窃听风暴 Das Leben der Anderen(2006)【完整台词】
窃听风暴 Das Leben der Anderen(2006) 全部台词 (当前第1页,一共 9 页)
TEMPORARY DETENTION CENTER
MINISTRY FOR STATE SECURITY
Stand still. Eyes to the floor.
Walk on.
TEMPORARY DETENTION CENTER
MINISTRY FOR STATE SECURITY
Address him as 'Captain!'
Enter.
Sit down.
Hands under your thighs, palms down.
What do you have to tell us?
I've done nothing.
I know nothing.
You've done nothing, know nothing...
You think we imprison people on a whim?
No...
If you think our humanistic system
capable of such a thing,
that alone would justify your arrest.
We'd like to jog your memory, prisoner no. 227.
On September 28th, Dieter Pirmasens,
your friend and neighbor, fled to the West.
We believe that he had help.
I know nothing.
He didn't even tell me he wanted to leave.
I first heard about it at work.
Please recount what you did on September 28th.
- It's in my statement.
- Tell me again.
I was at Treptow Park memorial with my children.
Where I met my old friend Max Kirchner.
We went to his place
and listened to music until late.
He has a telephone,
you can call him to confirm this.
I can give you the number.
The enemies of our state are arrogant.
Remember that.
It takes patience. About 40 hours worth.
(STASI COLLEGE, POTSDAM-EICHE)
Fast forward...
I want to sleep.
Please, let me sleep!
Hands under your thighs.
Tell me again
what you did on September 28th.
Please, just one hour,
just a little... a little sleep.
Tell me again what you did on that day.
Why keep him awake for so long?
It's... inhuman.
An innocent prisoner
will become more angry by the hour,
due to the injustice suffered.
He will shout and rage.
A guilty prisoner
becomes more calm and quiet...
Or he cries.
He knows he's there for a reason.
The best way to establish guilt or innocence
is non-stop interrogation.
...school friend Max Kirchner.
We went to his place...
and listened to music until late.
He has a telephone,
you can call him to confirm this.
Do you notice anything about his statement?
It's the same as at the beginning.
Exactly the same. Word for word.
People who tell the truth
can re-formulate things,
and they do.
A liar has prepared sentences,
which he falls back on
when under pressure.
We have two important indicators,
and can increase the intensity.
If you don't give names,
We'll have to arrest your wife.
Jan and Nadja
will be put into state care.
Is that what you want?
Who was the person who helped him flee?
- Glaske...
- Again! Speak clearly!
Glaske... Werner Glaske.
Werner... Glaske.
Quiet!
Quiet!
Listen!
Does anyone know what that is?
It's the odor sample for the dogs.
It must be collected at every
interrogation. Never forget it!
Your subjects are enemies of Socialism.
Never forget that! Goodbye.
That was good, really good.
You remember
how we sat there 20 years ago?
They've offered me a professorship.
Life's not about good grades, though
mine weren't that bad, thanks to you.
So what's up?
Why do you always think I'm scheming?
- I wanted to invite you to the theater.
- The theater?
I heard that Minister Hempf is going.
As head of the Culture Department,
I should show my face.
It starts at 7 p.m. We should get going.
THE LIVES OF OTHERS
Minister Hempf at one o'clock.
He used to be in State Security, you know.
He really cleaned up the theater scene.
Georg Dreyman, the writer.
An arrogant type, the kind I warn my students about.
But he's loyal.
If they were all like him, I'd be out of a job.
He's our only non-subversive writer
who is also read in the West.
He thinks the GDR is the greatest country on earth.
It starts.
What's wrong, my child? A new vision?
Speak, Marta! Speak!
Your Arthur...
is dead.
Arthur? Can't you be wrong, just this once?
No, sister. Believe me.
He fell to his death.
Crushed by the mighty wheel.
I see it,
though I'd rather see any other horror.
Why am I not spared these visions?
Elena! Go home... and mourn.
I'll finish your shift.
Did you like it? Dreyman's good, eh?
I'd have him monitored.
Monitored? All that teaching
is ruining your instincts.
I could oversee it myself.
He's clean, I tell you. Even Hempf likes him.
We'd be shooting ourselves in the foot.
I'm going down.
"Faces of Love"
I hear a lot about your work.
They say culture's in good hands.
Your name is mentioned in Party circles.
We're the Party's 'shield and sword'.
I'm aware of that at all times.
What do you make of him?
Of Georg Dreyman?
Maybe...
Maybe what?
Maybe he's not as clean as he seems.
Grubitz! That's why you and I are on top.
Your average Stasi chump would have said,
"One of our best! So loyal!" etc.
But we can see more.
You're heading to the very top, Grubitz.
There's something fishy about him.
I can feel it in my gut.
Dreyman's having a party next week.
Some dubious types are going, Hauser and that rabble.
Try to wire the place discreetly by then.
Measures A and B.
Only in his rooms. Nothing conspicuous.
He has powerful friends.
No one is to know about this
until we've found something.
But if you get something on him,
you'll have a good friend in the Central Committee.
You understand what I'm saying?
Have a nice evening, Comrade Minister.
Why is he staring at us?
What's he doing here, anyway?
I think he's got a crush on you.
