Stranger Things
YOU ARE THE REASON

pixel skylines

No title available
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
trying on a metaphor

@theartofmadeline

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
Monterey Bay Aquarium
KIROKAZE
Misplaced Lens Cap
AnasAbdin

titsay
NASA
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

oozey mess
Jules of Nature

roma★

Janaina Medeiros

blake kathryn

seen from Türkiye

seen from Singapore

seen from Taiwan
seen from Germany
seen from Iraq
seen from Philippines

seen from Saudi Arabia

seen from United States
seen from Israel
seen from Portugal

seen from Venezuela

seen from Russia
seen from Tunisia

seen from Taiwan
seen from Canada

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
@kpvk
Let writers ramble to you about their stories and they will forever love you.
Ready to comply.
tbh if i was evie in ‘the invitation’, i would have negotiated with walt. i would marry him under the condition that victoria gets demoted to third wife, that i control the manor, that victoria cannot live with me and lucy (she can stay), that he gets better light fixtures, (idc if the electricity bill goes up. hes rich he can handle it) and that he fires the butler bc i dont like him. they just needed to meet in the middle.
THE INVITATION (2022) dir. Jessica M. Thompson
Bonus:
THOMAS DOHERTY in THE INVITATION (2022) dir. Jessica M. Thompson
THOMAS DOHERTY as 𝖂𝖆𝖑𝖙𝖊𝖗 𝕯𝖊𝖁𝖎𝖑𝖑𝖊 / 𝕯𝖗𝖆𝖈𝖚𝖑𝖆 🦇 THE INVITATION (2022).
THOMAS DOHERTY as Walter De Ville | The Invitation (2022)
Not to be a vampire apologist but if i were being held captive by thomas doherty in eyeliner and a victiorian inspired wardrobe, i am not putting my full effort into escaping
I love the fact that the strongest person in the MCU is a mentally unstable 32 year old who makes self insert Sitcom AU FanFiction about her robot husband
WANDA MAXIMOFF’S POWERS IN WANDAVISION
just to be clear, the fact that music was nominated for a golden globe is absolutely disgusting. every single (adult) involved in that gross, ableist movie should be sickened by themselves.
for those of you who don't know, music (2021) is a movie being directed by sia about a nonverable autistic girl. not only does it not include any actually autistic people in the movie itself but it also only took advice from autism speaks which is looked at as a hate group by the majority of the autistic community. leaked scenes have also shown the movie glorifying prone restraints which are incredibly dangerous and have resulted in major injuries and even death to disabled people as recently as last year.
autistic people just like me have been incredibly outspoken about how harmful this movie is but the allistic have been mostly silent. we are already seeing reviews calling this movie 'inspiring' and important' and it's absolutely horrific! we need your help calling this out. please stand with us and call out this disgusting display of disrespect to autistic folks.
💛 - your local actually autistic pal
p.s. please, please reblog if you aren't autistic.
#DO YOU LIKE ME DO YOU LIKE ME DO YOU LIKE ME - han solo
#HAN SOLO YOU GIANT SMITTEN FLOPPY-HAIRED NERD BABY #everyone sit the fuck down for a sec i need to exorcise some feelings #look at his hopeful little face in the first gif #this idiot has probably spent months trying to win her over #badass space pirate all twisted in knots over this tiny force of a princess #she argues with him and yells at him she doesn’t pay attention when he does awesome things ‘LEIA LOOK DON’T YOU THINK I’M COOL?’ #but of course he doesn’t tell her that he likes her you never tell girls that you like them #but he just LIKES HER SO MUCH and he wants her to like him too because she’s LEIA and leia’s the BEST #he’s like a tiny child running away from home #BYE I’M LEAVING FOREVER NOW BYE YOU’LL NEVER SEE ME AGAIN BYE #(unless maybe you want me to stay i mean gosh i can stay if you really want me to) #the big dummy actually thinks she’s going to beg him to stay #and when she doesn’t he’s so embarrassed and hurt and he’s SO SAD it’s awful it’s like looking at a wounded labrador #and then he gets all SHOUTY and LEAVES because of course he does #why talk about our feelings no i’ll show you NOW I REALLY WILL LEAVE YOU’LL BE SORRY #OUR KIDS WOULD HAVE BEEN SMART *AND* BEAUTIFUL #in conclusion: #han solo: probably the most adorable overgrown five-year-old in the galaxy
I am a little high but what if people proposed with beautiful, intricate knives. Ladies would gather around the table and be like “guess what finally happened!!” And pull this beautiful, intricate dagger out of her purse and all the other ladies would gasp and congratulate her
Me: I’m a little high but –
Y'all rushing to that reblog button:
It’s an awesome idea tho
Because I have a tag for pretty weaponry, some knives I’d accept as proposals follow:
I said yes!
(but, actually, hubby bought me a dive knife when we got married so this works…)
I can 100% get behind this as a new tradition.
Ok but this is amazing becuase knives are dangerous and you can use them to hurt other people but when someone proposes with one it’s symbolic like “yes I love you and trust you so much I’m asking you a very vulnerable question with something you could hurt me with but I know you won’t”
@kinglesbiancore
