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Blood Diamond (2006) Movie Script

    Dia.
    English boys don't go
    to school every day.
    Teacher say this country
    was founded as a utopia.
    Do you know
    what that word means, Papa?
    Well, she says someday
    when the war is over...
    ...our world will be a paradise.
    And all this you learn in one day?
    And math and science.
    This is too much learning. Tomorrow,
    you will stay home and mend the nets, yes?
    No, Papa.
    What? So now you want
    to go to school every day?
    - Stay.
    - Papa.
    - Stay!
    - Papa!
    Jassie!
    Solomon.
    Come, come, come.
    Pick it up. Quick.
    - Papa! Papa!
    - Jassie.
    - Dia, run!
    - Papa!
    - Papa! Papa!
    - Dia, run!
    Papa!
    Bring forward the next one. Bastard.
    Bring forward the next one.
    - Long sleeve or short sleeve?
    - No.
    Young man. You must understand.
    The government wants you to vote, okay?
    They gonna tell you say,
    "The future is in your hands."
    We now the future.
    So we take your hands.
    - No.
    - No more hands, no more voting.
    Chop him.
    Spread the word.
    The Revolutionary United Front is coming.
    - RUF!
    - RUF! RUF!
    Bring forward the next one.
    Bring him forward. Bring him forward.
    Long sleeve or short sleeve?
    - Short sleeve!
    - Chop him.
    Hold on, hold on. Wait, wait, wait.
    Not this one. Look at him.
    - Put him in the truck.
    - Let's go.
    Bring him to the mines.
    He can work. He can work.
    Move, move, move.
    Next one, next one, next one.
    Throughout the history of Africa...
    ...whenever a substance
    of value is found...
    ...the locals die
    in great number and in misery.
    Now, this was true of ivory,
    rubber, gold and oil.
    It is now true of diamonds.
    According to a devastating report
    by Global Witness...
    ...these stones are being used
    to purchase arms and finance civil war.
    We must act to prohibit...
    ...the direct or indirect import
    of all rough diamonds from conflict zones.
    May I remind you...
    ...that the U.S. is responsible for two-thirds
    of all diamond purchases worldwide...
    ...and I don't anticipate
    that demand diminishing.
    We must remember
    that these stones...
    ...comprise only a small percentage
    of the legitimate diamond industry...
    ...whose trade is crucial to the economies
    of many emerging nations.
    The Freetown government
    and their white masters...
    ...have raped your land
    to feed their greed.
    RUF have freed you.
    - No more slave and master here.
    - It's true.
    Current estimates are that conflict stones
    account for only 15 percent of the market.
    But in a multi-billion-dollar-a-year
    industry...
    ...that means hundreds of millions
    of dollars are available...
    ...for weapons in these conflict zones.
    RUF is fighting for the people!
    RUF is fighting for Sierra Leone!
    Any bastard think he would joke
    with me diamond, I go cut he throat.
    Stop!
    And we are joined today
    by members of that diamond industry...
    ...who wholeheartedly
    endorse your proposal.
    I hope you join me
    in applauding their presence here.
    Mr. Van De Kaap and Mr. Simmons.
    Give it to me.
    Don't worry. We'll be fine, huh?
    Listen. You take off
    as soon as I'm out the door.
    You don't land
    until I raise you on the sat phone.
    You be careful, Danny.
    Don't worry. They want these guns
    too much to do anything stupid.
    Where is Commander Zero?
    I am Captain Rambo.
    Right. Right, I've seen your films, huh?
    I'm looking for Commander Zero, huh?
    He's inside. You talk to me.
    You are here to help us
    in our struggle against the government.
    I'm here to do business
    with Commander Zero, all right?
    All right.
    You are the man, huh?
    You are the man.
    Here, huh?
    Hey. I'm talking to you! Stop!
    - Commander Zero.
    - Hey.
    - I go kill you, eh?
    - It's fine, huh? It's fine.
    Commander Zero. Commander Zero.
    Mr. Archer, come here.
    You get something for me?
    And yourself get something for me, huh?
    Are you craze?
    You get for pay me first for them.
    This no fine, huh?
    This no fine.
    ...and their new weapons, huh?
    Maybe I could kill you
    and take what you bring.
    Then you get one more dead body...
    ...instead of airplane
    way full with grenade launchers.
    So I'm think I'm gonna go
    to them government.
    Them government,
    at least them go pay me, huh?
    Wait, wait. Wait, my friend.
    This is the thing you want? Here.
    So many I not know
    what to do with them all.
    Hey, Archer, next time,
    you bring satellite TV, eh?
    - I wanna see Baywatch.
    - Yeah.
    Yeah. Yeah.
    Hello, hello, hello.
    Papers, please.
    Danny Archer, National Geographic.
    You crossing into Liberia.
    I've got a letter from the minister of interior
    and a Liberian visa as well.
    I'm doing a story on the Marrakaz,
    who, as you know...
    ...are allowed to cross the border
    in order to get into grazing grounds.
    You ever read National Geographic, huh?
    - You're under arrest for smuggling.
    - No, no, no.
    Listen here, my friend.
    Listen here, all right?
    I am good friends
    with Colonel Coetzee.
    Colonel Coetzee would not be pleased
    that you've interfered with his business.
    Now, you know who I am, all right?
    You don't wanna make trouble for me
    or my friends, all right?
    Now, look, why don't I just
    look the other way, all right?
    You take one or two of those stones
    and get something lacquer for the wife...
    ...or maybe the mistress, all right?
    We'll solve the problem right here, huh?
    We'll go back to Freetown
    and ask Colonel Coetzee...
    ...how he wishes
    to thank his business associate.
    Guys, take him away.
    Hey! What the fuck?
    What's going on there?
    Come on! Fix that shit now!
    Wasting my time here!
    What in the shit is that?
    Fuck that stuff! Fix that shit!
    Damn, now need to work.
    - Can't work. What's going on there?
    - Boss.
    - Fix that thing.
    - I wanna go toilet. I must go now, now.
    - I can't hold it in, boss.
    - Go, go.
    Get to work. Go to work, go to work.
    Fuckheads wasting my time now.
    How am I work in this shit?
    Stop!
    Spread your fingers.
    Open.
    Make it quick.
    Give it to me.
    Give it to me.
    The government troops are coming!
    Go, go, go--!
    No, no, no!
    No! I'm not a rebel!
    RUF is coming! RUF is coming!
    RUF is coming! RUF is coming!
    RUF is coming!
    RUF is coming! RUF is coming!
    RUF is coming!
    RUF is coming! RUF is coming!
    RUF is coming!
    RUF! RUF! RUF!
    RUF! RUF! RUF!
    RUF! RUF! RUF!
    RUF! RUF! RUF!
    Hey.
    What did you do with it?
    I'm talking to you, you hear me?
    Where the diamond? The pink one.
    - I saw you take it.
    - You're mad. I do not know you.
    Liar! I saw it with my own eyes.
    This big. Biggest I have ever seen.
    My brothers, I go give $1000...
    ...to the man who cuts the diamond
    out of this bastard.
    You the craze! You the craze!
    Where is the diamond?
    Where is the diamond?
