Even if she was shaking that much... even if she fell...
she was still thinking of winning until the bitter end.
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@theartistlibrarian
Even if she was shaking that much... even if she fell...
she was still thinking of winning until the bitter end.
Each time I think about how they took out the Goldy Pond arc, I get so angry. Cause like not only was it a good ass arc, getting rid of it takes out something integral to the story as a whole, that I just don’t think they realized/cared about:
The validation of Emma’s beliefs.
Emma is established to be this happy-go-lucky character right? And as the children are still in Grace Field, you see that she still keeps this demeanor while juggling the new graveness of the situation she is in. While losing some of her naivety, she still shows herself capable of being someone hopeful for the future who will not let her circumstances get the better of her. The most important part of what makes this WORK for her character (instead of making it annoying and unrealistic) is the fact that she both acknowledged and experiences the tragedy of the world she is trying to be hopeful in. It’s not some little girl being like “I believe everything’s gonna be fine! Sparkles and rainbows!” while being shielded from the darker parts of the world. It’s a little girl who looks in the face of the darkness and that terrible world and is in the MIDST of it. It’s a little girl who found the dead body of her younger sibling and was faced with the reality that her whole life was a lie. It’s a little girl who realized her whole family was going to die and fought to grab onto her hope despite how overwhelmingly bleak their situation was. She knew and yet she didn’t hesitate to believe that they could escape. She knew and still wanted to yell to the world that she was going to save EVERYONE. Seeing someone so unwaveringly hopeful even after being hit with devastating loss and despair is like a beacon for anyone else struggling to keep surviving. Emma is lovable for how she loves—how her hope and determination stands fast in the face of adversity and still goes forward even as more events threaten to shake and bend it.
For whatever reason season 2 was changed the way it was (I’ve heard many things)(if it was because of the guns then WHY pick up the anime in the first place bc you derail EVERYTHING) it could never stand completely without Goldy Pond.
Goldy Pond is in plain terms Emma’s defining arc. It seems to be pushing forward a question whose answer will define the rest of the series.
“Who is Emma?”
Fuck it, I didn't want to make a post on this but it's bugging the hell out of me so let's exorcize the thought.
Lilo and Stitch is an extremely good children's movie. I've been working at a daycare for over five years now, and out of all the children's movies I've shown to an auidence of twenty or so school-age kids (i.e. between the ages of 5 and 12), the only movie that's held their attention as well as Lilo and Stitch is The Emperor's New Groove, and the only one that's held it better is An American Tail. Of those three, Lilo and Stitch has won the vote of "what movie we will watch" the most. It not only entertains kids, but emotionally captivates them from start to finish, because it very thoroughly understands how to engage children on their level. It's a smart, tightly written children's movie.
The feat of story-telling genius it pulls of lies in its ability to reach both where children's imaginations want to go and where their lived real-world experiences lie - most children's movies focus on one or the other, but Lilo and Stitch dives deep into both. On the imagination side, there's Stitch's whole plotline of being a little alien monster being chased by other weirdo aliens onto earth because they want to stop him from running amok and causing havoc (which, of course, happens anyway in fun cartoony comedy/action spectacle). On the real-world side, you have Lilo's plotline of being a troubled little girl who has an abundance of very real problems that, like an actual child, she struggles to comprehend and deal with, as well as the many adults in her life that care about her to some degree but all struggle to fully understand her. Kids want to be Stitch and run amok and cause cartoony havoc. Kids, even the least-troubled kids, relate to Lilo, because all of them have been in a similar situation as her at least once in their lives.
Balancing these two very different stories, with very different tones and scopes to their respective conflicts, is a hard writing task, but Lilo and Stitch manages to do it in a way that seems effortless with one very powerful trick. The two plots are direct mirrors to each other, complete with the characters involved in each having foils in the respective plot. To break it down:
Stitch, the wild and destructive alien gremlin who everyone has labeled as a crime against existence, is Lilo, the troubled young girl who's viewed as a "problem child" by all the adults in her life. In both plotlines, Stitch and Lilo are facing the threat of being "taken away" from the life they know because they act out, and in both plotlines, we see that this is an unfathomably cruel thing to do to them and will not actually solve the problems they have.
Dr. Jumbaa, the mad scientist who made Stitch because making monsters is what mad scientists do, and who had no intentions of ever being nurturing or parental to anything or anyone in his life, is Nani, Lilo's older sister whose parents died when she was young and now is forced to act as a parental substitute despite not being mentally or emotionally prepared for that responsibility yet. Both Dr. Jumbaa and Nani are trying to get their respective wild children in line with what society wants them to be, and both are struggling hard with it because they in turn have a lot of growing to do before they can actually accomplish that.
