"Coupling" (Coupling) not only bursts with laughter, but is also very coquettish. It is more rampant than "Sex and City", and more arbitrary than "Friends". There is a scene in the play: Patrick, who is "Countless princes", falls in love with the beauty mad Sally and tries to fight for the freedom of returning to his apartment. At this time, the screenwriter organized a drama of modern and ancient time and space: Queen Sally, like a female scorpion, played against the "knight" in her spare time, breaking down the knight's resistance step by step with gentleness, pitifulness, and collapse. The ending is naturally the Scorpion Queen taking the time to lead the knight back to her bed net. Steve (Jack Davenport) was caught by his girlfriend for watching lesbian porn. His face collapsed like a sack of potatoes, and he was struggling to death while breaking it. When Jeff (Richard Coyle) saw Xinyi's beautiful woman, his mouth was always out of control, and he couldn't end without talking about amputation of the beautiful woman or breaking one of his legs. Steve was so frustrated that he delivered a speech defending men's right to watch female organs. The speech was magnificent, like a one-man show in Shasha. Jeff was also in pain and had a very difficult out-of-order monologue. The tricks of British dramas are secretly based on drama. Jack Davenport (the same-sex lover of "Ripley the Genius") was born in a stage play, and Richard Coyle also worked as a stage actor. Funny is mainly based on language, not very ugly. The remarks are bolder than American dramas, but the humor and sense of onlookers keep them from losing control. They seem to be floating in the air, pleasing themselves with their own embarrassment, the subtle relationship between the two sexes and the less common desires. In another play, Jane (Gina Bellma) is definitely a breast-enhancing and long-legged stunner that is worth seeing. She is analogous to Phoebe, who is crossing and YY, but the control is Angelina Jolie level.
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