From the movie Usual Suspects
Verbal Kint: What the cops never figured out,
and what I know now, was that these men would never break, never lie
down, never bend over for anybody. Anybody.
Dave Kujan: Do you know a dealer named Ruby Deamer, Verbal?
Verbal Kint: Do you know a religious guy named John Paul?
Dave Kujan: Did you know Ruby's in Attica?
Verbal Kint: He didn't have my lawyer.
Jeff Rabin: I'm telling you this guy is protected from up on
high by the Prince of Darkness.
Keaton: I'm a businessman now.
Cop: Yeah? What's that, the restaurant business? No. From now
on, you're in the gettin'-fucked-by-us business.
Verbal Kint: Back when I was picking beans in Guatemala, we used
to make fresh coffee, right off the trees I mean. That was good. This
is shit but, hey, I'm in a police station.
Verbal Kint: Oh gee, thanks Dave, bang-up job so far. Extortion,
coercion; you'll pardon me if I ask you to kiss my pucker.
Verbal Kint: You think you can catch Keyser Soze? You think a
guy like that comes this close to getting caught, and sticks his head
out? If he comes up for anything it'll be to get rid of me. After that...
my guess is you'll never hear from him again.
Keaton is introducing quiet Verbal to the other suspects in the cell.
Keaton: His name is Verbal. Verbal Kint.
McManus: Verbal?
Keaton: Yeah.
Verbal: Roger, really. People say I talk too much.
Hockney: Yeah, I was just about to tell you to shut up.
After being strip-searched.
Fenster: Man, I had a finger up my asshole tonight!
Hockney: Is it Friday already?
Fenster: The way I hear it, Soze is some kind of butcher. A pitiless,
psycho, fucked-up butcher.
Suspects in a lineup are asked to read a phrase.
Cop: Number 1, step forward.
Hockney: Hand me the keys, you fucking cocksucker.
Cop: Number 2, step forward.
McManus: Give me the fucking keys, you fucking cocksucking motherfucker,
aaarrrghh!
Cop: Knock it off! Get back! Number 3, step forward.
laughing
Cop: In English, please?
Fenster: Excuse me?
Cop: In English.
Fenster: Hand me the fucking keys, you cocksucker, what the fuck?
Verbal Kint: I just can't believe we're going to walk into certain
death!
Fred Fenster: Ohh, is that the one about the hooker with, um,
dysentery?
Cop: I can put you in Queens on the night of the hijacking.
Hockney: Really? I live in Queens, did you put that together
yourself, Einstein? Got a team of monkeys working around the clock on
this?
Kobayashi: One cannot be betrayed if one has no people.
Hockney: What about it, pretzel man, what's your story?
Fenster: He'll flip ya. He'll flip ya for real.
Verbal Kint: To a cop the explanation's always simple. There's
no mystery to the street, no arch criminal behind it all. It if you
find a body and you think his brother did it, you're gonna find out
you're right.
Special Agent Dave Kujan: Let me tell you something. I'm smarter
than you are. I'm going to get it out of you whether you like it or
not.
Verbal Kint: Keaton once said, "I don't believe in God,
but I'm afraid of him." Well I believe in God, and the only thing
that scares me is Keyser Soze.
Verbal Kint: And I'm not just talkin' fat, I'm talkin' ORCA fat.
Verbal Kint: The greatest trick the devil ever pulled was convincing
the world he didn't exist.
McManus: There's nothing that can't be done.
Kujan: He was dead just long enough for the murder rap to blow
over. And then he had lunch.
preparing to snipe
Counting victims as he snipes at them.
McManus: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7... Oswald was a fag.
Verbal Kint: How do you shoot the devil in the back? What if
you miss?
Verbal: And then he showed these men of will what will really
is.
Trivia about
The Usual Suspects:
Dean Keaton is another name for 26th street in Austin, Texas.
Coincidence?
Benicio Del Toro's delivery of the line "He'll flip ya'.
Flip ya' for real." Is straight from the movie "Straight No
Chaser" about jazz pianist Thelonius Monk. Monk says the line himself.
The line-up scene was scripted as a serious scene, but after
a full day of filming takes where the actors couldn't keep a straight
face, director Bryan Singer decided to use the funniest takes.
The name of the film's production company (Blue Parrot/Bad
Hat Harry Productions) is an inside reference to a line from Jaws (1975),
where Brody meets an old guy in a bathing cap on a beach and greets
him by saying "That's a bad hat, Harry". The "Blue Parrot"
part is a reference to Casablanca (1942), as is the title of the film.
The order that the personal packages are given to everyone
in the pool room is the same order in which the characters die.
Five actors played the part of Keyser Soze: Gabriel Byrne's
and Kevin Spacey's faces are shown as Keyser Soze; in the flashback
sequence, Keyser Soze is played by a man with long hair which obscures
his face; and Bryan Singer and a friend of his played the parts of Keyser
Soze's hand lighting a cigarette and the close up of Keyser's feet.
The part of Verbal Kint was always intended for actor Kevin
Spacey. Is it a coincidence that Kevin Spacey and Keyser Soze have the
same initials?
At one point in the film, Keyser Soze is referred to as being
Turkish. "Soze" in Turkish means "to talk." This
is a clue that Keyser Soze may be "Verbal" Kint.
Actor Gabriel Byrne, when asked at a film festival, "Who
is Keyser Soze?" replied, "During shooting and until watching
the film tonight, I thought I was!"
When Kevin Spacey points a gun at Gabriel Byrne, Byrne asks
him what is the time. Spacey gets asked the same question, in the same
circumstances, by Richard Pryor in See No Evil, Hear No Evil.
Dean Keaton is Gabriel Byrne's real name.