'Cause even though you're running around with me, playing the thief, you're not a real bad guy, Bubba.
Red Notice
1.3s
You can't, can you?
Red Notice
3.6s
You wanna do it? [suspenseful music playing] Do it.
Red Notice
3.2s
Take me to the third egg, Booth. [train horn blowing]
Red Notice
1.1s
[exclaims]
Red Notice
4.5s
What do you mean, you can't tell me? It's not so much of a "can't," it's more of a "won't."
Red Notice
3.2s
I've been thinking about this a lot, and I can't tell you.
Red Notice
6.9s
No, I haven't. And no, it's not, all right? Cough it up. Where are we headed? Where's the third egg? All right, fine.
Red Notice
5.5s
Holidays, he'd drive hours away to obscure auctions, where he'd bid on the strangest things.
Red Notice
8.1s
This is fun, isn't it? Riding the rails hobo-style. You ever see, um, uh, Sullivan's Travels?
Red Notice
4.2s
[Booth] You gonna be this grumpy the whole trip? Wait till you see our ride. You're gonna love it.
Red Notice
5.9s
That same watch my father chose to love more than me. What a dick.
Red Notice
6.4s
And not just any watch. Creepy Nazi art guy Rudolph Zeich's watch.
Red Notice
3.2s
Including a watch.
Red Notice
1.4s
Don't run?
Red Notice
8.8s
Now, why would an art dealer leave his patron's side and travel halfway around the globe, with nearly 100 tons of so-called machine parts?
Red Notice
27.3s
It's game over for the Nazis, and that's when a forgotten Mr. Nobody named Rudolph Zeich, Hitler's personal art and antiquities dealer, and the only man ever rumored to have held Cleopatra's third egg in his hands, hopped a steamer ship and fled Germany for Argentina. The manifest shows he traveled with just a single suitcase. Oh, and sixteen five-ton cargo containers logged only as holding machine parts.
Red Notice
2.7s
The Red Army's at the gate, days from taking Berlin.