V for Vendetta (2005)

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V for Vendetta (2005)

Post by bunniefuu »

[woman] Remember, remember
The 5th of November


The gunpowder treason and plot

I know of no reason
Why the gunpowder treason


Should ever be forgot

But what of the man?

I know his name was Guy Fawkes

and I know in 1605, he attempted
to blow up the Houses of Parliament.


But who was he really?

What was he like?

[dogs barking]

[woman] We are told to remember
the idea and not the man.


Because a man can fail.

He can be caught,
he can be k*lled and forgotten.


But 400 years later

an idea can still change the world.

I have witnessed firsthand
the power of ideas.


I've seen people k*ll
in the name of them...


[crowd yelling]

...and die defending them.

But you cannot kiss an idea

cannot touch it or hold it.

Ideas do not bleed.
They do not feel pain.


They do not love.

And it is not an idea that I miss.

It is a man.

A man that made me remember
the 5th of November.


A man that I will never forget.

So I read that the former United States
is so desperate for medical supplies


that they have allegedly sent several
containers filled with wheat and tobacco.


A gesture, they said, of goodwill.

You wanna know what I think?

Well, you're listening to my show,
so I will assume you do.


It's high time we let the colonies know
what we really think of them.


I think it's payback time for a tea party
they threw for us a few hundred years ago.


I say we go down to those docks tonight
and dump that crap


where everything from the Ulcered Sphincter
of Ass-erica belongs!


Who's with me? Who's bloody with me?

[TV audience applauding]

Did you like that?

USA, Ulcered Sphincter of Ass-erica.
I mean, what else can you say?


Here was a country that had everything,
absolutely everything,


and now, 20 years later, is what?

The world's biggest leper colony. Why?

Godlessness.

Let me say that again.

Godlessness.

It wasn't the w*r they started.
It wasn't the plague they created.


It was Judgment.

No one escapes their past.
No one escapes Judgment.


You think he's not up there?

You think he's not watching over
this country?


How else can you explain it?
He tested us, but we came through.


We did what we had to do.

Islington. Enfield.
I was there. I saw it all.


Immigrants, Muslims,

h*m*, t*rrorists.

Disease-ridden degenerates.
They had to go.


Strength through unity.
Unity through faith.


I am a God-fearing Englishman,
and I'm g*dd*mn proud of it!


That's quite enough of that,
thank you very much.

Oh, sh*t.

[woman over speaker]
A yellow-coded curfew is now in effect.

Any unauthorized personnel
will be subject to arrest.


This is for your protection.

A yellow-coded curfew
is now in effect.


Any unauthorized personnel
will be subject to arrest.


This is for your protection.

- Whoa! Excuse me.
- Sorry, I didn't see you...

- In a hurry, are we?
- I was just...

- It's past curfew, you know.
- My uncle, he's very sick.

- Sick uncle? What you think, Willy?
- It's a load of bollocks.

I made a mistake. I shouldn't be out
after curfew. I know that.

Maybe you could look after us
before getting back to your uncle.

[man] See, my friend, he's kind of sick.
Ain't you?

Real sick. Bad case of the blues.
You can feel them.

- Don't touch me!
- Look, Willy, kitty's got claws.

- She just threatened us.
- That she did, that she did.

You know what that means,
don't you?

It means that we exercise
our own judicial discretion.

And you get to swallow it.

- Oh, God, you're Fingermen.
- She's getting the picture.

No, please, I didn't know. I'm sorry.

Not yet you're not. But you will be.

By sunup, if you're not the sorriest
piece of ass in all of London...

then you'll certainly be the sorest.

Oh, God, no. Please don't do this.

I'll go home.
I won't do it again, I swear! Please!

- What do you think, lads?
- Spare the rod, spoil the child.

Help me! Someone help!

[V] The multiplying villainies of nature
do swarm upon him.

- [Fingerman] What the hell?
- [Willy] Bugger off!

Disdaining fortune,
with his brandish'd steel

which smoked with bloody execution.

[Fingerman]
We're Fingermen, pal.

[V] Aha!

[yells]

[whimpering]

Jesus Christ! Mercy!

We are oft to blame in this...
'Tis too much proved.

...that with devotion's visage
and pious action

we do sugar o'er the devil himself.

- What's that mean?
- Spare the rod.

[truncheon drops]

I can assure you, I mean you no harm.

- Who are you?
- Who?

Who is but the form
following the function of what

and what I am is a man in a mask.

- Oh, I can see that.
- Of course you can.

I'm not questioning your powers
of observation.

I'm merely remarking upon the paradox
of asking a masked man who he is.

- Oh. Right.
- But on this most auspicious of nights

permit me then, in lieu of
the more commonplace sobriquet

to suggest the character
of this dramatis persona.

Voilà!

In view, a humble
vaudevillian veteran

cast vicariously as both victim
and villain by the vicissitudes of fate.

This visage,
no mere veneer of vanity

is a vestige of the vox populi,
now vacant, vanished.

However, this valorous visitation
of a bygone vexation stands vivified

and has vowed to vanquish these venal
and virulent vermin vanguarding vice

and vouchsafing the violently vicious
and voracious violation of volition.

The only verdict is vengeance,
a vendetta

held as a votive not in vain,
for the value and veracity of such

shall one day vindicate the vigilant
and the virtuous.

[V chuckles]

Verily, this vichyssoise of verbiage
veers most verbose.

So let me simply add that it's
my very good honor to meet you

and you may call me V.

Are you, like, a crazy person?

I am quite sure they will say so.

But to whom, might I ask,
am I speaking?

- I'm Evey.
- Evey?

E-vey. Of course you are.

- What does that mean?
- It means that I, like God,

do not play with dice
and do not believe in coincidence.

Are you hurt?

No, I'm fine.

- Thanks to you.
- Oh, I merely played my part.

- But tell me, do you enjoy music, Evey?
- I suppose.

You see, I'm a musician of sorts

and on my way to give
a very special performance.

What kind of musician?

Percussion instruments are my speciality.

But tonight I intend to call upon
the entire orchestra for this event

and would be honored
if you could join me.

I don't think so.
I should be getting home.

I promise you, it'll be like
nothing you've ever seen.

And afterwards,
you'll return home safely.

All right.

[Evey] It's beautiful up here.

[V] A more perfect stage
could not be asked for.

I don't see any instruments.

Your powers of observation
continue to serve you well.

But wait. It is to Madame Justice
that I dedicate this concerto

in honor of the holiday she seems
to have taken from these parts

and in recognition of the impostor
that stands in her stead.

Tell me, do you know
what day it is, Evey?

Um...

- November the 4th?
- Not anymore.

[bells chiming]

Remember, remember
The 5th of November


The gunpowder treason and plot

I know of no reason
Why the gunpowder treason


Should ever be forgot

First, the overture.

Yes.

Yes, the strings.

Listen carefully, can you hear it?

Now the brass.

I can hear it!

[Tchaikovsky's "1812 Overture"
playing over speakers]

Look outside, Mommy!
They're playing music!

- How do you do that?
- Wait.

Here comes the crescendo!

[V laughing]

How beautiful, is it not?

Gentlemen, you have had four hours.
You had better have results. Mr. Creedy.


The Bailey area is quarantined.

All significant witnesses
have been detained.

Good. Mr. Etheridge?

A recording device was found wired into
the central emergency-broadcast system.

The DCD was Tchaikovsky's
1812 Overture.

Add it to the blacklist.
I never want to hear that music again.


Yes, sir.

We also doubled our random sweeps
and are monitoring phone surveillance

indicating a high percentage
of conversation about the expl*si*n.

Mr. Dascomb,
what are we doing about that?


We're calling it
an emergency demolition.

We have spin coverage on the network
and throughout the InterLink.

Experts have been lined up to testify
against the Bailey's structural integrity.

I want Prothero to speak on
the dangers of these old buildings


and how we must avoid clinging
to the edifice of a decadent past.


He should conclude that the New Bailey
will become the symbol of our time


and the future
that our conviction has rewarded us.


Mr. Heyer.

Our surveillance cameras captured
several images of the t*rror1st

though the mask obviously makes
retinal identification impossible.

We also managed to get a picture of
the girl that Creedy's men were detaining.

- Who is she, Mr. Finch?
- Not sure yet, sir.

- But we're working on several leads.
- Anything else?

We located the fireworks launch

and found traces
of the expl*sives used at both sites.

Unfortunately it appears that despite
the heavy level of sophistication

these devices were homemade
with over-the-counter chemicals

making them very difficult to trace.

Whoever he is, chancellor,
he's very good.

Spare us your professional annotations,
Mr. Finch. They are irrelevant.