    Do you see a diamond?
    You devils have taken my family!
    My home! I done lost everything!
    Here, look. What is left?
    What is left?
    If there is a diamond,
    you are the one who has taken it!
    Liar! The man is a liar!
    I know your name, Solomon Vandy!
    You have a name!
    You have a family!
    And I'll catch them!
    And I'll find them!
    Please tell me you brought me
    cigarettes, bru, please.
    I just have to tell you, Danny.
    The colonel's not going to be happy
    about you losing the diamonds.
    Forget the colonel.
    There's a fisherman in there, all right?
    He might've found a pink. Big one.
    What about the colonel?
    He'll want that stone.
    Screw the colonel.
    I'll contact our friends in London.
    If this stone is as big as I think,
    we're gonna need a real buyer, all right?
    What? What?
    London wants nothing more
    to do with you.
    "Arrest in Sierra Leone of Daniel Archer,
    former mercenary and smuggler..."
    "Retains close ties
    to Van De Kaap diamond cartel.
    Sources say they deny
    any affiliation whatso--"
    Fucking hell.
    Listen, his name
    is Solomon Vandy, all right?
    Van De Kaap is gonna want that stone,
    whatever they say. You just get him out.
    Get him out.
    Yeah, can you tell Mr. Simmons
    that Danny Archer called. Right.
    Archer. A-R-C-H-E-R.
    Afternoon, darling, huh?
    Big white man all alone.
    That is no fine.
    - I'm safe, huh? No HIV.
    - Yeah, yeah. I've heard that one before.
    Archer, I know where to get
    nice baby diamond just for you.
    - Not now, next time.
    - Come on, Archer.
    I said not now, next time. Bugger off.
    Solomon Vandy?
    What do you want?
    It seems you made a friend in prison.
    - Hey.
    - How the body, Mr. Archer?
    The body fine, M'Ed.
    So you want something nice, huh?
    The best you can get ahold of, all right?
    Take me a few days,
    but I go find you something special.
    All right. You hear
    they took Marampa yesterday?
    - Really?
    - Now, come on.
    You know every move they make.
    When are they gonna hit us?
    Oh, I imagine they come
    do some shopping very soon.
    Yeah, yeah.
    Got any smokes back there?
    Yeah.
    Who's that, huh?
    All right.
    - Can I offer you a cigarette?
    - Oh, no, thanks.
    You listening to this?
    I am profoundly sorry.
    The world is falling apart,
    and all we hear about is Blowjobgate.
    I believe he's sorry.
    When was the last time the world
    wasn't falling apart, huh?
    A cynic. Why don't you sit down
    and make me miserable?
    - Danny Archer.
    - Maddy Bowen.
    - Pleased to meet you.
    - Nice to meet you.
    - American, huh?
    - Guilty.
    Well, Americans usually are.
    Says the white South African?
    I'm from Rhodesia.
    We say Zimbabwe now,
    don't we?
    - Do we?
    - Last time I checked.
    Don't tell me,
    you're here to make a difference.
    - And you're here to make a buck?
    - I'm here for lack of a better idea.
    - That's a shame.
    - Not really.
    Peace Corps types only
    stay around long enough...
    ...to realize they're not helping anyone.
    Government only wants
    to stay in power...
    ...until they've stolen enough
    to go into exile somewhere else.
    And the rebels, they're not sure
    they want to take over.
    Otherwise,
    they'd have to govern this mess.
    - But TIA, right, M'Ed?
    - TIA.
    What's TIA?
    - "This is Africa," huh?
    - Right.
    - You want another?
    - Sure.
    So which one are you?
    - Smuggler?
    - Am I?
    Somehow you don't strike me
    as the UNICEF type.
    How about soldier of fortune?
    Or is that too much of a clich?
    Diamonds?
    - If I told you I was a missionary...?
    - For Van De Kaap?
    Better watch that type of talk,
    Miss Bowen.
    In America, it's bling-bling,
    but out here, it's bling-bang, huh?
    I wouldn't want you
    getting in any trouble.
    How much trouble
    do you think I would get into...
    ...for talking about blood diamonds?
    - You're a journalist.
    - That's right.
    Piss off, huh?
    For five years, this country has reported
    almost no diamond exports...
    ...while Liberia, right next door,
    has exported 2 billion dollars' worth.
    Very odd, considering that Liberia
    has no diamonds to speak of.
    I'm shocked.
    Van De Kaap denies trading blood
    diamonds, but admits it's impossible...
    ...to tell where a diamond comes from
    unless their smuggler gets caught.
    What do you want from me, huh?
    You know all about Van De Kaap.
    Help me out. Off the record.
    Well, off the record, I like to get kissed
    before I get fucked, huh?
    Shit.
    - Cordell. How is it, Shona?
    - Long time, pal.
    - How's Alice?
    - She's well, thanks.
    Tim must be in school, right?
    - Big kids, big problems, you know?
    - Yeah, yeah.
    I heard you got into a spot of trouble
    in the bush, huh?
    Well, you know the bush, right, bru?
    - Company doing well?
    - Can't complain.
    Eleven wars in the continent.
    We're keeping busy.
    So, what, you're here on holiday, huh?
    - How's the colonel?
    - He sends his regards.
    Good, good. Score us a loose, huh?
    Smoking will kill you, bru.
    Only if I live, right?
    That's for breaking my TV, bru.
    Tell the colonel he'll get his money.
    I'll come see him soon.
    Ten more.
    Come. Come.
    Go on.
    Dia. Dia. Come here.
    Get away from there.
    Go. Go, Mama.
    Stay down.
    Excuse me,
    my name's Solomon Vandy--
    - Check the list.
    - I have checked the list.
    - File papers at the Office for Refugees.
    - Sir, I have filed papers with the office.
    Then God help you,
    because I can't.
    - Please, sir--
    - Next.
    - Sir-- Sir, no, please.
    - Hey, hey. Me, me, me.
    Husband here. One year we look.
    Hurry, Mom. Go.
    Dia! Dia!
    - Jassie!
    - Dia!
    - Mama!
    - Dia!
    Jassie! Mama!
    He's been waiting.
    What took you?
    What are you gonna do,
    shoot me right here, huh, Shona?
    Now, don't be a wanker, man. Get in.
    - Hello, Danny.
    - Colonel.
    You look well.
    Clean living and a pure heart,
    I suppose, huh?
    Walk with me.
    It seems the rebels have taken back
    the diamond fields, Danny.
    The government
    of Sierra Leone has contracted us...
    ...to go in there
    and take the rebels down.
    So you sell the rebels weapons...
    ...the government hires you
    when they use them? Nice, sir.
    I assume you're asking
    for mining concessions, huh?
    We save the government,
    they show their gratitude.
    And you get rich, right?
    How long have I known you, Danny?
    I was... I was 19, sir.
    And you survived.
    A lot of boys didn't. Why is that?
    Just lucky, I guess.
    No, you were a good soldier.
    But I made you better, didn't I?
    Yes, sir. Yes, you did.
    And over the years,
    didn't I protect you...
    ...teach you about diamonds,
    cut you in on the deals?
    - Some might call it that, yeah.
    - But not you...
