- I need you to step out of the car, sir.
- What is that for?
- Would you...
Would you hold still, please, sir?
You hold still.
Shit.
I ain't got no water.
I told you, I ain't got no agua.
Do you speak English?
Where's the last guy?
Último hombre. Last man standing.
There must have been one.
Where'd he go?
I reckon I go out the way I come in.
There ain't no lobos.
You stopped to watch your backtrack.
Now shoot my dumb ass.
But if you stop,
you stopped in shade.
Yeah.
- What's in the satchel?
- It's full of money.
That'll be the day.
- Where'd you get the pistol?
- At the getting place.
- Did you buy that gun?
- No. I found it.
- Llewelyn.
- What? Quit your hollering.
What'd you give for that thing?
Well, you don't need to know
everything, Carla Jean.
I need to know that.
Keep running that mouth of yours,
I'm gonna take you in the back
and screw you.
Big talk.
Keep if UP-
Fine. I don't want to know.
I don't even want to know
where you been all day.
That'll work.
All right.
- Llewelyn?
- Yeah?
- What're you doing, baby?
- I'm going out.
Going where?
A little something I forgot to do,
but I'll be back.
And what're you gonna do?
I'm fixing to do something dumber
than hell, but I'm going anyways.
If I don't come back,
you tell Mother I love her.
Your mother's dead, Llewelyn.
Well, then I'll tell her myself.
- How much?
- 69 cents.
And the gas?
Y'all getting any rain up your way?
- What way would that be?
- Well, I seen you was from Dallas.
What business is it of yours
where I'm from,
friend-o?
- Well, I didn't mean nothing by it.
- You didn't mean nothing?
I was just passing the time.
If you don't want to accept that,
I don't know what else I can do for you.
- Will there be something else?
- I don't know. Will there?
Is something wrong?
- With what?
- With anything.
Is that what you're asking me?
Is there something wrong with anything?
- Will there be anything else?
- You already asked me that.
Well, I need to see about closing now.
- See about closing?
- Yes, sir.
- What time do you close?
- Now. We close now.
"Now" is not a time.
What time do you close?
Generally around dark. At dark.
You don't know
what you're talking about, do you?
Sir?
I said you don't know
what you're talking about.
- What time do you go to bed?
- Sir?
You're a bit deaf, aren't you?
I said, what time do you go to bed?
Somewhere around 9:30.
I'd say around 9:30.
I could come back then.
Why would you be coming back?
We'll be closed.
Yeah, you said that.
Well, I got to close now.
You live in that house out back?
Yes, I do.
You lived here all your life?
Well, this is my wife's
father's place, originally.
You married into it?
We lived in Temple, Texas
for many years.
Raised a family there, in Temple.
We come out here about four years ago.
You married into it.
If that's the way you want to put it.
Well, I don't have some way to put it.
That's the way it is.
What's the most you ever lost
on a coin toss?
- Sir?
- The most you ever lost on a coin toss.
I don't know. I couldn't say.
Call it.
- Call it?
- Yes.
- For what?
- Just call it.
Well, we need to know
what we're calling it for here.
You need to call it.
I can't call it for you,
or it wouldn't be fair.
- I didn't put nothing up.
- Yes, you did.
You've been putting it up
your whole life. You just didn't know it.
- You know what date is on this coin?
- No.
1958.
It's been travelling 22 years to get here.
And now it's here.
And it's either heads or tails.
And you have to say. Call it.
Well, look, I need to know
what I stand to win.
Everything.
- How's that?
- You stand to win everything. Call it.
All right.
Heads, then.
Well done.
Don't put it in your pocket, sir.
Don't put it in your pocket.
It's your lucky quarter.
- Where do you want me to put it?
- Anywhere, not in your pocket.
Or it'll get mixed in with the others
and become just a coin.
Which it is.
Llewelyn?
What the hell?
- The Odessa.
- Why would we go to Odessa?
No, not we. You.
You stay with your mother.
Well, how come?
Look, right now it's midnight, Sunday.
The courthouse opens
nine hours from now.
Someone's gonna be calling in
the vehicle number
on the inspection plate on my truck.
And around 9:30, they'll show up here.
But for how long do we have to...
Baby, at what point
would you quit bothering
to look for your $2 million?
What am I supposed to tell Mama?
Why don't you try standing in the door
and hollering, "Mama, I'm home"?
- Llewelyn...
- Come on, pack your things.
Anything you leave,
you ain't gonna see again.
Well, don't fall down apologising.
Baby, things happen-
Come on, I can't take them back.
Mind riding bitch?
This his truck?
Got a screwgie?
when I was 25 years old.
Hard to believe.
My grandfather was a lawman.
Father, too.
Me and him was sheriffs
at the same time,
him up in Plano and me out here.
I think he's pretty proud of that.
I know I was.
Some of the old-time sheriffs
never even wore a gun.
A lot of folks find that hard to believe.
Jim Scarborough never carried one.
That's the younger Jim.
Gaston Boykins wouldn't wear one
up in Comanche County.
I always liked to hear about
the old-timers.
Never missed a chance to do so.
You can't help but compare yourself
against the old-timers.
Can't help but wonder how
they'd have operated these times.
There's this boy
I sent to the electric chair
at Huntsville here a while back.
My arrest and my testimony.
He killed a 14-year-old girl.
Paper said it was a crime of passion,
but he told me
there wasn't any passion to it.
Told me he'd been planning
to kill somebody
for about as long
as he could remember.
