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Earl Pfeiffer:
Are you happy? Mae Doyle D'Amato:
I'm happy. Earl Pfeiffer:
No, you're not. You're just like me. You're born and you'd like to get unborn. That's why I drink that shellac, to get unborn
Are you happy? Mae Doyle D'Amato:
I'm happy. Earl Pfeiffer:
No, you're not. You're just like me. You're born and you'd like to get unborn. That's why I drink that shellac, to get unborn
Full Transcript
00:00:00.765 --> 00:00:02.528
- Are you happy?
- I'm happy.
00:00:03.000 --> 00:00:04.934
No, you're not. You're just like me.
00:00:05.102 --> 00:00:07.366
You're born and you'd like
to get unborn.
00:00:07.538 --> 00:00:10.302
That's why I drink
that shellac, to get unborn.
00:00:10.908 --> 00:00:13.934
- You need some sleep.
- Sleep? I can't sleep.
00:00:14.578 --> 00:00:16.705
Somebody has to need me, love me.
00:00:17.214 --> 00:00:19.705
How do people go on this way? Tell me.
00:00:19.884 --> 00:00:21.545
- The heat's got you.
- And Jerry.
00:00:21.719 --> 00:00:23.186
What about Jerry?
00:00:23.354 --> 00:00:27.154
You wanted a man you could lean on.
Confidence. Well?
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Movie Summary
Mae Doyle comes back to her hometown a cynical woman. Her brother Joe fears that his love, fish cannery worker Peggy, may wind up like Mae. Mae marries Jerry and has a baby; she is happy but restless, drawn to Jerry's friend Earl.

