Peacemaker Full Nelson | 2.08

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@murdockparkour
Peacemaker Full Nelson | 2.08
Pride Month, and everyone’s favorite Bryan Fuller posted: a scene with the Marlanas, followed by Artemisia Gentileschi’s painting Judith Slaying Holofernes. We all know perfectly well that there are no random details in Hannibal. Every line of dialogue, every object in the frame, every painting means something.
The painting depicts the key moment of the story of Judith and Holofernes. Briefly: Judith, seeking to save her hometown, dresses in beautiful clothes and goes to the Assyrian camp with her maidservant. In the camp, she attracts Holofernes’s attention with her beauty and wisdom. He allows her to stay there. She spends three days in the camp, bathing at night with her maidservant in a spring. On the fourth day, when Holofernes, trying to seduce her, holds a feast and becomes drunk, she and her maidservant behead him and hide his head in a bag of provisions. The painting shows not simply the killing of a tyrant, but the victory of those considered weak over someone who possesses power. That is precisely why the reference is so interesting in the context of Margot and Alana.
Margot spent her entire life as a victim of her own brother. Mason abused her, controlled her life, took away her ability to have children, and literally treated her body as his own property (the scars on her back, the scenes from Season 2). Despite her family’s wealth and status, she existed almost as a prisoner. Like Judith, Margot is someone whom others perceive as weak. Alana also becomes the victim of a man who holds power over her. Hannibal uses her feelings, and after the events of the Season 2 finale she is left with severe consequences and a desire to regain control of her own life. In Margot’s story, she becomes the ally who does not turn away. The very maidservant who hides the “head” in a bag of provisions.
As in Gentileschi’s painting, two women act together. There is no male figure protecting them; instead, women stand in solidarity with one another, helping each other through a difficult situation without being afraid to get their hands dirty. It is especially interesting that Fuller references Artemisia Gentileschi’s version specifically, rather than simply the biblical story. In her interpretation, the emphasis is placed not on the heroism of Judith alone, but on the joint action of two women, their determination and mutual support. They function as a single unit. Margot and Alana function in exactly the same way. Judith and her maidservant strip Holofernes of his power. Margot and Alana strip Mason of his power. Both pairs commit a brutal act, but in both cases the violence is presented as a response to the years of abuse inflicted upon them.
Sorry if there are any mistakes here, I wrote in my native language for friends, then translated as best I could
Michelangelo's CREATION OF ADAM | PROJECT HAIL MARY (2026) for @thequeensjester
Ty Project Hail Mary for giving me a Ryan Gosling interest, that is exactly what I needed
Spoilers for the new Frankenstein movie ⚠️
While i understand the reviews of Frankenstein that disliked the creature forgiving victor in the end, I really do think it worked. Like i was fully expecting him to condemn the man and go fuck off and die on the ice like he did in the book, but like. I don't think it did the themes of the book a disservice like I've seen a number of people say. What I mean by that is that what Guillermo Del Toro did was show us the cycle of abuse through his (admittedly altered) version of Victor's story so that the Creature no longer had to fill the role of the horrible-thing-representing-the-ills-of-man-etc on its own. Everything else in the movie was showing us that, from Victor and his father's cruelty, to the classism and capitalist war profiteering shown through the opulence of Harlander and the other European aristocracy, and all the talk about how the killing and the cruelty feels like an inevitability. And then when it was the creature's turn to put that cruelty onto the one who first showed it those ills-of-man-etc, it instead chose to forgive, and to free the ship and live. This was a creature who had faced unimaginable pain, who had tried to kill itself time and time again, and who was furious at Victor for condemning it to this life of unending shame and fear, which (at least to me) felt very much like the throes of growing pains, of coming to terms with your abuser and your life and how what happened could not be undone, now chooses instead to break the cycle. And there's really just so much hope in it. Obviously that's not what Mary Shelley was getting at in the original horror novel, but it feels like closure for an open wound. We saw the horror throughout the rest of the film. It was there, it was delivered powerfully and clearly, and while I agree it doesn't have the ending that makes the original story feel so tragic and so horrifying, it felt very much like it fit with the take GDT was trying to do, which i do think was faithful to the themes of the story
hey. after grace dies. he's buried in a combination of human and eridian traditions. a beautiful carved monument to who he is and what he represents to the planet and people of erid. and they have a permanent sort of honor guard there. somebody always there to watch him sleep.
and generations later, when erid is thriving again and even rocky and adrian are long gone, buried or memorialized right alongside grace, classes of little eridian children come and watch the changing of the watch. feel connected to the history of their planet because they, too, are watching grace and rocky sleep. the saviors of erid will never sleep alone again.
A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms S1•E1 "The Hedge Knight"
Find someone to be brave for. Project Hail Mary (2026) dir. Phil Lord, Chris Miller
RYAN GOSLING as DR. RYLAND GRACE PROJECT HAIL MARY 2026 • dir. Phil Lord & Christopher Miller
notning makes sense
the way he looks at her every time 😍
A KNIGHT OF THE SEVEN KINGDOMS 1.05 - In The Name of The Mother
Grace Rocky save stars! ⭐️
We don't need a coupon. We're the government.
hope has blood on her hands
PETER CLAFFEY | SER DUNCAN THE TALL
A Knight in the Making - Episode 2 + 3 : x