Adolfo Celi credited as playing...
Inspector Rizzi
- Merle McGill: After all, honesty is the best policy, right?
- Inspector Rizzi: Debatable. But, at the moment I would appreciate it.
- Merle McGill: I guess it must be hard for you to understand, Inspector, a man like me and Cecil Fox.
- Inspector Rizzi: Not hard at all.
- Merle McGill: But how can I say it, Inspector... He was my first... man. Somehow you just never forget your first man.
- Inspector Rizzi: I remember mine - vividly.
- [Merle throws him a curious glance]
- Inspector Rizzi: He also got away.
- Princess Dominique: I have no need for Mr. Fox's money.
- Inspector Rizzi: That is what truly baffles me. This incredible wealth which nobody needs and everybody wants.
- Inspector Rizzi: A great genius. If it were not for Signor Perry Mason, every week, in America, an innocent person would be convicted of murder.
- Inspector Rizzi: Miss McGill, I understand the necessity of you to arrive in Venice incognito.
- Merle McGill: I wouldn't go anywheres uninvited.
- Inspector Rizzi: I must have used the wrong word. My English is uh... .
- Merle McGill: When you do talk to Princess Dominique, you know what she's gonna tell ya?
- Inspector Rizzi: If I had such capability, I would never get out of bed.
- Merle McGill: She's gonna say that she and I were here, in my room, all night, playing gin rummy together. That'll be a lie. For one thing, she can't even play gin rummy.
- Inspector Rizzi: Fascinating! Now, why would she choose a game she could not play?
- Merle McGill: [with a "caught" look on her face] Yeah, that was stupid of her, but the name of the game isn't important.
- Merle McGill: OK, shamus, so what's on your mind? Or, to be exact, on both your minds?
- Inspector Rizzi: Shamus? You use too many American idioms I do not know.
- Inspector Rizzi: That is what truly baffles me: this incredible wealth, which nobody needs - and everybody wants.