    ...because you done with me now, eh?
    On to bigger things.
    I need a man that knows
    his way around up there.
    Unless, of course,
    you wanna cut me in. Something pink?
    Sir...
    Our deal went bad,
    and you owe me money.
    I'll take a stone as payment.
    Look, do you think if I found a stone
    like that, I'd still be on this continent?
    - Come on.
    - Danny, give me your hand.
    That's red earth. It's in our skin.
    The Shona say the color
    comes from all the blood...
    ...that's being spilled
    fighting over the land.
    This is home.
    You'll never leave Africa.
    If you say so, sir.
    So, what did you do, bury it?
    Yeah. Yeah, I would have
    buried it, huh?
    - What are you talking about?
    - What am I talking about? Come on, bru.
    I'm late for work.
    Pink, huh? The biggest one
    he'd ever seen.
    You were in the mining camps,
    weren't you, bru?
    Why else would that rebel with
    the bandaged arm make up such a story?
    Go ask him.
    Thank you.
    Your mothers and fathers,
    your brothers and sisters are dead.
    - You are dead! You have been reborn.
    - No!
    - We are your family now.
    - No! No!
    Your parents are weak.
    They're the farmers.
    They're the fishermen.
    They've done nothing
    but suck the blood from this country.
    But you are the heroes
    who will save this nation.
    You are not children anymore.
    You're men.
    No one has ever given you respect...
    ...but with this in your hand,
    they go fear you.
    If you do not get
    the respect you deserve...
    ...you will take it
    by shedding their blood.
    - Repeat after me, shed their blood.
    - Shed their blood.
    - Louder! Shed their blood! Shed their blood!
    - Shed their blood!
    Make them hear you in Freetown.
    Shed their blood! Shed their blood!
    Shed their blood! Shed their blood!
    Shed their blood!
    - Dia Vandy, stand up.
    - Shed their blood! Shed their blood!
    - Shed their blood! Shed their blood!
    - Put your hand on the gun.
    Shed their blood!
    Shed their blood!
    Shed their blood!
    Shed their blood!
    - Shed their blood! Shed their blood!
    - Now squeeze the trigger.
    Come on, Dia. Pull the trigger.
    Pull the trigger!
    I know, I know.
    It's hard to be a man.
    Sit up. Come.
    But you are a soldier
    of the revolution now.
    And I am your commander.
    Whatever you need...
    ...guns, CDs, food...
    ...come to me.
    I will take care of you.
    Today, you are promoted
    to the rank of captain.
    Dia Vandy...
    ...boss man.
    How's it, bru?
    - You got something for me, huh?
    - Yeah.
    - So, what's new, M'Ed?
    - Fucking RUF.
    Tried to hit the government building
    across the street.
    Shit, man, half the people
    be soldiers today, RUF tomorrow.
    - Might be time to get your family out, huh?
    - And go where?
    Just fire up the chopper
    and fly away like you people?
    This my country, man.
    We here long before you came,
    long after you gone.
    - Hi. I'm Maddy Bowen.
    - How about you dance with me?
    - No, I don't dance.
    - Neither do I. Come on.
    - So, Danny...
    - Archer.
    Archer.
    When did you first start
    moving stones? Was it Angola?
    Then you did the whole
    mercenary thing. Was that fun?
    So, what are you?
    Nihilist? Opportunist?
    Maybe I wasn't breast-fed
    as a child, huh?
    You think I haven't met
    people like you before?
    - I think you get off on people like me.
    - You think?
    When did you first start
    working for Van De Kaap?
    Christ, you never stop, do you?
    No, I never stop.
    Do you want me to stop?
    Why don't we go back to your place,
    see what's in the minibar, huh?
    I'm a print journalist. I drank it.
    Is it possible that you don't care
    how many people die...
    ...because of the deals you do?
    People here kill each other as a way of life.
    Always been like that.
    So you can just watch it
    and go about your day?
    Maybe we should all just
    write about it, then.
    Look, thanks for the dance, huh?
    - And a shot too, huh, M'Ed?
    - Sure.
    You're a hard case, huh?
    Tell me something,
    how long you been here in Africa, huh?
    Three months. And before that,
    Afghanistan and Bosnia.
    You come here
    with your laptop computer...
    ...and your malaria medicine
    and your little bottles of hand sanitizer.
    Think you're gonna change
    the outcome, huh?
    Let me tell you something.
    You sell blood diamonds too.
    - Really?
    - Yeah.
    Tell me, how is that?
    Who do you think buys
    the stones that I bring out?
    Dreamy American girls who all want
    a storybook wedding and a big, shiny rock...
    ...like the ones in the advertisements
    of your politically-correct magazines.
    So, please, don't come here
    and make judgments on me, all right?
    I provide a service. The world wants what
    we have, and they want it cheap.
    We're in business together.
    Get over yourself, darling.
    Okay, just to clarify, not all American girls
    want a storybook wedding...
    ...just like not all Africans kill each other
    as a way of life.
    And yeah, it's a shit, shit world,
    but you know what?
    Good things are done every day,
    just, apparently, not by you.
    This place is about to explode.
    I wanna spend my time
    with someone else.
    You are listening to BBC World Service.
    In Sierra Leone, Revolutionary United Front
    forces have been sighted...
    ...within 10 kilometers
    of the capital city of Freetown.
    The minister of the interior
    has expressed confidence...
    ...that the government troops
    can repel the attack.
    All foreign nationals are being advised
    to leave the country.
    There are also unconfirmed reports...
    ...that atrocities are being committed by
    both sides in the rapidly worsening situation.
    The United Nations has described
    the refugee situation as critical.
    Don't tell me you're gonna try
    and sell it yourself.
    To who?
    And for what price, my friend?
    You need my help,
    whether you like it or not.
    - What are you talking about?
    - Here, let me help you with that.
    You hear that? You hear that?
    They came into the city overnight.
    It's started.
    What are you gonna do now, huh?
    Listen, the right stone can buy anything.
    Information, safety, even freedom.
    But a big stone does not stay secret
    for very long.
    The moment you tell anyone about it,
    your life is absolutely worthless.
    The only reason you're alive is
    you haven't told anyone where it is.
    Am I right? Am I?
    Who do you think got you
    out of jail, huh?
    - That makes us partners.
    - I am not your partner!
    What if I helped you find your family?
    What do you know of my family?
    The relief agencies are useless,
    the hospitals are overwhelmed.
    - There are other ways, bru.
    - Liar.
    Look at me. I know people, huh?
    White people.
    Without me, you're just another
    black man in Africa, all right?
    Oh, shit.
    We got no time.
    What's it gonna be?
    You would say anything.
    How can I trust you?
    I don't give a fuck about you, all right?
    That diamond could be priceless!
    We split it, and you get your family.
    What's it gonna be, yes or no? Yes or no?
    - Where will we go? Where do we go?
    - Come on, follow me!
    Stay low!
    Get your ass over here!
    Wait!
    Now!
    Come on, come on.
    Come on!
    Come on.
    Fuck!
    No, this way.
    Fire!
    Fuck! Go, go, go!
    Go!
    Shit!
    No! No!
    This way.
    This way. Stay low.
