Jamie Dornan had the unenviable task of playing Christian Grey, an emotionless billionaire who likes S&M. However, when the sensual stuff started, every flick of Christian’s nostrils has Johnson panting and pulling pained faces and looking far too into it, and, please, stop biting your lip! Her character is portrayed as intelligent, yet can’t see past Christian’s well-groomed cheeklines. What? There’s no breakfast scene at the International Pancake House? Fiends.ĭakota Johnson does the best with what she has (including some gloriously bad dialogue) and gives a good performance. It feels long and drawn out – more business arrangement then steamy and sexy. The plot goes back and forth with this premise without really going anywhere. Flowers probably would’ve been a better idea. Whilst rocky, the pair can’t seem to tear themselves apart, and Christian offers Ana a romantic idea – be my sex slave but you can’t tell anyone, however you do need to sign a contract with the terms laid out. Grey can’t take his cold eyes off Ana – and so begins the contractual courtship. Being better than the book is like receiving a punch to the face rather than a kick in the balls (which is probably a clause in Mr Grey’s ‘contract’)Ĭhristian Grey (Dornan) is a billionaire recluse (who leads Grey Enterprises within the massive, inconspicuous skyscraper Grey House…) who one day finds himself being interviewed by young Anastasia Steele (Johnson), an English literature student writing a scoop for the college newspaper.
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