Felix and Allison are the best. I love that he's able to develop these different relationships with everyone too. Sarah's he's sister, but Allison is turning into his friend and it's lovely.
I'd say Tatiana Maslany needs to be in all the things, but I really want her to keep on making this show. Just the little differences she makes in the characters, the way Cosima paces and uses her hands and Allison sits very still and Sarah breaks out into rages. There are all sorts of little things she does to make them all different people and it's amazing.
Tatiana Maslany had an interview where she says: The beautiful and horrific thing about the patent storyline is that, for me, it resonated as a woman -- this idea of your body, your personality and your image not being yours. As an actor, I understand that and the more I'm in a public consciousness, the more I understand that role a lot of women are forced to take, which is about giving up a lot of your identity to serve the public. For me, it was really incredibly resonant point in terms of the ownership women have over their bodies.
Re: Orphan Black and the Bechdel Test
Felix and Allison are the best. I love that he's able to develop these different relationships with everyone too. Sarah's he's sister, but Allison is turning into his friend and it's lovely.
I'd say Tatiana Maslany needs to be in all the things, but I really want her to keep on making this show. Just the little differences she makes in the characters, the way Cosima paces and uses her hands and Allison sits very still and Sarah breaks out into rages. There are all sorts of little things she does to make them all different people and it's amazing.
Tatiana Maslany had an interview where she says: The beautiful and horrific thing about the patent storyline is that, for me, it resonated as a woman -- this idea of your body, your personality and your image not being yours. As an actor, I understand that and the more I'm in a public consciousness, the more I understand that role a lot of women are forced to take, which is about giving up a lot of your identity to serve the public. For me, it was really incredibly resonant point in terms of the ownership women have over their bodies.
Which, just yes to everything she said.