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Professor Thyme and the History Mystery (2021-22)

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Subido el 30 de mayo de 2022 por Cp ciudaddecolumbia trescantos

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Ladies and gentlemen, we are pleased to welcome you this evening to the play 00:00:04
Professor Time and the History Mystery that the students in fifth grade have prepared. 00:00:09
We have made a lot of effort into making sure this event. I hope you enjoy the evening and 00:00:14
have a great time. Please turn off your cell phones, finish your conversations and let the magic begin. 00:00:20
It worked! It worked! 00:00:27
Excuse me a moment. Sorry to interrupt. I need some proof. 00:00:36
Excuse me. Could I borrow your bag? 00:00:41
You can trust me. I'm a professor. My card. Professor Time. With an H and a Y. 00:00:45
I just need your bag for a moment. To prove my point. 00:00:52
Ah now, I like your hair and your t-shirt. It's so cool! 00:00:56
Well, can I borrow your bag please? 00:01:00
Thank you! 00:01:04
Alright, you can carry on now. 00:01:07
We are security! 00:01:25
We are here to keep things... 00:01:26
...secure... 00:01:28
...runny and smoothly. 00:01:29
Switch off your phones! 00:01:31
Switch off your pages! 00:01:33
Keep your cameras... 00:01:34
...secure... 00:01:35
Andy, our job is to protect, our job is to work, our job is to keep you safe, thank you! 00:01:36
Ladies and gentlemen, Ms. Sally Pigeon! 00:01:44
Welcome delegates, my name is Sally Pigeon and I'm the press officer of the Scientific Institute of Logic, Learning, Investigation and Experimentation, or SILI. 00:01:52
As the Seelie Press Officer, it is my job to welcome you here today for a truly remarkable demonstration. And so, without further ado, I'd like to introduce you to our team. 00:02:06
It's a team of silly scientists who have been working alongside with Professor Time for the last five years into a tough secret project that is simply called Project Shhh. 00:02:21
But now it's time. El dios gives me the punch and yo dios demand you solve. Till gates I give you Professor Time! 00:02:46
Ladies and gentlemen, I am Professor Dan, with an H and a Y. 00:02:53
Now, what is time about half past seven? 00:03:02
Well, I wanted to know, and so I put one of my top scientists to work. 00:03:07
Professor Bofi, time is a component used to sequence events to compare the duration of the pixels and the intervals between them, and to quantify the motion of objects. 00:03:12
Now, I didn't understand the word of that, so I asked my next top scientist. Is that Professor Guy? 00:03:23
It's like a lamp. 00:03:31
I sensed we are getting close, so I asked my next top scientist. Professor Nair? 00:03:34
No one knows. 00:03:39
Perfect! Here, ladies and gentlemen, is the key to my invention. 00:03:41
If no one knows, then anything is possible, including time travels. 00:03:45
A G? 00:03:50
We started with Aces, there were four activities. 00:03:51
We discovered that if we took out all the bits we didn't understand, then it can work. 00:03:54
Oh, makes sense! 00:04:00
And Bob, you're a fool. 00:04:01
Well, actually Professor Harry is my uncle. 00:04:02
That's my girlfriend's uncle. 00:04:05
Now, how do you remember the bits we didn't understand when we got left the impossible? 00:04:07
So we took just two grams of that impossibility and we made this. 00:04:12
A G would do the honors. 00:04:17
Professor Time patented temporal perambulator, made from the best impossibility! 00:04:20
It's a time machine! 00:04:31
So there we have it, ladies and gentlemen, the world's first silly time machine. 00:04:34
But surely, Professor, we need a demonstration. 00:04:45
Of course! Now, travelling through time may be dangerous. 00:04:49
So, as thought, I just will start with a short hop to begin with. 00:04:53
Professor Buffy, here will monitor my progress on the time scale, so you can see where I have gone. 00:04:57
Ready one year, Professor Time. 00:05:05
Thank you, Buffy. 00:05:08
A simple key in the time and space coordinates to tell me where and when to send me. 00:05:11
There! Achieved the door! 00:05:18
This bracelet will ensure that, wherever this machine sends me, I will come back, this time and place. 00:05:21
Ladies and gentlemen, you are about to witness history in the making. 00:05:35
A generous backing time, without the aid of a self-denial. 00:05:39
It's working! It's going! 00:05:50
Hey Chief, what happened? Did it work? 00:05:52
He's gone! 00:05:55
Hooray! 00:06:03
Hooray, he's gone! 00:06:06
It's not a question of work, Mr. Young, but one. 00:06:17
He's only gone back ten minutes, but yes, according to my instruments, a chronological premeditation has occurred. 00:06:20
Sorry? 00:06:26
He traveled back in time! 00:06:27
It's the professor! He's coming back! 00:06:29
I've earned my time from the past! 00:06:34
You mean Professor? 00:06:39
Like I said, it was just a short talk to begin with. I traveled back two four-hour meetings, and when I was there, I realized you will need something. Madame, your bag. 00:06:46
That's amazing! Now, are there any questions for Professor Time in his momentous occasion? 00:06:58
Could I go back in the past and see my great-great-grandfather? I wouldn't recommend it. 00:07:08
Could you make a note of the military number, then go back in time and win the jackpot? 00:07:14
That would be an ethical. 00:07:21
What's the fastest line, Mama? 00:07:24
I think you're at the wrong press conference. 00:07:26
But I'll call your shoes. 00:07:29
Where were they left behind in the time machine? 00:07:31
Anna, I'm glad you asked me that. 00:07:33
We beat the game for first time. 00:07:35
What the... 00:07:37
Hold it right there. 00:07:38
Yeah, hold it right there. 00:07:39
Security over all exits. 00:07:41
Alexis, who is this man? 00:07:43
It's the infamous Countdown from S-T-U-P-I-N-D. 00:07:45
Stupid. 00:07:53
The scientific and technical university for people interested in science. 00:07:54
Eh? 00:07:59
