Steam'i Yükleyin
giriş
|
dil
简体中文 (Basitleştirilmiş Çince)
繁體中文 (Geleneksel Çince)
日本語 (Japonca)
한국어 (Korece)
ไทย (Tayca)
Български (Bulgarca)
Čeština (Çekçe)
Dansk (Danca)
Deutsch (Almanca)
English (İngilizce)
Español - España (İspanyolca - İspanya)
Español - Latinoamérica (İspanyolca - Latin Amerika)
Ελληνικά (Yunanca)
Français (Fransızca)
Italiano (İtalyanca)
Bahasa Indonesia (Endonezce)
Magyar (Macarca)
Nederlands (Hollandaca)
Norsk (Norveççe)
Polski (Lehçe)
Português (Portekizce - Portekiz)
Português - Brasil (Portekizce - Brezilya)
Română (Rumence)
Русский (Rusça)
Suomi (Fince)
Svenska (İsveççe)
Tiếng Việt (Vietnamca)
Українська (Ukraynaca)
Bir çeviri sorunu bildirin
Section Chief Blevins: Agent Scully, please have a seat. Agent
Scully, we've had a brief discussion, but will you
restate the matter we're here to put to rest?
Scully: Yes sir. Four years ago, Section Chief Blevins assigned
me to a project you all know as the x-files. As I am a
medical doctor with a background in hard science, my
job was to provide an analytical perspective on the
work of Special Agent Fox Mulder, whose investigations
into the paranormal were fuelled by a personal belief
that his sister had been abducted by aliens when he was
twelve. I come here today, four years later, to report
on the illegitimacy of Agent Mulder's work. That it is
my scientific opinion, that he became over the course
of these years a victim, a victim of his own false
hopes and of his belief in the biggest of lies.
"The X-Files: Gethsem