Question: According to the shop owner, Princess Nawa didn't know that she had to bring the earrings back together. She spent the rest of her life as a servant. However, in the past, Princess Nawa tells her servant, "Soon you will live your life in jewels and not chains," as if she expected the servant to remain in her place. Was she just lying and hoping to change back after the wedding?
Corrected entry: Near the end of the film, Hildenburg finds the card left behind in the alley from the strip club. This is after the police have been there. Would they not have found it and taken it as evidence?
Corrected entry: In the last scene, right after the switch, Rob Schneider stops the car with the gay bartender in it. When the gay guy turns around and smiles, Rob Schneider (as himself) recognizes the guy and screams. How could he have known the guy if he wasn't in the club, Jessica (as Rob) was.
Correction: You're an older man dressed in a pink bra and skirt and heels, you jump into the back of a car and a man turns around and grins at you in a predatory manner. Wouldn't you scream too?
It should also be pointed out that Clive doesn't scream until AFTER the guy locks the doors and starts to speed away.
Corrected entry: When Rob Schneider (in Jessica's body) steals tampons from the pharmacy the alarm doesn't go off.
Correction: Anti-theft devices are often placed on/in cheaper items, as shoplifters favor small and inexpensive items. That being said, it's still likely that this box of tampons doesn't contain an alarm device. I worked in stores where two or three brands of items would have devices, but the rest would not.
Adding on to this comment: Contrary to popular belief, not every single item in a store has an anti-theft device (and no, the bar codes don't trigger alarms). If everything did, cashiers would have to spend more time making sure that all devices were deactivated and/or removed (depending on the type). Most store companies expect some theft, and even factor a certain amount of loss into the company finances.
Corrected entry: I find it a little unusual that Jessica could miss as much school as she did while she was in Rob Schnieder's body, and the principal or any other staff member at that school not be concerned about where she is. They never showed anybody calling her from school or the principal calling her house to see what was going on. You can't get away with that at any high school no matter who you are.
Correction: I actually pulled that off without a hitch. Maybe I just attended a bad school, but it can happen.
Correction: One suggestion: At my high school, if you were absent, a recorded message would be left on the family's answering machine. Some people would return home before their parents and delete the messages.
In addition to this, there are schools where a student can have a "free period" or "study period" without a class. They have earned enough class credits and they no longer need a full schedule in order to graduate. During my senior year, I only had three classes and a study hall per semester. And if it's late enough the school year, some teachers don't take attendance carefully every day. I.e. they just check off the list out of habit. These reasons could account for some of the time when nobody notices that Jessica is missing.
Answer: She was lying to the servant. Most likely, the servant was terrified and might have run away from the situation. But according to the shop owner, the rich husband died on the wedding night, so the servant remained the Princess and lived in the lap of luxury.
Not sure about this because, if she planned to switch places for the wedding only, she would still have to deal with a lifetime of being married to the man she disliked. She would only be avoiding the wedding ceremony.