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Peter Quinn + holding guns | requested by anonymous
Rupert Friend for Variety
“I’m not sure I’d ever seen a character who had been through what this guy had been through. I wanted to be quite truthful in what we were portraying.”
Peter Quinn + jaw clenching
Why?
This is probably the question in everyones head now. Why? I don’t know and I… I don’t understand. This episode had nothing. It had a death. A death nobody wanted. Not like this. The ones still watching after 5.12 were hoping for some better times. In some way. All they got was suffering. From the very beginning to the end. The show gave us so much foreshadowing throughout the season, starting with the credits and its last lines “You saved me. Why?”. This Why. We knew why. Did Carrie? She did. But couldn’t express it properly. She even couldn’t show her real feelings in the moments of his death. No touch, no embracement. Not a single “I love you”. Nothing. You want to show us she already let him go? What is the reason the creators of the show don’t give the audience and Carrie and Quinn one moment of confession? This is so so hard to watch. This is something you can’t watch. This is something you don’t want to watch. This is why people will stop watching. It’s just too much. I know life doesn’t play how you want it to. There are moments you can’t say Goodbye although you wished. In real life. I know, I learned this. But there was the time, there was the possibility, the moment. So again, Why?
I’m very late to discover this but… so beautiful, Julie
“But there was the time, there was the possibility, the moment. So again, Why?”
Peter Quinn + badass + hotness + motorcycles +walls + guns + crossbody bag “Copy that.”
An Archive of Our Own, a project of the Organization for Transformative Works
It is my canon ❤
Reblog if you need one of these
bc writers like to make you suffer
Peter Quinn + f-bombs “No, really, Carrie. Fuck you.”
Save or Kill: Twilight or 50 Shades of Grey?
A Letter to Homeland Creators
Dear Mr. Gansa and Mr. Gordon,
As avid fans of Homeland since season 1, we would like to thank you for such an intriguing show and for giving us characters that we have enjoyed for so many years. So much were we consumed by the world you created that we started blogs and forums to discuss it with thousands of like-minded fans from around the world.
After the season 6 finale, however, we can’t help but feel devastated. The callous way in which Peter Quinn, a character we have come to love so dearly, was killed off has left us reeling with sadness.
That we’ve become so attached to a fictional person, of course, speaks volumes of the quality of writing and acting on Homeland. We were equally invested in the journey of Carrie Mathison, the protagonist. Her arc, we thought, was one of personal growth, with Quinn – a man with a strong moral compass – as her partner.
We were invested in Quinn because we were invested in Carrie. With Quinn gone, we’re not quite sure what Carrie’s journey will be, but if Quinn’s relentless suffering is any indication, we expect it will end badly. Forgive us, but we can’t invest eight years of our lives on rooting for a character whose suffering will never be rewarded. We invested five years on Quinn and the result was unabated heartbreak.
Real life hands us enough tragedy, we don’t need to seek it out in fiction. Times are bleak, as you well know, and we turn to artists for some hope, optimism, for a way to put into words and pictures the things we are feeling. We turn to stories for things to make sense and for good people to triumph ultimately over evil.
Homeland was bleak, but we willingly endured the bleakness awaiting a payoff. We got none. Quinn was a fighter and we expected him to overcome his demons and prevail. What we got this season was the exact opposite. He died full of self-loathing; that, we cannot forgive. With no reward for Quinn, the Dar reveal on the dock and Astrid’s tragic death feel entirely gratuitous, not to mention the two years of physical torment he suffered.
And what kind of a message have you sent to depressed and disabled veterans and stroke survivors around the world who saw themselves in Quinn? To victims of sexual abuse? That they’re better off dead? What an abominable message. The unceremonious manner in which Quinn was killed off, with no vicarious closure for the audience in the form of a ceremony or proper displays of grief from his friends, was just cruel.
We are sorry to say that we feel utterly betrayed and manipulated by the way you chose to portray Quinn’s journey over the past two seasons. The season 5 fake-death cliffhanger in retrospect feels like a cheap way to bait Quinn fans into sticking with the show for another season. So does the way you developed the Carrie/Quinn romance arc, which you yourself said was the emotional center of the season. Another story lopped off carelessly without resolution or payoff.
We also find Homeland’s message to be antifeminist. A woman with drive and determination destroys everyone in her path. A woman with a calling has to sacrifice her personal life. These are harmful stereotypes and we urge you to consider the special responsibility you bear by having a female protagonist.
