And even if you decide that it does not make financial sense for you to buy a policy, it may make
enough emotional sense and provide you with greater peace of mind.
Not exact matches
The resulting temporal choppiness from not being clear from the start not only continuously takes us out of the story to try to catch up with it when we're finally given
enough information for it to make
sense, but it also reveals just how manipulative the device is in order to try to load up all of the
emotional beats for whatever version of a climax the story can muster up.
It's in this hand - off from one tone to another where Macdonald fumbles the ball, as he hasn't given us
enough of an
emotional connection between the characters in order to feel for their plight, or even care about Daisy's newfound romance, before they're all thrust into danger and having to propel themselves forward out of a
sense of love that we feel is shallow and, in a real world
sense, would likely have been forgotten in the face of the death and destruction that surrounds them.
Although this material is familiar
enough in outline, and succumbs to some slightly schematic
emotional complications, there's much that's impressive: Michelle Rodriguez's fiercely self - possessed, emotionally nuanced lead performance, an unostentatious, completely authoritative
sense of the boxing and working - class milieu, excellent cinematography and production design, and fully imagined and well - acted secondary characters such as Jaime Tirelli's trainer and Santiago Douglas's boyfriend.
Dig deep
enough, and it is often an
emotional reason — so working with your emotions to help you get out of that hole makes perfect psychological
sense... which is why it works so often for so many tens of thousands of families who try it.
The economic,
emotional, and relational implications of divorce are
enough to make millennials want to find that
sense of certainty before walking down the aisle.