"Felicity the Great": Enjoy the thrill and beauty of dancing

Alexa 2022-04-08 09:01:13

The film is vivid and beautiful. It may be "Avanti" and "The Thief" that Shou watched as a child. . ” and other puppet dramas, I especially like the playful, cute, slender and vivid characters, and the characters in this animation happen to be such images. The heroine also has a round nose. The subject is also my favorite dance subject, so I watched the whole movie.

It is worth mentioning that the male protagonist has a prototype. The master Eiffel he worshipped in the play was the engineer who built the Eiffel Tower. His prototype in history was a Frenchman who was very persistent in flying. He hung his wings from the Eiffel Tower. The tower jumped down and fell to his death, but in the animation, he was flying with his beloved girl. It can be seen that the French are proud of their own culture and praise for various feelings, so they can make good works. Live life as poetry, this is what we can learn.

The heroine grew up in an orphanage and likes to dance. Later, when she had the opportunity, she and the hero went to the big city of Paris to pursue her dreams. One wanted to be a dancer and the other wanted to be an architect. They each worked hard for their dreams, survived, and finally achieved some results. Although the story is unreasonable, the pictures inside are all good-looking and the three views are all positive. It is worth watching, and I am also more I love dancing, and I hope I can realize all my dreams in the future, and live more and more beautifully.

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Extended Reading

Leap! quotes

  • Regine: [to Odette, as she and Felicie are cleaning the stairs] Get up.

    Odette: [meekly] Yes, ma'am.

    [gets up, but keeps her head down]

    Regine: [referring to Felicie] Who is this?

    Odette: No one. She helps.

    Regine: YOU feed her. Out of YOUR wages.

    Odette: Yes, ma'am.

    Regine: I want you to air and press the linen.

    [whispers]

    Regine: NOW.

    [Odette leaves. Regine looks down at Felicie coldly. A visibly frightened Felicie resumes cleaning the stairs]

    Regine: It's not clean.

    [purposely pushes the bucket of scrubbing water with her foot; the water spills down the steps, much to Felicie's shock]

    Regine: Oops! Oh, look what you did.

    [smiles wickedly and leaves]

  • Felicie: [on her first day of dance class, shyly greeting the other girls] Hi. Hello.

    [to herself; when none of the girls respond]

    Felicie: Okay. Super.

    [louder]

    Felicie: I'm Felicie.

    Nora: [confused] Felicie?

    Felicie: [realizes her mistake] Uh, no, no, no, no, no. Sorry. I'm... friendly, ever so friendly. And my name is Camille.

    Nora: Okay. I'm Nora, but everyone calls me... Nora. That's... the name that goes with MY face.

    [laughs]

    Nora: Hey, you should warm up.

    Felicie: [to herself, confused] Warm up?

    [shrugs and tries to literally 'warm up' by rubbing her hands on her arms]

    Dora: [amused] Oh my. That is crazy. I'm guessing you're new, my darling?

    Felicie: [awkwardly] You can tell that because...?

    [Before Dora can answer, Mérante enters the room. The girls quickly gather to one side of the room]

    Felicie: Who is that?

    Dora: [rolls her eyes] You are joking, right? It's Louis Mérante, ballet master, world-famous choreographer, the man who performed the most fouettes ever in a single solo.

    Felicie: Foo-what?

    Dora: Turns. Really difficult turns.

    Nora: 187 in total. And right after, he vomited!

    Mérante: Silence, mademoiselle! First position, second...

    [All of the girls except Felicie go through the basic ballet positions]

    Felicie: [lost] What?

    Mérante: Third, fourth, and rest in fifth.

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