The protagonists:
*
Although the screenwriter Daphne Reynolds tried very hard to describe Daphne as an ordinary girl, it is a pity that the screenwriters and senior executives with an annual salary of several million have long been derailed from today's teenagers.
When I say that no one is "looking" for themselves with annoyance, I believe what I said is the truth.
The 17-year-old girl is now worried about whether she will be too fat, whether Jack (or Ben) in the same class likes herself, and when will Backstreet Boys' new album be released.
So in essence, the character of Daphne has been distorted.
There will not be a girl who has never seen a big scene before, like her in the play, can perfectly integrate herself into the high-level society in such a short period of time.
The plot to give up everything in the end is even more an illusion created by the conscious and sublime integrity of American culture.
not a single person! Will willingly leave the luxurious life.
Maybe it's just that I'm too cynical.
I have watched several Amanda Bynes movies, but in my mind she is still the one who made funny shows when she was a child.
Her performance in this movie is remarkable, but unfortunately there are no moments that make people shine.
* Henry Dashwood
... Colin Firth (no... not talking about him today).
What can you say to a man like Lord Dashwood?
Not manly, not afraid of admitting mistakes, single-minded emotions...
perfection simply cannot exist.
Gentlemen are long gone... let alone rich and handsome gentlemen.
Unintelligible place:
-Since Henry and Libby (Daphne's mother) are so in love, why did Alistair Payne (Henry's political adviser) tell her that when Henry wanted her to leave, she didn't insist on meeting with Henry before leaving?
When Libby left only a letter saying "I am in love with other people", why didn't Henry ask why? I don't want to think about her as an American, who would he meet when he first came to the UK?
Didn't both of them realize that the telephone had been invented? !
-One of the plots in the movie that makes me very upset is that the bad guy will tell the protagonist all the bad things he has done very kindly, so that the protagonist finds out that he/she wrongly blamed his lover...
please... Is it okay?
-This last point really puzzled me, although I might be the only one who feels that way.
Why did Henry and Daphne not feel like a father or daughter...?
When I look at it, I think this is actually the love story between the two of them, even though they are a bit older.
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