Pleakley, the nebbish alien bureaucrat who ends up being assigned to help Dr. Jumbaa despite being mostly uninvolved in creating the whole Stitch situation, is David, the nice but mostly ineffectual guy who's crushing on Nani and wants to help her but doesn't really have much he can provide except emotional support. Ultimately Pleakley and David prove that said emotional support is a lot more helpful than it seems on the surface, as they give Jumbaa and Nani respectively a lot of the pushes they need to become better in their parental roles.
The Grand Councilwoman, who runs the society of aliens that is trying to banish Stitch forever for his crime of existing, is Cobra Bubbles, the Child Protective Services agent who is in charge of deciding whether or not Lilo needs to be taken away from her home forever for, ostensibly, her own good. Both are well-intentioned and stern, with a desire to follow the rules of society and do what procedure says is the most humane thing to do in this situation, but both lack the understanding of Stitch/Lilo's situation to actually help until the end of the movie.
Finally, we have Captain Gantu, the enforcer of the Galactic Council who is a mean, aggressive, sadistic brute but is viewed as a "good guy" by society because he plays by its rules (well, when he knows can't get away with breaking them, anyway), who is the counterpart of Myrtle, the mean, aggressive, sadistic schoolyard bully who is viewed as a "good kid" by other adults because she plays by the rules they established (well, when she knows she can't get away with breaking them, anyway). Both Gantu and Myrtle are, in truth, much nastier in temperament than Stitch and Lilo, but are better at hiding it in front of others and so get away with it, and often make Stitch and Lilo look worse in the eyes of others by provoking them to violence and then playing the victim about it - in fact, both even have the same line, "Does this look infected to you?", which they say after goading their respective wild-child victims into biting them.
The symmetry of these two plotlines allows them to actually feed into each other and build each other up instead of fighting each other for screentime. The fantastical nature of Stitch's plot adds whimsy to the far more realistic problems that Lilo faces so they don't get too heavy for the children in the audience, while the very real struggles of Lilo in her plotline bleed over into Stitch's plot and make both very emotionally poignant. When both plotlines hit their shared climax, they reach children on a emotional level few other movies can match - the terror of Lilo being taken away from her family, and the emotional complexity of that problem (Cobra Bubbles pointing to Lilo's ruined house and shouting at Nani, "IS THIS WHAT LILO NEEDS?" is so starkly real and heart-breaking), is matched and echoed in the visual splendor and mania of the spectacular no-way-this-is-going-to-work chase scene where Stitch, Nani, Jumbaa, and Pleakley all team up to rescue Lilo from Gantu.
The arcs of the characters all more or less line up. Nani confronts her own failures to be a guardian and parent to Lilo and resolves to do better and learn from her mistakes. Jumbaa, who through most of the movie protests to be evil and uncaring, nonetheless comes to not only care for Pleakley, but more importantly for Stitch too, and ends up assuming the role he never wanted but nonetheless forced himself into from the start: he is Stitch's family. Hell, the moment that reveals this is really clever - Stitch goes out into the wilderness to try and re-enact a scene from a storybook of The Ugly Duckling, hoping, in a very childish way, that his family will show up and love him. Jumbaa arrives and, coldly but not particularly cruelly, tells Stitch that he has no family - that Stitch wasn't born, but created in a lab by Jumbaa himself. But in that moment Jumbaa is proving himself wrong - because Stitch's creator, his parent, DID show up, and did exactly what happens in the story by telling Stitch the truth of what he is. It can't be a surprise, then, that later in the movie Jumbaa ends up deciding to side with Stitch, to help him save Lilo, and to stay on Earth with his child.
David and Pleakley go from being pushed away by Nani and Jumbaa respectively to essentially becoming their partners in the family. The Grand Councilwoman and Cobra Bubbles finally see how cruel their initial solution of isolating Stitch and Lilo from their family would be, and bend the rules they are supposed to enforce to protect and support this weird found family instead of breaking it apart. Gantu and Myrtle are recognized for the assholes they are and face comeuppance in the form of comedic slapstick pratfalls. And most importantly, Stitch and Lilo both get the emotional support and understanding they need to thrive and live happy lives as children should be allowed to do. It's like poetry, it rhymes.
It's a very precise, smartly written movie. It's a delicate balancing act of tone and emotions, with a very strong theme about the need for family and understanding that hits children in their hearts and imaginations. It's extremely well structured.
...
So it'd be kind of colossally fucking stupid to remake it and start fucking around with the core structure of it, chopping out pieces and completely altering others, with no real purpose beyond "Well, the executives thought it might be better if we did this."
I saw this on facebook days ago but didn’t want to say anything here not be screamed at I spread ‘false information’ tumblr is sensitive after all.
I have one in my hand right now so its real and I can post this.
We have slowly been seeing Lilo axed from the title of the franchise, first in merch and clothing.. slowly and slowly but NOW here it IS at a fast food company that is everywhere - now showing ‘Stitch’ as the name.
Will anyone complain about the name change? Is there any outcry Lilo is cut?
