Today's Document
sheepfilms
noise dept.

roma★

pixel skylines

titsay
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
official daine visual archive
Monterey Bay Aquarium

Love Begins
d e v o n
Three Goblin Art
tumblr dot com

Kiana Khansmith
YOU ARE THE REASON
Cosimo Galluzzi
Show & Tell

PR's Tumblrdome
DEAR READER

#extradirty
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@heartofliongold
- TRASH BLESSINGS -
A series of pieces based off of common urban fauna with the aim of reminding people of traits in them we could all do well emulating sometimes, and celebrating the ability of nature to carve out a place in any environment.
Interested in seeing these on patches or pins? Please send me a message! If there’s enough interest, I’ll look into the cost of having them made.
[REDBUBBLE COLLECTION] // [COMMISSIONS]
THESE ARE SO GOOD WTF
Did you enjoy your walk yesterday? I didn’t hear you come in. Yes, er, no, I, um went down to the beach to gather shells and time ran away with me.
Requested by anonymous.
‘kids these days have it easy’ thats the point thats the point thats the whole point we’re here to make it better for whoever comes after you sad selfish self absorbed puddle of wank
John Adams: “I study war and diplomacy, so that my son may study trade and commerce, so that his son may study art and music.”
If you have any thought for me, you will give me back my peace. I have no peace to give. There can be no peace for us. Only misery, or the greatest happiness. Anna Karenina (2012) dir. Joe Wright
stopppppp im going to pass away just thinking abt this
#what a way to discover you have a priase kink
When I got my first tattoo I told my rather beautiful tattoo artist that I refused to be a wuss and she said “Oh dont worry, if you squirm I will pin you down.”
And that lives in my head rent free.
“What is it with queer people and tattoos?”
Something something intricate rituals
Me meeting a genie: Okay, so my first wish is for 1000 dollars a day, deposited to my bank account without any way of tracing it to anything illegal. I want this money to come from the ten richest people in America (100 dollars each), withdrawn under the guise of nebulous, random purchases and surcharges. It would probably be best to split the money into a myriad of smaller fees, though, to reduce the likelihood of anyone noticing. Got all that?
Genie: um
Me, continuing on without a care: For my SECOND wish, I want you to give me the ability to learn any given phoneme, so that I can learn to pronounce new languages perfectly. If you're willing, it'd be nice if it were a little easier to memorize new languages too, but if that's not cool, I'm perfectly fine doing all the legwork myself I mostly just want to be capable of pronouncing things correctly.
Genie, now staring at me like I'm insane: ......okaaayyy?....
Me: For my third wish. I want to always have great ideas for gifts for people. Every birthday, every holiday, I want to be able to come up with something they'd really like, with enough time to actually get it for them.
Genie, just staring at me
Me: I can provide you with a written document if that would help.
Colorful Amsterdam apartment
THENORDROOM.COM - INSTAGRAM - PINTEREST - FACEBOOK
Shoutout to the breakers of generational curses
horror has so much potential as a medium for exploring trauma around womanhood, but also as a sort of confessional, or as wish fulfillment— women in horror are allowed to be monsters and sometimes that monstrosity is more real to us, hits home more than we’d like to admit — sometimes i think of writing something centered around a woman who does all the worst things i’ve ever thought of doing, whether it’s something i’ve ever wanted to do or something i fear that i would or both.
I think a lot of us fantasize about enacting gruesome violence against our oppressors way more than we'd like to admit and horror is a way to express that.
Our lives are already horror. What we fantasize about is retribution.
when kosinski wrote “i’m sure there are aspects of my personality buried within me that will surface as soon as i know i am completely loved.”
something about the wave of Alfred Molina thirst makes me think of that “Everyone is Beautiful and No One is Horny” essay. shan’t elaborate right now but give me a moment.
I’m sorry, the what essay?
so glad you asked
it was this article, “We All Simp for Alfred Molina” by Chingy Nea, that made me think of it, particularly this paragraph that one assumes the Nea must have composed whilst drooling like a cartoon wolf:
But gravity isn’t all Molina brings to the role [of Doc Ock]; he carries with him a stunning degree of raw sexual magnetism. As a larger man, Molina really carries his massive appendages, moves deliberately with a menacing cool and delivers one-liners in a sultry arch tone. The physicality of the role also plays into it with Octavius in an open trench coat with his titties out and with a bit of his paunch hanging over the metal tentacle corset around his waist, letting us really take in the beauty of his body.