Apologies, chancellor.

Gentlemen, this is a test.

Moments such as these
are matters of faith.


To fail is to invite doubt
into everything we believe,


everything we have fought for.

Doubt will plunge this country back
into chaos, and I will not let that happen.


Gentlemen, I want this
t*rror1st found


and I want him to understand
what terror really means.


England prevails.

[all] England prevails.

[TV theme music plays]

- [woman] You think people will buy this?
- [Dascomb] Why not?

This is the BTN.

Our job is to report the news,
not fabricate it.

That's the government's job.

On the lighter side of things

seems that the crew responsible for
the demolition of the Old Bailey

wanted to give the old girl a grand,
albeit improvised, sendoff.

Although the demolition had been
planned for some time


the music and the fireworks were,
according to the crew chief,


- "definitely not on the schedule."
- [man on TV] We'll be right back.

Do you believe that load of bollocks?
I mean, there was no bloody demolition.

I saw it, the whole thing.

- Did you see it?
- No. Last night I was...

Yeah, that's right. You went
to see Daddy Deitrich, didn't you?

Evey, there you are.

- You are still working for me.
- Sorry, Patricia.

I need two espressos and three coffees.

And Deitrich is ready for his tea.

[man] I don't get it.

Why does he wear a Guy Fawkes mask
and then blow up the Bailey?

Didn't Fawkes try to blow up Parliament?

It's not too late.
He's still got another 16 hours.

Maybe he's just getting started.

[phone ringing]

Yeah?

Okay. A lead on the girl.

[man] Look, don't get me wrong,
I love it. A cow getting crucified.

It's hysterical.
But you'll never get it approved.

You've got to rewrite it, okay? Gotta go.

I don't recall getting stood up
by a more attractive woman.

- Mr. Deitrich...
- Gordon, please.

I don't need "mister" to make
this body feel any older.

Gordon...

I was on my way last night,
but there were Fingermen

and I got scared and went home.

Sadly, after last night,
I think our curfew will only get worse.

Gotcha.

- Hey, Fred.
- [Fred] All that been x-rayed?

Nope. They're filled with bombs.

Well, wait till commercials
to set them off, okay?

- I can't believe you watch that sh*t.
[Fred] What?

Laser Lass is banging.

[indistinct chatter]

What's all that?

Not sure. They just arrived.
Marked for Stage 3.

Must be Prothero.

I wish someone had the balls to tell that
brat this station ain't his playground.

What the hell is this?

Just put them over there
until I can figure out what they're for.

This looks serious.
Her parents were political activists.

- They were detained when she was 12.
- What happened to her?

[Finch] Juvenile Reclamation Project

- for five years.
[Dominic] sh*t.

We're gonna need backup,
but keep it minimal.

You sure about that, sir?

I want a chance to talk to her

before she disappears
into one of Creedy's black bags.

Who's that?

Don't piss me about. You show me ID,
or I'll get Storm Saxon on your ass.

f*cking hell.

[tires screeching]

[man] Come on, let's move!

[beeping]

[alarm wailing]

You two, cover these elevators.
The rest of you follow me.

[man over speaker] Attention. Attention.

Will all personnel please
evacuate the building.


This is not a drill.

Will all personnel evacuate the building.

What the hell's going on?

- It's jammed.
- Break it down.

Dominic!

Police! Out of the way!

Get out the way!

Damn it!

I'll tell you what I know.
I'll tell you what I know.


I'll tell you what I know.
England prevails.


- Clear the halls.
[officer] Sir.

Help, Storm, help!

[man] Don't touch it.

Dad, what's wrong with the telly?

[V] Good evening, London.

- Allow me first to apologize.
- That's the emergency channel!

I do, like many of you, appreciate
the comforts of the everyday routine


the security of the familiar,
the tranquility of repetition.


Bloody hell.

I enjoy them as much as any bloke.
But in the spirit of commemoration...


- Who's that, Mum?
- Shh.

...whereby important events
of the past


usually associated
with someone's death


or the end of some awful,
bloody struggle


are celebrated with a nice holiday

I thought we could mark
this November the 5th


a day that is, sadly,
no longer remembered


by taking time out of our daily lives
to sit down and have a little chat.


There are, of course,
those who do not want us to speak.


Let me think, let me think.

Even now, orders are being shouted
into telephones


and men with g*ns
will soon be on their way.


- It's Chancellor Sutler.
- Damn it!

Why? Because while the truncheon
may be used in lieu of conversation


words will always retain their power.

Words offer the means to meaning

and, for those who will listen,
the enunciation of truth.


And the truth is

there is something terribly wrong
with this country, isn't there?


You designed it, you wanted it foolproof.
You said every television in London!

Cruelty and injustice,
intolerance and oppression.


And where once
you had the freedom to object


to think and speak as you saw fit

you now have censors and surveillance
coercing your conformity


- and soliciting submission.
- Cameras. We need cameras.

How did this happen?
Who's to blame?


Certainly there are those
who are more responsible than others.


And they will be held accountable.

But again, truth be told,
if you're looking for the guilty


you need only look into a mirror.

I know why you did it.

I know you were afraid.

Who wouldn't be? w*r, terror, disease.

There were a myriad of problems
which conspired


to corrupt your reason
and rob you of your common sense.


Fear got the best of you.

And in your panic, you turned to
the now High Chancellor Adam Sutler.


He promised you order,
he promised you peace


and all he demanded in return
was your silent, obedient consent.


- Inspector, they're almost through.
- Last night, I sought to end that silence.

Last night, I destroyed the Old Bailey

to remind this country
of what it has forgotten.


More than 400 years ago, a great citizen
wished to imbed the 5th of November


forever in our memory.

His hope was to remind the world
that fairness, justice and freedom


are more than words.

They are perspectives.

So if you've seen nothing,

if the crimes of this government
remain unknown to you,


then I would suggest that you allow
the 5th of November to pass unmarked.


But if you see what I see,

if you feel as I feel,
and if you would seek as I seek,


then I ask you to stand beside me,
one year from tonight


outside the gates of Parliament.

And together, we shall give them
a 5th of November


that shall never, ever be forgot.

Kerosene fog.
He's using our smoke machines.

Cover the exits.

No one gets out.
The rest of you, follow me.

Left.

You go right.

Spread out.

[man 1]
Don't sh**t! Please don't sh**t!

[Finch]
Hold your fire!

[man groaning]

He put masks on all of us.

Jesus.

- [man 2] Don't sh**t!
- [man 3] Wait!

- [man 4] Wait!
- [man 5] Hold your fire!

Freeze! Nobody move!

If you're wearing a mask,
get down on your knees!

- Get their masks off.
- [man 6] Please hurry!

There's a b*mb in the control booth.

Oh, no.

- Get anyone not wearing a mask out.
- [Jones] Yes, sir.

- Marshal, help carry this man.
- [Marshal] Sir.

Everyone else, let's go.

[beeping]

Good God.

Hurry up, you lot! Come on!
Everybody out!

Dascomb.

Have you any idea how long
it would take to rebuild this facility?

Do you have any idea
what you're doing?

[man 1]
Wait, wait!

Don't sh**t me, please!
It's him! It's him!

On your knees! On your knees!

[man, muffled]
Please! Please don't hurt me!

[whimpering]

[Kn*fe stabs]

Here we go.

I did it.

I did it.

Freeze!

Get your hands on your head.
Do it now or I sh**t.

I must say that I am rather astonished
by the response time of London's finest.

I hadn't expected you to be
quite so Johnny-on-the-spot.

We were here before you even started.
Bad luck, chummy.

Oh, I don't know about that.

Aah!

We're interrupting your regular program
to bring you this terrifying report


of a t*rror1st takeover of Jordan Tower
which ended only moments ago.


A psychotic t*rror1st,
identified only as the letter V


att*cked the control booth with
high-powered expl*sives and weapons


that he used against unarmed civilians
in order to broadcast a message of hate.


We've just received this footage
of a daring police raid.


[officer on TV] Stop!
Stop, stay where you are, or we'll sh**t!


Stay where you are!

Now, this is only an initial report

but at this time, it's believed
that during this heroic raid,


the t*rror1st was sh*t and k*lled.

Bollocks.

Again, from what we've been told
by authorities, the danger is now over.


The t*rror1st is dead.

[Finch]
Right there. What's he thinking?

Is he considering leaving her?

After she just saved him?

He's a t*rror1st. You can't expect him
to act like you or me.

Some part of him's human.

And, for better or worse,
she's stuck with him.

[Julie London's "Cry Me a River"
playing nearby]

- You scared me.
- My apologies.

- Are you feeling all right?
- Yes, thank you.