They steal other people's ideas and pass them off as their own. 00:08:00
That's stupid. 00:08:04
Precisely. 00:08:05
You do me injustice, Professor, while only this morning my assistant, Bongo, was working on our original invention of our own. 00:08:06
Invention of our own? And what was that? 00:08:14
It's a mechanism capable of superheating water molecules by producing ionizing radiation. 00:08:17
It could revolutionize domestic cooking as we know it. 00:08:25
It looks a bit like a microwave oven to me. 00:08:29
It's a microwave! Dude! Drongo! Drongo! It's a microwave! 00:08:36
Sorry, Count. 00:08:40
What do you want with us, Count? 00:08:41
We've been watching you, Professor. 00:08:44
Yeah, we've been watching you. 00:08:46
You've been doing rather well, Time Machine. Haven't you? 00:08:48
Haven't you? 00:08:51
Will you stop that? 00:08:53
It's a thermoplane! 00:08:54
Robin, how did that? 00:08:55
I don't want your plans. I want your rifles. 00:08:56
My bracelet? 00:08:59
Give it here. And one for my assistant, too. 00:09:00
You never get that way with these towns. Our security guards have the exits covered. 00:09:03
When do you think we are going to use the exits? 00:09:12
Captain Prongo, to the time machine. 00:09:14
No, you can't use the time machine. One mistake and history. We know it will change forever. 00:09:16
I know, but isn't it? 00:09:22
Prongo, let's have it. 00:09:24
Where is he going? 00:09:31
He could be going anywhere right now. 00:09:32
He got the cold and he starts his fingertips. 00:09:36
Can't we just, can't we open the door and call? 00:09:40
Not why, it's in use, I'm afraid. 00:09:45
Not unless you want a very big mess all over the floor anyway. 00:09:48
They have gone! 00:10:03
Call yourself security, fat-a-lucky-roo! Why didn't you stop him? 00:10:05
We didn't prepare to run an account and a ship! 00:10:11
I have no idea! And she? Buffy? Where he gone? 00:10:17
Of course! We can track his progress through time! 00:10:20
Exactly! 00:10:23
And then what? 00:10:24
And then what? Why, then we can go after him, of course! 00:10:25
Cool! 00:10:29
My instruments are telling me they have traveled back in time over 400 years ago, 00:10:30
years ago, in May the 19th, 1601. 00:10:35
1601? 00:10:38
Just before tea. 00:10:39
That's pretty specific. 00:10:41
Right, Bofin. 00:10:43
How many bracelets do we have left? 00:10:44
Four. 00:10:46
That's one for me and eight sheep. 00:10:50
One for you, Bofin, and one for you too, Salim. 00:10:54
Me? 00:10:58
Why me? 00:10:59
You are the city's first officer, right? 00:11:00
Right. 00:11:03
Well, the Bears will love this, couldn't they? 00:11:04
Mick, Evans, Boucher not on the map. 00:11:06
Of course! I could tell the world about it. 00:11:09
Think of it. 00:11:12
The interviews, a book deal, salad, pigeon, and history mystery. 00:11:13
We, well, we might have to work on the title, but other than that, it's a good idea. 00:11:19
Now, come on! Right, Buffy, send the hunters to Charlie Club. 00:11:26
That's good, that's silly. 00:11:34
She hasn't got quite got it right. 00:12:06
Has she? 00:12:08
And she doesn't have it working. 00:12:09
Here we are. 00:12:11
In turn. 00:12:12
In turn. 00:12:13
Just before she died. 00:12:14
Managed it since 2001. 00:12:16
Just I planned it. 00:12:18
Do you think they might change a bit? 00:12:20
And what does it mean? 00:12:22
Sorry about that. 00:12:24
I got scared a little. 00:12:25
Now, to turn the situation to our best, 00:12:27
there's no point of trying if there's no profit in it. 00:12:29
We have. 00:12:32
We have a symbol in about 20 years. Our young children will pass this way. 00:12:33
Oh, anyone has known? 00:12:40
Oh, yes. Even good Bumble has made some sex rules. 00:12:42
No, who wrote it? 00:12:46
Bumble, if you know what it is, you must be the happiest person alive. 00:12:48
We are sexy. 00:12:52
Is he on television? 00:12:54
I give up. The most famous play is right. 00:12:55
Whoever leaves in the past will pass this way. 00:12:58
I suppose. 00:13:00
Of course I have! It's like a type of cigar! 00:13:08
Drongo, are you always so stupid or are you making a special effort? 00:13:12
My plan is this. We will play our Mr. Shakespeare manuscript. 00:13:16
That is written in the work of one of the greatest works of literature. 00:13:20
We will turn our back to our present, where we are the author of a lot of work, 00:13:24
sell it for millions and turn it to the farmers. Right! 00:13:28
This is why we steal his cigar? 00:13:32
Don't tell me, Drongo. 00:13:34
Who should be the assertor of an apple, sir? 00:13:36
Go away! Do you think the witch? 00:13:39
This fool! I'm a lonely piece of shit, but that woman never passed. 00:13:41
She says she wasn't always like this. 00:13:45
Do you see before a woman with diminished perfume? 00:13:49
You what? She's on her luck. Look, can't you just speak properly? 00:13:52
Suit yourself. Mind yourself, my fools. I'm never so cool. 00:13:57
But have you seen what's on your chest, Danny? 00:14:01
No, it's not that. It's your Robert Farquhar. He's the Farquhar. 00:14:04
Your Robert what? 00:14:09
No, Farquhar. He's a new lord. He owns this market and charges us to sell our goods. 00:14:10
I have to give him 90% being alone. 00:14:16
90%? And I like the sound of him. 00:14:26
But he's weak, sir, and ill. 00:14:30
Recite me. Now, where could find this Robert Farquhar? 00:14:33
Try turning around, sir. Be gone, woman. 00:14:36
Now, who loves her for me? 00:14:40
Just speak normally, will you? We know you can't. 00:14:42
Oh, really? Who are you? 00:14:45
I'm Gandalf, and this is my assistant, Bob. 00:14:47
Are you selling? 00:14:50
This is my market. You have to pay me one to sell. 00:14:51
No, no. You are rich, ma'am, sure. 00:14:54
I'm interested, I know. 00:14:57
But I guess you like to be richer, is it fair? 00:14:58
Handsomely. And you'd be willing to pay for the virtues into the garbage, still would you? 00:15:01
Handsomely. 00:15:07
Change of plans, Rongo. Just walk with me and watch his face. 00:15:09
