Darling (1965) Poster

(1965)

Dirk Bogarde: Robert Gold

Photos 

Quotes 

  • Diana Scott : Taxi!

    Robert Gold : We're not taking a taxi.

    Diana Scott : Why not?

    Robert Gold : I don't take whores in taxis.

    Diana Scott : What do mean?

    Robert Gold : That's what you are isn't it? A little whore! Isn't it?

  • Robert Gold : Your idea of fidelity is not having more than one man in a bed at the same time.

  • Robert Gold : You're a whore, baby, that's all. Just a whore - and I don't take whores in taxis.

  • Diana Scott : You must lead such an interesting life.

    Robert Gold : Being a professional question mark?

    Diana Scott : Oh, it's better than being a professional bosom!

  • Diana Scott : Oh, it should be so easy to be happy, shouldn't it? It should be the easiest thing in the world.

    Robert Gold : It should be.

    Diana Scott : I wonder why it isn't? Maybe it is?

  • Diana Scott : I didn't know whether you'd come.

    Robert Gold : I was always easily seduced.

  • Robert Gold : You bitch! You filthy little bitch!

    Diana Scott : Enjoy yourself. You've got no right to call me anything!

    Robert Gold : I have every right to call you everything!

    Diana Scott : Oh have you? We're not married! At least, not to each other!

  • Diana Scott : Thank you so much for letting me do the "Finished Product." It's a very good program.

    Robert Gold : You really think so?

    Diana Scott : I thought I looked ghastly; but, it was a super program.

    Robert Gold : I thought you looked super and the program looked ghastly. What's more - I'm right too.

    Diana Scott : No. I thought you looked frightfully lean and intelligent.

    Robert Gold : I am frightfully lean and intelligent. Not that it helps.

  • Diana Scott : What do want to do then?

    Robert Gold : I don't know. I do know. I don't know.

    Diana Scott : I know.

  • Robert Gold : Now, Mr. Southgate, you have the reputation of being something of a 'lone wolf.' Is this a protest against the establishment?

    Walter Southgate : It's true. I have always preferred to be a mouse and walk by itself; rather than a member of a group of literary lions - always licking each other or washing each other behind the ears - and biting each other. And, as you know, they're behind bars in a cultural zoo!

  • Diana Scott : Your books have arrived.

    Robert Gold : And your records.

  • Diana Scott : Darling, two of the most gorgeous negroes you've ever seen have just gone up the stairs. What on earth is going on up there?

    Robert Gold : They're having a diplomatic reception.

    Diana Scott : Oh.

    Robert Gold : Would you like to have a diplomatic reception?

    Diana Scott : What a good idea!

  • Diana Scott : You look older.

    Robert Gold : You don't.

  • Diana Scott : You ba-stard! You just used me!

    Robert Gold : You - used - me. It's a moot point.

  • Diana Scott : Oh yes, I hate convention! You can't breathe. You have to break away.

    Robert Gold : But isn't the break away of yesterday the convention of today?

    Diana Scott : Well, then you have to break away again!

    Robert Gold : Just for the sake of it? Isn't that conventional? In the way young people do it today; I mean, in the way they dress and the way they dance, the way they're talking. That's more conventional than what they are trying to get away from.

    Diana Scott : Do you say the way I dress is conventional?

    Robert Gold : Well, you're dressed in the height of fashion. Your hair is...

    Diana Scott : Oh, I just wash and curl it!

  • Robert Gold : Buried treasure.

    Robert Gold : Oh?

    Diana Scott : Heads we do. Tails we don't. - We do.

  • Diana Scott : My friends seemed to get on very well with your friends.

    Robert Gold : Because your friends are so pretty.

    Diana Scott : And your's so intelligent.

  • Diana Scott : I'm so frightened sometimes.

    Robert Gold : What do you mean you're so frightened sometimes? Why? What are you frightened of?

    Diana Scott : I am so happy.

  • Diana Scott : What a party. What a wake!

    Robert Gold : What a bunch of zombies.

  • Diana Scott : You are jealous.

    Robert Gold : Who knows what I am.

    Diana Scott : Well, you're the one I bed with.

    Robert Gold : At present.

    Diana Scott : I hate you! What a thing to say!

    Robert Gold : Well, what do you want me to say? You know, as well as I do, what you're up to.

  • Robert Gold : How do you feel?

    Diana Scott : Empty.

  • Robert Gold : One day I'm going to have to bail you out of clink - for indecent exposure.

    Diana Scott : Would you?

    Robert Gold : Of course, I would.

  • Robert Gold : And you went down well?

    Diana Scott : Like a dozen oysters! I think.

  • Diana Scott : Look at this place. This rat trap! I'm not going to be a prisoner any longer!

    Robert Gold : So, you're the prisoner, are you?

    Diana Scott : Yes! Prying in my life, looking in my handbag, spying on me!

    Robert Gold : The quickest way of getting to know you.

  • Diana Scott : What will you write about?

    Robert Gold : I'll write about you, about myself, about my wife and my children. They all played large parts, you know.

    Diana Scott : I played the *largest* part!

    Robert Gold : Certainly the most dramatic.

  • Robert Gold : An American statesman recently said that Britain was a country which had lost pride in itself. Have we so much to be ashamed of, I wonder? Let's find out. - What are you ashamed of in Britain today?

    Interviewee: Teenage Boy : Oh, I can't think of nothin'.

    Robert Gold : Nothing?

    Interviewee: Teenage Boy : Well, the traffic and that. Its a bit congested.

    Robert Gold : That's the worst thing as far as you're concerned?

    Interviewee: Teenage Boy : Yeah.

    Interviewee: Bristol Worker : Well, some people don't work hard enough. Well, I work hard in Bristol. For one person. I do it for one person. Her name's Margaret Robinson...

    Interviewee: Bobby : Well, everyone these days wants something for nothing. They don't want to put anything out for what they're striving to get out of it.

    Interviewee: London Man : Um, talking as a Londoner, I think, in London, itself, the amount of - how rife homosexuality has become, in London, itself. I would say again, in retrospect, that a few years back, that, again, two or three years ago, you were very blatantly approached by different people in different places .

    Robert Gold : Really? And it does, sort of, it still, it still - you say it's worse?

    Interviewee: London Man : I think, in actual fact, it has become worse over a period of time. But, it's one of those things you have to live with, I dare say so.

See also

Release Dates | Official Sites | Company Credits | Filming & Production | Technical Specs


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