It turned into an odd
kind of love triangle.
Not exact matches
The
love triangle seems like
kind of a lazy way out
of this idyll.
It seemed as if we'd never get to see any other
kind of foreign film hereabouts — an effect reinforced by Ettore Scola's A Special Day, in which a director who had heretofore drawn a lot
of his strength and interest from the unpredictable intersections
of gritty - grubby realismo and flamboyant stylization (The Pizza
Triangle, We All
Loved Each Other So Much) inclined dangerously toward high gloss.
by Bill Chambers If Some
Kind of Wonderful is just an inverted Pretty in Pink, then Reality Bites is Some
Kind of Wonderful inverted back again, with a proud young woman positioned at the apex
of a
love triangle and flanked by suitors from opposite poles
of class who share a sincere affection for their mutual inamorata.
The story does, however, concern a
kind of fallout: the aftermath
of a messy
love triangle involving a philandering publisher (Kwon Hae - hyo), his mistress (Kim Sae - byeok), and his enraged wife (Cho Yunhee).
Since these
kind of movies always require at least the hint
of a
love triangle, there is also Ben Parish (Jurassic World's Nick Robinson), a football player from Cassie's high school who has been nicknamed «Zombie» and given a rank
of importance at the Army base.