This is when we steal his cigar? 00:15:13
What the? Ah, right, don't you? My plane. 00:15:17
We're there, aren't we? I presume. 00:15:21
Uh, yes, but only from this part. Are you? 00:15:23
Yes, no, we're travelers. Travelers, eh? 00:15:26
And just for me, Mr. Shakespeare, I'm such a big fan of yours. I've got all your plays. 00:15:29
Oh, really? 00:15:35
Muppet is my favorite. Would you love it for me? 00:15:36
Well, I am a bit busy at the moment. 00:15:39
I love the piece about the digger, pardon. 00:15:41
You know, it is a digger I've seen before. 00:15:43
It's a dollar. It's this dollar I've seen before. 00:15:47
So, what do you have here? 00:15:50
My latest. It's called Humming. 00:15:52
What's a really play about an anomaly? 00:15:54
Ignore him, my friend. He's less than brain a hoe. 00:15:56
So, you're on the way to the palace, aren't you? 00:15:59
How did you know that? 00:16:02
Just a guess. 00:16:03
Without the royal seal of approval, my plan will never be fulfilled. 00:16:04
Good is it? 00:16:07
Good is my bet, yes. 00:16:08
Why value them? 00:16:09
I suggest my position against Capone. 00:16:10
This plan could mean a start. 00:16:11
Ah, very. 00:16:12
No doubt. 00:16:13
Very. 00:16:14
Oh, look! 00:16:15
Henry VIII! 00:16:16
What? 00:16:17
What? 00:16:18
Now this man's gonna make my plans. 00:16:19
It's not Henry VIII. 00:16:20
King Henry VIII has been dead almost sixty years. 00:16:21
My mistake. 00:16:22
King Henry VIII has been dead almost 60 years. 00:16:23
My mistake, Queen Elizabeth is now so young. 00:16:26
Well, history was never my strong point. 00:16:29
Anyway, Kiara, say clearly. 00:16:32
I have a quick look to array and I think you are right. 00:16:34
Good stuff. 00:16:37
Now, I suppose we better be on the water. 00:16:38
Wouldn't want to be there when we're ready, would we? 00:16:41
No, quite right. Well, thank you, Mr. Henry. 00:16:43
I'm just a merchant. 00:16:46
From many you say? 00:16:47
Earth, yes. 00:16:48
Well, I must go. 00:16:50
Nice to meet you! 00:16:51
Would you like to play? 00:16:53
No, thank you! I think I have an investment opportunity for you. 00:16:55
Oh! 00:16:58
You give me a coach and coach and I give you sex for your latest play. 00:16:59
You can pass it your own and make yourself a fortune! 00:17:03
A thousand pounds you say? 00:17:06
Deal or no deal? 00:17:08
Deal! 00:17:09
Excellent! 00:17:10
This is why we steal this cigar! 00:17:11
Sex, sex, the best sex in the market! 00:17:14
Bread, buy my bread. The best is in the town. Bread, eggs, eggs, the best eggs in the market. Bread, buy my bread, eggs, eggs, eggs, eggs, bread. 00:17:21
But this part hasn't got home yet. 00:17:43
You're a little bit too much. This palace is such a mess. 00:18:07
It had better be tidied before the war. 00:18:10
From reality, today masks become frowned. 00:18:13
You're doing a feature on me, this month in your top complexion, and I want this place spotless. 00:18:15
Yes, you're exequed scumptiousness. 00:18:20
I still do. 00:18:22
Thank you, attendant. 00:18:27
Oh dear, you've made a bit of a straw. 00:18:28
Thank you, Majesty. 00:18:30
And you know what that means, don't you? 00:18:32
Please do not assume no doubt. 00:18:35
Yes, have your reserve reports to the executioner before dinner to have your head chopped up. 00:18:37
Isn't that right, Ash? You're not in luck with this. 00:18:42
You're right. You can have dinner first and then have your head chopped up. 00:18:45
You really can't go on executing your servants like that. 00:18:52
Why not? They've got plenty of time. Most of them have lived over hundreds. 00:18:55
Not anymore, I'm afraid. 00:18:59
Why? How many are left? 00:19:01
Free? Well, perhaps when I get my picture and rolls it today, we'll get more people applying. Simple. 00:19:03
There is someone at the door, my nice teacher. 00:19:16
Oh, just proceed then. Show the man, please. 00:19:18
Come here, good job. You look nice. 00:19:21
Oh, it's you. How is it? 00:19:25
Your majesty, I have room on the latest play. 00:19:28
It's much better to be better than your lessons. What was it? 00:19:31
Julia, your majesty. 00:19:34
That's the one. I hated it. 00:19:36
All that romance, Jack. This one is about a major majesty. 00:19:38
Okay. He's handsome, could be, but there's definitely no romance. 00:19:42
No romance. 00:19:46
Okay, come in over to my attendant and show us your dress. 00:19:47
Attendant! 00:19:51
Your head's up to be it. 00:19:53
Oh, no, it's a majesty. 00:19:58
Oh, good, because I've changed my mind. 00:20:00
Oh, thank you, a majesty. 00:20:02
Yes, I'd like you to get a chair for Mr. Shakespeare and then we can have your head chopped up. 00:20:04
Yes, a majesty. 00:20:08
Who are you? 00:20:11
I am Sir Robert Factors, famous playwright, and this is my agent. 00:20:13
Well, you're all just in time, Mr. Waldo, to be here. 00:20:19
Thank you, Your Majesty. Sorry. 00:20:22
Thank you. 00:20:24
Whatever. Anyway, we are about to hear his latest play. 00:20:25
Okay, Yates, I'm late. 00:20:29
Let's hear it. 00:20:30
The 8,400 fugatrons will operate by passing no ionizing, 00:20:31
micro-oil radiation at a frequency of 2.45 gigahertz per second. 00:20:34
That's not my play! 00:20:38
Sit! What is all this, Lady Champlain? You sound like a rebel to me. 00:20:39
Water, fats, and other substances in the food absorb energy from the microwaves in a process called electricity. 00:20:43
I'm afraid it makes no sense whatsoever, Your Majesty. 00:20:49
Well, normally I'm afraid to find you guilty of wasting my time. 00:20:53
Indeed, I didn't even know you were trying. 00:20:57
There wasn't a challenge. 00:21:00
I've got second thoughts again. 00:21:03
I didn't know your majesty. 00:21:08
Yes, I don't like the idea of you getting hurt sometimes if you run such a long way. 00:21:10
Well, yes, I suppose. 00:21:16
So now you won't be lonely. Old little boy here is coming with you. 00:21:18
Well, go on, dad. You must not keep the executioner waiting, because that's supposed to get him blocked. 00:21:23
Well, I suppose you've got a place for me, don't you? 00:21:28
