i have to die
Peter Solarz

titsay

shark vs the universe
AnasAbdin
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Today's Document

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣

@theartofmadeline
todays bird
cherry valley forever
h
NASA
almost home
trying on a metaphor
YOU ARE THE REASON
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

roma★
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@pink-icedcoffee
i have to die
Orlando, 02.11.2016 - Video by Phil Lutz
Papa is handed a painting of himself by someone in the audience and proudly displays it on stage for the rest of the ritual.
Rewatching Treasure Planet (great movie, watch it) made realize something about the way that stories convey information to their audiences. There's been a lot of discussion on the overuse of plot twists and how many stories prioritise surprising their audience over telling decent stories. However, if you instead reveal the "twist" to the audience before it becomes known to the characters, you can build tension and stakes. Treasure Planet comes right out and tells you that Long John Silver is the main villain almost immediately after his introduction (And even before he's introduced we're warned about a cyborg, so you'd have to be pretty dense to not put 2 and 2 together and realize he's a bad guy). So when the audience watches him and Jim bond and grow closer, it builds tension for when Jim finds out and it highlights the tragedy of their friendship, because we all know it's not going to end well. Then, after the truth is revealed, stakes are created because we want the friendship between Jim and Silver to be repaired, because we know it was real, but we don't know if can be after what Silver's done. And all of this would have been lost if Silver's true nature had been a cheap plot twist. The tragedy would be completely overshadowed by the surprise and betrayal, and any investment in their relationship would have been built on the false impression that Silver was a good guy.
Another good example of this is Titanic. Even if you were somehow ignorant of the ship's sinking, the film makes sure you know that it sank with its framing device of Old Rose telling her story to people salvaging the Titanic's wreak. And Titanic's plot structure could only possibly work if you know the ship is going to sink. I'm not just talking about building tension, tragedy, and stakes for the characters like with the above example, I mean that if you didn't know that the Titanic was going down walking into the film, the abrupt shift from romance to suspense-disaster would be an increadibly tough pill to swallow. But it works because we expect it. You don't walk into a film called Titanic without expecting the damn boat to sink.
However, the sad thing about both of these examples, is that despite all the benefits that came from telling the audience these things ahead of time, I think the main reason the creators didn't make them plot twists was because they couldn't have. Treasure Island is the single most influential piece of pirate media out there, and you'd have to have been living under a rock for over a century to not know the Titanic sank. So, the writers had to work around the fact that these important turning points in the narratives were common knowledge, and they wound creating incredible stories as a consequence.
I want to see more of this style of writing in stories where the writers aren't forced to do it. We've clearly seen that you can tell some really damn good stories by giving information to the audience before the characters learn it, and I just wish more works would do that instead of trying to surprise people with shocking twists.
i found this clip on twitter and GOD I WANNA CRY copia complimenting his ghouls for how they played AASYIEGDSOSB ☹️☹️ ALSO its so funny to me how ONE (1) singular ghoul got a line in the ghovie kdhsjsgkshskssk
So, I decided to also show my art on Tumblr! It's an official account, I'll add it later to my carrd.
For anyone who see me the first time, hi! I'm Eike and I currently draw cowboy ghouls! You can find me on Twitter and instagram under the same name!
Searchlights, looking for the watcher in the sky.
water ghouls cannot swim in their glamoured forms. their hands slip through the water much too easily, their arms and legs are far too short, and not to mention their complete lack of that rudder-like tail. they can’t swim—like, at all. they just flail and splash around and it’s a whole scene that usually leads to them being saved by another ghoul. instead, when forced to glamour, they prefer to lounge on the banks or sit back in a tube floatie where they are safe from drowning (and instant mortification)
Most of the time, I want to be kissed by someone who just got the taste of their favorite candy they haven't eaten in a long time, haven't seen, nor smelled in a long time. Just fucking devour my whole being with their lips... and sometimes I want someone to kiss me like I'm a little dainty, fragile, ancient procelian doll. I want to me kissed so sweetly and passionately by softly pressing their lips on mine lighter than a feather. :]
“if women want equality then they should be drafted” what if — just hear me out — what if nobody should be drafted. not even *looks behind my shoulder* not even men.
I miss Jinki so bad......
Progress shots of my Lotus Tower!
(Please ignore the messy workspace 😅)
As an adult I think me and all my friends should all have matching schedules and work like 20 hours a week and also everyone lives within 15 minutes of each other why is that so much to ask
I love how Ghost was like "these are the NAMELESS Ghouls. Do not get attached"
And what does the fandom do?
Get attached and give each one little nicknames and lore