Dian Fossey: Do you think I'm weird? Bob Campbell: I do. Bob Campbell: Crawling around the mud in this climate after a bunch of gorillas might be perceived as weird. Dian Fossey: It makes me look like some real weirdo. Dian Fossey: Why am I in this movie so much? Bob Campbell: You're the story. Would you like to go to the movies? Dian Fossey: Can I have a bath first? Bob Campbell: You can have a bath second. Dian Fossey: What?īob Campbell: You, my beautiful, are becoming a legend. Bob Campbell: Those puddle jumpers can fly in anything. Dian Fossey: What else will you do in Nairobi? Bob Campbell: What do you mean? Dian Fossey: Nothing. Bob Campbell: I won't even ask why, but I'll try to get some for you in Nairobi. Bob Campbell: Does it matter? Dian Fossey: Apparently not.ĭian Fossey: I need eight more Halloween masks - only red ones. Bob Campbell: How did you know I was married? Dian Fossey: The night you arrived, you shook the rain off your parka outside the door so you wouldn't get the floor wet. Dian Fossey: It most certainly is.ĭian Fossey: It's nice to see a married man who can sew. Six whole weeks, and not a single gorilla. Dian Fossey: Maybe I'm just no good at this. Louis Leakey: I know you're not an imbecile, but we must remember the elementary steps one overlooks in situations like this. They hold a clue to the way man adapted to his environment. These animals are being methodically wiped off the face of the Earth. Dear Miss Fossey, surely you didn't expect the beggars to come out and line up so you could count them. I'm not discouraged, but I'm starting to think I'll spend my six months in Africa without ever seeing any." Dr. The only guide we've got is Schaller's book. We're covering a lot of ground, but making very little progress. Leakey, Sembagare and I are doing our best to track the gorillas. What the hell have you been doing for the last five hours? Sembagare: I've been waiting for you to show me.ĭian Fossey: "March 23, 1967. Dian Fossey: What? Hey! Hey! That's great. Sembagare: Yes, of buffalo, antelope and elephant. George Schaller's book says we count the gorillas' night nests to get the census. Sembagare: How can I forget? I never knew. Dian Fossey: Oh yeah? They wouldn't be the first.ĭian Fossey: How big are these night nests? Sembagare: I don't know. Dian Fossey: What's your name? Sembagare: Sembagare Dian Fossey: Sem-ba-ga-re Sembagare: I am the finest tracker. Dian Fossey: You speak English? The priest? Sembagare: Saint Christopher. If they don't go, Dr Leakey, I don't go.ĭr. Those cases contain my hairdryer, my makeup, my underwear and my brassieres. Dian Fossey: Now wait a minute! I quit my job, left my fiancé, to say nothing of my appendix and flew halfway around the world. They'll be sent up next fortnight with the rest of the gear. Dian Fossey: Thank you, that's very nice of you. Dian Fossey: Dr Leakey, I just spent 35 hours on 4 different airplanes. Louis Leakey: Yes, to make it by sundown. A daily scalding might just make this climate bearable.ĭialogue Dian Fossey: You mean we go now? Dr.
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