Song...
OUTLANDER'S
styofa doing anything
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda

★
i don't do bad sauce passes
Claire Keane
DEAR READER
NASA

titsay
Show & Tell
Today's Document
todays bird
Jules of Nature
One Nice Bug Per Day
$LAYYYTER
Cosimo Galluzzi
cherry valley forever
Sweet Seals For You, Always
KIROKAZE
occasionally subtle
Three Goblin Art
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@shoutlandish
Song...
OUTLANDER'S
❝We're mated for life, Sassenach...❞
This is so so good 💔💕😭👏👏👏⚔️ thank you for sharing . Xx
IG theoutlandercollector
IG Vera Adxer
"Wouldn't want to frighten you".
Do you ever wish you hadna seen that flower, touched that stone? Never.
Caitríona Balfe and Sam Heughan talk saying goodbye to their characters in 'Outlander' Season 8 and debate what the ending means.
IG whisky_eyed_lass
😭😭😭
I just wanted to relive this moment one more time 🥹❤️
Hmmm🤔
So, we saw Jamie's ghost go to the stones after watching Claire ... 1943 right? Claire and Frank's late honeymoon? BUT!! Jamie is alive during that time. We know it's established in the books and show, time travelers cannot be in a time that they already exist. Can a ghost??? Can Jamie's ghost wonder around watching Claire while he is also alive during that time?
#2 - Are we to assume that even though he watches over her, when she meets up with him the next day, his ghost disappears?? Until he dies again ...
#3 - Jamie's ghost roaming ... just on special nights/parts of the year or always while in purgatory?? He's told her he would wait 200 years in purgatory for her. Roaming always?
#4 - They meet up again, the circle of life and love starts back on track. Do neither of them remember the past? Even though his ghost has been watching, he has no memory of it all?
How does that all work? I wondered if Diana has ever addressed any questions like this about the ghost. Time traveling, Jamie's ghosts, the kids powers, Jamie's dreams, and now Franny's time traveling ability. Those things left us hanging! It's at least left ME hanging! 😁
I love these thought-provoking questions!
IG outlander_starz
😭😭😭
😂😂😂
Claire’s heart starts to glow blue right before the ghost scene — as she’s calling him home to her via blue light, he calls her home to him via the stones. In doing so, he closes the time loop, and together they defy death itself. 😭💙
There will never be a love story like theirs again. Never.
😭
Video edit by me
Friends...
Jamie's last intended words to Claire were, in fact, I LOVE YOU!!
😭😭
‘Outlander’ Post-Credits Scene Honors Author Diana Gabaldon: Every Easter Egg and Cameo in the Series’ Final Moments (EXCLUSIVE)
By Jazz Tangcay
After eight seasons, Starz’s “Outlander” wrapped up with Claire (Caitríona Balfe) and Jamie’s (Sam Heughan) timeless love story getting a powerful (yet ambiguous) ending.
While the last moments of the finale, which aired on Friday, May 15, show Claire and Jamie, seemingly dead, opening their eyes and taking another breath (read their full interpretation of that here), those who stuck around for the post-credits scene got another treat.
The scene, directed by Balfe, takes place in the early 1990s as a group of “fans” stand in line at a bookstore where a new author, Diana Gabaldon, is signing copies of her debut novel, “Outlander.” Gabaldon, who penned the books the series is based on, published the first edition in June 1991.
“Having Diana there mattered to us. She’s the source of every word we’ve ever written on the show, and we couldn’t imagine ending it without handing the story back to her,” showrunner Matthew B. Roberts tells Variety of the scene. “She created this universe — it felt right that the last image of ‘Outlander’ be hers.”
As the camera pans, the room is filled with cameos from Roberts, executive producer Maril Davis and writer and executive producer Toni Graphia.
In addition to that, everyone else in the scene — the fans in line and those in the bookstore — are crew members including: John Casey (props), Suzanne Smith (casting), Carly Parris (production buyer), Davie Stewart (Sam’s Driver), Luke Coulter (camera), Catrina Luna (construction accountant), Chris Cameron (locations) and Carol Ann Crawford (dialect coach).
There’s another easter egg for eagle-eyed viewers. All the books featured on the shelves of the bookstore — and in the hands of those who are featured onscreen — have titles written by the crew members based on their specialty in the series.
“We felt that after eight seasons and twelve years, the people who actually built this world deserved to be in it,” adds Roberts. “Every face in that bookstore is someone who’s been with us from day one, and every book on the shelves is a job they did with a title created just for them. It was the only thank you big enough.”
The scene ends with another special wink to fans with one “fan” — script supervisor, Margaret Graham — asking Diana what the journal is that is beside her on the signing table. (The journal was first shown during the penultimate episode as the journal in which Claire is writing down her story.)
“Just a wee bit of inspiration,” Gabaldon responds.
Below is a list of some of the book titles written by production staff:
Toni Graphia (EP, writer) — “That’s Not How I Imagined It” Suzanne Smith (casting) — “The Tall One Will Do” Stuart Bryce (set dec) — “Requiem for a Barrell” Carol Ann Crawford (dialect coach) — “Dinny Fash: Scottish Colloquialisms” Luke Coulter (camera) — “Looking at the Eyelines” Scott Napier (DOP) — “It’s Too Shiny” Jon McCormack (key grip) — “Get a Grip” Patrick Conroy (producer) — “TV & Film Budgeting for Diddies” Jamie Fleming (accounts) — “The Case of the Late Invoice”
Watch the post-credits scene below:
The "Outlander" finale ended with a post-credits scene filled with cameos and easter eggs and a nod to author Diana Gabaldon. Watch exclusiv
IG balfe.nation
Visual languages, literary allusions, and the Outlander finale. Or, Frank was wrong and Jamie and Claire were right. As always.