Is your intended message one of utter hopelessness? The fight is futile and the bad guys will win? We are sorry, but nihilism is not the same as realism. Ambiguity is not the same as artistry. Your commitment to ambiguity now comes across as an inability or unwillingness to commit to your stories or characters; building the plane as you fly it, as a lack of vision and planning. Ambiguity has become your go-to excuse to avoid criticism: when “anything goes” is the name of the game, there is no accountability.
Finally, having no comment or statement from the showrunners following the death of a much-loved character like Peter Quinn has made things even worse.
What the Homeland
Very clear and beautiful written!
Peter Quinn: A Hair Story (part I of II) | requested by anonymous It’s about losing and gaining. Cutting and growing. To clean or not to clean. The long of it and short of it. But in the end, it’s always, always, hot as fuck.
Homage to Peter Quinn & Rupert Friend
For some of us, the moment Peter Quinn stepped on screen in Homeland, he stepped into our hearts.
Here was this tall, dark, and handsome guy smiling devilishly at Carrie. “Who was this guy?” we asked ourselves, and what was his story? Suddenly, Homeland had a whole new, exciting element. Yes, he was hot, but he was also snarky, cocky, and hmmm - kind of nice and caring towards Carrie. Finally, someone was looking out for our girl.
Not only that but he was a little edgy and hot under the collar.
And finally, we had someone who was seeing Brody for who he truly was and calling him on his bullshit.
Yup - we liked this Peter Quinn guy. We liked him A LOT. He was smart, he respected Carrie’s expertise and intelligence, and yeah - there was the hottie factor. As season two wore on, and Quinn’s hair grew, we wanted more from our new, gun-toting teddy bear with a temper. We wanted him with Carrie…even if it just meant them arguing or sitting in a car together. And thank god Homeland started to deliver.
Since season 2 I personally have become a total fangirl of Peter Quinn and Rupert Friend. In the off season I watched Rupert’s films & interviews and read articles about him. Why weren’t more people in love with this man and this character? He is tall (I love height) with a chisled face and eyes that speak volumes. His movements are graceful, his humor unexpected and creative. And did I mention his hair? My god women swoon over his hair (and worry when he cuts it - but we all stay committed). Yes, Rupert Friend, Rupes as we affectionately call you, thank you for bringing Peter Quinn to life the way only you can. We adore you both and cannot wait to see how you both progress. So, without further ado - some favorite Quinn moments. Season 3
Season 4
What are your favorite Quiinn moments?
For months, years, I believed in the idea that q and c would find light together in their world of darkness because the story was leading me there. I trusted the story, as an audience must if they are to truly fall into the world being created. That world was showing me plainly that people with mental illness, people who are damaged and broken and knocked down by this fucked up world that we live in could crawl out of their holes and be loved. Their hope gave me hope. (1/2)
But now I’m being told that the show was not leading me there at all. That I was fabricating my hope out of thin air. It makes me feel naïve and stupid, when I know that I am not. I have always loved homeland for its ability to show me truth as only fiction can, and now, it has lied to me. While the creators directed their efforts towards prescience and relevance they sacrificed the thing people want most from stories,: to feel less alone in the universe. Do you still trust them?
Can I give you a hug? I want to give you a hug.
It’s probably not much consolation, but where this television show has failed in making me feel less alone through its own storytelling, it has brought me closer in grief, confusion, and sadness to others who feel the same right now. Please know that you are not alone right now. So many people feel lied to and cheated right now. It’s a normal reaction when you have in fact been lied to. If you no longer trust the writers, that is also a normal response.
While Carrie and Quinn were never the happiest, go-luckiest pairing on earth, there was hope. There was something genuine about them, about their bond, that attracted so many people to their story. That wasn’t fabricated out of thin air. Not by a long shot.
Please don’t feel naive and stupid. The writers pulled a bait-and-switch; that’s just the fact of the matter. Damaged, broken, fucked up people are deserving of love. Perhaps not in the ethos of Alex Gansa, but in real life and in other fiction: yes.
[5/?] screencaps ❯❯❯ Peter Quinn
“For once in your life, you need to listen!” requested by anonymous
ATTENTION ALL QUINN FANS!
PLEASE SIGN THIS PETITION: https://www.gopetition.com/petitions/bring-peter-quinn-back.html
Thanks to @keepcalmandquarrieon!