- What is this place?
- It's my home.

- I call it the Shadow Gallery.
- It's beautiful.

- Where did you get all this stuff?
- Oh, here and there.

Much of it from the vaults of
the Ministry of Objectionable Materials.

- You stole them?
- Heavens, no.

Stealing implies ownership.

You can't steal from the censor.
I merely reclaimed them.

God, if they ever find this place.

I suspect if they do, a few bits of art
will be the least of my worries.

[Evey]
You mean, after what you've done.

God, what have I done?

I Maced that detective.
Why did I do that?

- You did what you thought was right.
- No, I shouldn't have done that.

I must have been out of my mind.

Is that what you really think,
or what they'd want you to think?

I think I should go.

- May I ask where?
- Home. I have to go home.

They're looking for you.

If they know where you work,
they know where you live.

- I have friends, I could stay with them.
- I'm afraid that won't work either.

You have to understand, Evey,
I didn't want this for either of us

but I couldn't see any other way.

You were unconscious
and I had to make a decision.

If I had left you there, right now you'd be
in one of Creedy's interrogation cells.

They'd imprison you, t*rture you,
and, in all probability, k*ll you

in the pursuit of finding me.

After what you did,
I couldn't let that happen

so I picked you up and carried you
to the only place I knew you'd be safe:

Here, to my home.

I won't tell anyone, I swear.
You know you can trust me.

I'm sorry, but I can't take that risk.

But I don't even know where this is.

[V] You know it's underground.

You know the color of the stone.

- That'd be enough for a clever man.
- Are you saying that I have to stay here?

Only until I'm done. After the 5th,
I no longer think it'll matter.

You mean a year from now?

I have to stay here for a year?

Sorry, Evey.
I didn't know what else to do.

You should've left me alone.

Why didn't you just leave me alone?

[V sighs]

[door slams]

- Anything else on the parents?
- Yeah, it ain't good.

They were interned at Belmarsh.

- Oh, no.
- Yeah.

She d*ed in a hunger strike. He d*ed
when the m*llitary retook the shed.

And that ain't the worst of it.
Her brother was at St. Mary's.

- Christ.
- It's nothing but bad luck here.

So we know her story.
Now we need his.

[Stan Getz's "The Girl From Ipanema"
playing on jukebox]

[V humming]

V?

Ah. Bonjour, mademoiselle.

I just wanted to apologize
for my reaction last night.

I understand what you did for me,
and I want you to know I am grateful.

Your hands.

[V] Yes.

[V humming]

There, that's better.

I hope I didn't put you off
your appetite.

- No, please. It's just... Are you all right?
- Yes, yes, yes, I'm fine.

Can I ask what happened?

[V] There was a fire. A long time ago.

Ancient history, for some.

Not really very good
table conversation.

Now, would you care for a cup of tea
with your egg?

- Yes, thank you. I'm starving, actually.
- Have a seat.

Mmm.

- It's delicious.
- Good.

God, I haven't had real butter
since I was a little girl.

Where did you get it?

[V] A government supply train
on its way to Chancellor Sutler.

- You stole this from Chancellor Sutler?
- Yes.

You're insane.

[V] I dare do all that may become a man.
Who dares more is none.

- Macbeth.
- Very good.

My mum, she used to
read all his plays to me

and ever since,
I've always wanted to act.

Be in plays, movies.

When I was 9, I played Viola
in Twelfth Night. Mum was very proud.

[V] Where is your mother now?

She's dead.

[V] I'm sorry.

Can I ask about
what you said on the telly?

- Did you mean it?
- Every word.

You really think blowing up Parliament's
going to make this country a better place?

[V] There's no certainty,
only opportunity.

You can be pretty certain
that if anyone does show up,

Creedy'll black-bag
every one of them.

[V] People should not be afraid
of their governments.

Governments should be afraid
of their people.

And you'll make that happen
by blowing up a building?

[V] The building is a symbol,
as is the act of destroying it.

Symbols are given power by people.

Alone, a symbol is meaningless,
but with enough people,

blowing up a building
can change the world.

I wish I believed that was possible.

Every time I've seen this world change,
it's always been for the worse.

I'll tell you what I know.
I know this is not a man.


[TV audience applauding]

[Prothero] What is he?

[Prothero on TV]
A man does not wear a mask.

- What is he?
- A man does not thr*aten civilians.

He's what every gutless,
freedom-hating t*rror1st is:


A g*dd*mn coward!

[phone ringing]

There will be no negotiation.

When I arrive in the morning,
the Paddy will be gone.

I'm looking at the tape right now,
and he has no idea how to light me.

My nose looks like Big f*cking Ben.

Listen to me, you bleeding sod,
England prevails because I say it does!

So does every lazy c**t on this show,
and that includes you.

Find another DOP
or find yourself another job.

I'll tell you what I wish.

I wish I'd been there.

I wish I'd had the chance
for a face-to-face.


Just one chance, that's all I'd need.

This so-called V and his accomplice,
Evey Hammond


neo-demagogues,
spouting their message of hate.


A delusional and aberrant voice
delivering a t*rror1st's ultimatum.


An ultimatum that was met
with swift and surgically precise justice.


- No mercy!
- The moral, ladies and gentlemen, is:

[together]
Good guys win, bad guys lose

and, as always, England prevails!

Holy Christ! Jesus!

Good evening, Commander Prothero.

Oh, my God! How did you get in here?

Don't worry, I've made sure
our reunion won't be disturbed by

any pesky late-night phone calls,
commander.

Stop. Why do you keep calling me that?

That was your title, remember?
When we first met, all those years ago.

You wore a uniform in those days.

You.

- It is you.
- The Ghost of Christmas Past.

[phone ringing]

- Yeah?
[Dascomb] Finch, it's Dascomb.

- Dascomb.
- I've already called the chancellor.

- We have to get control of the situation.
- What situation?

Chancellor Sutler agreed, for obvious
reasons, we have to keep this discreet.

In the wrong light,
the loss of the Voice of London

could be devastating
to our credibility.

Perhaps a stroke?

No, no, it's too horrific.

A quiet, dignified death in his sleep.

- We got any eyes or ears on this?
- No, camcos were cut.

It's the same M.O. as before.
But we got an elevator log ID.

- Let me guess.
- She's in deep, inspector.

[metal clanging]

V?

[soaring music playing on TV]

[V chuckles]

My fat, metal friend.

[imitates choking noises]

[grunting]

Mondego.

Oh, God. I hope I didn't wake you.

No, I just thought you were fighting.
I mean, for real.

[V] My favorite film:

The Count of Monte Cristo,
with Robert Donat as Edmond Dantes.

It is not my sword, Mondego,
but your past that disarmed you.


It gets me every time.

- Never seen it.
- Really?

- Would you like to?
- Does it have a happy ending?

[V] As only celluloid can deliver.

Okay.

Put the sword away.

Forensics just wrapped.

No prints, no hair, no fibers.
The guy is like a ghost.

You won't believe
what they found on Prothero.

- dr*gs?
- Could've started his own hospital.

- Interesting.
- Why?

Did you know Lewis Prothero was
one of the richest men in the country

before he was the Voice of London?

- dr*gs?
- Legal ones.

Major stockholder
in Viadoxic Pharmaceutical.

Viadoxic and St. Mary's
in less than a week. Coincidence?

When you're at this as long as I've been,
you stop believing in coincidence.

May we come up?

- [Dantes] You find your own tree.
- [V] You find your own tree.

- Did you like it?
- Yeah.

- But it made me feel sorry for Mercedes.
- Why?

Because he cared more about revenge
than he did about her.

...nationwide were devastated
as news of the most popular...


Wait. What's this?

...most awarded stars
in the history of the BTN


a man known to the entire nation
as "The Voice of London"


passed away late last night
from apparent heart failure.


- She's lying.
- How do you know?

She blinks a lot when she does a story
she knows is false.

It came as no surprise
to those who knew him


that his body was at his office

where he often worked long hours
after everyone else had gone home.


Lewis, you will be sorely missed.

V, yesterday I couldn't find my ID.

You didn't take it, did you?

[V] Would you prefer a lie or the truth?

Did you have anything
to do with that?

- Yes, I k*lled him.
- You.

- Oh, God.
- You're upset.

I'm upset?
You just said you k*lled Lewis Prothero.

I might have k*lled the Fingermen that
att*cked you. I heard no objection.

- What?
- v*olence can be used for good.

- What are you talking about?
- Justice.

Oh, I see.

[V] There's no court in this country
for men like Prothero.

And are you going to k*ll more people?

[V] Yes.

Take a look at this.

Prothero's m*llitary record.