I have your majesty. 00:21:31
It's much better if it's me good or it's the job for you two. 00:21:33
To be or not to be? That's the question. What are these novels in the mind of the sufferer? The slings and arrows of a righteous God? 00:21:37
Stop that play! 00:21:51
What is going on here? That was actually better again. 00:21:53
Sorry, Your Majesty, but it's important that you listen. 00:21:56
What an impertinent young lady. Where are the guards when you need them? 00:21:59
You have them all executed, Your Majesty. 00:22:02
Oh, yes, so I did. Well, who are you? 00:22:04
I am Professor Dunn, with an H and a Y. This is my niece, A.G., and my first officer, Sally Bridger. 00:22:07
First officer? Why can't you say so? She must be from royalty today. 00:22:15
Don't trust them, Your Majesty. Whatever they say. 00:22:20
I thought we could do some photo props here in this room. 00:22:22
Your Majesty, there is being a terrible mistake. This man here is a thief and a fraud. 00:22:26
Of course he is. He's an agent. Explain. 00:22:35
There's nothing to explain your minds if you're here. Jack has just written the greatest play of the century. 00:22:38
And what have you got out of it? 00:22:46
Just my commission. A small trifle. 00:22:49
That's not a trifle. That's a trick. 00:22:52
A check for a few samples. I saw the invest in your bank. Well, we like you, Indra. At 6% for 4 million. 00:22:54
By the time I have tried back to our person, it will be worth 55 trillion, 49 pounds and 7 pence. 00:23:01
I shall be able to manage my reward as your factor will go down at the latest rate of his age. 00:23:08
So, we are winners. 00:23:14
I am with you. 00:23:16
Not quite. 00:23:17
What? That check is quite useless. There is no surrogate factor. 00:23:18
Both of you? But how? 00:23:23
Will someone tell me what is going on here, Your Majesty? 00:23:25
There's been a terrible mistake. This play was written by no other than William Shakespeare himself, the man who really is the best playwright of his age. 00:23:29
Just tell me how to do it, Professor. Next time I'll be more careful. 00:23:41
But Finn... 00:23:45
It was quite easy, Willy. We knew that you were travelling back to today, just before tea. 00:23:46
So I sent the coordinator to arrive at Langston a few hours before you. 00:23:52
Before you arrived, I sent some business to great market sellers to disguise me as a rubber factory. 00:23:56
We knew you wouldn't be able to resist the opportunity to get rich. We set the trap and you walked right in. 00:24:03
This man here is guilty of death. Getting money under false pretenses and defilement says so. Wasting your money is his style. 00:24:10
You're right. And you know what I do to people who waste my time, don't you? 00:24:19
Eh, don't you think we should be on our way, Count? 00:24:23
Should I tell the executioner to concise this to break? 00:24:26
I can do for this, Professor! Just wait! 00:24:29
Time to go! It's time to meet the nursing! 00:24:31
Stop them! 00:24:33
Oh look! How are they? 00:24:34
Where? 00:24:36
They've called! 00:24:37
Should we go after them? 00:24:39
There's no point! They could be anywhere by now! 00:24:41
Or anywhere! 00:24:44
I ought to be thankful for your intervention. 00:24:46
Without you, a great misunderstanding would have passed. 00:24:49
and he would have fun and matches. 00:24:52
They chose him for sure. 00:24:55
You, kneel! 00:24:57
For your services to your pen and country, 00:25:00
arise your professor time. 00:25:03
Your majesty, I'm honored. 00:25:05
Of course you are, but tell me one thing. 00:25:07
Of course. 00:25:09
Where is your ship? 00:25:10
I know, I'm glad you asked me that. 00:25:11
Ah! 00:25:14
Where is it, Lady Champlain? 00:25:15
William Shakespeare wrote the place. 00:25:16
Yes, I know that, do try and keep up. 00:25:18
Yes, but you just sent him to have his head chopped up. 00:25:20
You're right. What was I thinking? Come on, later. 00:25:24
Maybe we have to go back to work. 00:25:26
Well done, Bofim. 00:25:31
Well done, Professor. 00:25:32
That's your professor to you. 00:25:33
Well, our work here is done. 00:25:35
All's well that ends well. 00:25:37
Indeed, Bofim. So it's back to the lab and the present day. 00:25:39
How do we do that? 00:25:43
It's straightforward. 00:25:45
We simply press this button and other bracelets and zoom! Back we go! 00:25:47
Right-o! This is so cool! 00:25:51
Professor needs a S. 00:25:54
Yeah! 00:26:11
And we are the ones to teach him! 00:26:12
Yeah! 00:26:14
So you know what we are going to do, don't you? 00:26:15
Yeah! 00:26:17
No. 00:26:18
I don't understand what made you so scared. 00:26:20
But whatever she is working. 00:26:23
Now, let's get back to the stupid lab and say nothing. 00:26:26
That's all for Act 1. Get ready for Act 2. You are about to witness history into the making and how the professor's time history is solved. 00:26:29
Please stay quiet because silence is required and Act 2 is about to begin. Hold on tight. 00:26:50
Has someone left the castle on? 00:26:58
Right, Drongo. If you are to teach Professor Chang a lesson, here is just a place for a minute to be. 00:27:19
Do you see it? 00:27:24
Why? 00:27:27
Look around you, Drongo. What do you see? 00:27:28
Books. 00:27:31
Precisely. And you know about these many books, don't you? 00:27:33
Pictures. 00:27:37
And? 00:27:38
Information, you fool! Honestly, don't go your business. 00:27:40
Which book after them? 00:27:45
All your errors. 00:27:48
Who wrote that then? 00:27:53
The greatest scientific the world has ever seen. 00:27:55
I thought you were the greatest scientific the world has ever seen. 00:27:58
Good boy, but this time can't close. Out of racing. 00:28:01
Never heard of me. 00:28:05
Now, why doesn't that surprise me? 00:28:06
Can I help you? 00:28:09
Yes, I want to borrow a book, please. 00:28:10
I thought you might be. But we've got plenty of them. Take your pick. 00:28:12
I'm looking for something in particular. 00:28:16
Name? Why did you need to know his name? 00:28:18
