Tuesday, May 20, 2008
Pasión de Gavilanes, Tues. May 20: Grabi finds out how the other half live and everybody finds out about Juan and Norma
Labels: gavilanes
Isn’t Eduvina Trueba just AWFUL? (The old lady who bought all the dresses from Oscar.) She’s a millionaire widow with a weakness for boytoys. She was crushing on blue-eyed Franco a while back & asked Oscar - ever with dollar signs in his eyes – to set them up. Franco, being the ingenuous dolt that he is, went on the date and eventually bolted when he couldn’t take it any longer. Despite his reaction, “Edu” as she likes to be called, still won’t give up on him. Eccchhhhh….
After my inadvertent, near-spoiler of yesterday, the thought occurred that I may need to apologize in advance for possible future missteps in that regard. When Margarita said that what I had mentioned had already been given away in the next day's teaser, it occurred to me that the online episodes may not break in the same places as those being broadcast currently on TV. Per my capitulos, the scene that I mentioned had occurred within the same episode, and according to Margarita, it was scheduled to broadcast on Telemundo the next day. So, mil disculpas if something unintentionally slips out again. I'll try to watch comments about beginnings and ends, just to be safe...
Juan is so tickled to have Norma out of the hacienda. In these few episodes, he's like a kid that just got exactly what he wanted for Christmas. The scenes where Norma visits him at home for the first time after moving out and when she comes to dinner are just priceless. Mario plays Juan with such a restrained yet palpable joy here. His smiles are to die for. When he & Norma say goodnight on his front step & he confesses he's afraid of losing her... ay, mama! That vulnerability is sooo adorable. It's easy to see why the world fell in love with Juan Reyes and Mario Cimarro was launched into superstardom.
On a different note, I just remembered one thing that made me crazy for most of the duration of this show: Why do these people seem to be the only ones in Latin America without cell phones? Granted, maybe the Reyes boys wouldn't be part of the cell phone crowd, but certainly the Elizondos, the Urribes and the other upper-class types would have them. They'd also help to avoid a lot of the conflict coming further down the road... Guess I may have answered my own question there. ;-)
I'm waiting to see tomorrow (or I guess it's today) what plans Sarita has to keep Feonando in the house. Frankly I don't get what she and Gaby see in him!
I have one request to you and all the commenters, please keep the nicknames of the characters to just those that shorten the actual names. It is really difficult to read along and keep up with what's happening when you start to use nicks that almost completely change the character name.
Which characters are you talking about when you use your nicks "Grabi" and "Feonando"?
Jody :)
Ho Jody: Ok, we need to be more careful for people reading this who a: don't know the nicknames used by the TW forum when PdG originally ran or b: the nicknames used by the folks blogging Fuego.
Out of respect for Fernando Colunga, star of Pasión, which was replaced by Fuego, the bloggers have called Fernando Escandón, Norma's husband verious nasty things including Feonando. Grabi is a nickname for Gabriela, the mother. If I use nicknames in future posts, I will make it clear to whom I am referring at the beginning.
Debbie: Sara knew about Norma & Juan’s affair, but she (and everyone else) didn’t know that Norma & Fernando had a celibate marriage. I think Sara assumed that Norma surely would be having relations with her husband more often than with the lowbrow ruffian Juan, so in her mind, odds were that the baby was Fernando’s.
Jody, good point about nicknames. It would definitely be simpler for newcomers to follow along if we stick to the actual names or avoid tricky convolutions. I think these characters’ names are short enough that I’ll stick with them.
There are quite a few nicknames for these same characters over on the “Fuego” board, but since this a different show & the characters really aren’t written the same, I don’t think the PDG characters have “earned” those nicknames so applying them here doesn’t necessarily seem relevant. As someone noted previously, Fernando Escandón is written quite differently in PDG from the uber-villain they make him in “Fuego”, so I don’t see him as a “Feonando”; I actually pity the guy (at this point in the story, anyway). As for disrespecting Fernando Colunga, he’s always been “Colunga” to me, kind of like “Brando”, “DeNiro”, or “Pacino”. As telenovela stars go, he’s big enough to rate single-moniker recognition. ;-)
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