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Too Much Recap: Crazy, Fancy Freaks
Seemingly, every woman Felix has ever had a romantic attachment to is at this wedding and is trying to wedge distance between Felix and Jess.
The dynamics set up by the wedding of one Georgia-Peach, a distant cousin of the late Queen, to Oriel — who expresses his joy at seeing his old schoolmate Felix by planting a kiss square on his lips, the same way Polly did with Jess when they first met — will ring familiar to anyone who has read a Jane Austen novel or two. The grip of the English customs and rules that dictated manners in a place like Hertfordshire, where Pride and Prejudice is set, has loosened since the early nineteenth century, but they haven’t, apparently, completely gone away. Jessica imagines her escape as a James Bond-like stunt, a comparison helped along by a slightly reminiscent score, down several floors of the main building; but as it turns out, she is maybe — and this is a generous estimate — two feet from the ground.
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