The author's name. 00:28:20
Ah, Hilbert Einstein. 00:28:21
Albert Einstein. 00:28:23
Wait here twice. 00:28:25
What's the theory of what? 00:28:28
Put simply, Einstein's theory of velocity was claimed that for a compound object, 00:28:30
the mass of the composite is not just the size of the continuous, 00:28:35
but the strength of their energies in their kinetic potential amass. 00:28:39
Are you ready, Xenny? 00:28:43
Sorry, I was wondering... 00:28:45
Well, stop it! 00:28:46
Extensive area productivity creates the building blocks of modern science 00:28:48
and the invention of time travel. 00:28:51
Without it, proper time machine wouldn't exist! 00:28:53
Here we are, Xenny. Extensive area productivity. 00:28:57
And what's the other one? 00:29:00
Something for your friends. English for beginners. 00:29:01
Now then, Drongo, I'm glad your time has come. 00:29:05
Finally, this is what you get to do something useful. 00:29:08
Goodie! 00:29:11
I want you to copy every last word from that book. 00:29:12
Why? 00:29:15
Because soon it won't exist. 00:29:16
I will be the master of them. 00:29:18
Are you reading Charlie and the Chocolate Factory? 00:29:23
It's just a side book. 00:29:25
Is it a cooking book? 00:29:26
No. 00:29:27
It's a wonderful book written by Robert Downey. 00:29:28
Quick, to the machine! 00:29:32
So, where are we and when? 00:30:03
Tell her, Popin. My instrumental technique will have trouble in burn. 00:30:05
Since the one, 1905, just after breakfast. 00:30:10
Right here. 00:30:14
This is where it all began, ain't she? 00:30:15
Can I have a cup of tea, too, please? 00:30:17
Of course. 00:30:20
And a cup for me, please. 00:30:21
Only pancakes, madame. 00:30:22
You are too late for breakfast. 00:30:24
We're not stopping. 00:30:26
But I can do your brunch. 00:30:27
No, thank you. 00:30:29
Can we stay, uncle? I'm starving. 00:30:30
You ate before we left. 00:30:34
But that was over a hundred years ago. 00:30:36
I beg your pardon? 00:30:39
Nothing. 00:30:41
Please? 00:30:42
Uh, alright then. 00:30:43
Great. What have you got? Pancakes? 00:30:46
Anything else? 00:30:48
No, just pancakes. My husband is the chef. 00:30:49
So? 00:30:52
He's the rubbish cook. All he can make is pancakes. 00:30:53
33 pancakes. 00:30:57
So, what did you mean when you write all of that? 00:31:00
You see that building there? 00:31:04
Yep. 00:31:06
That's the Federal Office for Intellectual Property, the Patent Office. 00:31:07
Right. 00:31:11
Okay. 00:31:12
The Patent Office in Switzerland was the workplace of the 20th century British scientist, Albert Einstein. 00:31:13
Wow. 00:31:20
It was here that developed his famous equation, E equals mc squared, in 1601. 00:31:21
Double, wow. 00:31:28
wow it was the opening that building will give him the time of resources to level up his theory 00:31:29
and without that we wouldn't be here now and since you've been doing all sorts of discoveries 00:31:35
including my time machine after we find our package we're going to go and say thank you cool 00:31:42
what are the pancakes really bertie who do you think are the pancakes do you see anyone else 00:31:51
sitting here? No, dear. Sorry, dear. Hey, these are birds. Sorry, who could eat 00:31:56
them, Mastro? Oh, but pancakes, it's a fairly wrong science. If it was real, right, I reckon 00:32:18
scientists understand. I often say, he's in the wrong job. Bertie, you're wasted here. 00:32:24
I have a lot of ideas, but you can't even cook a pancake. What? What did you say? I 00:32:30
said that he can't even cook a pancake. But what did you call him? Bertie. Shirt for Albert. 00:32:34
Albert Einstein? 00:32:39
That's me! 00:32:40
But you should be working over there, in the Patrins office. 00:32:41
No job, no E equals mc squared. 00:32:45
No E equals mc squared? Not that trouble! 00:32:47
What are you talking about? 00:32:50
Stingy, stingy night. 00:32:52
How did you know about the Patrins office? Who are you? 00:32:55
I am Professor Chad, with an H and a Y. 00:32:58
This is my niece, Angie, and my assistant, Cofia. 00:33:02
Sit down and move in first. Tell us why you didn't get that job. 00:33:06
Well, the science world got us first. A friend of a friend recommended me the job, so I went out for the interview. 00:33:12
That's where all went wrong. 00:33:18
He told me the position was not only available. 00:33:21
Do you despise this man? 00:33:25
Ignorant, bull-card, and downright fake. 00:33:27
Calm down! 00:33:30
Don't you know him? 00:33:31
He's a stupid scientist. 00:33:33
I don't think there is any code for that sort of language. 00:33:35
It stands for Scientific and Technical Universities of Perfectly Interesting Science. 00:33:38
It's what they live for, stealing other people's ideas and passing them off as a hobby. 00:33:44
It's a big idea to say. 00:33:49
Yes, why? 00:33:51
Well, some important papers of mine were missing. 00:33:52
What sort of papers? 00:33:55
It was an idea I have been working on. I call it the theory. 00:33:57
Of relativity! 00:34:01
How do you flare a thief then? 00:34:03
Count Downhouse has stolen King Nihon Sensei's square! 00:34:05
And we've seen the secret to time travel! 00:34:08
Sure, we'll head back to the present to see what he's done with it. 00:34:11
You're right. 00:34:15
Will someone explain what is going on? 00:34:16
You're right, Eiji. Come on, Buffy. We have to get back to the lab. 00:34:18
What's wrong? Why it doesn't work? 00:34:23
Of course, the secret to time travel no longer exists because Einstein never invented it. 00:34:25
it was never punished so time travel never existed and that's why the project selects 00:34:31
one word can you just remember and write it all out again sorry it's quite complicated 00:34:37
i never remember in that world so then how do we get home i'm sorry we can't we're stuck 00:34:43
so where are we and when tell her bobbin 00:35:04
My friends are telling me we have trouble in Paris since 1905, just after breakfast. 00:35:08
Right here. 00:35:16
This is where it all began, ain't she? 00:35:17
