The rest
of the picture can be filled in as follows: Keira Knightley and Chiwetel Ejiofor, who play newlywed couple Juliet and Peter, contend with the latent feelings
of Peter's old friend Mark (Andrew Lincoln); Martin Freeman and Joanna Page, body doubles in movies who find attraction to one another while staging sex scenes; Alan Rickman and Emma Thompson, a longtime married couple now
face a crisis in the wake
of Karen (Thompson)'s discovery
of an affair her husband is potentially having with a coworker; Hugh Grant's Prime Minister, the most self - deprecating individual ever to find himself in a position
of such
power, can't help but feel attracted to one
of his secretaries even after her indiscretion with the sleazy U.S. President (an
absolute waste
of Billy Bob Thornton's time).
One
of my
absolute favourite new changes, however, has to be the new location and feel
of the
power button, which now sits on the front -
facing exterior
of the system next to the stylus slot.