    Come on. Go, go, go. Come on.
    Come on!
    It's okay. It's okay, it's okay.
    Fire!
    - Is there another way?
    - That bridge is the only way across, huh?
    So, what do we do?
    - You are RUF, huh? And I am your prisoner.
    - What do you mean?
    You wanna see your son again, don't you?
    You stay behind me.
    Wait, wait. Wait.
    Bring that pink chicken skin
    over here, huh?
    Now let me shoot that pink ass, boy.
    Where are we going?
    Lungi's under government control.
    I'm gonna try to locate a sat phone
    to get in contact with my pilot, all right?
    I have agreed to nothing.
    You're in a bit of a conundrum there,
    my friend.
    You know what that means?
    It means you have no choice.
    So you're a fisherman, huh?
    - What do you catch mostly?
    - Fish.
    Come on.
    - Hello.
    - Back away from the fence.
    Listen, I'm from
    the Cape Herald, all right?
    My wallet, my credentials,
    everything got left in Freetown.
    We barely got out with our lives.
    Can we just get through?
    Back away from the fence.
    But you are not a journalist.
    I'm trying to get us to Kono.
    - Do you understand that, huh?
    - Getting B-roll. Wait.
    Listen, I'm coming back.
    I'm coming back just now.
    How's it, my bru?
    Have you got an extra smoke?
    - Here.
    - Oh, cheers.
    I'm looking for someone, an American
    by the name of Maddy Bowen.
    - If you saw her, you would not forget it.
    - Yeah, I know her.
    - Is it?
    - Yeah.
    Can you tell her Danny Archer's looking
    for her? I've got the story she wants.
    Okay, but I'm going out for a bit.
    If I see her before, I'll tell her.
    Magic. Listen, we'll be
    right down the road, huh?
    - Sweet. Cheers, bru.
    - Cheers.
    It is as I said.
    You will say anything.
    - You don't mind waiting?
    - No worries.
    - Thank you so much. I'll just be a sec.
    - All right, Maddy.
    Hi.
    You got out.
    Yes. Hello again.
    - This is Solomon Vandy.
    - Hi.
    - Hello.
    - Nice to meet you.
    So I'm on deadline. I've been waiting
    four hours to use the phone.
    - I've got someone holding my place in line.
    - I understand. Come with me, huh?
    All right. Here it is.
    - There's a company called Tiara Diamonds.
    - Right?
    They get the stones
    that I smuggle into Liberia.
    Now, Van De Kaap
    has no visible ties to Tiara...
    ...but through a series of cross holdings
    and offshore bank accounts...
    - ...they actually own it.
    - You can prove this?
    - If you help me out, yeah.
    - Right, here it comes.
    Before you say anything,
    look at that man. You see him?
    His entire village was burned down.
    His wife and children, they got away.
    He's been working in the mining camps,
    trying to get his family back.
    He cannot get through the red tape.
    All I'm asking is this,
    that you help him, huh?
    And how do you know this man?
    - I know him. I know him.
    - Oh, come on, Archer.
    You're using him.
    I'm using him, and you are using me,
    and this is how it works, isn't it?
    Come on. Look, you've got access
    to U.N. databases.
    - You can track his family for him.
    - Why?
    This whole country's at war.
    Why should I help just one person?
    I can't believe I just said that.
    My family's here, in Guinea?
    Yes, according to the manifest.
    I do not know how to thank you.
    Thank you. Thank you.
    This is what a million people looks like.
    At the moment, the second largest
    refugee camp in Africa.
    Might catch a minute of this on CNN,
    somewhere between Sports and Weather.
    - Hello.
    - Yeah, hello?
    I've spoken with Colonel Coedoo...
    ...and highlighted the names
    we're looking for.
    - Move away.
    - What him doing?
    Okay, I'm gonna check for you.
    - Wait me there.
    - Okay, thank you.
    We are here to help you.
    This woman says she has
    spoken to Coedoo.
    An entire country made homeless.
    Two multiplied by three
    is equal to six.
    Two multiplied by four
    is equal to eight.
    Two multiplied by five
    is equal to 10.
    Two multiplied by six
    is equal to 12.
    Jassie.
    Jassie!
    Jassie!
    - Jassie.
    - Solo.
    - Jassie.
    - Solo.
    Jassie. Jassie.
    - Solomon.
    - Jassie.
    - Solomon.
    - Jassie.
    Dia. Dia.
    Where is Dia?
    Jassie!
    They took him.
    There are only two children
    on the manifest.
    - Where is my son?
    - Oh, Christ.
    Where is my son?
    - Away from the fence.
    - Where is my son?
    Move away from the fence.
    - Let them out! Let them out!
    - Keep away from the fence.
    Let them out!
    Away from the fence.
    - They'll shoot you!
    - Jassie!
    No! Solo!
    Do you want your wife and child
    to watch you die?
    Solo! Solo!
    They said they're concerned that
    some of the refugees might be rebels...
    ...so they refused to release them
    until there's a cease-fire.
    I'm so sorry, Solomon.
    What you want, Mr. Archer,
    is beyond those hills...
    ...where I buried it.
    You say the mine is on the Sewa River.
    Where exactly?
    Solomon.
    I do not need a map.
    Yeah, well, I do.
    Look, we are down here, huh?
    The press convoy
    is on its way to Kono.
    You say the diamond mine is up here.
    Where did you bury it?
    When we get to Kono,
    we're gonna have to walk, all right?
    You damn well better be able to find it.
    My son is a very good student.
    He walks five kilometers
    to the Sister School...
    ...every morning to study English.
    He's going to be a doctor one day.
    "In the 90-degree heat,
    Solomon Vandy drops to his knees...
    ...rattling the wire
    with his powerful hands."
    - What?
    - Nothing.
    Do you think I'm exploiting his grief?
    You're right. It's shit.
    It's like one of those infomercials.
    You know, the little black babies
    with swollen bellies and flies in their eyes.
    So here I've got dead mothers,
    I've got severed limbs, but it's nothing new.
    It might be enough
    to make people cry if they read it...
    ...maybe even write a check...
    ...but it's not gonna be enough
    to make it stop.
    I am sick of writing about victims,
    but it's all I can fucking do.
    Because I need facts.
    I need names. I need dates.
    I need pictures. I need bank accounts.
    People back home
    wouldn't buy a ring...
    ...if they knew it cost
    someone else their hand.
    But I can't write that story...
    ...until I get facts
    that can be verified...
    ...which is to say, until I find someone
    who will go on record.
    So if that is not you...
    ...and you're not really gonna help me,
    and we're not really gonna screw...
    ...then why don't you get the fuck
    out of my face...
    ...and let me do my work?
    Do you know that Solomon thinks
    his son's gonna be a doctor one day?
    Maybe his baby dies in that camp.
    Maybe his daughter gets raped.
    Who knows, maybe both.
    Do you realize that
    that diamond...
    ...is the only chance he has
    of getting his family out?
    - You don't give a rat's ass about his family.
    - Do you understand that?
    Listen, I need to get to Kono, all right?
    The only way
    is with the press convoy.
    I'm a journalist,
    and he's my cameraman, all right?
    - No.
    - Please, Maddy.
