She's slutty in this world

Herminio 2022-03-22 09:02:34

Her debauchery is not due to ignorance, but a wise woman who knows how to harness wisdom.
Timely, forgiving, and revealing yourself.
The movie has a happy ending. In the depths of loneliness, two dissolute people finally run towards the unknown front together.
She deserves everything that belongs to her, and it is even more fortunate that the screenwriter let her meet another group of fireworks in the dark. This reminds me of a paragraph in "Paris I Love You", the mystery of pantomime. Two pantomime performers running around the bustling city can only meet in a cold prison. It hits the spot. We know it's not just love. It is the gleam of the same kind of encounter. Submerged in a sea of ​​people we even hopelessly think does not exist of the same kind.
But selfishly, I hope she can leave alone and unrestrained, and stop docking, although docking is the ideal of the homeless, and exile is their destiny.

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Extended Reading
  • Reginald 2022-03-27 09:01:15

    I don't know why it was translated this way.

  • Katrine 2022-03-28 09:01:08

    For Bell, the identity of the daughter-in-law of the English manor is not suitable, not because of the plot, but because she herself is not like a person of that era. For Barnes, he is destined to lose his wife, still not because of the plot, but because he looks too fresh and tender, the interaction between husband and wife is more like a stepson and stepmother, but it happens that his father is still handsome. But the problem came back to Bell. She was supposed to be the kind of strong American girl who didn't like fresh meat from the beginning, and this trait made it difficult for the audience to recognize that she would be the Continental Melancholy Fairs. vegetable! Even if it's just a ride... So this is a work that is doomed from the start of casting with the theme set by the director.

Easy Virtue quotes

  • Larita Whittaker: Cook, I can't call you a verb, your name?

    Cook: Beatrice.

    [Everyone stares]

    Cook: All right, all right, it's Doris. Sorry madam. Always wanted to be called Beatrice.

  • Larita Whittaker: You should have loved me more.

    John Whittaker: I couldn't have loved you more.

    Larita Whittaker: You should have loved me better.