The bullet screen in the brain that I read by myself

Peggie 2022-08-19 09:44:13

1. Beautiful clothes.

2. The situation is Emma's governess wedding.

3. The heroine is a bit annoying. She is the kind of noble who calls herself a eldest lady.

4. The heroine who is keen to be a matchmaker hahahaha

[If you want me to write about her matchmaking, the man fell in love with her. 】Sure enough hahaha. The heroine realizes the mistake of her behavior.

5. The male and female protagonists are tit for tat again. Prejudice.

6. A man who was mentioned from the beginning but never showed up - Suspense.

7. Hahahaha this boy is Adam in sex education.

8. The heroine falls in love with a man at first sight

9. The male protagonist and Jane played the piano together, and the female protagonist was compared. The heroine is jealous.

10. This heroine is a bit naive when she acts. I don't feel particularly smart, I just feel particularly self-righteous.

11.? This woman is also in sex education.

12. To be honest, I feel like I can't understand this film? ? ? What the hell is this filming? ? ?

13. The female protagonist's friend was humiliated at the dance, and the male protagonist invited her to dance to give her face. (Save the cat)

14. The two fell in love while dancing.

15. Sue is dead.

There is only one married woman in this world who can hold a banquet for me.

It's Mrs. xxx.

It's my future Mrs Knightley.

16. My best friend fell in love with the male lead. The lady is sad.

17. The heroine scolds old friends, so mean here. emmm

18. The heroine finally realized her mistake. The mistake of this film is that it all magnifies the shortcomings of the heroine, but it does not show too much of the advantages of the heroine.

Like "she's always so careful with them" (Dad says) but the film only shows her impatience. Deliberately writing the heroine hateful, it's really yours.

So, if the character has shortcomings, there must be character logic (for example, emphasizing how much her father prides himself on his status, so Emma's character is understandable, and at the same time she is kinder, and the audience will like such a heroine) , or the whole person is excellent, with only a few gender holes.

19. The heroine is so beautiful.

20. The female protagonist finally learned that her best friend likes the male protagonist. This is too stupid, and this heroine is too stupid. Any viewer has already guessed that it is the male lead.

21. The heroine quarrels with her best friend. Best friend "I rejected Mr. Martin because of you". It's all the heroine's fault.

22. The male protagonist misunderstood that the female protagonist likes a man who is engaged to Jane and wants to confess to him. Hahaha this misunderstanding. The female lead thought that the male lead would tell her that he liked his best friend.

23. Hahaha, the heroine had a nosebleed when the male lead confessed, hahahahahahahahaha

24. The girlfriend of the heroine took the initiative to show the heroine, and the two reconciled. But I think this settlement is only formal and they keep silent on the matter. What about the love given by the heroine's best friend? Well, it might be vulgar to write it out. The contradiction between the two people can be a little more conflicted. The previous quarrel is almost equivalent to nothing, and it can be written in more depth.

Why did the second woman accept Martin again?

25. The male protagonist is willing to stay in the female protagonist's manor and accompany her father for the sake of the female protagonist.

By the way, the heroine's father-daughter relationship has not been written much.

The new version of Little Women is much better. This story really doesn't have any theme or purpose, and it's not well told.

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Extended Reading

Emma. quotes

  • Mr. Elton: Dearly beloved friends, we gather here, in the sight of God, to join together this man, and this woman, in holy matrimony, an honorable estate, instituted by God, in this time of man's great in-no-cence...

    Mr. Woodhouse: In-no-cence? Innocence, no?

  • Mr. Woodhouse: Emma, you should not make matches, or foretell things. Whatever you say, always comes to pass! You must not make any more.

    Emma Woodhouse: I promise to make none for myself, Papa, but I must indeed for other people. 'Tis the greatest amusement in the world, and after such success you know...