What do you see?

Iraq, Kurdistan, Syria,
before and after, Sudan.

- Busy boy.
- But after all that

they put him in charge
of a detention facility at Larkhill.

Well, no good deed goes unpunished.

You think there's a connection
between our boy and Larkhill?

It might explain the connection
between him and the Hammond girl.

Problem is, I can't find
any other record of it.

Larkhill? Larkhill? I cannot recall
that particular facility, inspector.

- You're welcome to review our records.
- We've been through your records.

All it says is that there was
a detention facility at Larkhill

approximately 10 miles
north of Salisbury.

Well, there you have it.

This is a matter of some urgency, major.

We need to know if there was anything
different about this facility.

I'm sorry, inspector,
I simply cannot recall.

Was there a specific profile
for those being sent there?

- Usual undesirables, I should think.
- But do you know?

- Of course not. I wasn't stationed there.
- Do you know who was?

I cannot recall specific names,
but if you look through our records...

Your records are either deleted,
omitted or missing.

As head of the Detention Program
at that...

Before you go further, let me remind you
things were very chaotic back then.

Now we don't have the problems
we had back then.

We all did what we had to do.

And in those circumstances,
we did the best we could.

That's all I have to say about that.

You can do this.

Hi.

I've been thinking.

There's something
I want to ask you

but I don't think you'll understand why
unless you know a few things about me.

My father was a writer.
You would have liked him.

He used to say artists used lies
to tell the truth

while politicians used them
to cover the truth up.

[V] A man after my own heart.

He always told the best stories.

Until my brother d*ed.

That was when everything changed.

My brother was one of the students
at St. Mary's.


After he d*ed,
my parents became political.


They protested the w*r
and the Reclamation.


When Sutler was appointed high chancellor,

they were at the riot in Leeds.

I watched on the television,

thinking I was going
to see my parents k*lled.


I remember them arguing at night.

Mum wanted to leave the country.
Dad refused.


He said if we ran away,
they would win.


Win, like

it was a game.

[door opens]

Evey, quick, hide!

- Mummy!
- [Evey's mother] Evey!

[Evey]
I never saw them again.

It was like those black bags erased them
from the face of the earth.

I'm sorry, Evey.

No, I'm the one that's sorry.

Sorry I'm not a stronger person.

Sorry I'm not like my parents.
I wish I was...

but I'm not.

I wish I wasn't afraid all the time...

but I am.

I know this world is screwed up.
Believe me, I know it better than most.

Which is why I wanted to ask, if there is
anything I can do to help make it right,

please let me know.

[V] If you wish.

Do you really think
you'll find something here?

Worth a sh*t.

One thing is true of all governments:

The most reliable records are tax records.

It appears that the original
electronic records have all been lost.

Probably during the Reclamation.
A lot of things went missing back then.

But I found this hard copy
filed in the cold vault.

Everything we've got on Larkhill
is in there.

Thanks. This is a great help.

[Evey speaking in Latin]

[V] "By the power of truth, I, while living,
have conquered the universe."

- Personal motto?
- From Faust.

That's about trying
to cheat the devil, isn't it?

[V] It is. And speaking of the devil,

I was wondering if your offer to help
was still standing.

- Of course.
- It appears that unforeseen circumstances

have accelerated my original plan.

As a result, I'm in need of someone
with some theatrical skill.

I'll do my best.

[V] I believe you will.

Another doctor. Why does
a detention facility need so many doctors?

I don't know, but this is interesting.

The highest-paid person
at the camp was a priest.

- Really?
- Yeah, Father Lilliman.

- Lilliman.
- Was paid almost 200 grand a month.

Now, that is interesting.

Looks like he was promoted.
He's a bishop now.

- Your Grace.
- Oh, Denis.

- Has everything been arranged?
- Yes.

I've just received
your InterLink itinerary.

You should arrive in Perth
in time for Mass.

You're most diligent, Denis,

a noble example for all those
who labor in the name of our Lord, but...

- Your Grace?
- It wasn't labor I was speaking of.

It was, rather, my final remittance
that I was interested in.

My last little joy.

I'm sorry, Your Grace.

She has arrived, but there was
some confusion at the agency.

They've sent a new girl who,
I'm afraid, is a little older than usual.

Older?

Oh, dear. She's not too old, I trust?

That is for Your Grace to decide.

- Oh, my.
- Your Grace.

To think that I doubted your loveliness
for an instant.

Mea culpa, my child.

Mea culpa.

Your Grace, we don't have much time
and I have to tell you something.

A confession? I love the confession game.

Tell me your sins.

This isn't a game, Your Grace.

Someone's coming.
I think he means to k*ll you.

- I'm sorry?
- I'm telling you this

because I want some kind
of protection or amnesty.

I had nothing to do with the Bailey
and made a mistake in the Jordan Tower.

- I think this should balance it out.
- What are you talking about?

I'm Evey Hammond. I'm...

I've been the prisoner of the t*rror1st V
for the past several weeks.

I'm telling you that, any moment,
he's going to come through that door.

I unlocked the window in the room
where Denis told me to get ready.

[laughing] Wonderful!

It's a game I've never played!

What a delightful mind you have.

I hope the rest of you
is just as interesting.

- No, please, you have to believe me.
- Oh, I do, I do, I do.

Let me show you
the firmness of my beliefs.

Stop it! Get off of me!

Seems I've captured
a dangerous t*rror1st.

Now, how best to procure
her confession?

Oh!

You little bitch.
You f*cking little whore!

[V] Reverend.
- Oh, my God.

She wasn't lying. It is you.

I'm sorry.

- I had to.
[V] Evey!

And thus I clothe my naked villainy

with old odd ends
stolen forth from holy writ

and seem a saint,
when most I play the devil.

Oh, please, have mercy.

Oh, not tonight, Bishop.

Not tonight.

[Lilliman over speaker]
Don't do this, I beg of you.

Well, then.
Children's hour at the abbey.

[V] Open your mouth
and stick out your tongue.


- What the...?
- [Lilliman]I don't want to die!

This is Surveillance 109.
We have an emergency.

[camera shutter clicks]

Run every name in that file.
I want the whereabouts of all of them.

- Tonight.
- Yes, sir.

Pucker up, here comes the Finger.

Yeah. Get going. I'll handle him.

Creedy.

What are you doing here?

Several prominent party members
have been m*rder*d, chief inspector.

This is no ordinary situation and requires
more than your ordinary attention.

The chancellor demanded
my immediate involvement.

It'll be hard to investigate
if you're detaining all my witnesses.

The security of information is paramount.

In these volatile times,

mistakes like Jordan Tower
can no longer be tolerated,

if, indeed,
Jordan Tower was an accident.

- What does that mean?
- t*rror1st seems to have

a rather intimate understanding
of our system.

The chancellor suspects
there might be an informer.

Are you saying I'm under surveillance,
Mr. Creedy?

At this time, it would behoove you

to cease any investigation of matters
that have long since passed

and concentrate on the concerns
of our present.

You mean Larkhill?

Major Wilson is a friend
of the high chancellor.

- His loyalty is not in question.
- But mine is?

Your mother was Irish, wasn't she?

Terrible what St. Mary's
did to Ireland, wasn't it?

I've been a party member for 27 years.

If I were you, chief inspector,

I'd find the t*rror1st

and I'd find him soon.

[doorbell rings]

[siren wailing nearby]

Please.

Evey? Good God!

I'm sorry.
I didn't know where else to go.

Yes, well, you better come inside
before someone sees you.

- Cheers.
- I know every cop's looking for me.

I know it's horrible of me
to put you in this situation.

- Evey...
- You could be in terrible trouble.

Evey, listen to me.

If the government searched my house,
you would be the least of my problems.

You trusted me.

It would be terrible manners
for me not to trust you.

Oh, my God.
That's God Save the Queen.

My parents took me to it
when they hung it at Gallery 12.

- I thought Sutler had it destroyed.
- He believes he did.

Cost me more than this house,
but no matter how bad I feel,

it always cheers me up.

- What is that?
- It's a copy of the Koran, 14th century.

- Are you a Muslim?
- No, I'm in television.

But why would you keep it?

I don't have to be Muslim to find
the images beautiful or poetry moving.

Is it worth it? If they found that here...

I told you,
you'd be the least of my worries.

Thank you, Gordon.

- Thank you so much.
- It's all right.

This whole thing started the night
he blew up the Old Bailey.

I was on my way here, and...

Ah.

Yes.

You see, we are both fugitives
in our own way.

- But...
- You're wondering why

you were invited here to supper
in the first place

if my appetites were
for less conventional fare.

