The Money Maker (2025) Movie Script

Want some, Bobo?
They're coming!
- Come on, get to work.
Get out of there!
There!
Get out! Get down, I said!
Come on, guys, the chains!
Get the chains out!
Go, go!
Oh!
Don't move!
It's fine, he's in a hurry.
- What does he want from me?
- I don't know.
What's your name?
Bojarski.
Ceslaw Jan Bojarski.
Let's just say 'Jan'.
Don't take it personally.
- I don't work here,
sir.
Word is you've got talent, Jan.
Good.
I don't know what you're talking about.
Oh, really?
But do you know who I am?
Of course.
Everybody knows you,
Mr. Scola.
- Then you know
I'm not talking about mechanics.
I do fakes too.
- I...
- No need to lie.
Your buddy sang your praises.
So, since I don't like competition,
you're going to work for me.
By the way, you're not Jewish, are you?
Ah!
That boy's got nothing but qualities!
- Look at these visas,
Mr. Taylorman.
You won't find better.
- With these, you're already in Switzerland.
- Thank you.
- That'll be 7,000
with the visas.
- We said 5,000.
- I had to revise my prices upward.
That's all I have.
And this is worth something.
I don't understand German!
I learned Spanish.
'Volver a casa',
does that ring a bell?
No?
I'll leave it to you.
Everything okay?
Come on, let's dance.
So, have you thought about it?
Are we getting married soon?
I won't be free.
We'll have three children.
Two boys
and a girl who looks like you.
We'll have a dog too,
for hunting.
Of course!
Oh, no!
What's that?
A system I'm working on.
A coffee maker
that turns on by itself
at wake-up time.
An invention of mine.
- It's 7 p.m., right?
- Yes.
I still have a few adjustments
to make.
How did you get to France?
- I was an officer during the war
and...
I was taken prisoner.
I escaped from a camp
in Hungary and came here.
You're pulling my leg.
No, not at all.
So, besides coffee makers,
what do you dream of, Mr. Bojarski?
With this marvel,
no more stains.
The ink flows
thanks to... a tiny ball
that rolls when you press the pen.
It's revolutionary.
Do you know the Barjon
company, Mr. Bojari?
We sell ink,
not just pens.
The more the pens leak,
the more ink we sell.
Why would I want a pen
that doesn't leak?
Because a disposable pen
gets thrown away and bought again.
Schoolkids change every month.
Stenographers, every week.
Imagine the profits.
Your drawings are interesting.
Thank you.
But you're knocking
on the wrong door.
I brought a prototype.
Try it.
Have you filed a patent?
I'm working on it.
That's not enough,
in business law.
Do you think I'm a thief?
Try it and I'll drag you
to court.
And who will the judge believe?
A Polish immigrant
or a former Resistance fighter?
These photos are good,
you shouldn't have given them away.
You couldn't stand them anymore.
Well, I regret it.
Dad!
Hey!
Are you okay, darling?
Yes.
Where's Mom?
In the kitchen.
Shall we go see her?
Come on, stay here.
Get comfortable.
I'm warning you, tonight
my mother is awful.
Oh, really?
Hm.
That's not like her, though.
Did your meeting go well?
Too bad for them.
I married an inventor,
not a tie salesman.
Whoa!
It swivels!
Oh yes, look at that!
You can adjust the height,
thanks to this hydraulic column.
Do you see the handle?
There?
Oh! It's a bit low.
You can raise it.
The handle is here.
You adjust it
to your liking.
It's wonderful.
Have you found
an interested manufacturer?
Not yet, but I have contacts.
Jan, I can find you work
in my company.
In deliveries, would that suit you?
Dad, Jan is an engineer.
Yes,
but we won't always be able to help you.
France doesn't recognize
his degree.
France welcomes you,
and we house you.
You have plenty of apartments.
That's still one less rent payment.
I can write you a check.
Don't worry.
You're welcome here.
Dad, come give me a kiss!
I'm coming, sweetheart!
I love it when you pick my pockets.
Soon,
we'll be less dependent on them.
I promise you.
I don't want you to worry.
I'm not worried.
I've already told you,
I was born in Gdansk.
My papers were lost
during the war.
Then you don't exist.
That's absurd.
You can see that I exist.
I can't do anything about it.
And it's full of mistakes.
Learn to write French first.
Guys!
Lalanne?
Here.
Gastaud?
Yeah.
Colson?
Yes.
And Faivre.
Here.
And Bojarski.
And Dog... Dow... Dow, it's Dow.
Don't come back Monday.
We were hired
for two weeks.
I have Frenchmen
who come first.
What the hell are you talking about?
You think they carry meat
better than us?
- They make less of a fuss.
- Drop it, Dow.
You can't put brains
where there aren't any.
'Liberty, equality, fraternity.'
