Hedda (2025) screenplay and direction by Nia DaCosta
Tessa Thompson as Hedda Gabler, Nina Hoss as Eileen Lovborg, Imogen Poots as Thea Clifton, Tom Bateman as George Tesman, Nicholas Pinnock as Judge Brack
occasionally subtle

#extradirty
Mike Driver
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
Claire Keane
Keni

⁂
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

★
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
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DEAR READER

izzy's playlists!
will byers stan first human second

Andulka
One Nice Bug Per Day
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

tannertan36

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@mishi543
Hedda (2025) screenplay and direction by Nia DaCosta
Tessa Thompson as Hedda Gabler, Nina Hoss as Eileen Lovborg, Imogen Poots as Thea Clifton, Tom Bateman as George Tesman, Nicholas Pinnock as Judge Brack
A YA romantasy writer filed suit against another writer for copyright infringement, and as is always the case with these things, she padded her claims with delusionally spurious examples. The judge issued a 160-page ruling against the plaintiff where you can tell from the start how resentful they (or whatever clerk actually did the work) are to have been forced by duty to have read the works in question.
HEATED RIVALRY (2025-)
Watch for FREE on Youtube
O AGENTE SECRETO - THE SECRET AGENT (2025)
dir. Kleber Mendonça Filho
The miscommunication in Heated Rivalry is because they're living in different romance types to begin with:
Shane: In some sort of Austen-esque existence where hjs ill-advised flirtation with a notorious rake goes too far. Scandalised by the intimate use of first names he flees, concerned what society and his goodly parents will think, his reputation at stake. He tries to find a proper marriage prospect but alas his heart is lost to the rake! But he finally follows his heart and invites Ilya into his home too (and accepts first name usage!)
Ilya: Smoldering in mirrors and out of windows and getting emotionally wuthered screaming Shane's name on a moor. My man is byronically going through it gothic style
Scott Hunter is trying to live his best modern rom com life and is side-eyeing the fuck out of these two. No idea what's going on there and franly doesn't want to
and if i said this made my stomach hurt while making it
Ilya Rozanov's search history (insp)
+ bonus:
KISS OF THE SPIDER WOMAN (2025)
Tonatiuh as Molina & Diego Luna as Valentín
Why don't we go to the movies?
I don't even like Kimmel - but this is fucking dystopian shit.
A king who doesn't really want to and isn't able to run the kingdom properly catches wind of a noble woman who wants to kill him to take over and he realizes she is extremely competent so he decides to propose to her to save everyone the hassle and they have a surprisingly healthy relationship.
A Reasonable Proposal
King Aerlin the Third of Aelren did not like ruling.
He didn’t dislike it because of the wars, or the finances, or the elaborate diplomacy involved in placating half-drunk barons in jewel-toned doublets. No, his dislike was more fundamental. He simply wasn’t good at it.
He tried, at first. Earnestly, even. But policies blurred into parchment sludge, council meetings turned into passive-aggressive theatre, and every attempt to act “kingly” seemed to offend someone important. The advisors whispered that he was too soft. The generals claimed he was too hesitant. The high clergy said he lacked divine conviction.
He found solace in books, wandering his sprawling library with a glass of something amber in hand, or escaping to the gardens to sketch flowers he couldn’t name. On paper, his signature was elegant. In person, he was a walking apology wrapped in a crown.
But fate, ever fond of irony, had other plans for him.
And so it was that King Aerlin learned—while half-asleep at a council meeting about grain tariffs—that Lady Mirena of Lirenthal had been overheard plotting to kill him.
“...a subtle poison, Your Majesty,” droned Chancellor Vallis, squinting through his bifocals. “Very clean. Allegedly undetectable. She’s even assembled supporters, minor lords mostly. All quite impressed with her... ah, administrative acumen.”
Aerlin blinked. “I beg your pardon?”
“She means to kill you, sire,” said General Rennor cheerfully, slicing an apple with a dagger far too large for fruit. “And frankly, if she were aiming to win hearts and minds, she’s doing a marvelous job.”