Unfortunately, a man in my position
is expected to entertain

young and attractive ladies
like yourself.

Because in this world,
if I were to invite who I desired,

I would undoubtedly find myself
without a home, let alone a TV show.

- I'm sorry.
- Not as sorry as I am.

The truth is, after so many years,

you begin to lose
more than just your appetite.

You wear a mask for so long,
you forget who you were beneath it.

I'm sorry, chief inspector.
Same basic toxicology as Prothero.

You could get these poisons
from any house in London.

Thanks, Delia.

[Delia]
Any leads on finding this guy?

Nothing yet. But there's something else
you can help me with.

You started as a botanist, didn't you?

It's... It's a Scarlet Carson.

They're believed to be extinct.

He leaves them at the crime scenes.

I'd appreciate it
if you could have a look at it.

Any information could be helpful.

- Of course.
- [phone ringing]

Excuse me.

Yeah?

[Dominic] I just finished
going through the file, inspector.


You better get back here.

[Finch] Yeah, okay.

- My God. He's k*lled them all.
- [Dominic] All but one.

- [Finch] Who is she?
- [Dominic] Not sure.

She's clearly one of the people
in charge at Larkhill.

But after they shut it down,
she disappeared for two years.

Till she applied for an overseas visa,
which was denied.

Running away?

Probably, because after that,
all record of her seems to stop.

- She changed her name.
- That's what I'm guessing.

I put a call in to the registry,
but I haven't heard back.

- It's late, or early.
- Call them again. I want that name.

What? Are you sure about that?

Okay. Thank you.

Dr. Diana Stanton changed her name
to Delia Surridge.

- The coroner?
- Yeah.

Jesus, I just saw her.

[wind whistling]

It's you, isn't it?

- You've come to k*ll me.
- [V] Yes.

Thank God.

[siren wailing]

[operator] I'm sorry, but I can't get
a response from that number.


There's a problem with the connection.

Jesus Christ.

He's there.

[Delia] After what happened,
after what they did,

I thought about k*lling myself.

But I knew that one day
you'd come for me.

I didn't know what
they were going to do.

I swear to you.

Read my journal.

What they did was only possible
because of you.

Oppenheimer was able to change
more than the course of a w*r.

He changed the entire course
of human history.

Is it wrong to hold on
to that kind of hope?

I have not come
for what you hoped to do.

I've come for what you did.

It's funny.

I was given one of your roses today.

I wasn't sure you were the t*rror1st
until I saw it.

What a strange coincidence,
that I should be given one today.

There are no coincidences, Delia.

Only the illusion of coincidence.

I have another rose.

And this one is for you.

- You're going to k*ll me now?
- I k*lled you 10 minutes ago

while you slept.

- Is there any pain?
- No.

Thank you.

Is it meaningless to apologize?

[V] Never.

I'm so sorry.

[siren wailing]

Damn it.

[Finch] The t*rror1st obviously
wanted us to have it.

He wanted us to know the story,
or at least a part of it.

Am I to understand that you have read
this document, inspector?


- Yes, sir.
- Has anyone else read it?

- No, sir.
- Then let me make this perfectly clear.

The contents of this document
are a matter of national security


constituting an as*ault on the character
of several important party members


as well as a blatant violation
of the Articles of Allegiance.


As the authenticity of this document
cannot be verified,


it could be an elaborate forgery
created by the t*rror1st


as easily as it could be the deranged
fantasy of a former party member


who resigned for psychological reasons.

Any discussion of this document
or its contents


will be regarded, at the very least,
as an act of sedition


if not a willful act of treason.

- Is that understood, Mr. Finch?
- Yes, sir.

You would do well, inspector,

to put it out of your mind.

[Delia] May 23rd.

My first batch of subjects arrived today

and I have to admit that I'm very excited.

This could be the dawn of a new age.

Nuclear power is meaningless

in a world where a virus
can k*ll an entire population


and leave its wealth intact.

- [guard 1] Stay together!
- [guard 2] Come on, move!

[Delia] May 27th.

Commander Prothero toured the lab
with a priest, Father Lilliman,


who I was told is here to monitor
for Rules and Rights violations.


It made me nervous, but the commander
assured me there wouldn't be a problem.


June 2nd.

I keep wondering if these people knew
how they might be helping their country,


if they would act any differently.

They're so weak and pathetic.
They never look you in the eye.


I find myself hating them.

August the 18th.

Of the original four dozen,
over 75 percent are now deceased.


No controllable pattern has yet emerged.

September the 18th.

There is one case that continues
to give me hope.


He exhibits none of the immune-system
pathologies the other subjects developed.


I've discovered cellular anomalies in his
blood that I've been unable to categorize.


The mutations seem to have triggered

the abnormal development
of basic kinesthesia and reflexes.


The subject said
he could no longer remember


who he was or where he was from.

Whoever he was,
he is now the key to our dream


and the hope that all of this
will not have been in vain.


November the 5th.

It started last night, around midnight.

The first explosions tore open
the entire medical section.


All my work, gone.

I was trying to understand how
it could've happened when I saw him.


The man from room 5.

He looked at me.

Not with eyes. There were no eyes.

But I know he was looking at me
because I felt it.


[yells]

[Delia] Oh, God,

what have I done?

[Sten Getz's "Corcovado" playing]

Bonjour, mademoiselle.

What is that you're making?

We called it "eggie in the basket."
My mum made them.

- This is weird.
- What?

The first morning I was with him,
he made me eggs just like this.

- Really?
- I swear.

That is a strange coincidence.
Although there's an obvious explanation.

- There is?
- Yes, Evey.

I am V.

At last you know the truth.

You're stunned, I know.

Hard to believe, isn't it, that beneath
this wrinkled, well-fed exterior,

there lies a dangerous k*lling machine
with a fetish for Fawkesian masks.

Viva la revolución.

That is not funny, Gordon.

Yeah, I know.
I'm useless without a studio audience.

I've seen people go to jail
for less than that.

Of course, he was right, wasn't he?

There is something wrong
with this country.

Morning, inspector.

You're at it early.

Is something wrong?
You don't look so good, sir.

[beeps]

I wanna ask a question, Dominic.

I don't care if you answer me or not.

I just wanna say this aloud.

But I need to know that this question
will not leave this office.

Yeah, of course, inspector, but...

Because of the t*rror1st?

No.

So, what is it, chief? What's going on?

The question I want to ask
is about St. Mary's

and Three Waters.

The question that's kept me up
for the last 24 hours,

the question I have to ask, is:

What if the worst,

the most horrifying biological att*ck
in this country's history

was not the work of religious extremists?

I don't understand. We know it was.
They were caught. They confessed.

And they were ex*cuted. I know.

And maybe that's really what happened.

But I see this chain of events...

these coincidences, and I have to ask:

What if that isn't what happened?

What if someone else unleashed that virus?

What if someone else
k*lled all those people?

Would you really wanna know who it was?

Sure.

Even if it was someone
working for this government?

That's my question.

If our own government was responsible

for what happened at St. Mary's
and Three Waters...

if our own government was responsible

for the deaths of almost 100,000 people,

would you really wanna know?

[man 1] This has to be the bloody
coldest March in years.


[woman] Keep talking like that,
we'll lose our party status.


[man 2]
They're a pack of lying hypocrites!

[man 1] Keep it down, will you?

Based on random audio sweeps,
I've projected that right now


believe the t*rror1st is still alive.

We're also showing a 12-percent increase

over last month's positive mention
in all four quadrants.

[Sutler] Mr. Creedy?
- We're handling it as best we can.

Arrests are as high as they've been
since the Reclamation.

I want more than arrests. I want results.

[music playing on TV]

- What's all this about?
- I'm celebrating.

Celebrating what?

I think this could be
the best show we've ever done.

[Deitrich on TV] Very good evening,
ladies and gentlemen.


Listen, we've got an extraordinary
show for you tonight.


You're not gonna believe it.
As a matter of fact, I don't think I do.


Will you please give
a very warm welcome


to our own Chancellor Adam Sutler!

- [audience applauding]
- ["God Saves the Queen" playing]

- No way!
- No, it can't be!

We threw out the censor-approved script
and sh*t one I wrote this morning.

Oh, my God.

[gulps]

Chancellor, chancellor, chancellor,

I understand you've been
under tremendous strain lately,


since the beginning
of this whole terrorism business,


and we thought it would be a nice idea
to try and help you relax. Girls?


[rock music playing on TV]

Ah! Warm milk.
There's nothing better.


I understand you enjoy a glass
every night, chancellor.


Since I was a boy.

But you're wrong, Mr. Deitrich.

- The t*rror1st was never a concern.
- [Deitrich] Oh, really?