I'm getting out
of this shitty country.
Jan.
I didn't escape,
I was pardoned.
And you, how are you?
Apparently, things aren't great.
I'm fine, I'm managing.
- You're a family man now,
aren't you?
What do you want from me?
It's too green.
And I'm not even talking
about the print quality.
The colors bleed
at the edges.
It's really ugly.
- See, I need you.
My guys are useless.
I need someone better.
I've never forged banknotes.
There's a first time for everything.
Don't worry,
these are real.
- Cheers, Mr. plastic engineer.
- Consulting engineer.
- Same thing.
You're my hero, Bojarski.
'Well, Well, Well' Ray
Ventura Old dandies
have all the nerve But after all
old age has to pass Well!
Well! Well! Joy lifts me up
Well! Well! Well!
I feel light as air
But suddenly
there's a knock at my door
And I recognize the voice
I like so much
Well! Well! Well! Spring
is coming back Hey, guys.
- No, the boss asked me to stay
because we're behind schedule.
- Here!
Yeah, I have to go now.
Kiss the little one for me.
- You know what we do
with snitches?
Cry of pain
- Come on, throw him out.
- What are you doing?
I'm admiring your work.
Around here, guys like you who struggle,
it ends badly for them.
- 5 years in prison
for fake papers,
30 for forged banknotes.
Welcome to the big leagues.
Suzanne?
You okay?
I waited for you all night.
- The boss gave me the day off,
he approved my prototypes.
I'm all yours, both of you.
All to myself.
I dropped Aline off at my mother's.
So...
The neighbors might see us.
But we have nothing to hide.
Right?
What's this?
- An advance
for the patent on my pen.
See?
I knew that one day,
your talent would be recognized.
Look.
I have a surprise for you too.
Really?
'Wayra'
Yma Sumac
- And here's one for you.
- Thank you.
Ma'am.
Phone - Mr. Director,
may I see you?
Oh!
Don't move.
OK, load up! Come on!
Hurry up!
Careful, it's delicate.
Don't move!
Stop moving or I'll shoot!
- Get in the car! Hurry up!
Come on!
Don't move!
We're getting out of here! Come on!
Come on, let's get the hell out of here!
Come on, come on! Let's go!
Come on! Woo-hoo!
Good morning, Mr. Bojarski.
Good morning, sir.
Dad!
Dad, you're squeezing me too hard!
You're choking me.
Sorry.
- I've never seen any
this good.
- That's the problem.
Our agents have trouble telling them apart.
Weren't they supposed to be impossible to forge?
- I'll pass the information
up the chain.
To alert the lyse? No.
Let's first assess
the counterfeit that's out there.
- I won't risk
the security of our banknotes.
- I'm just asking you
to trust me.
I'll track down the forgers
and arrest them, like always.
Relax, old man.
You look on edge.
- While he was in Washington
for lectures,
Chief Inspector Mattei was recalled
to lead the investigation
into the Rambouillet robbery,
which left 5 dead,
including 2 gendarmes.
We were able to interview him
about counterfeiting.
Inspector!
Inspector, a word about the robbery
of the Banque de France van?
I can only tell you
that I will avenge
the innocent victims.
- I'll send the guilty to prison.
- Thank you.
- France vs. England
in rugby union.
The French are outflanking
the British.
Field Marshal Montgomery...
You think it'll be okay?
What are you doing with my bills?
If anyone asks you,
you say you don't know.
Oh, there are rules.
You can't just spend them like that.
- You're right.
Look the other way, I prefer that.
Work hard!
Is he here?
Inspector.
A jeweler was paid
by a customer
- with a wad of counterfeit bills.
- And?
The bills we're looking for.
Does your client have a name?
Don't move.
Police, open up!
Get out of the vehicle!
And the young man too!
- Yeah, I'm coming...
You don't want to talk to us, Serge?
The attack on the Banque
de France van, ring a bell?
5 dead, including 2 gendarmes.
Perrier...
See? This is the gun
we found on you.
And a gun,
has a memory.
- I don't know what you're talking about.
- A ballistic test
would tell us whether the gun was used
in the robbery,
but if you've got nothing to fear,
good for you.
Go fuck yourselves.
- If you help us,
we'll forget about this gun.
But play smart
and you'll end up on the chopping block.
It's up to you.
The cops are coming.
Take the goods.
You, burn the rest!
OK, boss.
Let's get out of here!
- Grab your plates
and your hardware.
Meet me in my car.
- Hurry up, quick!
The crates!
The two cans!
- Hurry up! Come on, move!
The cops!
Guys, they're here!
Don't move!
You two, stay there!
Come on, quick!
- Catch him!
Don't move!
- Come on, go ahead. Get in.
One minute.
Jan?
- I have great news
to tell you.
I'm going to work here,
on my own.
When did you decide that?
