Talk:The Girl in the Café

Vandalism
I really doubt one of the sentences included in the article. It states (without no source...): The reviews, however, were generally negative. Well, generally, as far as I know after some research, there is more positive reviews on the Internet than the negative. Actually, I have found just one negative review: and a lot of positive (not including these written by fans):, , , , , , , , , , ,. So I think the beggining of the "Critical reception" section needs to be changed (I'll suggest changing/deleting the sentence I mentioned above) or some sources for that information need to be found. If nobody minds, I change it after 18:00 (UTC). Andrij Kursetsky  &#8855;  10:47, 3 July 2007 (UTC)
 * Changed, I hope in a good way. Andrij Kursetsky   &#8855;  19:15, 3 July 2007 (UTC)

Overview
I just watched the DVD yesterday. I believe the Overview is wrong on several points. 1. he falls in love. I did not interpret his romantic involvement as love. I believe they seemed to be on that trajectory, but had not reached the point of "being in love". 2. she confronts the prime minister. In three different scenes she becomes confrontational (maybe more?) One with the Chancellor, Once with the Prime minister (and the German Prime Minister(?)) and once at dinner with the entire G-8. 3. he realizes she was right. First he had been working for *years* on this very issue, there was no realization of her "rightness". Second, I do NOT think he agreed with her approach. There was one scene where he becomes aggressive with the Chancellor, but had he agreed with her approach he certainly would have "kept his powder dry" until he had the opportunity to pursuade the entire G-8 or at least the Prime Minister. Some of this is debatable, I know, but I think the claims of "in love" "confrontation of (solely) the Prime Minister" and "her being 'right'" are at least not clear.69.40.241.198 (talk) 23:12, 21 March 2011 (UTC)