- Chancellor, chancellor...
- It's him.

Are you saying that
he's not still alive and active?


The t*rror1st has been neutralized.

[explodes]

Oh, my God! Chancellor, look!

The t*rror1st!

[fake Sutler] The t*rror1st!

[laughter]

Get him!

Oh, dear.

[laughing]

[Boots Randolph's "Yakety Sax"
playing on TV]

[fake Sutler] At last!

And now, for all the world to see.

It's him!

Unhand me! I am your chancellor!

How dare you! I am the chancellor!

Impostor!

Soldiers! That man is the t*rror1st!

- I order you to sh**t that traitor!
- Liar!


- Faker!
- Fraud!


- Ready!
- Aim!


- Fire!
- Fire!


[audience applauding]

[snickers]

What are they gonna do, fine us?

Big deal. We've got
the most-watched show on air.

Well, you're my agent,
that's what I pay you for.

Protect me.

I should've hired him to be my mother.

- You're mad.
- Either that or I wasn't breast-fed.

- Is everything a joke to you?
- Only the things that matter.

- What if they come after you?
- I tell you what's gonna happen.

I'll have to make some kind of apology,
do some boring fundraiser.

In the meantime, our ratings will go
through the roof. It'll be fine. Trust me.

[glass breaks]

Gordon?

[men shouting]

Quick, Evey, hide!

Not so funny now, is it, funnyman?

[panting]

[grunts]

- [man] Gotcha.
- No, no.

[Evey screams]

[gasping]

[man] Do you know why you're here,
Evey Hammond?

Please.

[man] You've been formally charged
with three counts of m*rder,

the bombing of government property,
conspiracy to commit terrorism,

treason and sedition, the penalty
for which is death by f*ring squad.

You have one chance,
and only one chance, to save your life.

You must tell us the identity
or whereabouts

of code name V.

If your information leads to his capture,

you will be released
from this facility immediately.

Do you understand what I'm telling you?

You can return to your life, Miss Hammond.

All you have to do is cooperate.

Process her.

[sobbing]

[Evey crying]

[screaming, sobbing]

[door opens]

[squeaking]

[rustling]

[woman's voice]
I know there's no way I can convince you

this is not one of their tricks,
but I don't care.


I am me.

My name is Valerie.

I don't think I'll live much longer.
I wanted to tell someone about my life.


This is the only autobiography
that I will ever write and, God,


I'm writing it on toilet paper.

I was born in Nottingham in 1985.

I don't remember much
of those early years


but I do remember the rain.

My grandmother owned a farm
in Tottle Brook


and she used to tell me
that God was in the rain.


I passed my 11 Plus
and went to girls' grammar.


It was at school
that I met my first girlfriend.


Her name was Sarah.

It was her wrists.

They were beautiful.

I thought we would
love each other forever.


I remember our teacher telling us

that it was an adolescent phase
that people outgrew.


Sarah did.

I didn't.

In 2002, I fell in love
with a girl named Christina.


That year I came out to my parents.

[shouting indistinctly]

[Valerie] I couldn't have done it
without Chris holding my hand.


My father wouldn't look at me.
He told me to go and never come back.


[woman crying]

[Valerie] My mother said nothing.

But I'd only told them the truth.
Was that so selfish?


Our integrity sells for so little,
but it is all we really have.


It is the very last inch of us.

But within that inch,

we are free.

[man]
It ends whenever you want it to.

- Just tell us where he is.
- I don't know.

[Valerie] I'd always known
what I wanted to do with my life


and in 2015, I starred in my first film,
The Salt Flats.

It was the most important role of my life.
Not because of my career,


but because that was how I met Ruth.

The first time we kissed,

I knew I never wanted to kiss
any other lips but hers again.


We moved to a small flat
in London together.


She grew Scarlet Carsons for me
in our window box


and our place always smelt of roses.

Those were the best years of my life.

But America's w*r grew worse and worse

and eventually came to London.

The bill proposed by the Undersecretary
for Defense, Adam Sutler

to close the remaining tube stations
passed with near-universal...

[Valerie]
After that, there were no roses anymore.

Not for anyone.

[man] You won't last much longer.

You're gonna die here.

Why protect someone
who doesn't give a sh*t about you?

[door slams, locks]

[Valerie] I remember how the meaning
of words began to change.


How unfamiliar words like "collateral"
and "rendition" became frightening,


while things like "Norsefire" and the
"Articles of Allegiance" became powerful.


I remember how "different"
became dangerous.


I still don't understand it,

why they hate us so much.

[grunts]

[Valerie] They took Ruth
while she was out buying food.


I've never cried so hard in my life.

It wasn't long till they came for me.

It seems strange that my life should end
in such a terrible place.


But for three years,
I had roses and apologized to no one.


I shall die here.

Every inch of me shall perish.

Every inch

but one.

An inch.

It is small, and it is fragile

and it is the only thing
in the world worth having.


We must never lose it or give it away.
We must never let them take it from us.


I hope that, whoever you are,
you escape this place.


I hope that the world turns
and that things get better.


But what I hope most of all
is that you understand what I mean


when I tell you that
even though I do not know you


and even though
I may never meet you,


laugh with you, cry with you,

or kiss you...

I love you.

With all my heart,

I love you.

Valerie.

[man] I'm instructed to inform you

that you have been convicted
by special tribunal

and that unless you are ready
to offer your cooperation,

you are to be ex*cuted.

Do you understand what I'm telling you?

- Yes.
- Are you ready to cooperate?

- No.
- Very well.

Escort Miss Hammond back to her cell.

Arrange a detail of six men

and take her out behind
the chemical shed and sh**t her.

[man] It's time.

I'm ready.

[man] Look, all they want
is one little piece of information.

Just give them something, anything.

Thank you,

but I'd rather die
behind the chemical sheds.

[man] Then you have no fear anymore.
You're completely free.

What?

Hello, Evey.

You.

- It was you?
- Yeah.

That wasn't real?

- Is Gordon...?
- I'm sorry, but Mr. Deitrich's dead.

I thought they'd arrest him

but when they found a Koran
in his house, they had him ex*cuted.

Oh, God.

- Fortunately, I got to you before they did.
- You got to me?

You did this to me?

You cut my hair?

You tortured me?

You tortured me.

Why?

[V] You said you wanted to live without
fear. I wish there'd been an easier way

- but there wasn't.
- Oh, my God.

I know you may never forgive me

but nor will you understand
how hard it was for me.

Every day, I saw in myself
everything you see in me now.

Every day, I wanted to end it.

But each time you refused to give in,
I knew I couldn't.

You're sick! You're evil!

You could have ended it.
You could have given in, but you didn't.

- Why?
- Leave me alone! I hate you!

[V] That's it! See, at first,
I thought it was hate too.

Hate was all I knew.
It built my world, imprisoned me,

taught me how to eat,
how to drink, how to breathe.

I thought I'd die
with all the hate in my veins.

But then something happened.

It happened to me
just as it happened to you.

Shut up! I don't want to hear
your lies!

[V] Your own father said
that artists use lies to tell the truth.

Yes, I created a lie.

But because you believed it,
you found something true about yourself.

- No.
- What was true in that cell is true now.

What you felt in there
has nothing to do with me.

I can't feel anything anymore!

Don't run from it, Evey.
You've been running all your life.

[gasping]

I can't. Can't breathe.

Asthma. When I was little...

Listen to me, Evey.

This may be the most important moment
of your life. Commit to it.

[sobbing]

They took your parents from you.
They took your brother from you.

They put you in a cell
and took everything they could take,

except your life.

And you believed that was all
there was, didn't you?

The only thing you had left
was your life, but it wasn't.

- Oh, please.
- You found something else.

In that cell, you found something
that mattered more to you than life.

When they threatened to k*ll you
unless you gave them what they wanted,

you told them you'd rather die.

You faced your death, Evey.

You were calm. You were still.

Try to feel now what you felt then.

Oh, God.

I felt.

[V] Yes?

I'm dizzy.

I need air.

Please, I need to be outside.

[V] There's a lift.
It'll take us to the roof.

[thunder rumbling]

God is in the rain.

[crying]

[shouts]

[Cat Power's "I Found a Reason" playing]

V.

I'm leaving.

There are 872 songs in here.

I've listened to them all,
but I've never danced to any of them.

- Did you hear me?
- Yes.

I can't stay here.

[V] I know.

Well, you won't find
any more locked doors here.

I thought about keeping this

but it didn't seem right,
knowing you wrote it.

I didn't.

May I show you something before you go?

- She was real.
- Yes.

She's beautiful.

- Did you know her?
- No.

She wrote the letter
just before she d*ed.

