{1}{72}movie info: XviD; 23.976fps; 624x352; 698.54MB|Perfume.The.Story.of.a.Murderer.RETAIL.READNFO.DVDRip.XviD-DiAMOND {1792}{1844}Quick.|We can't hold them back much longer. {1928}{1946}Hurry. {2030}{2051}Come on! {2244}{2262}Quick! {2389}{2410}Faster! {2711}{2761}Open the doors. Come on, quickly! {2990}{3051}String him up, the burning scum! {3067}{3131}Let him suffer like my sister suffered! {3131}{3184}Give him to the people! {3345}{3399}May you burn in the|eternal fires of damnation! {3399}{3448}Just read them the sentence. {3463}{3531}You killed my sister!|You'll pay, you will! {3531}{3583}The sentence of the court {3583}{3637}is that in two days hence {3637}{3746}the perfumer journeyman|Jean-Baptiste Grenouille {3746}{3806}shall be bound to a wooden cross {3806}{3877}with his face raised toward heaven. {3915}{3978}And whilst still alive {3978}{4059}be dealt twelve blows with an iron rod {4115}{4183}breaking the joints of his arms {4209}{4233}his shoulders {4262}{4335}his hips, his legs. {4379}{4484}He shall then be raised up|to hang until dead {4484}{4564}and all customary acts of mercy {4564}{4631}are expressly forbidden|the executioner! {4840}{4918}In 18th-century France,|there lived a man {4918}{5048}who was one of the most gifted|and notorious personages of his time. {5048}{5132}His name was Jean-Baptiste Grenouille {5132}{5195}and if his name|has been forgotten today {5195}{5263}it is forthe sole reason|that his entire ambition {5263}{5365}was restricted to a domain|that leaves no trace in history {5472}{5541}To the fleeting realm of scent. {5865}{5967}In the period of which we speak,|there reigned in the cities a stench {5967}{6060}barely conceivable to us|modern men and women. {6060}{6141}Naturally, the stench|was foulest in Paris {6141}{6196}for Paris was|the largest city in Europe. {6215}{6304}And nowhere in Paris was that|stench more profoundly repugnant {6304}{6348}than in the city�s fish market. {6391}{6457}Here we are. I'll get another box. {6482}{6585}It was here, then, on the most|putrid spot in the whole kingdom {6585}{6705}that Jean-Baptiste Grenouille|was born on the 17th ofJuly, 1738. {7273}{7326}It was his mother�s fifth birth. {7326}{7390}She�d delivered them|all here under her fish stand {7390}{7463}and all had been stillbirths,|or semi-stillbirths. {7468}{7499}You all right? {7499}{7570}And by evening the whole|mess had been shoveled away {7570}{7626}with the fish guts into the river. {7626}{7702}It would be much the same today {7702}{7805}but then, Jean-Baptiste|chose differently. {8590}{8609}What's that noise? {8655}{8695}- It's a baby.|- What's going on here? {8791}{8815}It's a newborn. {8840}{8864}Where's its mother? {8902}{8931}She was just here. {8979}{9061}She tried to kill it. Her own child. {9061}{9109}She tried to kill her baby! {9147}{9190}There! There she is! {9196}{9234}Stop! Stop where you are! {9234}{9249}Murderer! {9258}{9354}Thus, the first sound to|escape Grenouille�s lips {9354}{9395}sent his motherto the gallows {9488}{9546}and Jean-Baptiste, by official order {9572}{9619}to the orphanage of Madame Gaillard. {9709}{9749}How many today? {9749}{9815}Four. Well, three and a half. {9917}{9972}As usual, more dead than alive. {9972}{10023}Just take the money and sign. {10214}{10241}Make room. {10270}{10297}Where? {10297}{10320}Move! {10369}{10398}Go on, now. {10662}{10690}Is it dead? {11318}{11365}That's not staying in my bed. {11372}{11411}Let's throw it out, then. {11411}{11466}What if it screams? {11466}{11497}Let's just kill it. {11936}{11971}Harder! Push! {12016}{12041}What are you doing?! {12257}{12375}For Mme Gaillard, Grenouille was|a source of income just like any other. {12375}{12444}The children, however, sensed at once {12444}{12508}that there was something|different about him. {12889}{13017}By the age of five,|Jean-Baptiste still could not talk. {13017}{13130}But he had been born with a talent|that made him unique among mankind. {14575}{14669}It was not that|the other children hated him {14669}{14727}they felt unnerved by him. {14821}{14917}Increasingly he became aware|that his phenomenal sense of smell {14917}{15010}was a gift that had been|given to him, and him alone. {15214}{15290}When Jean-Baptiste did|finally learn to speak {15290}{15369}he soon found that|everyday language proved inadequate {15369}{15464}for all the olfactory experiences|accumulating within himself. {15576}{15601}Wood. {15740}{15769}Warm wood. {15806}{15833}Grass. {15855}{15901}Wet grass. {15913}{15937}Stones. {15956}{15990}Warm stones. {16050}{16076}Water. {16126}{16164}Cold water. {16314}{16346}Frog. {16395}{16436}Wet stones. {16457}{16535}Big, wet frog stones. {16579}{16608}Something {16659}{16725}something, something. {16766}{16886}By the age of 13, Madame Gaillard|no longer had room forJean-Baptiste {16886}{16925}and therefore decided to sell him. {16925}{16946}Come on. {17030}{17056}Ten