123

The Ten Commandments

The Ten Commandments

Moses: [just after Moses defended himself, against Rameses' accusations, he opens a curtain, to Sethi] Let your own image proclaim my loyalty for a thousand years.
Sethi: Superb!


--Cedric Hardwicke (as Sethi) in The Ten Commandments

The Ten Commandments

The Ten Commandments

Nefretiri: Do not exhaust yourself, Great One.
Sethi: [on his deathbed] You are the only thing I regret leaving. You have been my joy.
Nefretiri: And you my only love.
Sethi: Now you're cheating. There was another. I know. I loved him, too. With my last breath, I'll break my own law and speak the name of... Moses.
[10 seconds]
Sethi: Moses.
[Sethi's last words, were spoken slowly, as he said Moses' name twice]


--Cedric Hardwicke (as Sethi) in The Ten Commandments

King Solomon's Mines

King Solomon's Mines

Patrick 'Patsy' O'Brien: Well, you never know what you can do 'til you try.
Allan Quartermaine: While you're trying, your poor sister's peacefully passing away in Kilkenny.
Kathleen 'Kathy' O'Brien: Allan Quartermain, it was a lie about me father's sister.
Allan Quartermaine: I know. I've met the Irish before.


--Cedric Hardwicke (as Allan Quatermain) in King Solomon's Mines

On Borrowed Time

On Borrowed Time

Julian Northrup: Live and let live, that's my motto.
Mr. Brink: Yes. You can hardle expect me to second that.


--Cedric Hardwicke (as Mr. Brink) in On Borrowed Time

King Solomon's Mines

King Solomon's Mines

Allan Quartermaine: You know, O'Brien, there's only one kind of man that it's useless to argue with.
Patrick 'Patsy' O'Brien: And that is?
Allan Quartermaine: A fool!


--Cedric Hardwicke (as Allan Quatermain) in King Solomon's Mines


The Ghoul

The Ghoul

Broughton: Almost his last words were a threat to return from the dead. In my opinion, he was mad!


--Cedric Hardwicke (as Broughton) in The Ghoul

The Ghoul

The Ghoul

Broughton: We all know that dead men don't come back.


--Cedric Hardwicke (as Broughton) in The Ghoul

The War of the Worlds

The War of the Worlds

Commentary: Mars is more than 140 million miles from the sun, and for centuries has been in the last status of exhaustion. At night, temperatures drop far below zero even at its equator. Inhabitants of this dying planet looked across space with instruments and intelligences that which we have scarcely dreamed, searching for another world to which they could migrate. They could not go to Pluto, outermost of all planets. So cold, that even it's atmosphere lies frozen on it's surface. They couldn't go to Neptune, or Uranus. Twin worlds in eternal night and perpetual cold. Both surrounded by an unbreathable atmosphere of methane gas, and ammonia vapor. The Martians considered Saturn, and attractive world with it's many moons and beautiful rings of cosmic dust. But, it's temperature is close to 270 degrees below zero. And ice lies 15,000 miles deep on it's surface. Their nearest world was giant Jupiter, where there are titanic cliffs of lava and ice with hydrogen flaming at the tops, where the atmospheric pressure is terrible. Thousands of pounds to the square inch. Nor could they go to Mercury, nearest planet to the sun. It has no air, and the temperature at it's equator is that of molten lead.


--Cedric Hardwicke (as Commentary) in The War of the Worlds

The War of the Worlds

The War of the Worlds

Commentary: No one would have believed in the middle of the 20th Century that human affairs were being watched keenly and closely by intelligences greater than Man's. Yet, across the gulf of space on the planet Mars, intellects vast and cool and unsypathetic regarded our Earth with envious eyes, and slowly and surely joined their plans against us. Mars is more than 140 million miles from the sun, and for centuries has been in the last status of exhaustion. At night, temperatures drop far below zero even at its equator. Inhabitants of this dying planet looked across space with instruments and intelligences that which we have scarcely dreamed, searching for another world to which they could migrate.


--Cedric Hardwicke (as Commentary) in The War of the Worlds

The War of the Worlds

The War of the Worlds

Commentary: The Martians had calculated their descent with amazing perfection and subtlety. As more of their cylinders came from the mysterious depths of space, their war machines, awesome in their power and complexity, created a wave of fear throughout the world.


--Cedric Hardwicke (as Commentary) in The War of the Worlds

drugstore.com - new customer offer

123

GourmetGiftBaskets.com