And I delivered it to you
as it had been delivered to me.

Then it really happened, didn't it?

- Yes.
- You were in the cell next to her.

And that's what this is all about.

You're getting back at them
for what they did to her.

- And to you.
- What was done to me created me.

It's a basic principle of the universe

that every action will create
an equal and opposing reaction.

Is that how you see it?

- Like an equation?
- What was done to me was monstrous.

And they created a monster.

- Do you know where you'll go?
- No.

That would have scared me before

but I suppose I should thank you.

Well.

Thank you.

Goodbye.

Evey...

may I ask you for something?

If I had one wish, I would wish
to see you again, if only once

before the 5th.

- All right.
- Thank you.

[sobbing]

[Heyer] Chancellor, I know no one
seems to want to discuss this

but if we're to be prepared
for any eventuality,

then it can't be ignored any longer.

The red report in front of you has been
vetted by several demolition specialists.

Now, it concludes that

the most logical delivery system
for the t*rror1st to use

would be an airborne att*ck.

A separate report has been filed

suggesting a train, despite the fact
that the tunnels surrounding Parliament

have been sealed shut.

Who filed that report?

[Heyer] Chief Inspector Finch.

Do you have any evidence
to support this conclusion, Mr. Finch?


No, sir. Just a feeling.

If I am sure of anything, inspector,

it is that this government won't survive
if it is to be subject to your feelings.


Mr. Dascomb, what we need right now

is a clear message
to the people of this country.


This message must be read
in every newspaper,


heard on every radio,
seen on every television.


This message must resound
throughout the entire InterLink!


I want this country to realize
that we stand on the edge of oblivion.


I want every man, woman and child to
understand how close we are to chaos.


I want everyone

to remember why they need us!

In the former United States, civil w*r
continues to devastate the Midwest.


Scientists attribute this water shortage
to the lack of rainfall the last two years.


Ministry officials expect
water coupon prices to rise.


Police have arrested nine suspects.

Can you believe this sh*t?
Been going on all summer.

Outside the quarantine zone, a new
airborne pathogen has k*lled 27 people.


Authorities uncovered new evidence
linking the t*rror1st organization called V


to the St. Mary's viral att*ck
on London 14 years ago.


[device beeps]

[Dominic] My friend inside the Finger
came up with something.

There were three men.

Covert intel.

Original black-baggers,
all under Creedy.

[Finch] Alan Percy, Robert Keyes,
William Rookwood.

The day after the St. Mary's outbreak,

Percy gives his Beretta a blowjob,
Keyes dies in a fire...

Rookwood goes missing.

Bloody coincidences
are making me sick to my stomach.

Rookwood.

How do I know that name?

[Dominic] Holy sh*t. He must have had
a hidden trip on his file at the Finger.

But how'd he know it was you?

What do we do?

I'm a cop. I have to know.

I came when they opened it.
It gave me the collywobbles.

Still does.

That's close enough, inspector.

[device beeps]

We're not wired.

I'm sorry, but a man in my position
survives by taking every precaution.

- You have information for us?
- No, you already have the information.

All the names and dates
are inside your head.

What you want,
what you really need, is a story.

A story can be true or false.

I leave such judgments to you,
inspector.

Our story begins,
as these stories often do,

with a young, up-and-coming politician.

He's a deeply religious man
and a member of the Conservative Party.

He's completely single-minded and
has no regard for the political process.


The more power he attains,
the more obvious his zealotry


and the more aggressive
his supporters become.


Eventually, his party launches a special
project in the name of national security.


At first it's believed to be a search
for biological weapons


and it's pursued without regard
to its cost.


However, the true goal
of this project is power.


Complete and total hegemonic domination.

The project, however, ends violently.

But the efforts of those involved
are not in vain


for a new ability to wage w*r is born
from the blood of one of the victims.


Imagine a virus,
the most terrifying virus you can

and then imagine that you
and you alone have the cure.

But if your ultimate goal is power,
how best to use such a w*apon?


Well, it's at this point in our story
that along comes a spider.

A man seemingly without a conscience

for whom the ends
always justify the means.


And it's he who suggests that their target
should not be an enemy of the country,


but rather, the country itself.

Three targets are chosen
to maximize the effect of the att*ck:


A school, a tube station
and a water-treatment plant.


Several hundred die
within the first few weeks.


Three Waters has, in fact,
been contaminated.

Authorities are attempting to control
its deadly spread.

...sent a wave of destruction
through the Underground.

[Rookwood] Fueled by the media,
fear and panic spread quickly,


fracturing and dividing
the country until, at last,


the true goal comes into view.

Before the St. Mary's crises,

no one would've predicted the results
of the election that year. No one.

And then not long after the election,
Io and behold, a miracle.


Some believed it was the work
of God himself.


But it was a pharmaceutical company
controlled by certain party members


that made them all obscenely rich.

A year later, several extremists are tried,
found guilty and ex*cuted,

while a memorial is built
to canonize their victims.

But the end result,
the true genius of the plan, was the fear.

Fear became the ultimate tool
of this government.

Through it, our politician
was ultimately appointed

to the newly created position
of high chancellor.

The rest, as they say, is history.

- Can you prove any of this?
- Why do you think I'm still alive?

All right. We'd like to take you into
protective custody, Mr. Rookwood.

I'm sure you would.

But if you want that recording,
you'll do what I tell you to do.

Put Creedy under 24-hour surveillance.

When I feel safe he can't pick his nose
without you knowing,

I'll contact you again.

Till then, cheerio.

[Finch] Rookwood...

why didn't you come forward before?

What were you waiting for?

Well, for you, inspector.

I needed you.

[V] Shh, shh, shh.

[Beethoven's "Symphony No. 5"
playing over speaker]

What's he doing in the dark there?

Creepy Creedy.
Not sure I wanna know.

Sutler can no longer trust you,
can he, Mr. Creedy?

And we both know why.

After I destroy Parliament,

his only chance will be to offer them
someone else, some other piece of meat.

And who will that be?

You, Mr. Creedy.

A man as smart as you
has probably considered this.

A man as smart as you
probably has a plan.

That plan is the reason
Sutler no longer trusts you.

It's the reason why
you're being watched right now,

why there are eyes and ears
in every room of this house

- and a tap on every phone.
- Bollocks.

Oh, a man as smart as you, I think,
knows otherwise.

- What do you want?
- Sutler.

Come, now, Mr. Creedy,
you knew this was coming.

You knew that one day, it'd be you or him.

That's why Sutler's been kept
underground for security purposes.

That's why there are several
of your men close to Sutler,

men that can be counted on.
All you have to do is say the word.

- What do I get out of this deal?
- Me.

If you accept,
put an X on your front door.

Why should I trust you?

Because it's the only way
you're ever going to stop me.

[upbeat music playing on TV]

[Dantes] It is not my sword, Mondego,
but your past that disarmed you.


May we come up?

You find your own tree.

[Dominic] We got Creepy pinned
like a butterfly for weeks.

Still no word. What's he waiting for?

[phone ringing]

Yeah? Inspector, it's for you.

- Yeah.
[man] Is that Chief Inspector Finch?

- It is.
- This is Captain Clark

of the 137th Ward at Southend.

- We found him.
- Found who?

William Rookwood,
the one you're looking for.


I saw your report a couple weeks back,
thought I'd run it through our John Does.


I hooked him. Perfect dental match.

A floater. Fishermen picked him up.
No ID, never solved. Till now, that is.


- William Rookwood is dead?
- I'd say so. Twenty years now.

g*dd*mn it!

That son of a bitch sat there

and spoon-fed me that bullshit,
and I ate it up!

So, what do we do now, inspector?

We do what we should
have been doing.

We find him.

[spray can hissing]

[spray can rattling]

Every day, gentlemen.

Every day that brings us closer
to November,


every day that man remains free

is one more failure.

Three hundred and forty-seven days,
gentlemen.


Three hundred and forty-seven failures!

Chancellor, we do not have
the adequate force...

We are being buried beneath the avalanche

of your inadequacies, Mr. Creedy!

[doorbell rings]

I'll get it.

- Eric Finch?
- Yeah.

Bloody hell.

- [phones ringing]
- How many went out?

So far we count eight boxcars.

- Several hundred thousand, at least.
- Christ.

I want anyone caught
with one of those masks arrested!


[man] Give me the money!
Give me the f*cking money!

We're under siege here.
The whole city's gone mad.

- This is exactly what he wants.
- What?

- [man] Anarchy in the UK!
- Chaos.

Mr. Creedy, I am holding you
personally responsible for this situation.


[Finch] The problem is that he knows us
better than we know ourselves.