Well, yesterday.
A guy got hurt again at the lab.
We work without protection.
I prefer to work for myself.
If you agree, of course.
Hm.
Anyway,
I trust you.
- Is it true?
- Hm.
- However,
we'll have to be careful.
I'm going to work on plastic.
There will be vats
at high temperatures.
So, no entering here.
- Can we die?
- Hm.
Youll be careful too?
Of course.
You coming?
The fingerprint analysis
turned up nothing.
They dont match any known criminal.
Theyre the printers.
- Never been jailed
or taken into custody.
Either hes careful,
or hes new at this.
Either way, its the same.
Nothing can help us.
So, we close the case?
No. We wait.
A counterfeiter
doesnt change careers.
Hell get back to work,
and when he does,
well be there to catch him.
- Whats gotten into you?
- Ive found the invention
thats going to change
- our lives.
- Oh, really?
- Will you show it to me?
- As soon as its ready.
Im going to need you
to type up my patents.
Youll be proud
to call yourself Bojarski.
- Whats this invention
supposed to do?
Take you dancing!
Every day!
- Bell
- No. 131.
Window 2.
Ma'am, do you need help?
Ah!
Well done, Jan.
Congratulations, Dad.
- Its beautiful.
- Thank you.
I wish youd been there.
Me too.
Sorry.
- Men's place
is not in the delivery room.
Well, speak for your husband.
What did I do?
Nothing!
A photo for the album.
Thank you.
- 1.6 kg.
Should I cut off the head?
Yes.
That will be 300 francs.
- Allow me.
Him, the poultry. Me, the dough.
It's new, this bill.
Oh, really?
Hm.
- Hello, Mrs. Thouvenot.
- Hello.
Your order is ready.
So, 500, 600... and 700.
Thank you.
Wishing you happy holidays.
Merry Christmas.
Sir!
Your chicken!
- I'm dizzy.
- Yes!
Come on, goodbye. Thank you!
400, 500... and 500 makes 1,000.
Thanks, Dad!
Thank you.
400... 500...
You're crazy, Bojarski!
- He's not here.
He's in Paris for his patents.
- Does he have a mistress?
- Oh no, Mom. Stop.
- What?
- You never really know your husband.
- I do.
- You don't know exactly
what he does for a living.
He's an inventor!
What don't you understand
about that?
- Whatever you want.
Goodbye, darling.
Goodbye.
- Mom! Mom!
Pierre bumped himself!
- Where do I put him,
the head of the CID?
Far away from me.
I don't want him to know
I'm stuck.
Then what's the point of these dinners?
Go open it.
Fine, I'll put him across from Solange.
Solange?
- My colleague from Chanel's
press office.
Make an effort, Andr.
Mr. Perrier.
- Sorry,
I'll steal him for a minute.
- Hurry up. You're not ready.
- Printed with the same plates
as Scola's.
- Are we sure?
- Certain.
But they make their own paper.
The Bank of France is stunned.
Yeah, about damn time.
We're restarting surveillance operations.
Paper makers, informants, printers,
the whole lot.
- Aline, watch out!
Pierre's crying.
Look at this!
You're never there
when I need you.
- I work all the time
for you!
I wish you'd work less and
take care of your children.
And that we start
going out again!
That's not fair to say.
- Leaving me to do everything alone,
is that fair?
Here, take your son.
- Finish drying up!
Pierre's crying.
I need some air.
Where are you going?
To clear my head.
Someone's knocking.
Wait, don't open it!
Pierre is whimpering.
- Someone's knocking.
- It's the police!
You're an idiot!
- Let me introduce Jackie,
we're getting married!
Nice to meet you!
'He Saw Me Naked'
Mistinguett Remarks in Polish
Completely naked - Without
any cover-up or bra thing
I love it!
I blushed all the way to my
vaccines He saw me naked
It's all in the hips!
- Ooh, ooh, ooh.
Look at those hips.
Come on, Suzanne!
Show us what you can do.
- Oh, no!
- Come on, Suzanne!
- Come on!
- Come on.
... thoughtless
I neglected to
veil a few little frills
He saw me naked - All
right, sweetheart, you're hired!
I need to ask my
husband what he thinks.
- Not him.
He was raised by Jesuits.
You might be surprised, Dow.
- How's work?
- It's fine.
I started my own transport company
in Montreuil.
It's doing pretty well.
I hired ex-cons
to drive the trucks.
Prisoners?
Aren't they trouble?
- No.
They get a second chance.
You yourself
have become a model citizen.
Exactly.
I got my papers.
I even have my tradesman's card.
- You didn't wait for it
to make a living.
Did you take me for a Pole?
- There you go.
- Thanks.
Here you go.
- Until this morning,
I wasn't taking those anymore.
- Oh, why?
- Too many fakes in circulation.
- What changed
since this morning?
