(no subject)
Mar. 19th, 2006 05:05 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Dear ABC Family:
I appreciate you for making a sequel to The Cutting Edge, and even more for showing the two back-to-back. Because it was a good way to spend my Saturday night. However, in the future, consider:
a) Showing the first one before the sequel makes it even more obvious that neither DB Sweeney nor Moira Kelly was in the sequel.
b) I hate to nit-pick, but if Kate and Doug got together at the Albertville Olympics in 1992, their daughter would only be 14 for the 2006 Olympics in Torino. Which is very young for Olympic competition, especially pairs (as it helps to wait until the boys are old enough to lift the girls up). And since there are shots of her (and her partner) drinking legally, I'm fairly certain she was meant to be at least 21.
Oh well, this is not a movie meant for contemplation, it's a movie meant for watching people skate around and occasionally make stupid decisions and attempt to ignore chemistry until the inevitable but satisfying ending occurs. And it was good at that.
Yours,
Evelyn
I appreciate you for making a sequel to The Cutting Edge, and even more for showing the two back-to-back. Because it was a good way to spend my Saturday night. However, in the future, consider:
a) Showing the first one before the sequel makes it even more obvious that neither DB Sweeney nor Moira Kelly was in the sequel.
b) I hate to nit-pick, but if Kate and Doug got together at the Albertville Olympics in 1992, their daughter would only be 14 for the 2006 Olympics in Torino. Which is very young for Olympic competition, especially pairs (as it helps to wait until the boys are old enough to lift the girls up). And since there are shots of her (and her partner) drinking legally, I'm fairly certain she was meant to be at least 21.
Oh well, this is not a movie meant for contemplation, it's a movie meant for watching people skate around and occasionally make stupid decisions and attempt to ignore chemistry until the inevitable but satisfying ending occurs. And it was good at that.
Yours,
Evelyn