请以你的名字呼唤我 Call Me by Your Name (2017)【完整台词】
请以你的名字呼唤我 Call Me by Your Name (2017) 全部台词 (当前第1页,一共 7 页)
The usurper.
Caro? He's here.
- Professor Perlman.
- Welcome, welcome.
- Thank you so much for having me.
- Oh, my goodness.
You're bigger than your picture.
Well, I couldn't get
all of me in the photo.
That's the problem.
He seems very confident.
- Mrs. Perlman.
- Annella.
Oliver. Very nice to meet you.
- Thank you for having me in your home.
- Welcome.
Where's Elio?
I'll go down.
Elio?
- You must be exhausted.
- What gave me away?
Hey.
Darling, come help Oliver
take his things up to his room.
- He's already here?
- Yes!
Every single one of these will.
Elio, Oliver. Oliver, Elio.
- How you doing?
- Nice to meet you. Elio.
You must be exhausted.
- A little bit.
- Come, come, come.
May I bring your things up to your room?
- Sure. Yeah.
- My room?
Follow him.
- You're very welcome here.
- Si.
Our home is your home.
You're leaving?
- Hello.
- Hi.
Nice to meet you.
My room is now your room.
I'll be next door.
We have to share the bathroom.
It's my only way out.
We're being called for dinner.
Sorry.
Yeah.
We're being called for dinner.
Yeah, I'm probably gonna pass.
Will you make an excuse for me
to your mom, though?
Thanks, man.
So, this is your old room, huh?
Thanks.
Later.
I'll take care of the tart.
Look at this.
Good morning, Professor.
- Good morning.
- Back from the dead.
- Was I out that long?
- It seemed like it, huh?
- How are you?
- I... Well, rested now.
- Thank you.
- I'm glad.
Would you like some espresso?
I would love some. Thank you very much.
This looks amazing.
I didn't take your seat, did I?
No, no, no. It's okay. Please.
Did you...
Did you recover from your trip?
I did. Yeah, big time.
- Thank you.
- Good.
I could show you around.
That'd be great. Thank you.
Is there a... Is there a bank in town?
I'd love to start
an account while I'm here.
Let me do it.
Sorry.
- It happens to the best of us.
- Yeah, well...
None of our residents has ever
had a local bank account.
Really?
Should I take him to Montodine?
I think they're closed
for summer vacation.
You try Crema.
Crema?
Thank you.
Is this your orchard?
These are Annella's trees.
Peaches, cherries, apricots...
Pomegranate.
Have another egg.
Oh, stupid.
No, no, no. I know myself too well.
If I have a second,
I'm just gonna have a third,
and then a fourth, and then you're just
gonna have to roll me out of here.
- Delicious.
- Darling?
Thank you.
Shall I give him Anchise's bike?
So, what does one do around here?
Wait for the summer to end.
Yeah?
What do you do in the winter?
- Wait for summer to come?
- Well, we only come here for Christmas
and some other vacations.
- Christmas? I thought you...
- And Easter as well.
- Thought you were Jewish.
- Well, we are Jewish,
but also American, Italian, French.
Somewhat atypical combination.
Besides my family, you're probably
the only other Jew
to set foot in this town.
I'm from a small town in New England.
I know what it's like
to be the odd Jew out.
So, what do you do around here?
Just read books.
Transcribe music. Swim at the river.
- Yeah?
- Go out at night.
- I don't know.
- That sounds fun.
All right, buddy, thanks for the help.
Sorry. Sorry about that.
It's all right.
All right, later.
What do you have there?
That should all be...
What is this?
These are the continuation
of these archaeology department...
These are archaeology?
Yeah, those are archaeology.
The rest of these should be history.
Okay.
- More apricot juice?
- Yeah.
- Here, tesoro.
- Thank you.
Help yourself, darling.
Thanks.
Help yourself to some more.
The word "apricot"
comes from the Arabic.
It's like the words "algebra,"
"alchemy," "alcohol."
It derives from an Arabic noun
combined with the Arabic article "al"
before it.
The origin of our Italian albicocca
is al-barquq.
It's amazing that today in Israel
and many Arab countries,
the fruit's referred to
by a totally different name, mismish.
I may have to disagree
with you there, Professor.
I'm gonna talk etymology,
so just bear with me a second.
You're right in the case
that most Latin words
do find their origins in Greek words.
However, in the case of "apricot,"
it's a little bit more
of a complicated journey.
How so?
Well, here, the Greek actually
takes over from the Latin.
Latin word being
praecoquum or precoquere.
So it's, "precook" or "pre-ripen,"
as you know.
To be precocious or premature.
And the Byzantines, to go on,
then borrowed praecox,
which became prekokkia,
which then became berikokki,
which is how the Arabs got al-barquq.
That's courtesy of Philology 101.
Flying colors.
He does this every year.
It's about drink time. Let's go here.
- Ciao, Romano.
- Ciao, Oliver.
- How are you?
- All good.
Ciao, boys!
All good?
All good!
Let's see. What have we got?
- Can you start please?
- Of course!
Good morning, gentlemen.
How do you know about this place?
Okay.
Go, Chiara!
No, no, no, no, no!
He's better than the guy
who came last year.
Remember?
Get in there!
Much better!
See how cute he is.
Elio, water!
Perfect timing.
What's the matter? Are you all right?
- What, pinch a nerve?
- I'm okay.
Here. Hold this.
Trust me. I'm about to be a doctor.
Hey, hey, come here.
See? That's the problem.
You're too stressed.
- You just gotta relax a little bit.
- I am relaxing.
Marzia, come here for a minute.
Back me up here.
- Feel that. Right there?
- Oliver.