- The Bank of France announced
it would reimburse the fakes.
Do you know how much money
that'll cost them?
That seems to amuse you.
There is a mistake.
Some are missing.
- What is this
nonsense?
Be more specific.
The end of the 'Minerve' and 'Hercule'.
- We couldn't let all these fakes
keep spreading.
We detected more than 200
in one month.
Not counting the ones we missed.
It's costing us a fortune.
Between us,
the 'Richelieu' is nothing.
The real new thing...
here it is.
Look at this beauty.
The 'Terre et Mer'.
Impossible to fake.
- Is that supposed to cheer me up?
How do I stop my forgers?
The greater good comes first.
- Does it turn you on to wage war on me?
Does it make you feel important?
- You're not the center of the world.
'The Real Mambo'
Ginette Baudin
Woo-hoo!
Damn!
I'm getting old!
Cheers, Jackie.
- We won't stay long.
I've got work tomorrow.
Tomorrow, it's Sunday!
- What's Sunday?
I don't even remember.
- Here you go, Jackie.
- No, thanks.
- Suzanne.
- No, it's too late now.
- You don't like mothballs?
- Shh.
Can I pay?
- No, Bojarski.
Business is good.
Where the hell did I put that damn money?
Damn. This one's for you.
This is for your pretty eyes, and this...
I'll cover the table.
Dow, Dow, Dow, Dow!
People are trying to sleep.
So, is the party going well?
- Come on, let's go.
- Move.
Come on, gentlemen!
Hands on the wall, move
it and show your papers.
- Where are they?
- In your pocket?
- What did they do?
- His name?
- Bojarski.
He's not one of ours.
Foreigners with French women,
I find that suspicious.
- What's suspicious?
Forget it.
- Listen to your husband,
ma'am.
- Whose money is this?
- It's my money.
I'm giving you back your wallet.
- Don't lose your papers.
- Thanks.
Ladies, have a good evening.
You're kidding, Dow.
Tomorrow, I'll file a complaint.
No, no.
You're not doing anything.
- Are you scared of the police
now?
- You wouldn't understand.
- Since when?
Listen, Suzanne!
It took me 10 years
to get my papers!
I don't want any trouble!
- Bojarski,
are we working for the cops?
Are you dealing in weapons?
- I do what pays.
Try it.
- Do you know how much it'll cost
you if the cops catch you?
Cut the attitude.
You haven't always been clean.
- For us,
there's only one thing to do,
we have to stay under the radar.
- And get exploited
to the bone?
Is that life?
Stop looking at me like that!
I owe you nothing!
- You owe me nothing,
and I owe you nothing.
I don't want to see you anymore.
There's nothing to understand.
You're putting my family in danger,
so get out of my life!
Clear?
Mr. Minister.
- I'll be right back.
- You sure?
Mr. Minister.
Commissioner.
I'll leave you.
- The general told me about you,
and not in flattering terms.
I need more resources.
- You already have 12 officers.
Do you know how much that costs us?
- Not as much
as changing currency.
The police experts think
the counterfeits
come from a gang of experts.
Can I be honest?
The gang doesn't matter.
It's the engraver that matters.
If I catch him,
I shut down the operation.
- If all it takes is catching him,
what are you waiting for?
A piece of advice, Mattei.
Spend less time at social events
and more behind your desk.
- Where do we put this one?
Looks like an apple.
Yeah, a frosted apple.
No, a bitten apple.
Do we put Santa on it?
- Up there?
There'll already be a ball.
Can I help you?
I wanted to know.
What?
You know that little shed.
No. You're hiding something from me.
- Did you have to come here
in the middle of the night?
- Come on. I'll show you around tomorrow.
- No.
Tonight.
What are you playing at, Suzanne?
I want to know who I'm living with.
That's a roll-on deodorant.
It's like a pen,
but bigger.
- I'm going to patent it.
- Stop.
Tell me what you're really doing here.
After you.
Did you steal them?
- No, not at all.
They're mine.
You wanted to know
what I was doing here.
Now you know.
I sell them off, bill by bill.
Day after day.
Each time in a different place
in Paris.
Your patents are just hot air?
- Everyone doesn't care
about a polak's inventions.
Since when do you play this?
I don't play.
I was tired of being treated
like a nobody.
I couldn't take it anymore, the shame.
And when you rot in prison?
- That won't happen.
- Oh, really?
- Why?
- I take precautions.
Are you smarter than everyone else?
Yes.
No, but do you hear yourself?
Who do you think you are?
Look.
Mine will be even prettier
than the original.
Are you going to keep going?
If I work my ass off,
in a year,
I'll have made hundreds.
And what happens to us?
What do you mean?
Did you prefer when we were living
off your parents?
Or when I was stuck doing
those crappy little jobs?
I never thought you were pathetic.
