- Scene title: This film could be called "The Children of Marx and Coca-Cola." Understand what you will.
- Paul: We' went to the movies often. The screen would light up, and we'd feel a thrill. But Madelrine and I were usually disappointed. But Madeleine and I were usually disappointed. The images were dated and jumpy. Marilyn Monroe had aged badly. We felt sad. It wasn't the movie of our dreams. It wasn't the total film we carried inside ourselves. That film we would have liked to make, or more secretly, no doubt, the film we wanted to live.
- Paul: [Voice-over] From January to March, I continued the opinion polls. Do vacuum cleaners sell? Do you like cheese in tubes? Do you read a lot? What's a cadre? Do you like poetry? Winter sports? Short skirts? How do you react to an accident? If your lover left you for a black, would you mind? Do you know about the famine in India? Do you know what a Communist is? Do you use birth control pills or a thing in your vagina? Where do you live? What's your salary? Why are society women more frigid than factory girls? Do you know there's an Iraqi-Kurd war on? Gradually, over these three months, I came to realize that these questions did not reflect but deformed the collective mentality. My lack of objectivity, even when unconscious, tended to provoke a predictable lack of sincerity in those I was polling. Unawares, I was deceiving them and being deceived by them. Why? Probably because polls and surveys quickly veer from their true goal, the observation of behavior, and instead insidiously go for value judgments. I discovered that the questions I would ask any French person expressed an ideology that reflects not present mores but those of the past.
- Madeleine Zimmer - une petite chanteuse: Do you think one can live alone? Always alone.
- Paul: No, I don't think one can, it's impossible. Without tenderness you'd shoot yourself.
- Catherine-Isabelle: [Voice-over] We can suppose that, 20 years from now, every citizen will wear a small electrical device that can arouse the body to pleasure and sexual satisfaction.
- Madeleine Zimmer - une petite chanteuse: [Voice-over] Give us a TV and a car, but deliver us from liberty.
- Madeleine Zimmer - une petite chanteuse: What's the center of the world for you?
- Madeleine Zimmer - une petite chanteuse: The center of the world? We've never talked, and the first time we do, you ask me weird questions.
- Madeleine Zimmer - une petite chanteuse: I think it's a perfectly normal question. Come on. Answer me.
- Paul: Love, I guess.
- Madeleine Zimmer - une petite chanteuse: Funny. I'd have said "me."
- La femme dans le métro: Know what you niggers are? You're potential murderers. And you know it.
- L'homme dans le métro: And you, your dream is to be like a Hollywood hooker. Money is all you think about. It's written all over your face.
- [La femme points over to Robert and Paul who are eavesdropping on the conversation]
- L'homme dans le métro: They just don't get it. They just don't get it. They take their heads in their hands and blather, "Oooh, I just love Bessie Smith."
- [Robert and Paul look at each other]
- L'homme dans le métro: They have no clue what she's singing about. "Here's my big fat black ass." She's not singing about love.
- La femme dans le métro: What, then?
- L'homme dans le métro: It's not about desire, not about sorrow. Nothing like what you think. Want me to tell you? Her big fat ass is telling you to f*** off. That's what. Same goes for musicians. Take Charlie Parker.
- Paul: Do you think socialism still has a future?
- Mlle 19 ans de 'Mademoiselle Age Tendre': Socialism? Is that what you asked?
- Paul: Yes.
- Mlle 19 ans de 'Mademoiselle Age Tendre': I'm not qualified to answer. I know nothing about it.
- Paul: What does "the American way" mean to you?
- Mlle 19 ans de 'Mademoiselle Age Tendre': A very fast-paced life, probably. Very free.
- Paul: What about the car?
- Madeleine Zimmer - une petite chanteuse: What car?
- Paul: The car.
- Paul: You stole one?
- Paul: Yes.
- Catherine-Isabelle: I doubt that.
- Madeleine Zimmer - une petite chanteuse: You're not Pierrot le Fou. He stole cars for his women.
- Paul: Times had changed, It was the age of James Bond and Viet Nam. Hope swept the French left as the December elections loomed. I turned 21 two days before.
- Scene title: The mole has no consciousness, yet it burrows in a specific direction.
- Madeleine Zimmer - une petite chanteuse: Are you looking for work?
- Paul: Not exactly, but I just did my military service.
- Madeleine Zimmer - une petite chanteuse: Was it fun?