it’s Nea’s appreciation for Molina’s physicality, specifically the fond attention drawn to his visible paunch, that made me think of R.S. Benedict’s essay “Everyone Is Beautiful and No One Is Horny.” it’s a good read but also a long one, so I’ll summarize: Benedict posits that current standards of American attractiveness stem from post-9/11 anxiety - “When a nation feels threatened, it gets swole,” she writes - and has created a national mentality of bodies as commodities to be honed to perfection without indulging in any of the pleasure a body can bring, a vessel disjointed from any sense of self and meant only to be looked at with awe.
she opens particularly by noting the very particular brand of sexless-ness that pervades mainstream media, leading to action heroes whose beautiful faces and implausibly sculpted muscles are attractive in theory but also seem to exist in a world apart from anything like genuine sensuality. their bodies are inhuman in their perfection, and this comes at the cost of doing anything as human as fucking. to quote:
In the films of the Eighties and Nineties, leading actors were good looking, yes, but still human. Kurt Russel’s Snake Plissken was a hunk, but in shirtless scenes his abs have no definition. Bruce Willis was handsome, but he’s more muscular now than he was in the Nineties, when he was routinely branded a bona fide sex symbol. And when Isabella Rosselini strips in Blue Velvet, her skin is pale and her body is soft. She looks vulnerable and real.
Benedict mostly speculates about the neutered nature of DC and Marvel’s movie characters, but they’re hardly the only blockbusters falling into this trend. Alison Wilmore’s “Why Doesn’t The Rock Get to Make Out More Onscreen?” calls attention to this with a particular focus on Disney’s new Jungle Cruise movie, describing Dwayne Johnson and Emily Blunt’s roles as “characters who are to Humphrey Bogart and Katharine Hepburn in The African Queen as Funko Pops are to people,” with their inevitable kiss playing out “as though they’re dolls whose heads are being smashed together by a child enacting a rudimentary idea of passion.”
similarly to Benedict’s point, Wilmore notes that “There’s a striking divide between the body that Johnson is so famous for and the characters who are supposed to inhabit it… his characters rarely if ever seem to take pleasure in this physicality beyond its capacity to intimidate and serve as a spectacle.”
and by now you’re probably saying okay Makenzie that’s swell, but what the fuck does this have to do with people thirsting over Alfred Molina? well, look at him.
take in the tits and paunch Nea loves so much, and compare Molina’s body with the kind that have dominated the biggest movies of the last decade or so, since the MCU set the tone for the future of the superhero genre. Quoth Benedict again:
Actors are more physically perfect than ever: impossibly lean, shockingly muscular, with magnificently coiffed hair, high cheekbones, impeccable surgical enhancements, and flawless skin, all displayed in form-fitting superhero costumes with the obligatory shirtless scene thrown in to show off shredded abs and rippling pecs. And this isn’t just the lead and the love interest: supporting characters look this way too, and even villains (frequently clad in monstrous makeup) are still played by conventionally attractive performers. Even background extras are good-looking, or at least inoffensively bland.
Molina’s Doc Ock isn’t bland; he has character in the form of features that are, increasingly, written off as too ugly or undesirable for film. I think the reason people may be reacting so strongly to him nearly two decades after the movie’s release is that a pretty-normal looking body has now become a spectacle unto itself, by virtue of being so normal.
the current crop of superhero stars are exercised, waxed, dieted, dehydrated, and quite probably steroided into something the average person could never achieve on their own, a body that’s fun to look at but is ultimately alien to anything most people will ever experience. whereas what we’re looking at with Alfred Molina’s Doc Ock is something like a body that many people actually have, a body that many people have known and loved, a body that, frankly, many people have had sex with - certainly more than have ever had sex with, say, Chris Evans’ Steve Rogers all hairless and shiny fresh out of getting shot up with super soldier serum.
it’s a sexy body because it’s a palpably human body, in a genre that increasingly shuns exactly that.
plus, you know, those are just some nice tits.
Both of these articles are worth a read, but this post sums them both up pretty nicely.
got my first positive review lads :)
I find the entire “Everyone Is Beautiful” article hilariously detached from the existence of old Hollywood and classic cinema. Actors permanently altering themselves to the point of hiding their ethnicity and changing their names was standard well into the 50s and 60s. So was cosmetic surgery, drug abuse to alter weight, and a thousand other obsessive ways of projecting an illusion of plastic perfection. Reducing that to “well it wasn’t the same!” is inaccurate and completely erases the horrors actors were often put through by studios - Judy Garland may be one of the most famous, but she certainly wasn’t the only one.