Suzanne.
Don't let me go.
Here.
It's beautiful!
4 years old. What a big boy.
Do you like it?
Yes.
Blow, darling.
Where is daddy?
He's working.
How do you find it?
'Will be punished
with forced labor
those who have counterfeited
banknotes.'
Bravo, it reads very well.
Kids,
breakfast is ready!
I'm going to get my driver's license.
I'll let you take care of the kids.
- Visiting
old flames?
I missed chasing after you.
- It's important
to exercise.
How much time do you have left?
What would you say
if I put in a word for you?
You'd gain a few months.
In exchange for what?
- What can you tell me
about it?
- It's fine work.
- And?
What?
You see this petal?
I know.
It's one of the engraver's
few mistakes.
The real 'Terre et Mer'
has a wilted petal.
- It's not a mistake,
it's a signature.
Do you have a stem?
- Why would he sign
his own bills?
To tell the real ones from the fake.
At the risk of drawing attention?
Exactly.
He wants us to recognize
his talent.
The copyist wants to do better
than the original.
It's not to impress
shopkeepers.
- Meaning?
- You don't know him,
but he knows you.
He wants to move you, to stir you.
Your client isn't a crook.
Then what is he?
- An artist who makes more
from his bills
than you do from
investigating him.
And his accomplices just let him do it?
- Who says he has any?
- No, impossible.
It takes at least six people to do that.
- 'General Massu has entered
Algiers...'
A marvel, this camera.
'He'll also be up against the FLN
fighting for Algeria's independence.'
- Algeria... Can't we
find another topic?
You must be loving this.
- He never uses it.
- It must've cost a fortune.
Do you sell them for a lot,
- your patents?
- Some of them, yes.
- 'Panic at the Bank of France,
which is wondering
'whether the counterfeit bills
'might be the work of the Soviets
'to destabilize our economy,
reveals a source who prefers
to remain anonymous.'
Grandpa, what does 'anonymous' mean?
That he wants to stay hidden.
- Or it means
nobody knows him.
Maybe that's true.
That you're a Russian spy
who wants to destabilize
our economy.
Light
Come on, tell me everything.
Are you a Red?
Am I your cover?
I admit it.
On the other hand,
I'm a fugitive.
Why?
I turned it down for love.
That's a shame.
Oh, really?
- At least,
a spy is romantic.
It's loyal to something.
It has convictions.
The analyses are conclusive.
To get this result,
they mixed
tracing paper
and rolling papers.
Fifty-fifty, at a rate of 10
rolling papers per note.
That makes one pack of 100
for 10 notes.
- That could empty out
every tobacco shop in France.
- We analyzed
every brand of paper.
- JOB, Zig-Zag, Riz Lacroix...
- So what?
He only uses OCB paper.
- Come on, gentlemen, help yourselves!
- We need to find out
where he gets his supplies.
- One guy per tobacco shop?
We're gonna need to recruit!
Marchal, you're fired up!
You'll lead the investigation.
Ask OCB whether they've
had any stockouts recently.
Then you'll go question
the tobacco shop owners involved
one by one.
Understood?
Thank you, sir. Have a good day.
- Here are the tobacco shops
where a stranger bought
boxes of 100 sheets
in the last six months.
They're everywhere.
If our guy is sourcing
all over the country,
we're no further ahead.
Ladies and gentlemen, the
1:27 p.m. train to Marseille
will arrive on platform C.
Hello?
I didn't think you'd pick up.
Do you often call people...
hoping
that they won't answer?
No.
Only when I feel
like talking.
I have your work in front of me.
Oh, really?
- Your bills are more real
than real.
Hats off.
It wasn't easy.
I had to design
new machines.
- So why did you choose
to copy 'Terre et Mer'
instead of 'Richelieu'?
It's more profitable.
Harder, too.
- I'm glad
you noticed.
On this one,
the watermarks are more complex.
The front and back faces
have to line up.
And then there's intaglio printing,
with this slightly raised impression.
- And the faces of those two women, too.
Their gaze is less direct
than on the Richelieu.
They don't stare anyone down.
- May I ask you a question?
- Go ahead.
- Who are you doing all this for?
Who else would it be for but you?
I'm not your only audience.
What do your accomplices think?
You work alone,
don't you?
That must be exhausting,
all that traveling.
I'm going to have to leave you now.
I'm warning you.
I'll arrest you in due time.
- I'll stop on my own.
No.
You'll never stop...
because you don't do this
for the money, do you?
Sorry, sir. We're closing.
Yes, I'm coming right away.
- Identity check. Please
show your papers.
Ladies and gentlemen,
show your papers!
- Come on, move along.
- Your papers, please.
- Identity check!
- Your papers.
- Go ahead.
- Please, your papers.
Thank you.
Good.
Your papers, please.
Show your papers!