“Why is no one alarmed by this?”
“She’d be a more effective ruler,” muttered Lady Vyne, one of his oldest council members. “You’re sweet, Aerlin, but sweet isn’t a strategy.”
“She’s also thirty-three and unmarried,” added the Master of Coin. “Ambition tends to curdle when there’s no outlet.”
Aerlin stared at them all.
“So, let me be clear,” he said slowly. “A noblewoman is plotting to assassinate me, and you’re all... supportive?”
The room exchanged looks.
“She’s really very competent,” Vallis offered weakly.
And so, that night, Aerlin read the report in full.
Lady Mirena of House Lirenthal—originating from a side branch of her family—was born to obscurity and rose like wildfire. She managed estates with uncanny efficiency, implemented fair tax schemes in her region, and had allegedly turned a struggling orphanage into a self-sustaining institution in under a year. Her public works were admired. Her speeches circulated in pamphlets. She was rumored to read three languages and had once bested a general in a game of Go in under twenty moves.
She was, in short, exactly the kind of person Aerlin wished was in charge.
He closed the dossier and sipped his wine, thinking. Killing her would be a political nightmare. Letting her kill him would be—while somewhat tempting—not ideal for the kingdom. Or himself.
That left one option.
Mirena was not pleased to be summoned.
She arrived at the palace flanked by two silent attendants and clad in steel-gray silk, the color of dignity under threat. Her mouth was drawn in a polite, disdainful line. She curtsied with mechanical grace.
“Your Majesty,” she said, as though addressing a bee she hoped wouldn’t sting.
Aerlin dismissed the guards. “Thank you for coming. I promise I won’t waste your time.”
“Then let us speak plainly,” she replied. “You’re aware I’ve considered removing you.”
He appreciated her honesty. “Yes. I read the report.”
“Then I assume you’ve summoned me to threaten, bribe, or execute.”
“None of the above.”
That gave her pause. A tiny vertical line appeared between her brows.
“I want to propose,” he said.
A beat.
“Propose what?” she asked, cautiously.
“Marriage.”
She blinked. “Excuse me?”
“Look,” Aerlin gestured vaguely at a chair, then sat across from her. “Everyone thinks you’d make a better ruler. They’re not wrong. You’re smart. Capable. Terrifying. I, meanwhile, once got lost in my own wine cellar.”
She didn’t laugh. But the corner of her mouth twitched.
“So why not save everyone the trouble?” he continued. “You want the throne. I don’t. But if you kill me, there’s a succession crisis, maybe a civil war, probably famine—”
“I have plans in place for a famine,” she interrupted.
“I don’t doubt it,” he said with a smile. “But here’s a better way. Marry me. Rule as queen. I’ll stay out of your way. I’ll go to ribbon-cuttings and pretend to care about tournaments. You handle the real governance. And in return, both the kingdom and I survive and thrive.”
Mirena stared at him.
“This is not how power is transferred,” she said slowly.
“Neither is assassination,” he replied.
Silence fell. Then she said, “Do you have any idea what you’re offering?”
“Salvation?” he said, only half joking.
“No. Legitimacy. You’d give your crown to a woman the nobles barely tolerate, who has no royal blood—”
“Everyone thinks you’re from the side family. No one needs to know you were adopted.”
Her eyes narrowed slightly.
“So you’ve done your digging.”
“I wanted to know my potential future wife,” he said, unashamed. “Originally named Maeve, orphaned at six by the Frontier Crisis. Adopted at fourteen by Duchess Elen of Lirenthal because you looked and behaved remarkably regal. You’ve been hiding that ever since.”
She looked away. “It shouldn’t matter.”
“I agree. But it does. So use me.”
At that, she tilted her head. Studied him like one might study an unusually articulate frog.
“And what do you want out of this, truly?”
Aerlin paused. “I want someone competent in charge. I want the kingdom to survive. I want to go back to reading poems and failing at painting. And maybe... I want someone who doesn’t look at me like I’m a failure just because I hate ruling.”
There was another silence, but softer this time.
“You’re ridiculous,” she said finally.
“Frequently.”
She stood.
“I’ll consider it.”
He didn’t expect her to say yes.