Can I have a cup of tea, sir, please? 00:35:19
Of course. 00:35:22
Can I go for me, please? 00:35:23
Only pancakes, madam. 00:35:24
You are too late for breakfast. 00:35:26
We're not stopping, but I can do your brunch. 00:35:28
No, thank you. 00:35:31
Can we stay, uncle? I'm starving. 00:35:33
You ate before we left! 00:35:36
But that was over a hundred years ago! 00:35:38
I beg your pardon? 00:35:41
Nothing. Please? 00:35:43
Uh, alright then. 00:35:45
Great. What have you got? Pancakes? 00:35:47
Anything else? 00:35:50
No, just pancakes. My husband is the chef. 00:35:51
So? 00:35:54
He's the rubbish cook. All he can make is pancakes. 00:35:55
33 pancakes! 00:35:59
So, what did you mean to write all of the guns? 00:36:02
You see that building there? 00:36:06
Yep. 00:36:08
That's the Federal Office for Intellectual Property, the Patent Office. 00:36:09
Right. 00:36:13
Okay. 00:36:14
The Patent Office in Switzerland was the workplace of the 20th century British scientist, Albert Einstein. 00:36:15
Wow. 00:36:22
He was here that developed his famous equation, E equals mc squared, in 1601. 00:36:23
Double, wow. 00:36:30
It was the opening that made me want to give him the time and resources to level up his theory. 00:36:31
And without that, we wouldn't be here now. 00:36:37
And since you've been here before, all sorts of discoveries, including my time machine. 00:36:40
After we find our pancakes, we're going to go and say thank you. 00:36:45
Who ordered the pancakes? 00:36:49
Really Bertie? Who do you think ordered the pancakes? 00:36:54
Do you see anyone else sitting here? 00:36:57
No, dear. 00:36:59
Yeah, sure we are. 00:37:00
Hey, these are birds. 00:37:02
Sorry, but it's not natural. 00:37:18
Oh, it's bad. 00:37:20
Pancakes is a fairly wrong science. 00:37:21
If it was real, right, I reckon scientists understand. 00:37:23
I often say, he's in the wrong job. 00:37:26
Perkins, you're wasted here. 00:37:29
I have a lot of ideas, but you can't even cook a pancake. 00:37:31
What? What did you say? 00:37:33
I said that he can't even cook a pancake. 00:37:35
But what did you call him? 00:37:37
Bertie. 00:37:38
Short for Albert. 00:37:39
Albert Einstein? 00:37:40
That's me. 00:37:41
That's me! But you should be working over there, in the Patents Office. 00:37:42
No job, no E equals MC squared. 00:37:47
No E equals MC squared? Not that trouble! 00:37:49
What are you talking about? 00:37:52
How did you know about the Patents Office? Who are you? 00:37:57
I am Professor Chad, with an H and a Y. 00:38:00
This is my niece, Angie, and my assistant, Ophelia. 00:38:04
Sit down a moment, Bertie. 00:38:08
Tell us why you didn't get that job. 00:38:10
Well, the signs were good at first. A friend of a friend recommended me the job, so I went down for the interview. 00:38:14
That's where all went wrong. 00:38:20
He told me the position was no longer available. 00:38:23
Did you describe this man? 00:38:27
Ignorant, vulgar, and downright fake. 00:38:29
Calm down! 00:38:32
Don't you know him? 00:38:33
He's a stupid scientist. 00:38:35
I don't think there is any code for that sort of language. 00:38:37
It stands for Scientific and Technical Universities of Certainly Interesting Science. 00:38:40
It's what they live for, stealing other people's ideas and passing them over to Zoe. 00:38:46
Stealing ideas, you say? 00:38:51
Yes, why? Well, some important papers of mine were missing. 00:38:53
What sort of papers? 00:38:57
It was an idea I have been working on. I call it the theory. 00:38:59
Overactivity! 00:39:03
Have you heard of it then? 00:39:05
Count Down has stolen King Niko's Sensei Square! 00:39:07
And we've seen the secret to time travel! 00:39:10
Sure, we'll head back to the present to see what he's done with it. 00:39:13
We're ready. 00:39:17
Will someone explain what is going on? 00:39:18
We're ready, Chief. Come on, Buffy. We have to get back to the lab. 00:39:20
What's wrong? Why it doesn't work? 00:39:25
Of course, the secret to time travel no longer exists because Einstein never invented it. 00:39:27
It was never punished. 00:39:33
So time travel never existed, and that's why the project selects one word. 00:39:35
Can you just remember and write it all out again? 00:39:39
Sorry, it's quite complicated. I never remember it at all. 00:39:43
So then, how do we get home? 00:39:47
I'm sorry, Chief. We can't. We're stuck. 00:39:49
Because the proof of the pudding isn't there yet. 00:40:09
But I'm not hungry. 00:40:11
I mean, this is where I discovered if my plan is working. 00:40:13
How? 00:40:17
Don't go. 00:40:18
I look into your eyes and I have a feeling no one is in town. 00:40:19
We went back inside, right? 00:40:23
Right. 00:40:25
I stole SSG and destroyed it, right? 00:40:26
Right. 00:40:29
Then I fixed it so he spends his days in the back. 00:40:30
Badly. 00:40:33
Yeah. 00:40:34
So, Aether never goes in sealed bodies. 00:40:35
The world has never heard of E equals MC. 00:40:38
Yes, I'd like to borrow a book, please. 00:40:41
Well, you can't do that. 00:40:42
I'm racing. 00:40:43
Racing? 00:40:44
Yes, I'm racing. 00:40:45
Never heard of it. 00:40:46
Good. 00:40:47
But I'll hold it. 00:40:48
Wait. 00:40:49
I don't understand. 00:40:53
Where did the book go the last time? 00:40:54
Check out in your bag. 00:40:55
It's gone. 00:40:56
It never exists. 00:40:57
It's never published. 00:40:58
We have changed it. 00:41:02
Otak left a copy to me earlier. 00:41:03
Yes, I knew it. 00:41:04
It's gone. 00:41:05
It's gone. 00:41:06
It's gone. 00:41:07
It's gone. 00:41:08
It's gone. 00:41:09
It's gone. 00:41:10
It's gone. 00:41:11
It's gone. 00:41:12
It's gone. 00:41:13
It's gone. 00:41:14
me earlier and that would be my fortune. Your fortune? Sorry, our fortune. Sorry. Well, I had a good look for books right after this. Yes. And it turns out I was wrong. What? Yes, frankly cooking is... 00:41:15
Excellent! You see, Drongo, experience in Aurora City has been wiped from history. Now, we follow the secret of Tantra. Quick, let's get to the 00:41:37
and message the world and sell it for the highest bidder. 00:41:46