Open your suitcase.
- Ladies and gentlemen,
show your papers!
- You!
Stop him!
Move along.
Dad.
Hm?
- Can Sophie come over
for a sleepover Saturday?
Sophie who?
- Sophie, my best friend
since primary school!
I've told you about her a hundred times!
- I don't want you inviting
people over to the house.
- I'm doing well in school.
Why are you punishing me?
Lower your voice, please.
- Nobody comes over,
and you're never here!
- I work so you can have
a better life than I did at your age.
And what kind of life did you have?
What did your parents do?
There's nothing to know!
- It's like your job!
What's the last thing
- you invented?
- The last thing
let me buy you
that TV!
- I don't care! I want
to see real people!
You've already lost your friends.
Do you want to lose your children too?
Why do you keep going?
- For the past two months, he's only
been sourcing in the south of France.
It started in Nice,
then Cannes, Toulon, Marseille.
Then he went back up to Lyon.
- He's methodical.
- Too much so.
Look, after Lyon, he
turned off toward Grenoble.
- Thanks to the rail network.
- He's less careful.
If he keeps this
up, he'll soon be in...
He's coming.
He called the owner yesterday
to check his stock.
- What if he goes to another tobacco shop?
- Impossible.
He's methodical.
You okay, Legal?
- No. Can you cover for me,
please?
- Sure.
- Thanks.
She's now on the rail,
while in last place,
there's Nimble Boy.
OK, that's a good start!
- Come on!
- Come on!
Grard, a Bastos, please.
TV commentary A Bastos...
- That'll be 10.
- Grard,
can you get us another round?
- My pleasure.
- That's kind, thanks.
- That's good! That's good!
- Yes!
Come on, run! Run!
Come on!
Come on!
Come on, pretty girl!
Come on, run!
- What is he doing, Marchal?
Vomiting Oh, oh!
- Don't mind me!
- Sorry, I'm sick.
Sir?
- I called
and ordered OCB rolling papers for you.
- Oh, it's you?
I'll go get your order.
No, Roc pine!
Oh!
- Perrier, let's go.
Police!
In the restroom.
No way!
Have the fingerprints lifted.
And call the sketch artist.
- He won't be here
until tomorrow.
- So what?
Do you have a better idea?
- Excuse me,
is the 10:12 p.m. train to Paris,
is it on this platform?
- No, it's canceled.
Tomorrow, at 7:15.
Thanks.
- Good morning.
- With the DIY fair,
we're usually fully booked.
Thank you, sir.
- Ah, Mr. Mattei.
Your taxi is booked for tomorrow.
Thanks.
- Give us 10 minutes.
We'll take care of your luggage.
Can you let me know
when room 23 is ready?
- Good evening. A vodka.
- Certainly, sir.
Good evening, sir.
Do you have a light?
Are you the one we see
in the newsreels?
The counterfeiting commissioner?
- It's been a long time
since anyone recognized me.
My glory days
are behind me.
To the glory days, then.
- What do you do for a living,
sir...
Brabin. Maurice Brabin.
I'm a sales rep
for DIY tools.
I'm here
for tomorrow's trade show.
- I can't even
hammer in a nail.
Are you handy?
A little.
- And how does one become
a tool salesman?
- My dream was
to become an engineer.
I would be one today,
if I'd stayed in Poland.
But 'Brabin'...
Brabinski.
I had to Frenchify my name
to find work.
Please.
Yes, sir.
- Are you in Vichy
for work or for a spa treatment?
Do I look like I'm here
for a spa treatment?
So, work then.
Are you on the trail
of a counterfeiter?
Forgive me.
I love crime stories.
I'm subscribed
to 'Dtective' magazine.
You've got to pass the time
on tour.
I did have a lead, yes.
And?
I was this close to arresting him.
8 years I've been tracking the same guy.
8 years of floundering
and ruining my career.
Even my wife
can't stand me anymore.
- Do you talk about your work
to your wife?
Don't you?
- Me, drills and screwdrivers,
that doesn't interest many people.
Whereas you...
I'm not exactly a role model.
Two divorces...
three marriages...
Until your next arrest.
- I'm not the one
who deserves pity most.
Oh, yeah?
Can you imagine?
Making masterpieces
without being able to tell anyone.
It's like being the ghostwriter
for a Goncourt prize.
In his place,
it would eat me up inside.
- Maybe not him.
Oh, yes.
- How do you know?
I'm starting to figure the guy out.
Lighter clicking
Well... I've bothered
you enough.
It's on me.
Are you sure?
It bothers me.
You're going to offend me.
Thanks for the conversation.
I was in a talkative mood
tonight.
One second.
- Get out!
Stop!
- I don't want to see you anymore!
Do you hear me?
- Never again!
- Stop!
- Here, the Dauphine.
It was to celebrate your license.