I can't let the evening pass
without raising a toast to our artists.
A great Socialist,
I can't recall who it was, once said:
MINISTRY FOR STATE SECURITY
Stand still. Eyes to the floor.
Walk on.
TEMPORARY DETENTION CENTER
MINISTRY FOR STATE SECURITY
Address him as 'Captain!'
Enter.
Sit down.
Hands under your thighs, palms down.
What do you have to tell us?
I've done nothing.
I know nothing.
You've done nothing, know nothing...
You think we imprison people on a whim?
No...
If you think our humanistic system
capable of such a thing,
that alone would justify your arrest.
We'd like to jog your memory, prisoner no. 227.
On September 28th, Dieter Pirmasens,
your friend and neighbor, fled to the West.
We believe that he had help.
I know nothing.
He didn't even tell me he wanted to leave.
I first heard about it at work.
Please recount what you did on September 28th.
- It's in my statement.
- Tell me again.
I was at Treptow Park memorial with my children.
Where I met my old friend Max Kirchner.
We went to his place
and listened to music until late.
He has a telephone,
you can call him to confirm this.
I can give you the number.
The enemies of our state are arrogant.
Remember that.
It takes patience. About 40 hours worth.
(STASI COLLEGE, POTSDAM-EICHE)
Fast forward...
I want to sleep.
Please, let me sleep!
Hands under your thighs.
Tell me again
what you did on September 28th.
Please, just one hour,
just a little... a little sleep.
Tell me again what you did on that day.
Why keep him awake for so long?
It's... inhuman.
An innocent prisoner
will become more angry by the hour,
due to the injustice suffered.
He will shout and rage.
A guilty prisoner
becomes more calm and quiet...
Or he cries.
He knows he's there for a reason.
The best way to establish guilt or innocence
is non-stop interrogation.
...school friend Max Kirchner.
We went to his place...
and listened to music until late.
He has a telephone,
you can call him to confirm this.
Do you notice anything about his statement?
It's the same as at the beginning.
Exactly the same. Word for word.
People who tell the truth
can re-formulate things,
and they do.
A liar has prepared sentences,
which he falls back on
when under pressure.
We have two important indicators,
and can increase the intensity.
If you don't give names,
We'll have to arrest your wife.
Jan and Nadja
will be put into state care.
Is that what you want?
Who was the person who helped him flee?
- Glaske...
- Again! Speak clearly!
Glaske... Werner Glaske.
Werner... Glaske.
Quiet!
Quiet!
Listen!
Does anyone know what that is?
It's the odor sample for the dogs.
It must be collected at every
interrogation. Never forget it!
Your subjects are enemies of Socialism.
Never forget that! Goodbye.
That was good, really good.
You remember
how we sat there 20 years ago?
They've offered me a professorship.
Life's not about good grades, though
mine weren't that bad, thanks to you.
So what's up?
Why do you always think I'm scheming?
- I wanted to invite you to the theater.
- The theater?
I heard that Minister Hempf is going.
As head of the Culture Department,
I should show my face.
It starts at 7 p.m. We should get going.
THE LIVES OF OTHERS
Minister Hempf at one o'clock.
He used to be in State Security, you know.
He really cleaned up the theater scene.
Georg Dreyman, the writer.
An arrogant type, the kind I warn my students about.
But he's loyal.
If they were all like him, I'd be out of a job.
He's our only non-subversive writer
who is also read in the West.
He thinks the GDR is the greatest country on earth.
It starts.
What's wrong, my child? A new vision?
Speak, Marta! Speak!
Your Arthur...
is dead.
Arthur? Can't you be wrong, just this once?
No, sister. Believe me.
He fell to his death.
Crushed by the mighty wheel.
I see it,
though I'd rather see any other horror.
Why am I not spared these visions?
Elena! Go home... and mourn.
I'll finish your shift.
Did you like it? Dreyman's good, eh?
I'd have him monitored.
Monitored? All that teaching
is ruining your instincts.
I could oversee it myself.
He's clean, I tell you. Even Hempf likes him.
We'd be shooting ourselves in the foot.
I'm going down.
"Faces of Love"
I hear a lot about your work.
They say culture's in good hands.
Your name is mentioned in Party circles.
We're the Party's 'shield and sword'.
I'm aware of that at all times.
What do you make of him?
Of Georg Dreyman?
Maybe...
Maybe what?
Maybe he's not as clean as he seems.
Grubitz! That's why you and I are on top.
Your average Stasi chump would have said,
"One of our best! So loyal!" etc.
But we can see more.
You're heading to the very top, Grubitz.
There's something fishy about him.
I can feel it in my gut.
Dreyman's having a party next week.
Some dubious types are going, Hauser and that rabble.
Try to wire the place discreetly by then.
Measures A and B.
Only in his rooms. Nothing conspicuous.
He has powerful friends.
No one is to know about this
until we've found something.
But if you get something on him,
you'll have a good friend in the Central Committee.
You understand what I'm saying?
Have a nice evening, Comrade Minister.
Why is he staring at us?
What's he doing here, anyway?
I think he's got a crush on you.
I can't let the evening pass
without raising a toast to our artists.
A great Socialist,
I can't recall who it was, once said:
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