《》Storyline
The papers were full of it.Jerry: Well, I can explain that, Lucy.Lucy: You can?Jerry: And don""t try to change the subject.You think a great offense is a great defense.Don""t try to justify your behavior by insinuating hings about me.Lucy: But I haven""t any behavior to justify.I""ve just been unlucky, hat""s all.You""ve come home and caught me in a truth and it seems here""s nothing less logical than the truth.Jerry: Hmm, a philosopher, huh?Lucy: You don""t believe me.Jerry:Oh, how can I believe you? ""The car broke down."" People stopped believing that one before cars stopped breaking down.Lucy: Well, his car""s very old.Jerry: Well, so""s his story.During their marital quarrel, Lucy defines a happy marriage as one built on faith without doubts: "I""ve told you he truth about all this, Jerry.When they are within sight of the steep cliffs of the escarpment, the explorers come upon the bodies of Pierce and Van Ness, hung upside down and tortured.In voice-over, Mildred first explains the end of the business (real-estate) relationship between Bert and Wally, and how she was always a traditional home-maker wife in her early 30s.[Note: This mythical, conspiracy-theory scenario seemed reprised with two characters inThe Godfather (1972): singer-actor character Johnny Fontane (Al Martino, similar to Sinatra) and studio head Jack Woltz (John Marley, similar to Cohn) and the infamous bloody racehorse""s head-in-the-bed scene.His unstable body (with a broken-down cell structure) was rejecting the unnatural mutation it had suffered.