Has it been long?
Do you love him?
Answer me.
- Do you love him?
- Let go of me.
It's been 2 years
since you promised me you'd quit.
The 2 years are up,
and nothing has changed.
I can't keep fearing
that the cops will show up.
I'm almost there, Suzanne.
Give me a little time.
- Stop treating me
like an idiot!
You'll never stop,
so leave me alone!
Stop! Stop!
Stop that.
Stop. Stop.
Stop.
Stop.
Stop.
Stop!
Not moving away
- The fingerprints match
those found 10 years ago
with the Tractions gang.
What do we do? Do we air it?
- To risk
it disappearing?
No. We keep this to ourselves.
In a few months, we'll
carry out a gradual transition
to the new franc.
Our experts have created
a new generation
of banknotes
that are virtually impossible to forge.
Good. Thank you.
Jacques, I'll let you take it from here.
Thank you, Director.
Our engineers redesigned
the paper
by incorporating new patterns
and brand-new watermark designs.
This new intaglio-printed note
is shorter than the Richelieu.
The Bank of France...
Sir. Sir!
I beg your pardon.
'Forgive'
Vanessa Contenay-Quinones
Don't worry. It's over.
The pain comes and goes.
I'm used to it.
- Yeah. And how long has she been gone?
My pain?
No, Suzanne.
A year, almost.
And you think she'll come back?
If it helps, I've
lost everything.
Jackie,
my job, my company...
I owe money to all of Paris.
I don't even know
who to turn to.
Bojarski, what did you do?
Is that why
Suzanne left?
- Suzanne couldn't take
that double life anymore.
- And you, could you handle
that double life?
- How much do you need
to get back on your feet?
Oh... around... 10,000.
Here.
- No need to pay me back.
- I can't just take that.
- I didn't say 'for nothing'.
- Right.
- I need you.
Did you understand what I was doing here?
Well, France didn't want us,
so you went after its money.
Rule No. 1:
no more than one note per shop.
One business, one note, one street.
Rule No. 2: nothing flashy.
Forget the cars, the clothes.
Rule No. 3: discretion.
Don't change your habits.
- Good thing,
I don't have any habits.
Hi, Dad.
You could kiss me.
I'm late.
Ah, Jan.
The spitting image of his mother
at that age.
I wish you courage.
- What are you talking about now?
I'll leave you.
- Pierre, get ready,
your father is here.
It's fine!
How are you?
My mother is driving me crazy,
but I'm seeing
an apartment tomorrow.
Have you seen the doctor?
He says it's stress, overwork.
I wanted to tell you...
I'm going to quit.
I had to start over from scratch
for the Bonaparte,
but in a year,
it'll be over.
I promise you.
- I dreamed
that you got arrested.
I was almost relieved.
And you, behind bars,
you were proud.
I'll never go to prison.
Even if the police find me,
no engraver at the Bank of France
can match me.
- Pierre, hurry up!
- Hey, what happened to you?
- Some big kid called me
a Polack at school.
Will you bring him back tonight?
Yeah, yeah.
- You'll tell me about it.
- Hm.
Jan.
I'm still waiting for you to sign
the divorce papers.
- It's my math homework,
I can't do it.
- I wasn't that bad at math
at your age.
- Fractions,
I don't get them at all.
- Yeah, but it also depends
on how it's explained to you.
That's Mr. Zulawski.
When he talks,
it sounds like Latin.
Ah, the Poles...
Well...
So... Can you read
me the heading?
'A gardener plants geraniums
'around the circular edge...'
So, are we moving?
You pay back everything in 3 days!
- You understand?
- Yeah, okay!
Holy shit.
- What happened to you?
- This? A jealous husband did it.
I worked hard.
With one fake Bonaparte in the horse race,
I got three real ones.
Not bad, huh?
Oh, yeah?
You have 5 bills to move a day,
you make 25 francs per bill.
Do you know many jobs
that pay this well?
No.
- Isn't that enough for you?
- Yes. Is there a problem?
- You were supposed to give me
8,000 new francs.
- There's 7,500
in small bills
and 300 with the Bonapartes.
That makes 8,000.
You're short 300. Come on.
- Read the bill numbers.
- No.
Read it!
39320 V60... yeah.
Read the numbers.
39320 V60... they're the same.
- Of course,
since I made them!
No, it's the tobacconist...
That's enough now!
Stop treating me
like an idiot!
You think I can't spot
my own fakes?
- Wait, please.
I screwed up, I won't do it again.
I need that money.
Phone
- Let's take a break.
I'll call you back.
Yes, hello?
Yes, speaking.
I was expecting your call.
Exactly.
Understood. Thank you.
Next!
I'd like... I'd like
10 Treasury bonds.
Of course.
- Hello, miss.
I'm being rude.
Is there a problem?