This episode is very callback rich, to put it mildly. When they’re in bed together on their last morning at the house, Jamie more or less asks Claire if she regrets not buying the vase. She tells him, unequivocally, that she doesn’t. And they talk about bees sleeping together who just need rest, but seem dead. Jamie quotes the Yeats poem, which in book canon is part of a conversation with Bree. Frank and Bree thought Claire wanted to live in the woods alone. Jamie and Bree now know differently. Because Bree knows who she is. And Jamie has always understood Claire.
Frank was wrong is the episode theme in so many ways. Frank looks at Bree and claims to love her, but also knows she is a constant reminder of Jamie, part of why Claire can’t forget him. Jamie looks at Bree and sees Claire: their love for each other, Claire’s own capacity for love and sacrifice and care. He is still grateful to Frank, and most of all still able to look at Bree and see only good. His daughter is a person in her own right but also another way to see the love of his life. And to see the light of the moon, too, of course. (My headcanon is that Claire’s name was also inspired by Debussy’s Claire de Lune).
Where is Jamie when he asks if Claire can forgive him for bringing her here? Near water, like in The Reckoning, and Alamance. He is restless, tapping his fingers, until she takes his hand. Which she does when he admits he’s terrified of not seeing their oldest grandson again. He asks her to remember him, and we transition to one of the most joyful love scenes we’ve seen. Jamie smiles repeatedly. Whatever is ahead, the delight of being with Claire overpowers it. After, the camera lingers on their strewn clothes: their passion is the same as always.
We’ve seen a lot of Claire and Jamie’s battlefield farewells. This one is about contrasts. Jamie doesn’t promise it won’t be today. He tells Claire he loves her in Gaelic, and she says it back in the same language, the language of his heart, her heart’s home. She doesn’t need an interpreter anymore, is not an Outlander in the same way. He bows like before Prestonpans; the weight of history, their history, is still the weight of love.
Notably, Claire doesn’t bow her head in the prayer before battle. For her, faith without works is dead, which lucky for Claire is not Saint Paul, it’s from the book of James: she will go where Jamie goes and do her job. Roger is a historian, but he’s not like Frank: he follows Claire’s lead. He also understands her allusion to Tennyson’s Lady of Shalott, a woman who can see the world only in a mirror. Probably also an allusion to Claire’s least fave, St. Paul, who wrote about seeing “through a glass, darkly.”
Roger tells her to hope the curse doesn’t break, because when it does the mirror cracks and the lady dies. It’s an Arthurian story. Lancelot’s also in it. Claire and Jamie are always mythical, whether they are invoking Orpheus and Eurydice (Wentworth) or The Odyssey and its separated married couple. Incidentally, the Mirror Crack’d, a line from that Tennyson poem, is also an Agatha Christie novel, which I will come back to in a minute.
Jamie tells Claire he’s only afraid of not seeing his home again. She assures him they’ll see the Ridge, and he just nods. Because he doesn’t mean a place. He means *her.* Roger suggests taking Jamie’s body home and Claire says “he is home.” Her eyes shut, her breath gusts out. She glows blue. And then we are in 1945 Inverness and see the ghost. Because the bees are only sleeping, and so are Jamie and Claire.
I watched part of “Sassenach” yesterday and what struck me most was Claire and Frank admitting they struggled to remember each other. Jamie goes to Claire because he remembers everything. And, as he’s admitted, because there are people he would enjoy haunting.
Frank was and is wrong: he’s not seeing Claire’s wartime past in the stranger outside the window. He is seeing her future and her forever. One he can’t write about accurately because he underestimates her at every turn and doesn’t give her choices. Like Tom Christie (whose name is clearly an Agatha callback) Frank claims to love Claire and writes about her, only to be incorrect. Frank, like Tom, doesn’t understand her. He silences her story. Jamie lets her tell it. And Jamie only goes to the stones because he already knows Claire would do it all again. Because he asked her what she wanted. He always does. And he lets himself haunt Frank, even if it’s not the main point. Because it’s fun. And he keeps his promise not to scare Claire.
Jamie goes back to 1945 Inverness for more than a prank. He touches the stones. He calls Claire back to him; he can’t travel to her but he can trust her. She has the spyglass again in this episode. He can trust her vision and her heart.—she will see the flowers and find him. And then the flashbacks begin, which I am convinced Jamie and Claire both see. Because neither of them has forgotten a thing.
Claire told Richardson she didn’t know what it was that brought her to the past the first time, just that she is meant to be part of history. We know now what brought her. It was love. And memory. And because she told Jamie what she wanted, and he always gives it to her. Their love is not in Frank’s book, is only captured in Claire’s journal, what she calls “our history.” Claire makes such a tender and anguished face when Jamie tells her he hasn’t had everything he wants, only to relax when he admits it’s just that he hasn’t slept in a flower holding her feet. She makes it up to him in the end.
Wherever they go next—they’re alive, it’s not an afterlife, Claire’s too practical for that—history doesn’t capture it. They’re finally free of official records. It’s all a love story from here on out. Because the world is all around them. It’s just the two of them now.