    - Please.
    - No!
    After I smuggle the stones
    across the border...
    ...local buyers get them
    to a middleman in Monrovia.
    Go on.
    He pays off Customs and then certifies
    that the diamonds were mined in Liberia.
    That way, they can be legally exported.
    Now, once they've reached
    the buyers in Antwerp...
    ...diamonds are brought
    to the sorting tables...
    ...no more questions are asked.
    By the time they get to India...
    ...the dirty stones are mixed with
    the clean stones from all over the world...
    ...and then they become
    like any other diamonds.
    And Van De Kaap
    knows about all this?
    Yeah.
    When I get to London,
    I meet with Simmons.
    Supply and demand. You control the supply,
    and you keep the demand high.
    - Agreed.
    - Good.
    Now, there's an underground vault...
    ...where they put all the stones
    they buy up to keep off the market...
    ...so they can keep the price high.
    If rebels wanna flood the market
    with a billion dollars' worth of rough...
    ...a company like Van De Kaap,
    who says that they're rare...
    ...can't afford to let that happen.
    Especially when they're telling
    some poor sod...
    ...he's supposed to shell out
    three months' salary...
    ...for an engagement ring.
    Now, technically speaking,
    they're not financing the war...
    ...but creating a situation
    where it pays to keep it going.
    - You understand?
    - Yes. And where's my proof?
    Names, dates and numbered accounts.
    You publish one word of this story
    before I give them the stone...
    ...and I'm dead, huh?
    After I give it to them,
    then... I leave this continent forever.
    If you don't come out
    with the diamond?
    Then write whatever you want.
    I'm already dead.
    Now, remember. All you say is,
    "I am the cameraman," all right?
    Listen, I cannot do this.
    - Why not?
    - Because I am not a journalist.
    - Of course you're not.
    - Well, then how can I say I am?
    Because you do. Because that's how
    you get your son back, all right?
    Now get on the bus. Go.
    I am the cameraman.
    You are writing about
    what is happening here?
    Yes.
    So when people in your country read it,
    they will come help us, yes?
    Probably not.
    - You heard of a Stinger?
    - What?
    Your friend, Maddy. She's like a full-on,
    heat-seeking missile, bru.
    I mean, I saw her go into Afghanistan...
    ...like about 200 clicks
    into Taliban land.
    When the military said no,
    she just took a bus, bru.
    Came back with 3000 words,
    and she still looked so good.
    - Like hot, you know?
    - All right.
    Calm down to the frantic now, huh?
    - What's that?
    - What's going on?
    Looks like it was an RPG.
    Open the door. Let us out.
    - Let's go, let's go.
    - Come on. Go, go, go.
    Go, go! Move, move, move!
    We've just happened upon
    the sight of an ambush...
    ...fifteen kilometers
    from the Liberian border...
    - ...near the Moa River...
    - As you can see behind me...
    ...just a few minutes ago...
    - ...an ambulance has...
    - Got movement in the bush.
    - Check out the head of the road.
    - Spread out.
    --at this site.
    Dozens of--
    Many are injured.
    Get back on the bus, huh?
    Get back on! Come on!
    - Maddy!
    - Move it! Move it!
    Get back on the bus!
    Solomon! Solomon!
    - Let's go.
    - Solomon, come here!
    - Go, go, go.
    - Come on, come on.
    - Get in the bus!
    - Move, move, move! Come on, come on.
    - Move!
    - Get in the bus. Let's go.
    Get in, get in.
    Goddamn it, get in! Get in!
    - Let me inside!
    - There's no fucking space!
    - Let them on the bus.
    - You give him your seat.
    What if we just take your place, huh?
    What if we take your place?
    That's enough. He can ride with me.
    Oi, he can ride with me.
    Maddy! Let's go!
    Maddy, let's go. Come on!
    Nothing like a little bang-bang
    to get the heart started, Maddy.
    - Whatever you say, Corbauld.
    - Come on, love. Don't be like that.
    Story's played out, hasn't it?
    Government bad, rebels worse.
    No one gives a toss anymore.
    Know what I mean?
    This medicine will make you strong...
    ...make you invisible to your enemies.
    Bullets will bounce off you.
    Superboy Killer, yes, huh?
    Commando.
    Foreigners are the cause of the problems.
    Poppy Sankoh say,
    "Overthrow those who would exploit you."
    I am Baby Killer.
    - I am the Master of Disaster.
    - You will be strong.
    I am Born Trouble.
    I am See Me No More.
    You'd think they'd want
    at least one decent road in this place.
    I'm gonna have to start charging
    an entrance fee. Oh, God!
    Get down!
    - Look out!
    - Shit!
    - You all right?
    - Fine.
    Shit!
    Hold on!
    Hold on!
    Come on.
    - Everyone all right, huh?
    - Yeah, I'm fine.
    Let me see that. You okay?
    - Yeah.
    - All right.
    Quietly, now. Quietly.
    Come on.
    Kamajors. Local militia
    protecting their homes, huh?
    - Do not look them in the eye.
    - No.
    Excuse me. Excuse me?
    Hi, I'm Maddy Bowen
    with Vital Affairs magazine.
    Wonder if I could take your picture.
    I'm just gonna get my camera.
    I've heard about your struggle.
    I'd love to know more about it.
    Would you mind if I took your picture?
    Everyone together?
    Everyone could all come in together.
    Is that okay?
    If everyone could come closer.
    If you come over here and come in
    nice and close. That's good.
    Yeah. That's great.
    And we'll get one with all of us.
    There you go. That's perfect.
    How about one together?
    Us together, what do you think?
    I'll come in like this, yeah?
    Cheese.
    So do you think
    they've read your work?
    Shut up.
    Hey, get them, get them, get them.
    - I got a score. I got a score.
    - You missed.
    Where have you come from?
    - Where did you come from?
    - Where have you come from?
    That's right. Yeah.
    From New York. From America.
    I don't have anything for you.
    My name is Benjamin Margai.
    Danny Archer. This is Maddy Bowen.
    - Hello. How are you?
    - Very well, thank you.
    I'm the cameraman?
    The Belgians were the first
    to chop off limbs in Africa.
    King Leopold took one hand
    for every hundredth slave in the Congo...
    ...to keep them in line.
    Many of these children
    were taken by the RUF.
    We have taken them back.
    Some of them have been
    made to do horrible things.
    We are trying
    to bring them back to life.
    Let me show you.
    Imagine doing all this, huh?
    What's your excuse?
    Well, it's gotten hard to go back
    to sipping lattes and talking interest rates.
    So you're an action junkie, huh?
    Three out of five ex-boyfriends
    recently polled...
    ...say that I prefer to be
    in a constant state of crisis.
    Maybe I just give a shit.
    You were good today.
    You know that?
    You too.
    "--that sometimes they forgot
    to close the door.
    She also wrote
    about her sister Josie...
    ...who was very ill
    and who had to be taken to hospital."
    Cheers.
    So how many attacks
    have there been in the area?
    I have known most of the rebels
    since they were children.
    The local commander is still afraid
    I will come after him with my ruler.
    So you think because your intentions
    are good, they'll spare you, huh?