I don't have enough anymore.
Wait a minute.
I'm coming.
- Is it okay?
- It's okay.
I have four.
The manager confirmed it to me,
I'll have more tomorrow morning.
I'll come back later.
There you go, thanks...
- Wait, sir, your money.
- Oh, shit...
Here.
- Thank you.
- Goodbye, sir.
- Is this how the counterfeiter
moves his bills?
- Possible.
- That would be clever.
Careless, above all. And new.
If he'd been doing that from the start,
we'd have locked him up long ago.
You know what that means,
Perrier?
That he's not working alone anymore.
He hired someone
and that someone
isn't playing by the rules.
We've been waiting 15 years
for that slip-up.
All right, have a good day.
- What are you doing?
We're almost done.
- Want us to give you a demo?
- Yes, of course.
What are you working on?
- Dad's new invention.
- It's yours.
A single-dose coffee machine.
In a packet, you put
- a dose of ground coffee...
- You slide it into the machine,
the water heats up...
- It passes through the packet,
which acts as a filter.
And then you throw it away.
One dose, one coffee.
You got back to your inventions?
- Good accounts
make good friends.
But in the air!
- Hello?
- They've spotted me! Move!
Don't move!
Who are you on the phone with?
Don't hang up!
Who was that?
No one.
A wrong number.
Shall we continue?
- If you want
us to take you to the hospital,
you tell us who you work for.
I work alone.
- A genius like you,
I doubt it.
I don't care if you believe me...
He's screaming.
Damn it!
If you talk,
you fall under Article 138
of the Penal Code.
It says that anyone who reports
a counterfeiter
can get
an exculpatory excuse.
Does that mean anything to you?
- No.
- In plain English, if you talk,
you avoid hard labor
and prison.
So...
is that true?
- I don't go around
carrying the Penal Code.
You'll have to take my word for it.
- Then untie me,
and after that, we'll talk.
Alright, Pierre. Ready to go?
Oh no, Mom. Five more minutes.
It worked, we did it!
We did it.
Jan Ceslaw Bojarski?
Yes.
You are under arrest.
- What makes me think
it's real?
- Where are you going?
- I'm going home.
How long have you been married?
It's been 20 years,
but we haven't lived together
for a year.
- You're claiming
that in 20 years minus 1 year,
you never saw a thing?
- Who are you to say
what needed to be seen?
So?
- Nothing so far.
- Go back up, search everywhere.
Tear the house apart if you have to.
Yes, sir.
- Untie him.
I'll find it.
You know
I'm going to find it!
No, I don't know anything at all.
It's probably
just another one of your false leads.
What's that?
- A state-of-the-art
coffee machine.
Want to try it?
I didn't dare ask.
One dose, one coffee.
The perfect dose.
- You've already got
the ad slogan.
I'm an inventor.
Doesn't seem very economical to me.
- Maybe,
but it's practical and really good.
Here.
I'll have a jackhammer brought in
or do we settle this
like civilized people?
- Who helped you
to rig all this up?
No one.
My wife had nothing to do with it.
Swear to me she'll be fine,
and I'll tell you everything.
- Commissioner, please!
- Please, for Paris Match!
Commissioner!
Madam, please!
Please step back.
- Back up, back up!
- One more.
No, not the family.
It's there.
Come on.
I have bad news.
- The Bank of France refused to hire me?
- The USA and the USSR
wanted your services,
but the general vetoed it.
- He didn't like a Pole doing better
than his Frenchmen.
If you'd told me that one day
de Gaulle would know me...
I really sweated over that one.
I thought the gaze looked lifeless.
- Yours does have more sparkle,
that's true.
- I tried to improve the original a bit.
Page 10, they're talking about you.
- The Court and jury decide
by absolute majority
to convict Bojarski Jan
Ceslaw to 20 years in prison
and order the seizure
and destruction
of all the banknotes
he has counterfeited.
Mingled journalists' voices
How do you feel?
Eh...
I'm almost a celebrity here.
Outside too, you know?
The neighbors still haven't gotten over it.
- Your mother neither, I imagine.
You were the one who was right.
I should've stopped earlier.
Here.
I signed them.
I'm sorry it took me so long.
You see, Bojarski...
I'd rather these ones
were fake.
- I'm going to stay here
for a very long time.
Listen.
Go out on the terrace...
And now, the highlight
of the auction...
a genuine fake banknote,
a Bojarski,
nicknamed 'the Czanne
of counterfeit money'.
For this Bonaparte-period
Bojarski,
considered his masterpiece,
1,000 euros.
I have a bidder at 1,000 euros.
1,100...
1,200, 1,300, 1,400, 1,500...
2,000, 2,100, 2,200,
2,300... 2,400, 2,500... 3,000...
3,500... 4,000... 4,500...
Adaptation: Hugo Martinet