- Paul: It's 16 months of your life with no comfort, money, love, or free time. In other words, modern life. 24 a day of submission to unbridled authority, 16 months of struggle a young Frenchman must endure to win relative freedom from authority, when he's had no exposure to culture. It can become a life of submission, because the military and industrial complex coexist well, as the logics of money and order.
- Madeleine Zimmer - une petite chanteuse: It doesn't sound like fun.
- Madeleine Zimmer - une petite chanteuse: Why do you want to go out with me tonight?
- Paul: Because I think you're pretty. And for some tenderness.
- Madeleine Zimmer - une petite chanteuse: Ever go with a hooker?
- Paul: It's happened. But I don't like hookers. It's sad and without feeling.
- Madeleine Zimmer - une petite chanteuse: Spare me the details.
- Paul: [Voice-over] Robert liked Catherine, who was probably still a virgin but had the makings of a future militant.
- Madeleine Zimmer - une petite chanteuse: [Voice-over] Today in Paris. What do young women dream about? But which young women? The assembly-line inspectors with no time to make love because they're so worn out? The manicurists on the Champs-Élysées who start hooking at age 18 at the big Right Bank hotels? The rich schoolgirls who only know Bergson and Sartre because their bourgeois parents keep them locked up? The is no average Frenchwoman.
- Madeleine Zimmer - une petite chanteuse: [Voice-over] I'm glad Paul's in love with me. I might let him screw me. But he'd better not become a pest.
- Catherine-Isabelle: She's afraid you'll get her pregnant.
- Paul: What an idiot. I'm old enough not to screw all the way. Would you be afraid?
- Catherine-Isabelle: No. Not me. I use a thingamajig.
- Paul: What's that? What is it?
- Catherine-Isabelle: A gadget from America. A guy from Air France brought one for Elisabeth. Madeleine thinks it's indecent. I can understand her being scared.
- Madeleine Zimmer - une petite chanteuse: [Referring to her newly released record single] I'm No. 6 in Japan.
- Catherine-Isabelle: Really?
- Madeleine Zimmer - une petite chanteuse: With "Pinball Champ".
- Paul: More! Who's ahead of you?
- Madeleine Zimmer - une petite chanteuse: The Beatles, France Gall, Bob Dylan...
- Elisabeth: Move your behind, Madeleine.
- Madeleine Zimmer - une petite chanteuse: Don't say "behind." Say "bottom."
- Paul: Not "bottom." "Buns."
- Elisabeth: No, you say "butt."
- Paul: No, "Bum."
- Madeleine Zimmer - une petite chanteuse: "Heinie."
- Elisabeth: "Moons."
- Paul: "Rear end."
- Paul: Do you know what birth control is?
- Mlle 19 ans de 'Mademoiselle Age Tendre': More or less. It's a big topic now.
- Paul: What is it, in practical terms? Come on. Tell me.
- Mlle 19 ans de 'Mademoiselle Age Tendre': You're making me uncomfortable. I won't answer. I know what it is... but it's a pain...
- Paul: I'm polling French women. You're a typical French woman.
- Mlle 19 ans de 'Mademoiselle Age Tendre': Yes, of course. Well, birth control is...
- Paul: Do you know practical ways not to have kids?
- Mlle 19 ans de 'Mademoiselle Age Tendre': There are lots. I'd feel strange naming any.
- Paul: Just name one or two.
- Mlle 19 ans de 'Mademoiselle Age Tendre': Pills, for example, not to use a more specific term. Or else the diaphragm.
- Le partenaire de Brigitte Bardot: I think now that you've performed it, you should forget it completely. Act as if you're reading it for the first time. Forget you've rehearsed it. Read it out any old way.
- Brigitte Bardot: Okay. I'll give it a try. "It was constructed. It was perverse. There was no one. Man had withdrawn, leaving traces of his deeds. There was nothing, nothing at all. We were lost, happy to desire nothing again."
- Paul: Let's go. This is stupid.
- Catherine-Isabelle: I want to see it.
- Elisabeth: Let's go. Eroticism makes me sick.
- Catherine-Isabelle: Speak for yourself.
- Catherine-Isabelle: I'm not seeing anyone in particular.
- Robert: So you sleep around?
- Catherine-Isabelle: I don't sleep around.
- Robert: That's what you said.
- Catherine-Isabelle: [laughing] I certainly did not say that. I said I wasn't seeing anyone in particular. "Going out" doesn't mean "going to bed."