    My heart always told me
    that people are inherently good.
    My experience suggests otherwise.
    But what about you, Mr. Archer?
    In your long career as a journalist...
    ...would you say that people
    are mostly good?
    No.
    I'd say they're just people.
    Exactly. It is what they do
    that makes them good or bad.
    A moment of love,
    even in a bad man...
    ...can give meaning to a life.
    None of us knows which path
    will lead us to God.
    Hey!
    It's palm wine.
    - Jesus Christ.
    - Yeah, yeah. It takes getting used to, huh?
    God.
    - Drank that as a boy.
    - In Rhodesia?
    I take notes.
    The Shona...
    The Shona have a word for me.
    - It means "white boy in Africa."
    - When did you leave?
    I didn't leave.
    I got sent away to South Africa
    in 1978 when the munts overran us.
    Then you joined the army?
    Yeah. Yeah, I did my time in Angola.
    - The 32 Battalion.
    - That's right.
    You know, contrary to what
    you might think about us...
    ...we fought with the blacks, huh?
    Yeah. Side by side.
    There was no apartheid in a foxhole.
    The colonel always used to tell us that.
    - This is Colonel Coetzee?
    - Yeah.
    Then, of course, it's 1994.
    No more army.
    No more apartheid.
    Truth and reconciliation
    and all of that rubbish, you know.
    Kumbaya.
    We fought and died together,
    you know?
    Black and white. Most people back home
    didn't even know we were at war.
    We thought we were
    fighting Communism...
    ...but in the end, it was all about
    who gets what, you know?
    Ivory, oil, gold:
    Diamonds.
    So one day I decided,
    "Fuck it," you know?
    "I'm gonna get mine."
    You gonna steal his diamond?
    That diamond is my ticket
    out of this godforsaken continent.
    That doesn't answer the question.
    My dad came home
    from the war in '69.
    And it took him...
    ...about 20 years to get right.
    What?
    You Americans love to talk
    about your feelings, huh?
    So, what does that mean?
    What does that mean?
    - Got a thing for messed-up vets now?
    - Shut up.
    You lost both your parents.
    That's a polite way
    of putting it, yeah.
    Mom was raped and shot...
    ...and Dad was decapitated
    and hung from a hook in the barn.
    I was 9.
    Boohoo, right?
    Sometimes I wonder...
    ...will God ever forgive us
    for what we've done to each other?
    Then I look around and I realize...
    ...God left this place a long time ago.
    It's...
    What's the point, huh?
    Oh, shit. Keep moving, huh?
    - What?
    - Drive at them. They'll panic.
    Do you know where the word
    "infantry" comes from?
    It means "child soldier."
    They are just children.
    - Stop! Stop! RUF on the road!
    - Hi. Hello. Hello.
    Hello, little brothers.
    - RUF on the road!
    - Yeah, yeah. What is your names?
    I'm Dead Body.
    Who is this motherfucker?
    We are teachers on our way to Kono.
    Only RUF on the road.
    - RUF only!
    - Yes, yes, I understand that.
    - Only RUF!
    - But son, this is--
    Don't move! Don't move! Fuck.
    Jesus Christ! Maddy, press your hand
    against the exit wound there, huh?
    - Got it.
    - Keep it there, huh?
    Whatever you do,
    don't talk, all right?
    Is there any wine left in that jug?
    - Here.
    - Pour it all over everything, huh?
    The colonel's gonna have a medic
    at the airstrip in Kono.
    - How far is it?
    - You said not to talk.
    A comedian, huh?
    - How's his pulse?
    - I can feel it sometimes.
    - Hold it right there.
    - Stop.
    Papers, please.
    Excuse me.
    I was just trying
    to keep pressure on the wound.
    - He's lost a lot of blood.
    - You'll be all right, huh?
    Will you?
    I'll check on him in the tent
    in a little bit. Thank you.
    Hey.
    Look who's alive, eh?
    I told the H you'd be back.
    I'm afraid we're evacuating
    all non-military personnel, miss.
    Transport touches down at 1600.
    She's with me, all right?
    No exceptions, pal. This is gonna be ugly.
    Colonel doesn't want an audience.
    Is I.R.'s presence here
    known to other African nations?
    - She's with you?
    - Yeah.
    Come on. The colonel's this way.
    Give me a minute, huh?
    We block their escape
    by blowing the bridge.
    That's correct.
    You made it out. Well done.
    Negative, Kilo Foxtrot, stand by.
    - Colonel, sir.
    - So must be real, then.
    The pink.
    Well, you're part
    of this operation now.
    First we snuff everything that moves
    out there, then we find your diamond.
    Colonel?
    Go get kitted. Yes?
    Move, move, move!
    - Go get your kit.
    - Will do, chum. Will do.
    It's go time, all right?
    Meet me behind the tents.
    How's Benjamin?
    They say he'll live.
    Good. Good.
    Listen, Maddy...
    ...I need you to do me one last favor.
    Yeah?
    Tell that guard
    you wanna put him...
    ...on the cover of Soldier of Fortune
    magazine for me.
    You're going in.
    You and Solomon.
    You're going in now.
    Your plane leaves
    in a few minutes, huh?
    You're an idiot.
    - What if I wanted to go in with you?
    - I'd say no.
    - What if I insist?
    - I'd insist back.
    It's my story.
    Your story is Van De Kaap, all right?
    That stone is mine.
    I'm not leaving here without it,
    you understand?
    Please, just give me two minutes.
    Yeah.
    - Hello.
    - Hi.
    My name is Maddy Bowen.
    I'm with Vital Affairs magazine.
    I was wondering
    if I could ask you a few questions.
    Well, that depends what they are.
    Oh, I see you're familiar
    with our devious ways, aren't you?
    Okay, so I'll start
    with something simple.
    And before that you were with
    the South African Defense--?
    - Defense Force, correct.
    - Of course.
    And was that with Colonel Coetzee?
    Were you in Angola?
    Angola, yeah.
    That is all I really need to know.
    Thank you so much.
    - Thank you.
    - Okay.
    Thank you, huh?
    Just keeping my end of the deal.
    Good luck to you, Solomon.
    Okay.
    - I hope you find what you're looking for.
    - Thank you for all you have done.
    - Listen, I--
    - No, you listen.
    In another life maybe, all right?
    Yeah. Sure.
    Yeah.
    You find yourself a good man,
    all right, Maddy?
    You know, I've got three sisters.
    They're all married to good men.
    I prefer my life.
    Here is my office phone...
    ...home phone, cellphone.
    I'm used to being pursued,
    but what the heck.
    You better get on that plane, huh?
    You should get on that plane.
    So should you.
    You gonna call me?
    Soon as I'm near a phone, yeah.
    Yeah, right.
    - Where is he?
    - I don't know.
    Oh, shit.
    Nabil? Yeah, I'll call you
    when we get closer, all right?
    You keep me posted. Right.
    All right. I set the pace, huh?
    Two-hour marches, five-minute breaks.
    If I hold my hand up like this, you stop.
    If I point to the dirt, you lie flat.
    If I say go, you move like your life
    depended on it. Understood?
    - Yes, boss.
    - Come on.
    Tell me about the stone.
