It takes place after she overheard Otto's and Archie's conversation before the courtroom scene. She already wears her courtroom outfit.
Archie goes through some papers when Wendy comes in and asks what case he is on today. Archie replies that it's the jewel robbery which causes Wendy to let out a sarcastic "Jewel robbery. What a coincidence." The phone rings then, Archie picks it up and Wendy leaves with a goodbye but before she is gone, Archie asks in surprise if she is off. Wendy states that she is, "as it happens" and leaves with a "see you later, ducky". Archie is pretty irritated by Wendy's behavior before he picks the phone back up again. The last thing we see is that he says "What?" in best Wendy-like manner before the screen goes black.
It's not a long scene and there isn't much happening.
"This is a scene where Maria's perfomance was so strong that we nearly kept it altough we realized that it was redundant." - John Cleese about the scene
And yes. To be fair if you view it from what is happening in the scene, you know, from a dramaturgical perspective, the dialogues, then you might consider it redundant. Or when you try to make Archie and Wanda get together.
BUT. IT. IS. NOT.REDUNDANT!
For several reasons.
1) It shows us that Wendy does seem to be interested in Archies work. She asks "What case are you on today, Archie?" which contrasts the impression we get when we first meet Wendy and she couldn't care less about it. Remember her saying "This is the first moment I've had for myself all day" when Archie wants to tell her he won the case? So how come Wendy has changed her mind? Well, maybe because she usually is interested in Archie's cases and she just simply had a bad day after that she just wanted a good cup of tea whilst sitting in her garden reading the Country Life Magazine. Or maybe because she is really mad at Archie and hopes to find something out by attending the court hearing. Because, still, her necklace is gone. Maybe the case could be about the necklace! So, wether if it's general interest in Archie's work or just due to the situation, it shows us that Wendy shows interest in Archie's work at least in this scene.
2) Archie learns about Eileen Coady's death and he's not as half as happy as George and Ken are.
3) It gives us context for the courtroom scene when Wendy slaps Archie. Because without this scene, it looks like Wendy is overreacting. "Yeah dude accidentally spills the beans in the courtroom that he has an affair and his wife slaps and divorces him immidiately". But this tiny scene here, it shows that Wendy's "I have never been so humilliated in my life" isn't just limited to what happened in court. It's not just the affair that humilliates Wendy. It's everything that happenes to her throughout the movie that humilliates her. The slap isn't an overreaction, it's a relief of emotions that she's been holding back.
AND THIS TEENSY-TINSY SCENE THAT'S BEEN CUT WOULD MAKE THIS MORE CLEAR.
Had to Google it up to be honest... yes heard of it but didn't watch it.
It's a kids TV show with two animal pals expierencing fairytales through their magic talking fairytale book as far as I can tell.
"Simsala Grimm" is derived from the term "Simsala Bimm" witch is basically a term like "Bibbedi-bobbedi-boo" or "Abracadrabra" and the name of the Brother's Grimm (my assumption).
Your German mutuals probably know “Simsala Grimm”
@creative-soul-22 hey do you know what simsala grimm is
The reason why we as a society think our voice sounds "bad" is because we always only hear trained voices or voices edited with autotune.
We rarely hear unfiltered, real voices singing anymore because the music industry has taught us if you don't sound like the singers nowadays you sound bad.
I may be becoming the guy at work who won't let people talk bad about their own singing voices, but to be fair people keep talking bad about their singing voices to me