Why did Karla think they were HER tickets?
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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) -
Cameo87 — 14 years ago(April 03, 2012 06:19 PM)
An actor changing a line and a description in the script of the relationship between characters are two completely different things.
Do you think there was some type of script meeting in the I Still Know pre-productions offices that went something like, "I don't like that Karla is described as Julie's roomate in the script - even though it appears that she lives with Julie, even answers the phone as if she lives in the same apartment. Let's just delete that invisible description that no one in the threatre is ever going to see, even though it makes no sense that Karla would behave this way in Julie's apartment unless she lived with her. Just to confuse some of the dumbasses watching!"
I mean, seriously