She was putting 2 and 2 together with the Francine scene from earlier. "Why'd you tell me this, Francine?" "Because I'd thought you'd know what to do..." "Why?"
She listed specific things to the shrink, like other perfumes she smelled on his clothes, etc. She knew. Which is why she told the...
I think you're reading it wrongly. There's two types of forward change going on: forward change for the better (Don) and forward change for the worse (two men not having any regard for the woman). Their jack-assery isn't "old-school" thought; Don and Roger would talk about the same things with...
Hammer's The Gorgon. Aside from the cheesiest rubbery head this side of a Barbie doll, the faux-gothic quality to these films suckers one in pretty deep.
The one other thing I'd point out is that what people do to their significant others (such as cheating) is not a correlation to how they act in public (stopping guys from being rude in front of a woman).
That's nice.
I'll still assume he used it as a way to shut up two men rudely talking about a secretary's panties in front of and completely oblivious to a clearly uncomfortable woman who deserved much more respect than that rather than purely because Emily Post wrote a book.
To me...
I'm fairly certain he was more interested in having his hat off in front of the woman than for the fact he was in an elevator. Him pulling off the other guy's hat completely derailed their "I slept with that chick!" discussion.
I wasn't telling you whether or not you can or can not like the film; I was simply pointing out that telling about a bunch of past adventures is not anything like actually seeing the tail-end of a prior adventure meaning this film differed from the rest in that regard.
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