What are we going to do? 00:42:01
There's nothing we can do, Edgy. 00:42:03
We're stuck here in the pubs. 00:42:05
It's not so bad. 00:42:07
I don't want to be stuck in 1905 forever. 00:42:09
Don't worry, it won't be forever. 00:42:12
Really? 00:42:14
Of course not. 00:42:15
Next year it would be 1906. 00:42:16
There must be a solution. 00:42:19
I can aim more out of the instant pancakes. 00:42:21
Did someone say pancakes? 00:42:25
I made some more to cheer you up, and these are only bar on one side. 00:43:01
Well done, Mercy! Very improving! 00:43:05
Thank you! 00:43:08
Come on, Muffin! Sing! We're going to find a solution! 00:43:09
What are you doing? 00:43:15
I'm going to record here the temporal perimolector for an angle cross-temporal viewing. 00:43:16
Like I said, what are you doing? 00:43:21
I'm going to use this computer to see in the future so we can see what's coming down next. 00:43:24
Clever, Robin, very clever! It's just a matter of inieting the flash capacitor, discombobulating the binary infuser and... 00:43:30
Hey, Preston! 00:43:40
Have you printed this bottle here? 00:43:44
It's working! Well done, HG! 00:43:47
That's amazing! We are looking into the computer... 00:43:51
There's Sally! But what's happening? 00:43:55
It's the press conference where Professor Time unveils her time machine. 00:43:58
Shhh, let's listen. 00:44:03
Welcome delegates, my name is Sally Pitchell and I'm the press officer of the Scientific and Technical University for Filtering Curesting Designs, or STUPID. 00:44:06
No, that's wrong. She's a silly press officer, not a stupid press officer. 00:44:22
But don't you see? Countdown has changed the future, because we were trapped here in the past, the city never existed. 00:44:27
As the stupid press owner, it is my job to welcome you here today for a truly remakeable demonstration. 00:44:38
And so, without further ado, I'd like to introduce you to our most gift, most remarkable and most... 00:44:49
Intelligent... 00:44:58
Sorry! Intelligent scientist! Calm down! 00:44:59
This is all wrong! You should be up there and go to the time machine and watch your idea! 00:45:05
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome! Welcome to the most important day ever! 00:45:12
Today, you will see what a delusion and how lucky you are to be in my presence. 00:45:17
Quite simple, my invention will change the world and make it very, very rich. 00:45:22
Us? 00:45:27
Father? 00:45:28
You mean us? It will make us very, very rich. 00:45:29
Rongo, until this was Topia's time run for a stupid book. 00:45:32
And I failed the time machine. 00:45:35
So? 00:45:37
Single funnel. 00:45:38
Rongo, whose leg is on the bottom? 00:45:39
George, because it couldn't spell lines. 00:45:42
I know! See, I feel! Legit, I'm getting there now! I'll get you! 00:45:44
Calm down, patented temporal paraphernalia! 00:45:48
Let's go! Let's go! 00:45:51
What's going on, Tantan? 00:45:57
Actually, I met Bertie using your ideas! 00:46:02
Bertie? 00:46:05
Bertie! You're a genius! 00:46:06
I knew! 00:46:08
It's just a shame the world has forgotten you. 00:46:09
No, this is so unfair. 00:46:12
Just a minute, Ichi. I think I'm... 00:46:15
Now, are there any questions for Countdown in his momentous occasion? 00:46:20
Could I go back in the past and shoot my great-great-grandfather? 00:46:34
Of course. Give me his name and I'll do it for a fee, of course. 00:46:39
Could you make a note of last week's lottery number, then go back in time and win the jackpot? 00:46:44
What a fantastic idea! Thank you! 00:46:52
Was the first day not that bad? 00:46:56
I think you're still at the wrong press conference. Security? 00:46:58
No, no! 00:47:02
But she said nothing wrong! 00:47:03
We don't make any mistakes. Not now, I'm in charge. 00:47:05
No-no no-no NO NO 00:47:08
No-no 00:47:17
Sy anal 00:47:19
I'm writing my letter To Sally Pigeon of course 00:47:25
but Sally Pigeon hasn't been work yet, six years to a hundred years in the future 00:47:29
I know that moment, but this letter won't be opened until it's moved. 00:47:35
How come? 00:47:39
I'm going to send this letter first class to sell it to you. 00:47:40
It should get there in a couple of days. 00:47:44
But I'm going to write something special on the back. 00:47:46
Do not open until the invention of a giant machine. 00:47:50
Just an idea Drongo gave me. 00:48:04
Drongo? 00:48:06
Yep, if I'm right then Drombo has saved us all. We don't even know him. 00:48:07
Is there anything? 00:48:11
Yes. 00:48:12
Where's the nearest postman? 00:48:13
They are on the corner. 00:48:14
Let's see what's going on. 00:48:16
Don't worry, Adolf. It's time for me to make history. 00:48:23
Drombo, please give the coordinator for the first ever journey back inside. 00:48:27
Look! That's my ladder! 00:48:37
Well, a jeep obviously found the post post. 00:48:39
I can't believe the time has come. 00:48:43
This letter has sat on the basement for over a hundred years ago, 00:48:51
gathering dust waiting for this moment. 00:48:56
Do not open until the mention of the time machine. 00:48:59
Well, I guess that's about now. 00:49:04
My post letter, uncle! 00:49:07
I know, look! It's there already! 00:49:12
How quick! 00:49:14
Not really. It took over a hundred years. 00:49:15
Shhh! 00:49:18
This brainless wouldn't sort that. 00:49:20
Whoever this machine sent me, I would come back at this time and place. 00:49:23
Ladies and gentlemen, you are the witness here. 00:49:27
In a making, a journey back in time would have the name of a safety net. 00:49:30
Oh no! You don't! 00:49:34
What's she doing? 00:49:36
Just what I thought she would. 00:49:40
What is the meaning of this? Security? 00:49:44
Don't even think it! 00:49:46
She's got a gun! 00:49:49
What are you doing in this video? 00:49:52
I'm putting things right, like it says in the letter. 00:49:54
What letter? 00:49:58
Read it for yourself. 00:50:00
It was delivered over a hundred years ago, but had my name on it. 00:50:02
It was given to me when I pursued this stupid organization. 00:50:10