But three days later, she returned.
“I accept,” she said simply.
The wedding was small, by royal standards. Mirena refused most of the excess and insisted the remaining budget be redirected to emergency granaries in the floodplains. The nobles grumbled, but they knew better than to challenge her now.
Publicly, the marriage was framed as a political union of stability and shared vision. Privately, the court whispered of the strange couple: the incompetent king and the ambitious queen.
They weren’t lovers. Not at first. But something like respect bloomed between them.
Mirena took to ruling like a sitsi to water. She restructured the tax system, appointed common-born clerks who proved capable, and brokered trade agreements that stunned the treasury into silence. She had little patience for flattery and even less for corruption. Several wealthy lords “retired” mysteriously after meeting with her.
Aerlin, for his part, became something unexpected: likable. He played the part of doting husband with a warmth that felt genuine. He hosted banquets, read to children at city festivals, and insisted on planting trees in every district.
“She rules the mind,” he said once in an interview, “and I, the heart. It works out.”
It did.
One evening, nearly two years into their marriage, they found themselves in the palace garden. The moon hung like a pale coin in the sky.
Mirena stood with her arms folded, watching the newly planted magnolias.
“You know,” Aerlin said from the bench nearby, “I used to be afraid of you.”
“You should still be,” she replied, without turning.
He chuckled.
“Why didn’t you go through with it?” he asked after a moment. “The assassination, I mean.”
She looked at him then. Her amber eyes were tired, but bright.
“I almost did,” she admitted. “But then I reread the reports. You’ve never ordered executions. You never raised taxes on the poor. You listened more than you spoke. And...” She hesitated. “You left most of the heavy lifting to others.”
“Because I was terrible at it.”
“Because you were honest about being terrible at it,” she said. “That kind of self-awareness is rare.”
He smiled, surprised.
“Besides,” she added, voice dry, “I didn’t want to run a broken kingdom. Better to fix it first, then take it.”
He laughed then, genuinely. “Romantic.”
They sat in comfortable silence.
Eventually, Aerlin said, “I like this. Us.”
She glanced at him.
“So do I.”
It wasn’t a grand love. But it was something better, perhaps. A partnership. An odd sort of love forged not from passion, but from shared purpose and trust.
Edi Gathegi as Mr. Terrific SUPERMAN (2025)
Margaret Nazon — Galaxy Cluster [velvet with beading (glass, plastic and organic material), canvas backing, 2016]
pov: you fell out of a nautiloid
inspired by that one house md promo image
Unrelated, Best Boy Hank Green made a cute, no subscription, not invasive and full of malwares app.
It's a cute lil app that helps you step away from your phone and leave it alone for a time you set, to stay away from distraction. If you pick up the phone, the knitting lil bean loses all of his knitting... So if you say "I'm setting down my phone for half an hour so I can efficiently clean the table and bag up the trash" it helps resisting the call of the screen. Because you can't make the bean sad. The bean is too cute.
4th place in the downloads jfc. I think people are starved for simple and honest softwares with no evils schemes and data stealing
1st place, above chatGPT at the moment!!!
It’s adorable! I love my bean, I’m so proud of their socks. They work so hard!
It’s like practicing healthy boundaries, but with myself.
Reblog to make ChatGPT loose to a cute knitting bean.
ok well this blew my mind
In Pilgrim Bell, Kaveh Akbar reaches across languages to write "documents of barbarism."
This is also true with filmmakers. Western filmmakers pan their cameras mostly left to right and Iranian filmmakers do right to left.
Time seems such a universal concept and then I find out the different ways people perceive everything and remember “it’s all appearances to consciousness”
But the coolest part of that time-direction study, was there didn’t seem to be a consistent pattern to how aboriginal Australians arranged the images, until it was realized that the issue was where the participant was sitting, because they were consistently arranging them East to West.
drew them
That’s it, that’s distilled to their essence