@lady-redshield-writes this seems up your alley
This isn’t just up my alley, it’s traveled all the way down the alley, through my front door, and is sitting on my couch. I love this so much.
Let's talk about The Mummy (1999)
Someone was talking at me yesterday about this movie and I was getting riled so I decided to go full rant. Specifically in regards to the feminist podcast that slammed it.
I don't even remember which podcast it was, but I am still rankled and baffled that any "feminism in movies" podcast could jump to anything but "this movie is phenomenal."
First of all, even just discussing the overall quality: sure, it might not have been groundbreaking with its cgi or plot twists. But back in the 90s, that wasn't the standard of measure like it is now (and even now is a shitty standard that needs to die). This movie was light and funny and yet hit all the right beats to maintain the dire stakes needed to make it a compelling action flick.
Its characters are fully realized and entirely distinct from each other. Even those treated with a broader brush, such as the Americans, were charismatic enough that we were fully invested in their fate. The entire cast of characters were real people with real impact and real agency.
The script is quotable and fucking hilarious. There are gems from literally every single character. Rick and Evie have actual chemistry, aided by Rachel Weisz's natural magnetism and Brendan Frasier's career-long knack for acting utterly charmed with his female costars.
Actually, let's talk about Rick O'Connell for a second. This is peak 90s Brendan Frasier. He is absolutely GORGEOUS, suave, and cool, rugged and handsome. He is the epitome of the 1920s adventure hero. Dear god I want to kiss those casting directors. But for all his general peak masculinity? He's feminist as fuck. He is equally dumbstruck by Evie as she is by him, and it's wholly evident that it's more than a "oh no she's hot" thing.
How do we know?
He steals her some tools to dig with. This gift demonstrates that he a) has identified her passion for archaeology, b) has recognized her proficiency in the field, despite it not being explicitly stated on screen, and c) sees a chance to restore her full and active participation in the discovery of Hamunaptra.
There is never a moment where Rick assumes to be the leader of the expedition. He is the weapons expert, the muscle--and he knows it. Better than that, he's totally okay with it. He follows Evie's lead in all things.
Another favorite moment of mine is when they're facing off with the American team on Day 1, and Evie realizes there's a chamber underneath Anubis they could use to excavate the statue. She puts her hand on Rick's arm, looks him in the eye, and says very deliberately "there are other places to dig." And he yields, instantly.
By comparison, see the way the Americans treat their workers and guide.
Does he groan about his work being made exponentially harder as a result? Nope. And that's a recurring theme in his behavior the entire goddamn movie. The only time he is in charge is when a situation is in his wheelhouse-- namely, combat and rescue. And it deserves mentioning that the majority of the time that he's in charge, Evie is not present.
Meanwhile, Evie-- her adventurer's spirit chafing in an academia that dismisses her for her gender-- is an absolute marvel. She is visually coded as being very feminine (she's in dresses and long hair most of the film), but that fact in no way detracts from her competence and agency.
She is consistently protrayed as a fully capable expert in egyptology and there is never a single moment where she waffles on what to do. Even when she's the damsel in distress, she actively makes the choice to be so because she weighs the potential outcomes and decides doing so provides their best chance of success.
Evie is never the passive victim. She is constantly brash, constantly scheming, and saves the lives of her would-be rescuers mid-abduction. And when her brother (who is the failure of the family, against type) needs help with translation, she correctly translates for him while being throttled by a mummified priestess.
When I first saw this film, I was too young to realize how novel it was. Back then, all I knew was that it was just a good time. But now as an adult-- an adult acutely aware of the treatment female characters have gotten in the twenty years since-- I marvel at the respect with which the writers and directors treated Evie.
I marvel at how tender Rick was allowed to be, despite his rugged adventurer archetype.
The Mummy (1999) is peak storytelling. It doesn't try to outsmart the audience, but rather lays out a consistent, coherent narrative that gives the characters and viewers room to breathe. It invests the audience enough to care whether the characters succeed in their goals.
The Mummy (1999) does it right. It's the reason that any talk of the Tom Cruise version gets an immediate eyeroll from me, because whatever modern grimdark grit they shove into a story about a mummy cannot compare to the reliable and timeless entertainment of the 1999 adaptation.
All modern media should aspire to be the kind of film that The Mummy (1999) is.
So rude
But so true
Damn this post.
Called out.
I’m in this picture, and I don’t like it.