And now the time has come to open it. 00:50:14
Give me three years. 00:50:17
Dear Sally, I am a popular chef with an ace and an award. 00:50:19
And you work for me and encounter a scar messing with sex. 00:50:23
You've got to trust me. 00:50:26
Here are the qualities you need. 00:50:28
I spread everything what you can hear. 00:50:30
This could have been written by anyone. 00:50:32
How do you know it's real? 00:50:34
I don't. 00:50:36
But I'd rather trust and spell what I never made 00:50:37
than live a moment longer in a world ruled by you. 00:50:42
by you. Now, Drongo, here's the coordinate. Drongo, here we get this. Really? There is 00:50:46
something I need to give you. Instantly? What are you doing, Drongo? Give it to Mr. Ancient. 00:50:52
He knows what to do. Well done, Drongo. You've seen such class. Now, let's take it aside. 00:50:58
It's time to put history right. Countdown, you're great. Oh, I'm count? What? Not so 00:51:06
That was stupid, Norma-man! 00:51:31
You mean I get my theory back? 00:51:33
Oh my god, what? 00:51:41
Yes, it does! 00:51:43
All was copied out by Drom and he's not the world's best expeller. 00:51:45
And I can give you the name of our potato publisher. 00:51:52
So, everything will be back to normal and we can overcome! 00:51:56
Yes, we can! 00:51:59
Sully! From Sir Time's Woffin 18? 00:52:03
I'll remember you now! 00:52:06
Of course, now you're here and things are clear. 00:52:08
Time is correcting itself. 00:52:10
So, I'm silly, not stupid? 00:52:12
Precisely. 00:52:16
Here you go, Mr. Einstein. 00:52:17
My dearie, I have it back! 00:52:19
Yes, you do. Now you can change it. 00:52:22
Well, I think it's time we did like to say thanks. 00:52:25
I wasn't happy? 00:52:31
No. 00:52:33
For the banana? 00:52:34
For this great race. 00:52:35
Without you, the modern world... 00:52:37
Cheers, friend. Nice to meet you. 00:52:43
Stay cool. 00:52:45
Come on team, let's go home! 00:52:46
Just one thing before you leave. 00:52:48
Yes? What is that? 00:52:50
Where is our jersey? 00:52:52
I don't know, I'm glad... 00:52:54
Security! 00:53:15
Why Bongo? 00:53:17
Why did you betray me? 00:53:19
Because you are mean to me! 00:53:21
Of course I am! 00:53:23
You are such an easy target! 00:53:27
Well, not anymore! From now on you are in your own! 00:53:29
Oh, how right you are! 00:53:31
From now on you can be posterized! 00:53:33
What are you going to do with me? 00:53:35
Do you remember one of your more useful inventions, Mongo? 00:53:38
Now? 00:53:42
Yes, the pickle-izer. 00:53:43
That was just a prototype. It's not pre-tasted. 00:53:44
Well, here is our change. 00:53:47
Oh, and don't worry. I'll show the one who took the finest feathers. 00:53:49
Gucci! Open the tray! 00:53:54
They are coming back inside and there is nothing you can do to stop them. 00:53:56
Wanna bet? Check! 00:54:00
There, that's London Inn. Now, to send them somewhere where they want to be, like a nation, let's see. 00:54:04
Where they get to do all the dinosaurs. 00:54:11
There, that's the last we see of them. 00:54:16
Goodbye, Prima Time. Meek, you are ready. 00:54:23
You say the sweetest things. 00:54:26
The games have come down. Everybody turn against you, then have enough. 00:54:30
But they sent you back to Stone Age! 00:54:34
When I traveled, if you remember, we had a bad idea a few months ago 00:54:37
and slipped out before this press conference began. 00:54:42
We've been watching you from the back of the room. 00:54:45
Then it was a simple matter of programming the time machine 00:54:47
to look like it was bringing us back a few minutes ago 00:54:51
and fooling you that it sent us back to Stone Age. 00:54:54
So, we were in a real danger. 00:54:57
Is it just me, or this is really confusing? 00:55:00
So, calm down. It's time to face your crimes. 00:55:04
Don't listen to him! 00:55:07
They are not on your side anymore. 00:55:08
Since Aces Theory has been published in the past, everything is as it was before you started making them. 00:55:10
This is my silly laboratory again, and this is my silly time machine. 00:55:16
There, I'll be there. 00:55:21
Yes, and I'm always waiting for you at the Cheek Advisor. 00:55:22
No! No! Anything but that! 00:55:25
Anything? 00:55:27
Anything! 00:55:27
Because there is another option, you see. I think you'll survive another time. 00:55:28
He does? 00:55:32
Hey, Chi, you can find good in anyone if you look hard enough. 00:55:33
Come, our world faces great challenges. 00:55:38
Beyond warming, famine, war, and who knows what. 00:55:41
But with our siblings and machine, we can help. 00:55:44
Imagine the two of us together to save the world. 00:55:47
Do let me work beside you. 00:55:50
I'll be strong. 00:55:52
And Duongo? 00:55:53
He can make the tea. 00:55:54
It's a deal. And so, ladies and gentlemen, you have witnessed history in the making. 00:55:55
And you can read it all about in my forthcoming book, Professor Time and the History Mystery. 00:56:02
Well done, Sally. 00:56:08
And it all goes to show, when silly and stupid come together, 00:56:10
the result isn't always quite so bad. 00:56:16
There's just one thing I don't understand. 00:56:20
Yes? 00:56:23
In all our time traveling adventures, there was a mystery you made. 00:56:23
What's that? 00:56:27
What happened to our shoes? 00:56:28
And now I'm glad you asked me that. 00:56:30
Yes? 00:56:33
Ladies and gentlemen, we hope you have enjoyed the play. 00:56:44
And remember, you don't make mistakes when traveling in time. 00:56:48
Please, give a big round of applause to all our actors and actresses. 00:56:51
Teachers! Teachers! Teachers! 00:56:56
Idioma/s:
en
Autor/es:
CPB. Ciudad de Columbia
Subido por:
Cp ciudaddecolumbia trescantos
Licencia:
Reconocimiento - No comercial - Sin obra derivada
Visualizaciones:
88
Fecha:
30 de mayo de 2022 - 17:15
Visibilidad:
Público
Centro:
CEIP Ciudad de Columbia
Duración:
59′ 31″
Relación de aspecto:
1.78:1
Resolución:
1280x720 píxeles
Tamaño:
901.65 MBytes

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