MovieChat Forums > Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them (2016) Discussion > I liked the romance between the tramp an...

I liked the romance between the tramp and the fat guy


They had great chemistry. So i hope they could get maried and got kids

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Me too and i liked her more than her sister lol.

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Ditto

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Overall, I liked Queenie (tramp?) and Kowalski (fat guy?) better than the main characters - Newt and Tina.

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If vampires hate "plus signs" - imagine how they feel about the "square root" symbol.

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So cliche that the tramp would fall for the dopey guy

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Yes cliché but it worked

I. Totaly believed it

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It's a case of curiosity. She never met a no-maj, he never met a yes-maj. And both love food. What else do you need?

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so so so there 4 u
wuz jus' Yeah!
n nyo
MMmmmmMMMMmmmmm
ahd sum hope 4 the twin beds scene
but
wuz so so so hoppy sum Bodhi wuz in luv






der hund verzehrt mein kind

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Maybe she can read her mind and know he's a good guy?

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It was real love

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"Why does it hurt so muuuuuuch?"

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Probably the only parts of the movie i really did enjoy were the scenes they were in.

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My favorite was the romance between the tramp and the blind girl.

Wait.

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LOL

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:D

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I can't remember a romance between a fat guy and a homeless person.

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The OP was using the definition of Tramp as a "floozy" or "loose woman" or "Bimbo" rather than the other definition of "hobo" or "homeless bum". The "homeless" definition was used in films like "The Little Tramp" or "Lady and the Tramp" which might cause the confusion.

Dr. Kila Marr was right. Kill the Crystalline Entity.

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Sorry, I was being sarcastic. The OP'S misogyny didn't deserve a serious response 

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I definitely missed something. What makes you think that Queenie was a tramp?


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I too think it's an inaccurate description. Queenie was very flirtatious and the fact that she didn't think anything was wrong with her meeting men for the first time in her undergarments (a woman after my own heart ;) lol). But I suppose those are MODERN sensibilities. A woman in the 1920s would rarely do that unless she was 'easy'. Sad to say, but that would be the stereotype of that time period.

I too don't like the term 'tramp' since it also implies promiscuity as well as provocative or 'trashy' behavior. Queenie was none of those things. Her only 'fault' in 1920s America would be her comfort with flirting with men she just met in her lingerie. 99% of the women in 'polite society' probably would not have been so comfortable.

Dr. Kila Marr was right. Kill the Crystalline Entity.

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I think we should remember that these men came into her apartment unannounced. She did not plan to meet them in her underwear. I also think that it might be more appropriate to refer to both actors by their character's names of Queenie and Jacob. It is wonderful that you appreciated their romance but it really reveals more about you than them that you describe them the way you do.

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Reveals 'what' exactly about me? Your control freak post says a lot about you in fact. You read way too much into people's posts. And you seem strident in demanding that I bow to your rules of referring to them by their character names.

Dr. Kila Marr was right. Kill the Crystalline Entity.

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So i hope they get children

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get as in understand?
or
make / have / create?







o
as 2 the thread
they
so so so
need there own shew



der hund verzehrt mein kind

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She did not plan to meet them in her underwear.


Yes, but she didn't have to get dressed seductively in full view of them, either.

Arthur, put the kettle on and dig out those lemon hand wipes.

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agreed, fat guy was funny and tramp was quirky, they will be nice couple

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They made such a great couple. But would their union be illegal in the States? Was expecting for them to go to Europe.

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