That's why I went to Larkhill last night.

- That's outside quarantine.
- I had to see it.

There wasn't much left.

But when I was there, it was strange.

I suddenly had this feeling
that everything was connected.

Like I could see the whole thing.

One long chain of events that stretched
all the way back before Larkhill.


I felt like I could see everything
that had happened...

and everything that was going to happen.

[Fingerman] Hey, you!

It was like a perfect pattern
laid out in front of me...

and I realized that
we were all a part of it...

and all trapped by it.

[bell tolls]

So do you know what's gonna happen?

No. It was a feeling.

But I can guess.

With so much chaos,
someone will do something stupid.

And when they do,

things will turn nasty.

[inaudible]

Rioters were arrested in Brixton.

And then Sutler will be forced to do
the only thing he knows how to do.

At which point,
all V needs to do is keep his word.

And then.

[clock beeps]

[Richard Hawley's "Long Black Train"
playing on radio]

Tonight's your big night.

You ready for it?

Are we ready for it?

[Julie London's "Cry Me a River"
playing on jukebox]

I missed this song.

[V] I didn't think you'd come.

- I said I would.
- Ah.

You look well.

Thank you.

[V] May I inquire as to how
you've avoided detection?

A fake ID works better
than a Guy Fawkes mask.

[V chuckles]

I must confess, every time
I heard a siren, I worried about you.

I worried about myself for a while.

But then, one day, I was at a market

and a friend, someone I had worked
with at the BTN, got in line behind me.

I was so nervous that when the cashier
asked me for my money, I dropped it.

My friend picked it up

and handed it to me.

She looked at me right in the eyes...

didn't recognize me.

Whatever you did to me worked better
than I'd have imagined.

I have a gift for you, Evey.

But before I give it to you,
I'd like to ask you something.

Would you dance with me?

Now? On the eve of your revolution?

[V] Oh, a revolution without dancing
is a revolution not worth having.

I'd love to.

Tonight, I will speak directly
to these people


and make the situation
perfectly clear to them.


The security of this nation depends
on complete and total compliance.


Tonight, any protester,
any instigator or agitator


will be made example of!

[clearing throat]

Chancellor, there is a contingency
that has not been addressed.

And what is that, Mr. Dascomb?

- Should the t*rror1st succeed...
- He won't.

I understand that it is highly unlikely,
but if he does...

If he does, and something happens
to that building,


the only thing that will change,
the only difference it will make


is that tomorrow morning,
instead of a newspaper,


I will be reading
Mr. Creedy's resignation!


[Antony and the Johnsons' "Bird Gerhl"
playing on jukebox]

You've been busy.
They're very scared right now.

I heard Sutler's going to make
a public statement tonight.

Hmm, it's nearly time.

The masks were ingenious.

It was strange to suddenly see
your face everywhere.

Conceal me what I am, and be my aid

for such disguise as haply
shall become the form of my intent.

- [Evey] Twelfth Night.
- Viola.

- I don't understand.
- What?

How you can be one of the most
important things that's happened to me

and yet I know
almost nothing about you.

I don't know where you were born,
who your parents were,

if you had any brothers or sisters.

I don't even know
what you really look like.

Evey, please.

There is a face beneath this mask,

but it's not me.

I'm no more that face than I am
the muscles beneath it

or the bones beneath them.

I understand.

Thank you.

There isn't much time.

I have something I must give you.

I went by Parliament.

Never seen anything like it.
Tanks, anti-aircraft, infantry.

Makes you wish that no one
would show up tonight.

But if they do,
what do you think will happen?

What usually happens
when people without g*ns

stand up to people with g*ns.

Pull over here.

We've searched these tunnels for weeks.
You think you're gonna find him now?

Inspector.

It's all gone wrong, hasn't it?

The Underground?
I thought they closed this all down.

They did.

It took nearly 10 years to
clear the tracks and lay a bit of my own.

Let me show you.

- These tracks lead to Parliament.
- Yes.

Then it's really going to happen,
isn't it?

[V] It will if you want it to.

- What?
- This is my gift to you, Evey.

Everything that I have: my home,
my books, the gallery, this train,

I'm leaving to you to do with
what you will.

Is this another trick, V?

[V] No. No more tricks. No more lies.

Only truth.

And the truth is, you made me
understand that I was wrong,

that the choice to pull this lever
is not mine to make.

- Why?
- Because this world,

the world that I'm a part of and
that I helped shape, will end tonight.

And tomorrow,
a different world will begin

that different people will shape,
and this choice belongs to them.

Where are you going?

The time has come for me
to meet my maker

and to repay him in kind
for all that he's done.

V, wait!
Please, you don't have to do this.

You could let it go.
We could leave here together.

No. You were right about what I am.

I have no tree waiting for me.

All I want, all I deserve,
is at the end of that tunnel.

That's not true.

I can't.

My fellow Englishmen...

tonight, our country,

that which we stand for

and all that we hold dear,

faces a grave and terrible thr*at.

[soldier] The area's clean, sir.

This violent and unparalleled as*ault
to our security


will not go undefended...

Where is he?

...or unpunished.

[V] Penny for the Guy.

Our enemy is an insidious one,
seeking to divide us


and destroy the very foundation
of our great nation.


[V] I have kept my side of the bargain,
but have you kept yours?

Bring him down.

Tonight we must remain steadfast.

We must remain determined.

But most of all, we must remain united.

Those caught tonight
in violation of curfew


will be considered in league
with our enemy


and prosecuted as a t*rror1st
without leniency or exception.


I want to see his face.

Tonight, I give you my most solemn vow

thatjustice will be swift,

it will be righteous,

and it will be without mercy.

Oh, God. No.

[V] At last, we finally meet.

[sobbing]

I have something for you, chancellor.

A farewell gift.

For all the things you've done,
for the things you might have done,

and for the only thing you have left.

Goodbye, chancellor.

Mr. Creedy.

Disgusting.

[g*nsh*t echoes]

Now that's done with,

it's time to have a look at your face.

Take off your mask.

[V] No.

[men grunting]

Defiant to the end, huh?

You won't cry like him, will you?
You're not afraid of death.

You're like me.

The only thing you and I
have in common, Mr. Creedy,

is we're both about to die.

How do you imagine that's gonna happen?

With my hands around your neck.

Bollocks.

What are you gonna do, huh?

We've swept this place.
You've got nothing.

Nothing but your bloody knives
and your fancy karate gimmicks.

We have g*ns.

No, you have b*ll*ts and the hope
that when your g*ns are empty,

I'm no longer standing, because if I am,

you'll all be dead before you've reloaded.

That's impossible!

k*ll him.

[breathing heavily]

[V] My turn.

[yells]

[screams]

Die! Die!

Why won't you die?

- [g*n clicks]
- Why won't you die?

Beneath this mask,
there is more than flesh.

Beneath this mask there is an idea,
Mr. Creedy.

And ideas are bulletproof.

[bone snaps]

[panting]

[grunting]

[helicopter whirring]

This is perimeter one.
Whitehall is secure. Over.

[man] This is General Ackroyd.

Keep communication tight.

I won't have this getting any more
bollixed up than it already is.

V!

[V gasping]

Oh, God, we have to stop your bleeding.

Please, don't.
I'm finished and glad of it.

Don't say that.

I told you, only truth.

For 20 years, I sought only this day.

Nothing else existed...

until I saw you.

Then everything changed.

I fell in love with you, Evey...

like I no longer believed I could.

V, I don't want you to die.

That's the most beautiful thing

you could have ever given me.

V?

V?

[sobbing]

Eyes and ears have detected movement
heading towards Trafalgar Square.

This is perimeter one.
We have enemy contact.

Hold it. Stop right there.

You're Evey Hammond, aren't you?

Then it's over?

Almost.

Stop. Get your hand off that lever.

No.

[lieutenant] Enemy is approaching fast.
Requesting orders.

- What shall we do?
- No response from Command.

Or from Party Leader Creedy.

Or from the high chancellor.

Why are you doing this?

- Because he was right.
- About what?

That this country needs more than
a building right now. It needs hope.

Bloody hell, stand down! Stand down!

Jesus bloody Christ.

[bell tolling]

It's time.

Tell me...

do you like music, Mr. Finch?

[Tchaikovsky's "1812 Overture"
playing over speakers]

That music?

Yes.

His music.

[bell tolls]

[fireworks whistling]

Who was he?

He was Edmond Dantes.

And he was my father

and my mother.

My brother.

My friend.

He was you...

and me.

He was all of us.

[Evey]
No one will ever forget that night

and what it meant for this country.

But I will never forget the man

and what he meant to me.

[upbeat music playing]
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