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White Cargo

White Cargo

Wilbur Ashley: The natives have been looking at me lately, in a queer sort of way.
Mr. Harry Witzel: Maybe they're wondering how you can walk without a spine.


--Walter Pidgeon (as Mr. Harry Witzel) in White Cargo

Forbidden Planet

Forbidden Planet

Commander John J. Adams: Dr. Morbius, just what were the symptoms of all those other deaths, the unnatural ones I mean.
Dr. Edward Morbius: The symptoms were striking Commander. One by one in spite of every safeguard my co-workers were torn literally limb from limb.
Commander John J. Adams: By what?
Dr. Edward Morbius: By some devilish thing that never once showed itself.
Commander John J. Adams: And the Bellerophon?
Dr. Edward Morbius: Vaporized as the three remaining survivors tried to take her off.
Commander John J. Adams: And yet in all these 19 years you personally have never again been bothered by this planetary force?
Dr. Edward Morbius: Only in nightmares of those times. And yet always in my mind I seem to feel the creature is lurking somewhere close at hand, sly and irresistible and only waiting to be reinvoked for murder.


--Walter Pidgeon (as Dr. Edward Morbius) in Forbidden Planet

Forbidden Planet

Forbidden Planet

Commander John J. Adams: What is the Id?
Dr. Edward Morbius: [frustrated] Id, Id, Id, Id, Id!
[calming down]
Dr. Edward Morbius: It's a... It's an obsolete term. I'm afraid once used to describe the elementary basis of the subconscious mind.
Commander John J. Adams: [to himself] Monsters from the Id...
Dr. Edward Morbius: Huh?
Commander John J. Adams: Monsters from the subconscious. Of course. That's what Doc meant. Morbius. The big machine, 8,000 miles of klystron relays, enough power for a whole population of creative geniuses, operated by remote control. Morbius, operated by the electromagnetic impulses of individual Krell brains.
Dr. Edward Morbius: To what purpose?
Commander John J. Adams: In return, that ultimate machine would instantaneously project solid matter to any point on the planet, In any shape or color they might imagine. For *any* purpose, Morbius! Creation by mere thought.
Dr. Edward Morbius: Why haven't I seen this all along?
Commander John J. Adams: But like you, the Krell forgot one deadly danger - their own subconscious hate and lust for destruction.
Dr. Edward Morbius: The beast. The mindless primitive! Even the Krell must have evolved from that beginning.
Commander John J. Adams: And so those mindless beasts of the subconscious had access to a machine that could never be shut down. The secret devil of every soul on the planet all set free at once to loot and maim. And take revenge, Morbius, and kill!
Dr. Edward Morbius: My poor Krell. After a million years of shining sanity, they could hardly have understood what power was destroying them.
[pause]
Dr. Edward Morbius: Yes, young man, all very convincing, but for one obvious fallacy. The last Krell died 2,000 centuries ago. But today, as we all know, there is still at large on this planet a living monster.
Commander John J. Adams: Your mind refuses to face the conclusion.
Dr. Edward Morbius: What do you mean?


--Walter Pidgeon (as Dr. Edward Morbius) in Forbidden Planet

Funny Girl

Funny Girl

Fanny Brice: Flo! Flo, quit yelling or your ulcer will flare up.
Florenz Ziegfeld: That's funny coming from you, you gave me that ulcer!


--Walter Pidgeon (as Florenz Ziegfeld) in Funny Girl

The Miniver Story

The Miniver Story

Clem Miniver: 1946... twenty years, 1966... then... we'll be like Ol' Man River. We'll just keep rolling along.


--Walter Pidgeon (as Clem Miniver) in The Miniver Story


Mrs. Miniver

Mrs. Miniver

Clem Miniver: She was a good cook, as good cooks go. And as good cooks go, she went.


--Walter Pidgeon (as Clem Miniver) in Mrs. Miniver

Soldiers Three

Soldiers Three

Col. Brunswick: I've heard it all Pindenny. I've heard it ten times, and it's no use. It always ends up the same way - you turn up with the patrol in lady's pink silk underwear!


--Walter Pidgeon (as ) in Soldiers Three

Forbidden Planet

Forbidden Planet

Dr. Edward Morbius: Guilty! Guilty! My evil self is at that door, and I have no power to stop it!


--Walter Pidgeon (as Dr. Edward Morbius) in Forbidden Planet

Forbidden Planet

Forbidden Planet

Dr. Edward Morbius: How ironic that a simple scholar, with no ambition, beyond a modest measure of seclusion, should out of the clear sky, find himself besieged by an army of fellow creatures, all grimly determined to be of service.


--Walter Pidgeon (as Dr. Edward Morbius) in Forbidden Planet

Forbidden Planet

Forbidden Planet

Dr. Edward Morbius: In times long past, this planet was the home of a mighty, noble race of beings who called themselves the Krell. Ethically and technologically they were a million years ahead of humankind, for in unlocking the meaning of nature they had conquered even their baser selves, and when in the course of eons they had abolished sickness and insanity, crime and all injustice, they turned, still in high benevolence, upwards towards space. Then, having reached the heights, this all-but-divine race disappeared in a single night, and nothing was preserved above ground.


--Walter Pidgeon (as Dr. Edward Morbius) in Forbidden Planet

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