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besleybean wrote:
She will stop at nothing to keep him.
I agree. How do you feel about this?
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Schmiezi wrote:
besleybean wrote:
She will stop at nothing to keep him.
I agree. How do you feel about this?
Funny. I know your question wasn't directed at me, but when I read that sentence I immediately thought 'Yep. And that's what I call unhealthy'.
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Well I don't think either John or Sherlock are in any danger from her.
She may even end up sacrificing herself for John.
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besleybean wrote:
Well I don't think either John or Sherlock are in any danger from her.
She may even end up sacrificing herself for John.
But how Do you FEEL about it?
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Currently my main feelings are directed to having empathy with John.
With Mary, so far I just accept whatever we are shown of her.
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Without having feelings about it?
I personally agree with Solar here. Her kind of love does not seems healthy to me. And her motives strike me as xvery egoistic - a character trait I cannot stand, neither in real live nor on screen.
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Well, you maybe won't have to watch her much longer.
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We won't have to if, as many of us surmise, she's killed off (and the baby with her) as she was in canon.
Last edited by kgreen20 (April 30, 2016 7:47 pm)
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nakahara wrote:
Good one Nakahara.
The powers that be can give us this surface appearance of forgiveness, but if they want the audience to forgive her and accept her as redeemed, they have got to give us a substantial explanation of her actions.
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But some of the audience are perfectly happy with how they have presented things.
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tonnaree wrote:
nakahara wrote:
Good one Nakahara.
The powers that be can give us this surface appearance of forgiveness, but if they want the audience to forgive her and accept her as redeemed, they have got to give us a substantial explanation of her actions.
Agreed. The thing is, I could even accept the fact that John (apparently) has forgiven her - if I could understand his reasons. But not only does Mary not tell us anything about her past to make us understand why she did what she did - it's the same with John. We jump from furious John in 221B to forgiving John in that absurd Christmas scene. How can any writer in his right mind expect an audience to just swallow this?
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@ Solar "You can fool all the people some of the time, and some of the people all the time, but you cannot fool all the people all the time."
Last edited by Harriet (April 30, 2016 9:54 pm)
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I refer the member to my previous post.
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tonnaree wrote:
nakahara wrote:
Good one Nakahara.
The powers that be can give us this surface appearance of forgiveness, but if they want the audience to forgive her and accept her as redeemed, they have got to give us a substantial explanation of her actions.
Agreed. And I doubt that it would have needed too much screen time. But they didn't. On purpose.
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We assume.
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Who is 'we'?
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besleybean wrote:
We assume.
I trust in their talent. Leaving out those information is ignoring all you've learnt in Writing 101. They are no amateurs, hence my belief they did it on purpose.
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The same ' we' that tonnaree was implicating! 'The audience'.
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besleybean wrote:
We assume.
Do you?