I think she looked at Vivien the same way. Of course you can. You know. And, and yet with great respect, because she knew how hard it must have been. And that it was even harder for him, of course, than for her.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
It must have been so impossible to think about it and dare to do that, so they feel compassionate for her. I don't think the movie would work otherwise.
She did not admire him any more than she had. It was merely that she considered him the Lesser of two evils.
I thought it was time for a tough, smart, likable female private investigator, and that's how VI came to life.
Viv had this kind of stage presence where you couldn't ignore it. He walked onstage, he looked dangerous. You just didn't know what he was going to do.
I would say anything is possible on 'Jane the Virgin.'
Can you not see that women could do and would do a hundred times more for the slave, if she were not fettered?
It was a perfect marriage. She didn't want to and he couldn't.
Well even before she was diagnosed with the cancer, I would have said that she was a lot tougher than me and most guys would probably say that about their wives and it's probably true in most cases.
She claimed she loved the camera, its warmth, its familiarity. She responded to its naked glare, its slavish attention to every expression of her face and body, with the kind of immediacy a trusted lover could expect.
Her blue eyes were still beautiful, but they did not know what was before them, and Mary herself could never look through them again to tell Laura what she was thinking without saying a word.