Felicity under the aura of the protagonist

Darrion 2022-04-07 09:01:06

If Felicity didn't have the aura of the protagonist, she would be a very ordinary girl. She is sophisticated, does not seek to make progress, and is a little bit naughty. It was such an imperfect child who suddenly got lucky and got a chance to become a good ballet dancer. In the end, she proved herself worthy of such luck with talent and hard work.

Such struggle history is more likely to cause controversy and will be criticized as unfair competition. But on the other hand, most people are imperfect, and most people have dreams. If you have a dream in your heart, you have the opportunity to realize it, of course, the premise is to maintain integrity.

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Extended Reading
  • Jevon 2022-04-11 09:01:07

    It is indeed poisonous chicken soup. This is the scriptwriter's pot. There are many film and television dramas about impostors. The first task is to give the protagonist a reasonable reason. If this is not handled properly, the whole story will collapse. For example, the female lead can be set to hate ballet but be forced to study, or she can let the female lead pretend to be herself because she accidentally breaks her leg but does not want to lose the opportunity to apply for the exam. There are many solutions, but the screenwriter chooses the one that challenges the bottom line of the public the most.

  • Romaine 2022-04-06 09:01:06

    Pretty Disney style. The mandarin dubbing is amazing. Victor and the little heroine are both great. The Russian prince's voice made me laugh to death. The Chinese dubbing finally broke away from the tradition and made people's ears shine. Although some lack the so-called "professional", but Better results. A look at the subtitle table, dubbing director Teng Xin, Sheng Yilun, Xiang Zuo, a new hope for Chinese dubbing! I came back and searched the original French and English versions, and they were not as pleasant as my Chinese.

Leap! quotes

  • Victor: [watching Felicie dance around the Irish bar] Wow!

    [Love-struck, he tosses her a rose. Felicie reaches up to catch it, but loses her balance and falls onto a table. Merante, who was seated nearby, stands up and removes his hat. Felicie gasps in fear]

    Mérante: [sternly] I hope that tomorrow you act with a little more dignity.

    [starts to walk out]

    Mérante: Anyway, tonight was...

    [puts his hat back on and smiles]

    Mérante: A GOOD performance.

    Felicie: [flattered] Thank you, sir.

  • Felicie: [after Camille once again steals her music box] Leave it. Give it back.

    Camille: [laughs mischievously] Silly me. I didn't throw it hard enough THE FIRST TIME!

    [She prepares to throw it across the room, but Felicie grabs her wrist and takes her music box back]

    Felicie: Don't make the same mistake.

    [puts the music box back in her pocket and starts to walk away]

    Camille: Why are you leaving? Scared of being humiliated?

    Felicie: [stops and faces her] Looks like you need more training.

    [uses her broom to stretch her body]

    Felicie: You're nowhere near ready.

    [drops her broom as she and Camille circle each other on tiptoes]

    Camille: I'M going to show you what a real dancer looks like.

    Felicie: Are you sure about that?

    Camille: Quiet! Tonight, these seats will be full! Paris will be looking at ME! Adoring ME!

    Felicie: [smirks] Or not.

    Camille: [furiously] I already told you! You are nothing! You will always be nothing!

    Felicie: [spins up to her] Only one way to find out. Right here. Right now.

    [She and Camille engage in a dance-off. Nora walks in and notices]

    Nora: [pleasantly surprised] Oh my god.

    [rushes out of the room and shouts to the others in the building]

    Nora: DANCE-OFF!