There’s also a huge discourse to be had about the racial homogeny and aggressively cishet gaze that defined much of the films of the era the author rhapsodized about. And how much of that “sexiness”, in hindsight, includes truly nauseating examples of rape culture in media. Not even going to touch the classic bewailing of how Kids These Days just aren’t horny enough with a ten foot pole - is sex another industry ruined by Millennials?
If you don’t like the misrepresentation of aggressive fitness obsession and only one kind of body in popular franchises, that’s great. I agree with a lot of that. But the extrapolations drawn are from a very narrow lens, focused on one issue and one era. Everybody may be beautiful, but maybe you’re just not horny. And that’s okay.
“The entire article” that commenter apparently didn’t read outside of the headline and the quoted passage? Here, let me pull up another quote for you:
Let’s not pretend that Old Hollywood was a progressive haven of body positivity. Since the departure of voluptuous vamp Theda Bara from the silver screen, actors have always gone to extremes to maintain a certain look. Rita Hayworth underwent an ethnic makeover to appear more Caucasian so she could get leading roles. Stars of the 1920s limited their fluid consumption to two glasses a day to avoid water weight. Jane Fonda suffered from severe bulimia at the height of her sex symbol status; so did Marlon Brando.
Also, when the author says characters aren’t horny, she’s not saying she’s not horny for them. Sexiness (as distinct from beauty) is certainly part of what Benedict is discussing, but “maybe you’re just not horny” is missing a major part of the point:
And yet, these characters fucked. Blue Velvet’s Dorothy Vallens and Jeffrey Beaumant fucked. Michael Keaton’s Batman and Michelle Pfeiffer’s domme Catwoman fucked. Kyle Reese and Sarah Connor fucked. Snake Plissken didn’t fuck on screen, but the character radiates overwhelming sex-haver energy. […]
Seen today, one of the most striking scenes in 1982’s Poltergeist is not the evil clown doll or the monster tree, but a moment of relaxed affection between the parents. The father—a bald, beer-bellied Craig T. Nelson—cracks jokes and prances for his wife, who wears a frumpy nightgown and smokes a joint and yammers weed thoughts and laughs at her husband’s silly display. Finally, the husband playfully dives onto the bed. Neither character is glamorous in this scene, but their relationship feels frisky and lived-in and charismatic and real.
She’s talking at least as much about what characters do, how they act, what emotions they’re allowed to express.
Actually, I’m not done: that anyone could read this article as bitching about the kids these days: “is sex another industry ruined by Millennials;” as opposed to saying that the kids these days have been traumatized, thoroughly and unjustly fucked over, by post-9/11 culture, just utterly mystifies me.
Maybe we’re too anxious about the Apocalypse; maybe we’re too broke to go out; maybe having to live with roommates or our parents makes it a little awkward to bring a partner home; maybe there are chemicals in the environment screwing up our hormones; maybe we don’t know how to navigate human sexuality outside of rape culture; maybe being raised on the message that our bodies are a nation-ending menace has dampened our enthusiasm for physical pleasure.
I really don’t get how you read that and think “oh yeah, this is some boomer laying everything bad in the world at the feet of millennials and gen Z.”
andrew garfield saying, “i hope this grief stays with me because it’s all the unexpressed love that i didn’t get to tell her” about his mothers passing is so gut wrenchingly beautiful because we rarely talk about the love we want to express but can’t, not because you’re not brave enough to say it out loud but because they’re not here to listen to it anymore. calling grief the love you never had the chance to share makes it less of a burden and more of something you want to keep and not something terrible you want to move on from. i love love how everything about grief always comes down to “what is grief if not love persevering?”
By Czeck writer Karel Čapek, inventor of the term ‘robot’ as well!
This is one of my husband’s favorite short stories. He quotes it from memory. I’m pretty sure he can recite the entire thing from memory.
This is a tremendously impactful short story and every time I see it, it serves as an excellent reboot button for my state of mind.
Jennifer S. Cheng, So We Must Meet Apart; “August 24, 2018”
when jenny slate said ‘i’m tired of sinking down to a lower place to be with men. i am tired of throwing a tarp over some of my personality so that the shape of my identity suits some gross man a little better for whatever shitty things he needs to do in order to keep his boring identity erect and supreme’ and ‘i can’t become smaller to fit into a crouching love in somebody else’s meager world. i don’t do that anymore’ and ‘who will meet me at once in all of my worlds and pump with all of my hearts? to have to kill even one of my hearts to match up with you is simply not worth it to me’ and ‘i was born as sweet as that and if i am too sweet for your tastes then just clamp your mouth shut and spin on your heels. i can’t add sourness to my sap anymore just to fit onto a menu in a restaurant for wimps’ honestly yeah
Indian architecture inspired by Ettore Sottsass