    Is it clear or is it milky?
    Clear.
    And the color, is it strong?
    Does it hold the light?
    It is as you say.
    - About the size of a bird's egg?
    - Yes.
    One hundred carats.
    Come on, let's pick up the pace.
    Dia!
    Stop the truck!
    I thought it was Dia.
    Wake up.
    Don't worry, they're gone, huh?
    You know, I once had this buddy...
    ...named Mabhoko.
    We used to hunt bush meat
    together as kids, huh?
    Baboons.
    Baboons, they were
    the hardest to catch. They're...
    They're cunning.
    Cunning creatures.
    Fast, strong.
    Got good eyesight.
    We would always find them
    by the smell of their shit.
    And that's how we learned to track
    your black terrorists in Angola, huh?
    By the smell of your shit.
    It's not...
    It's not the same as a baboon's.
    But, you know, after you skin it...
    ...the flesh of a baboon...
    ...isn't that much different
    than a man's, you know.
    I'll tell you, I can track anything.
    You risk my life like that again...
    ...and I'll peel your face
    back off your head.
    Do you understand?
    Make us a fire.
    What'd he say?
    We are going the right way.
    Hold up there, my man.
    It's this way, huh?
    Where do you think you are going?
    Stop!
    I said, stop!
    He is not down there, all right?
    All right. You're gonna need
    some of that old discipline, huh?
    Now you listen here, my boy,
    and you listen well.
    You are not going down there.
    Are we clear?
    You are not the master.
    Right now, that is exactly what I am,
    and you'd better remember it, Kaffir!
    Don't you fucking move, huh?
    Don't you move. Don't you move, huh?
    - My son is there!
    - Your son is gone!
    - He is alive!
    - He's gone!
    He's alive! He's there
    with those crazy people!
    I am his father! His father!
    I should have protected him!
    I must go find him.
    I cannot live without knowing!
    Shoot me if you want, but I'm going.
    Why should it matter,
    I'm dead already.
    We wait until dark, huh?
    Are you satisfied?
    All right, come on.
    --is fighting for Sierra Leone
    RUF is fighting for Sierra Leone
    Go tell my parents
    They may see me no more
    In the battlefield
    We're fighting forever
    Go tell my parents
    They may see me no more
    In the battlefield...
    You are how old?
    Me? I'm 31.
    And you have no wife?
    - No.
    - No children?
    No.
    And no home?
    No.
    But you have money, yes?
    Yeah, some.
    But not enough?
    No.
    If you get this diamond,
    you will have enough money, yes?
    Yes.
    Then you will get
    a wife and children?
    Probably not, no.
    What?
    What?
    I am confused.
    Yeah?
    That makes two of us, my bru.
    Oh, Christ.
    I've gotta quit smoking, huh?
    Why don't you?
    I'll tell you what, Solomon.
    You find me this diamond,
    and I'll quit right then and there, huh?
    - You were born in Zimbabwe?
    - Oh, yeah.
    - Is it beautiful there?
    - Sure you're not a reporter?
    Because you ask a hell of a lot
    of questions, my man.
    My grandfather told
    many stories of war.
    How the Mende fought the Temne.
    Or how two tribes would fight
    when somebody had stolen a woman.
    I understand white people
    want our diamonds, yes?
    But how can my own people
    do this to each other?
    I know good people...
    ...who say there is something
    wrong with us...
    ...inside our black skin.
    That we were better off
    when the white man ruled.
    But my son is good.
    And when he grows up...
    ...and peace comes...
    ...this place will be a paradise.
    We'll get your son back, huh?
    Where is it exactly?
    Through the camp, by the river.
    Christ.
    Okay.
    I'm gonna make contact
    with the colonel.
    He'll send in an air strike.
    - What is that?
    - A chopper, huh? An attack helicopter.
    - We use it as a diversion.
    - What if my son is there?
    - He isn't.
    - How do you know?
    I said we do it my way now, all right?
    Don't fuck with me.
    Cordell, it's Danny.
    Yeah, yeah, yeah.
    Shut up and listen, all right?
    You tell the colonel I've found the stone.
    No, I haven't got it in my hands,
    but I'm OP'ing its location.
    It's a major rebel camp, my man.
    You tell him to send in the dakadak.
    Because I stole a GPS, that's how.
    If you shut up and listen,
    I could give the coordinates.
    Zero-nine-zero-five-four-two-four, north.
    Three-two-seven-two-nine
    three-zero-five-zero, east.
    I'll call back at midnight to confirm.
    You can look all night,
    my friend, right?
    I promise you he is not there.
    They're coming in the morning, all right?
    No movement, my friend. You stay still.
    When it gets dark,
    then we move in closer.
    Solomon. Shit.
    I can do it.
    - Help me.
    - Help him.
    Thank you, Papa.
    Hey, you smell.
    That's fine.
    - Ready? I'm winning.
    - Okay, let's go.
    Play, man.
    - Play. Play the card.
    - Play.
    Dia.
    Leave me alone.
    - Dia. I'm your papa. Come with me.
    - Hey.
    - Dia.
    - Get away from me.
    - Dia. Dia!
    - I do not know you. Traitor!
    - Enemy! Enemy!
    - What the hell are you doing?
    - What are you doing?
    - I don't know you!
    - What's wrong?
    - I hate you!
    - Dia, come with me!
    - I hate you!
    Get away from me!
    - Get him!
    - Don't shoot!
    - Don't shoot! Don't--! Don't shoot!
    - I hate you!
    - Fisherman! Traitor!
    - Don't shoot!
    Get away from me!
    I knew you would come back.
    I have dug and dug and dug,
    but I've found nothing.
    Nothing.
    Dig, dig, dig!
    You will find it for me.
    You will dig up
    what you have come back for.
    No.
    Why should the diamond
    go to the foreign devils?
    We will use it
    to make the country strong.
    RUF is fighting for the people!
    RUF is fighting for Sierra Leone!
    Pick it up.
    Why? You are going to kill me anyway.
    I do not need to kill you,
    Solomon Vandy.
    If you do not bring me the diamond...
    ...I will find the rest of your family.
    Just as I have found your son.
    I will rape your wife
    in front of your eyes...
    ...slit her throat...
    ...and I will keep your daughters
    for myself.
    You think I am a devil...
    ...but only because I have lived in hell.
    I want to get out.
    You will help me.
    I don't remember.
    Find it or your family will die!
    Now pick it up!
    - Go!
    - Bastards!
    Shoot it!
    Dia!
    Come, boy. Come. This way. This way.
    Dia!
    Colonel, we think Archer's there.
    I don't give a damn who's down there.
    Kill them all.
    Dia!
    I'm coming!
    - Dia!
    - Bastard!
    No!
    Dia!
    - We found his digger, sir.
    - Keep him close.
    - Danny boy.
    - Colonel.
    - Thanks for calling it in.
    - Yeah, yeah. Always happy to help, huh?
    So where is it? The stone?
    We split, huh? Fifty-fifty, all right?
    Look around you, Danny boy.
    You're not in a position
    to be dictating terms.
    Then you will never find it, sir.
    That's correct.
    - But he will.
    - Come. Up.
