Why did Karla think they were HER tickets?
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SeleneGoddess — 14 years ago(November 02, 2011 03:09 PM)
- Julie would not have reacted the way she did at the
front door closing
if she had a roommate who would have come in through the front door. - Julie says it's "her number" that's unlisted. Not "our number".
- Friends do laundry at each other's places all the time. Especially if they went home with them after a night at the club. Not to mention that all Carla washed were her tennis shoes. It's not like she had heaps of laundry she was washing.
Arguing with a bigot is like teaching an infant the quadratic formula.
- Julie would not have reacted the way she did at the
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EmilyTheDramaQueen — 14 years ago(November 02, 2011 04:21 PM)
- Julie's been through hell and back so she's paranoid and judging from the class room scene she freaks out A LOT!
- They can have different land lines like me and my roommate do
Also, every description of this movie says that Carla is her roommate, so I don't get why your stupid ass (and you are the only one who does) think they aren't. So get over it they are!
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SeleneGoddess — 14 years ago(November 02, 2011 06:20 PM)
Actually, if you read our posts, it was more laughter and joking on my part (and I think her part) where I didn't appreciate the childish nature she responded with and she thought I couldn't admit I was wrong. Then it just ended up beingfluff
If only closed minds came with closed mouths. -
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Jerique — 14 years ago(March 23, 2012 02:32 PM)
That doesn't settle anything.
In the film, it is
never
stated that they are roommates. It doesn't matter what the script says. In The Social Network, Sean Parker says, "there's a fire in here, Amy" and in the final film he says, "there's a snake in here, Amy."
The script is not definitive.
Julie and Karla are not roommates.
By the way, the ticket thing with Karla always annoyed me too, but then again she was a bitch, anyways.
"
Victims
; aren't we all?"
Eric Draven
(The Crow)