Said if they turned him out,
he'd do it again.
Said he knew he was going to hell.
Be there in about 15 minutes.
I don't know what to make of that.
I sure do don't.
The crime you see now,
it's hard to even take its measure.
It's not that I'm afraid of it.
I always knew you had to be willing
to die to even do this job.
But I don't want
to push my chips forward
and go out and meet something
I don't understand.
Man would have
to put his soul at hazard.
He'd have to say, "Okay.
"I'll be part Of this world."
Yes, sir, I just walked in the door.
Sheriff, he had some sort
of thing on him,
like a oxygen tank for emphysema
or something
and a hose that run down his sleeve.
Oxygen tank?
What the hell's he got that for?
You got me.
Well, you can look at it when you get in.
I'll be down there in a bit.
Yes, sir, I got it under control.
- Howdy. What's this about?
- Step out of the car, please, sir.
- What is that?
- I need you to step out of the car, sir.
- What is that for?
- Would you...
Would you hold still, please, sir?
You hold still.
Shit.
I ain't got no water.
I told you, I ain't got no agua.
Do you speak English?
Where's the last guy?
Último hombre. Last man standing.
There must have been one.
Where'd he go?
I reckon I go out the way I come in.
There ain't no lobos.
You stopped to watch your backtrack.
Now shoot my dumb ass.
But if you stop,
you stopped in shade.
Yeah.
- What's in the satchel?
- It's full of money.
That'll be the day.
- Where'd you get the pistol?
- At the getting place.
- Did you buy that gun?
- No. I found it.
- Llewelyn.
- What? Quit your hollering.
What'd you give for that thing?
Well, you don't need to know
everything, Carla Jean.
I need to know that.
Keep running that mouth of yours,
I'm gonna take you in the back
and screw you.
Big talk.
Keep if UP-
Fine. I don't want to know.
I don't even want to know
where you been all day.
That'll work.
All right.
- Llewelyn?
- Yeah?
- What're you doing, baby?
- I'm going out.
Going where?
A little something I forgot to do,
but I'll be back.
And what're you gonna do?
I'm fixing to do something dumber
than hell, but I'm going anyways.
If I don't come back,
you tell Mother I love her.
Your mother's dead, Llewelyn.
Well, then I'll tell her myself.
- How much?
- 69 cents.
And the gas?
Y'all getting any rain up your way?
- What way would that be?
- Well, I seen you was from Dallas.
What business is it of yours
where I'm from,
friend-o?
- Well, I didn't mean nothing by it.
- You didn't mean nothing?
I was just passing the time.
If you don't want to accept that,
I don't know what else I can do for you.
- Will there be something else?
- I don't know. Will there?
Is something wrong?
- With what?
- With anything.
Is that what you're asking me?
Is there something wrong with anything?
- Will there be anything else?
- You already asked me that.
Well, I need to see about closing now.
- See about closing?
- Yes, sir.
- What time do you close?
- Now. We close now.
"Now" is not a time.
What time do you close?
Generally around dark. At dark.
You don't know
what you're talking about, do you?
Sir?
I said you don't know
what you're talking about.
- What time do you go to bed?
- Sir?
You're a bit deaf, aren't you?
I said, what time do you go to bed?
Somewhere around 9:30.
I'd say around 9:30.
I could come back then.
Why would you be coming back?
We'll be closed.
Yeah, you said that.
Well, I got to close now.
You live in that house out back?
Yes, I do.
You lived here all your life?
Well, this is my wife's
father's place, originally.
You married into it?
We lived in Temple, Texas
for many years.
Raised a family there, in Temple.
We come out here about four years ago.
You married into it.
If that's the way you want to put it.
Well, I don't have some way to put it.
That's the way it is.
What's the most you ever lost
on a coin toss?
- Sir?
- The most you ever lost on a coin toss.
I don't know. I couldn't say.
Call it.
- Call it?
- Yes.
- For what?
- Just call it.
Well, we need to know
what we're calling it for here.
You need to call it.
I can't call it for you,
or it wouldn't be fair.
- I didn't put nothing up.
- Yes, you did.
You've been putting it up
your whole life. You just didn't know it.
- You know what date is on this coin?
- No.
1958.
It's been travelling 22 years to get here.
And now it's here.
And it's either heads or tails.
And you have to say. Call it.
Well, look, I need to know
what I stand to win.
Everything.
- How's that?
- You stand to win everything. Call it.
All right.
Heads, then.
Well done.
Don't put it in your pocket, sir.
Don't put it in your pocket.
It's your lucky quarter.
- Where do you want me to put it?
- Anywhere, not in your pocket.
Or it'll get mixed in with the others
and become just a coin.
Which it is.
Llewelyn?
What the hell?
- The Odessa.
- Why would we go to Odessa?
No, not we. You.
You stay with your mother.
Well, how come?
Look, right now it's midnight, Sunday.
The courthouse opens
nine hours from now.
Someone's gonna be calling in
the vehicle number
on the inspection plate on my truck.
And around 9:30, they'll show up here.
But for how long do we have to...
Baby, at what point
would you quit bothering
to look for your $2 million?
What am I supposed to tell Mama?
Why don't you try standing in the door
and hollering, "Mama, I'm home"?
- Llewelyn...
- Come on, pack your things.
Anything you leave,
you ain't gonna see again.
Well, don't fall down apologising.
Baby, things happen-
Come on, I can't take them back.
Mind riding bitch?
This his truck?
Got a screwgie?
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