- It's too tight, right?
- Yeah.
- He needs to relax.
- Oliver!
Later.
You should relax more.
Caro? He's here.
- Professor Perlman.
- Welcome, welcome.
- Thank you so much for having me.
- Oh, my goodness.
You're bigger than your picture.
Well, I couldn't get
all of me in the photo.
That's the problem.
He seems very confident.
- Mrs. Perlman.
- Annella.
Oliver. Very nice to meet you.
- Thank you for having me in your home.
- Welcome.
Where's Elio?
I'll go down.
Elio?
- You must be exhausted.
- What gave me away?
Hey.
Darling, come help Oliver
take his things up to his room.
- He's already here?
- Yes!
Every single one of these will.
Elio, Oliver. Oliver, Elio.
- How you doing?
- Nice to meet you. Elio.
You must be exhausted.
- A little bit.
- Come, come, come.
May I bring your things up to your room?
- Sure. Yeah.
- My room?
Follow him.
- You're very welcome here.
- Si.
Our home is your home.
You're leaving?
- Hello.
- Hi.
Nice to meet you.
My room is now your room.
I'll be next door.
We have to share the bathroom.
It's my only way out.
We're being called for dinner.
Sorry.
Yeah.
We're being called for dinner.
Yeah, I'm probably gonna pass.
Will you make an excuse for me
to your mom, though?
Thanks, man.
So, this is your old room, huh?
Thanks.
Later.
I'll take care of the tart.
Look at this.
Good morning, Professor.
- Good morning.
- Back from the dead.
- Was I out that long?
- It seemed like it, huh?
- How are you?
- I... Well, rested now.
- Thank you.
- I'm glad.
Would you like some espresso?
I would love some. Thank you very much.
This looks amazing.
I didn't take your seat, did I?
No, no, no. It's okay. Please.
Did you...
Did you recover from your trip?
I did. Yeah, big time.
- Thank you.
- Good.
I could show you around.
That'd be great. Thank you.
Is there a... Is there a bank in town?
I'd love to start
an account while I'm here.
Let me do it.
Sorry.
- It happens to the best of us.
- Yeah, well...
None of our residents has ever
had a local bank account.
Really?
Should I take him to Montodine?
I think they're closed
for summer vacation.
You try Crema.
Crema?
Thank you.
Is this your orchard?
These are Annella's trees.
Peaches, cherries, apricots...
Pomegranate.
Have another egg.
Oh, stupid.
No, no, no. I know myself too well.
If I have a second,
I'm just gonna have a third,
and then a fourth, and then you're just
gonna have to roll me out of here.
- Delicious.
- Darling?
Thank you.
Shall I give him Anchise's bike?
So, what does one do around here?
Wait for the summer to end.
Yeah?
What do you do in the winter?
- Wait for summer to come?
- Well, we only come here for Christmas
and some other vacations.
- Christmas? I thought you...
- And Easter as well.
- Thought you were Jewish.
- Well, we are Jewish,
but also American, Italian, French.
Somewhat atypical combination.
Besides my family, you're probably
the only other Jew
to set foot in this town.
I'm from a small town in New England.
I know what it's like
to be the odd Jew out.
So, what do you do around here?
Just read books.
Transcribe music. Swim at the river.
- Yeah?
- Go out at night.
- I don't know.
- That sounds fun.
All right, buddy, thanks for the help.
Sorry. Sorry about that.
It's all right.
All right, later.
What do you have there?
That should all be...
What is this?
These are the continuation
of these archaeology department...
These are archaeology?
Yeah, those are archaeology.
The rest of these should be history.
Okay.
- More apricot juice?
- Yeah.
- Here, tesoro.
- Thank you.
Help yourself, darling.
Thanks.
Help yourself to some more.
The word "apricot"
comes from the Arabic.
It's like the words "algebra,"
"alchemy," "alcohol."
It derives from an Arabic noun
combined with the Arabic article "al"
before it.
The origin of our Italian albicocca
is al-barquq.
It's amazing that today in Israel
and many Arab countries,
the fruit's referred to
by a totally different name, mismish.
I may have to disagree
with you there, Professor.
I'm gonna talk etymology,
so just bear with me a second.
You're right in the case
that most Latin words
do find their origins in Greek words.
However, in the case of "apricot,"
it's a little bit more
of a complicated journey.
How so?
Well, here, the Greek actually
takes over from the Latin.
Latin word being
praecoquum or precoquere.
So it's, "precook" or "pre-ripen,"
as you know.
To be precocious or premature.
And the Byzantines, to go on,
then borrowed praecox,
which became prekokkia,
which then became berikokki,
which is how the Arabs got al-barquq.
That's courtesy of Philology 101.
Flying colors.
He does this every year.
It's about drink time. Let's go here.
- Ciao, Romano.
- Ciao, Oliver.
- How are you?
- All good.
Ciao, boys!
All good?
All good!
Let's see. What have we got?
- Can you start please?
- Of course!
Good morning, gentlemen.
How do you know about this place?
Okay.
Go, Chiara!
No, no, no, no, no!
He's better than the guy
who came last year.
Remember?
Get in there!
Much better!
See how cute he is.
Elio, water!
Perfect timing.
What's the matter? Are you all right?
- What, pinch a nerve?
- I'm okay.
Here. Hold this.
Trust me. I'm about to be a doctor.
Hey, hey, come here.
See? That's the problem.
You're too stressed.
- You just gotta relax a little bit.
- I am relaxing.
Marzia, come here for a minute.
Back me up here.
- Feel that. Right there?
- Oliver.
- It's too tight, right?
- Yeah.
- He needs to relax.
- Oliver!
Later.
You should relax more.
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