Word: bride
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...Bull's-eye. "There are always humble beginnings," said the zinged Andrew at a press conference last week. "It's got to start somewhere." Currently "over the moon" and hoping for a late-summer wedding in Westminster Abbey, the couple kissed happily for the cameras. Then the bride-to-be gave reporters a look at her engagement ring, a $37,000 oval ruby surrounded by ten drop diamonds that Andrew helped design. Asked what they saw in each other, the Prince fumbled for an answer. "Wit? Charm? And good looks?" prompted his future wife. "Yes, probably," he replied...
...best of the secondary characters is Kurgan, played by Clancy Brown of The Bride fame. As the immortal (yes, another immortal) representation of evil, Kurgan seems strangely at home in downtown Manhattan. His attire looks as if it has been borrowed from The Terminator's prop room, but unlike Arnold, Kurgan has that all-important sense of humor. After all those centuries, its nice to see that he's still enjoying his work...
...began working with groups that were pressing for large-scale Jewish immigration to Israel. At the same time, he fell in love with a vividly beautiful girl in his Hebrew class, Natalya Stiglitz. After applying for visas to Israel, they married in a religious ceremony in 1974. Shcharansky's bride, who had taken the Hebrew name of Avital, had to leave the Soviet Union the next day, but he was denied permission to emigrate...
...discover themselves to be politically compatible. This "coming together" is one of the film's most charming scenes, with Guilford asking Jane to outline her religious beliefs as he surreptitiously moves closer to her on their bed, tossing aside the book of Platonic theory that had been holding the bride's attention before he entered the room...
...NUNN'S EFFORTS would be entirely fruitless, however, were it not for the expertise and finesse Helena Bonham Carter in providing Jane with a credible range of emotions to complement the metamorphoses undergone by her character as she progresses from shy, introverted, young scholar to innocent bride to the ruler of England. The catalyst which triggers this series of changes is her growing love for Guilford and her subsequent initiation into womanhood. Even taking into account the self-imposed constraints of cinematic exposition, Jane's blossoming into adulthood occurs far too quickly; on her wedding night, we see her reading...