francs. {17095}{17174}From his first breath|of the odor enveloping this man {17174}{17230}Seven, and not one sou more. {17230}{17296}Grenouille knew that his life|in Grimal�s tannery {17296}{17387}would be worth precisely as much as|the work he could accomplish. {17387}{17416}Come on. {17460}{17509}Unfortunately for Madame Gaillard {17586}{17602}Take it! {17602}{17659}The bargain was short-lived. {17796}{17892}Life expectancy in the tannery|was a mere five years {17892}{17993}but Jean-Baptiste proved to be|as tough as a resilient bacterium. {18005}{18120}He adjusted to his new fate and became|a paragon of docility and diligence {18123}{18218}Slaved 15, 16 hours a day,|summer and winter. {18254}{18376}Gradually he became aware of a|world beyond the tannery {18376}{18486}where a Utopia of unexplored|smells lay in store for him. {19054}{19073}Grenouille! {19160}{19243}Come with us.|I'm taking you to town for delivery. {19260}{19337}Jean-Baptiste Grenouille|had triumphed. {19337}{19371}He was alive {19389}{19463}and at last he was in his element. {20367}{20424}He was not choosy. {20424}{20461}He did not differentiate between {20461}{20532}what are commonly considered|to be good smells from bad {20571}{20605}at least not yet. {20683}{20730}He was very greedy. {20752}{20893}The goal was to possess everything the|world had to offer in the way of odors {20893}{20978}His only condition being,|that they were new ones. {21044}{21133}Thousands upon thousands|of odors formed an invisible gruel {21133}{21237}which he dissected into its smallest|and most remote parts and pieces. {21461}{21545}Buy your pennant here|fortonight's fireworks at Notre Dame. {21626}{21652}Grenouille! {21750}{21771}Come on! {21869}{21908}Get your ass over here! {21967}{22058}He needs two dozen skins|by next week. Can you do that? {22058}{22121}Yeah. Yeah, come with me. {23620}{23658}What is it called? {23658}{23705}Amor and Psyche, madame. {23705}{23747}My latest creation. {23753}{23797}May I try it? {23797}{23858}If you'll allow me, mademoiselle. {24024}{24069}Sheer heaven! {24149}{24256}Monsieur Pelissier,|you are truly an artiste. {26468}{26537}Please, take them.|I've got fartoo many. {27660}{27688}What do you want? {27900}{27932}Want to buy some? {28247}{28280}Two for a sou. {28933}{28961}Stand clear! {36858}{36947}Next time you run off like that,|I'll kill you! {37030}{37121}That night, he could not sleep. {37121}{37223}The intoxicating power of the girl's|scent suddenly made it clearto him {37223}{37331}why he'd come to his|own life so tenaciously, so savagely. {37361}{37505}The meaning and purpose of his|miserable existence had a higher destiny {37505}{37575}He would learn how to preserve scent {37575}{37668}so that never again would he lose|such sublime beauty. {38227}{38337}There were about a dozen|perfumers in Paris in those days. {38337}{38441}One of them, the once-celebrated|Italian perfumer, Giuseppe Baldini {38441}{38518}had set up shop in the center of the|bridge called the Pont au Change {38518}{38597}on his arrival in Paris over|thirty years ago. {38610}{38675}To be sure, at one time in his youth {38675}{38806}Baldini had created several truly great|perfumes, to which he owed his fortune {38845}{38955}But now Baldini was|out of touch, out of fashion {38955}{39051}and spent his days waiting|for customers that no longer came. {39084}{39119}Chnier! There you are! {39119}{39141}Monsieur Baldini. {39141}{39165}Put on yourwig. {39192}{39215}Put on yourwig! {39276}{39311}You going out? {39311}{39366}I wish to retire to my|study for a few hours {39366}{39430}and do not want to be|disturbed under any circumstances. {39430}{39492}Will you be creating a|new perfume, Monsieur Baldini? {39492}{39552}Correct. For Count Verhamont. {39552}{39605}He has asked for something like {39605}{39697}I think he said it was called|Amor and Psyche {39697}{39772}from that swindler in|the Rue Saint Andre des Arts. {39772}{39791}Pelissier? {39791}{39882}Pelissier, that's him. {39882}{39914}Amor and Psyche {40027}{40079}- Do you know it?|- Oh, yes. {40079}{40146}You can smell it everywhere|these days, monsieur. {40146}{40214}On every street corner. {40214}{40287}In fact, I just purchased you a sample. {40340}{40376}In case you wanted to test it. {40447}{40558}What on earth makes you think I'd be|interested in testing it? {40558}{40623}You're right. It's nothing special. {40623}{40656}Actually {40656}{40705}it's a very common scent. {40705}{40819}I believe the head|chord contains lime oil. {40819}{40869}Really? {40869}{40910}And the heart chord? {40910}{40978}Orange blossom, I believe. {40978}{41083}And civet in the base chord,|but, you know, I cannot say for sure. {41083}{41177}Well, I couldn't care less what that|bungler Pelissier slops into his perfumes {41177}{41224}Naturally not, monsieur. {41224}{41314}And I am thinking of creati...
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