First 30 minutes. Garfunkel and Nicholson discuss girls . . . college students who seemed to have had no contact with females in high school. Enter Candice Bergen. Garfunkel falls for her. Nicholson sneaks after her, has sex with her, while she is still ostensibly G's girl. She doesn't want to her G but seems to love Nicholson more. He expects her to dump Garfunkel . . . she's hesitating.
"To all humankind, Tess was only a passing thought. Even to friends, she was only a frequently passing thought." Angel Clare is a good character. He's "enlightened," in so many ways, but when Tess's confesses her "crime," he reverts to ancestral form . . . Tess's "confession" comes earlier than I expected, right after Angel reveals that he has had a bad moment with a woman. Tess points out the similarity in their transgressions, though his is the only true transgression, expecting forgiveness. She doesn't get it. She returns to her mother . . . realizes she can't stay with her. Thoughts to suicide. Unhappiness that divorce is not possible. Departs. Tragic in that the two, if Angel could just see clearly, would indeed be a great couple, each adding to the other. Nature as a definite force involved in the tragedy. It's not neutral--when things go bad, the very skies mock Tess. Tess as unaware of the power of her bea...
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