    Introduce me to your digger.
    Solomon Vandy.
    This is Colonel Coetzee.
    He wants the diamond.
    - No more than you.
    - Fuck.
    You gonna show us where it's hidden?
    Does he speak English?
    He will only tell me, sir.
    I promise you that.
    - Let me talk to him, huh?
    - Go on.
    All right, my friend.
    End of the line here, huh?
    - You just tell him where it is, all right?
    - I do not trust him.
    I don't trust him either,
    but we haven't got much of a choice here.
    I promise you
    he will shoot us both in the head.
    Right, tell him, huh?
    Tell him where it is, huh?
    - Go on. Come on.
    - I'm not feeling the love, Danny.
    All right.
    No more messing about, all right?
    I said tell him where it is!
    Tell him where it is! Now!
    Tell him!
    - No.
    - Fucking--
    Danny, there are other ways
    to do this, okay?
    Yeah, yeah.
    - If he tells us, do we have a deal, sir?
    - Seventy-thirty.
    Sixty-forty. I've already lined up a buyer.
    Agreed.
    Come here.
    This is his son. Vandy will do
    whatever you want for his sake, all right?
    Danny, you're a pisser, man. Well done.
    Boys, we move out.
    What do you say, Mr. Vandy?
    - You ready to take a walk?
    - Come on.
    Come on.
    So who's the buyer?
    I'm guessing London.
    Well, they no longer accept
    conflict diamonds, huh?
    Wouldn't hurt to interest
    some other parties.
    - Start a bidding war.
    - What, one war's not enough for you, huh?
    I missed you, Danny.
    See? It is here.
    He has tried to find it.
    All right, Mr. Vandy.
    Time for you to start digging.
    Hey, boet, have you got a smoke?
    Smoking will kill you.
    Sorry.
    It's all right.
    Time I quit smoking anyway,
    huh, Solomon?
    - It's gone.
    - What?
    Someone has taken it.
    This is where I buried it.
    It isn't here.
    Well, then there's no reason
    for any of you to stay alive. Is there?
    Wait, wait, wait.
    I know, I know. I know where it is.
    - I know where it is.
    - It better be there.
    Yes.
    Oh, here, here.
    It is here.
    - Yeah? Yeah, there it is.
    - Yes.
    Fuck!
    TIA, huh, Danny?
    TIA.
    Keep digging, huh?
    They'll be here any second. Come on.
    Keep digging.
    - It had better be there, huh?
    - Yes, yes.
    Have you got it?
    - Have you got it, huh?
    - Yes, got it. Oh, yes.
    Oh, yes.
    Solomon.
    Dia, what are you doing?
    Dia.
    What are you doing?
    Of the proud Mende tribe.
    You are a good boy
    who loves soccer and school.
    Your mother loves you so much.
    She waits by the fire making plantains...
    ...and red palm oil stew
    with your sister N'Yanda...
    ...and the new baby.
    The cows wait for you.
    And Babu, the wild dog
    who minds no one but you.
    I know they made you do bad things...
    ...but you are not a bad boy.
    I am your father...
    ...who loves you.
    And you will come home with me
    and be my son again.
    Solomon, we've got to move, huh?
    We've got to--
    Go, go! Move!
    Move. Move.
    Move, move, move!
    Move! Move! Move!
    How far?
    There's an airstrip
    at the top of that gorge.
    A plane will meet us, huh?
    Hey, stop. Stop.
    Give it to me.
    Come on, give it to me, huh?
    Keep moving. They'll be tracking us.
    Nabil, where are you?
    I'm nearly there.
    Tell me what's happening.
    We're about 10 K's out, huh?
    We've got it, my friend.
    - Who is we?
    - The fisherman and his son.
    Lose them.
    It's at the top of that ridge there, huh?
    You must stop and rest.
    What? And give up the damn stone?
    Keep moving. Come on.
    Come. Come, come.
    I can't. Stop.
    - Okay.
    - Stop.
    Come on.
    No! God, no. Stop.
    Christ. No more. No more.
    Take it, huh?
    - Mr. Archer--
    - Take it, take it.
    I thought you would steal it from me.
    Yeah, yeah, it occurred to me, huh?
    Listen...
    ...this is Maddy's card, huh?
    You call her when
    you get to Conakry, all right?
    And don't trust that pilot for a second.
    You point this at his head
    if he fucks around, all right?
    I can carry you.
    You take your boy home, huh?
    You take him home, huh?
    - Go! Go!
    - Go. Come on.
    Go on!
    Come on. Come on.
    Archer, you're a dead man!
    Yeah, yeah.
    Dia.
    Hello. Maddy Bowen.
    Yeah.
    Thought I'd never call, huh?
    And I'm so glad you did.
    Excuse me.
    When am I gonna see you?
    Maddy, I want you to do me
    one more favor, huh?
    I want you to go meet Solomon
    in Conakry.
    In Guinea?
    Why do you want me to go to Guinea?
    We found his son...
    ...but he's gonna need some help,
    you understand?
    Maddy?
    You're hurt.
    Are you hurt?
    Yeah, well, I've got
    a little problem here.
    Okay. You--
    You tell me where you are.
    Archer?
    I'm looking at an incredible view
    right now.
    I wish you were here, Maddy.
    Okay, then I'm coming to be with you.
    You just tell me where you are.
    I don't think so.
    Are you still in Kono? Because I can
    get someone there to help you.
    Maddy, you find someplace safe
    for the boy, all right?
    And keep him out of sight.
    And get Solomon to London.
    He's bringing something with him.
    But he's gonna need your help.
    Why aren't you bringing it yourself?
    I'm saying it's a real story now.
    And you can write the hell out of it.
    I'm really happy I met you.
    You know that?
    Yeah, I'm...
    I'm really happy I met you too.
    And I wish I could be there with you.
    That's all right.
    I'm exactly where I'm supposed to be.
    When we get to the stairs,
    you just keep walking...
    ...and I'll wait for you here.
    You're not coming.
    I'm not here. Good luck.
    You must understand, Mr. Vandy...
    ...that your diamond could have ended up
    nowhere else but with us.
    - It is not enough.
    - I assure you, 2 million pounds...
    ...is more than anyone else will offer you
    for that stone under the circumstances.
    I want what was promised to me
    by Mr. Archer.
    - What was promised to you?
    - My family.
    When they are here,
    you will get the stone.
    I will have the money too.
    Well, may I see what I'm buying?
    You will get the stone
    once my family is here.
    How do I even know you've got it?
    Can you comment on the diamonds
    mined in Sierra Leone?
    I'm not going to comment
    on some sensationalist magazine article.
    - What about Liberia?
    - No comment. No comment.
    - Mr. Van De Kaap--
    - That's all I have to say.
    The natural resources
    of a country...
    ...are the property of its people.
    They are not ours to steal...
    ...or exploit in the name of our comfort,
    our corporations, or our consumerism.
    They're ready for you, sir.
    The Third World is not a world apart.
    And the witness you will hear today
    speaks on its behalf.
    Let us hear the voice of that world.
    Let us learn from that voice.
    And let us ignore it no more.
    Ladies and gentlemen,
    Mr. Solomon Vandy.

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