There is no denying it anymore. Yet everyone is ‘cool with it’ cause Stitch his cute. I honestly don’t want the franchise to be ‘Stitch’ if they won’t RELEASE THE ANIME called ‘Stitch!’ on Disney plus and let the rest of the world SEE IT and acknowledge it. LIlo has been severed from Stitch in almost all new merch its time to #RELEASETHESTITCHANIME
The mases have been fully conformed to a Lilo-less Stitch. Just DO IT DISNEY
Keep reading
I’m too just sick and tired of Disney’s exclusion of everything that isn’t the one uber-popular character when it comes to this franchise and, admittedly, how much of the fandom is acceptant of this obnoxious and insulting “Disney Stitch” rebrand solely because they really do not want to give up Stitch or see him lose attention in Disney’s eyes.
The problem with that? He was honestly never at risk of losing Disney’s attention. He’s an evergreen character now, on the levels of other Disney characters like Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck, Winnie the Pooh, and Buzz Lightyear, and has been that way for years now. He commands a massive fanbase that no other character within his franchise comes even close to matching, and Disney will not ignore that.
Stitch is popular because, to his fans, he’s the ultimate comfort food of a fictional character (and considering all that’s been going on for the past few years, people want a lot more of what comforts them and makes them happy these days). He can do all these things that we can’t such as having incredible powers and causing all sorts of mischief, and he can get away with it with his adorable looks. He also has a strong underlying current of relatability (that frankly has been stripped away from him over the years in favor of keeping up his cute and funny antics) that people can connect with, while still being true to himself.
But, like any other comfort food, it’s not healthy to solely have what you enjoy the most all the time. You need to balance that out with variety. The Lilo & Stitch / Stitch franchise has a lot of character variety. What other franchise do you know of that has:
A little neuroatypical girl with a love of both the traditions of her people and things that don’t normally appeal to most her age (let alone in general) and has gone through so much trauma that it’s astonishing that she somehow found a way to cope with it and help others?
Her older sister who went through the same ordeals, is stressed out from having to go through more tough ordeals than what her sister can handle, and yet still manages to roll with the punches the best she can?
An alien mad scientist who created literally hundreds of bizarre and fantastic creatures and yet is surprisingly sociable with those who aren’t as smart as he is?
An alien bureaucrat with a passion for something he knows very little about but is well-meaning towards it, and when given the opportunity to experience that passion, he’s able to take the opportunity in his own way…
The surfer boyfriend of the older sister who is good friends with her family, helps them out however he can, and only pursues his romance when she’s fully and emotionally available?
A social worker who is a supposedly former government agent who, while loyal to his job and is a strict man, genuinely has good intentions and is concerned for the safety of a little girl and her family?
A giant militaristic alien who, despite his toughness and competence, gets humiliated by a wild card character, taking him out of his job, is forced to work for a rodent-like wannabe tyrant with a voice of a Monty Python character, and despite his seriousness, gets a lot of moments of bathos through his rivalry with the wild card?
The aforementioned creatures from the alien mad scientist who have a wide variety of powers and abilities, many of them quite out there, and yet are oddly adorable in their own right and get rehabilitated to use what they have to help society?
And what franchise is able to take all these unusual characters (among others not mentioned), bring them together on an island, unite them under the concept of family, and somehow make it work? And this is not even getting into the spin-offs that came out in the last fifteen years.
Without the variety that makes the franchise work, all you’re getting are these rushes of fleeting comfort and happiness from this one thing. You’re just going back to ending up wanting again because you just want this one thing all the time, and if you’re not willing to look for that variety, or even contribute to keep that variety going, then you’re just going to drain yourself.
I try to keep a more general franchise focus, both on my blog and elsewhere because it’s just wearing me down to see so many people just focusing only on Stitch. I’ve seen much of the same old things from Stitch over and over again, from clip art to cheap merch to fan art of him doing the same familiar poses (how many times do I need to see yet another “cute” picture of Stitch just sitting down with his hands on the ground in front of him?), that there’s virtually nothing genuinely fresh about his character anymore. The spin-offs without Lilo did nothing to expand his character; they just took away most of his character development and have him go through the same motions again and again, just with different people from different cultures.
He’s not being reinvented; he’s the same, exact, mischief-making, constantly hungry, temperamental, fun-loving alien going back to the 2000s. He’s not further evolving, and that metamorphosis program from Stitch & Ai was a terrible excuse of an “evolution” that did nothing for him or his character in the slightest. And he’s not maturing as a character, because Disney knows full well now that people will throw fits at the slightest hints of him showing signs of mentally growing up, going all the way down to even speaking English more fluently over time. (His broken English, combined with that nasal voice of his, has, honestly, been one of Stitch’s more genuinely annoying traits—and Sanders more or less knows so, considering that he originally did that voice before it became the widely-known “Stitch voice” just to annoy and mess with his co-workers. And the broken English doesn’t really fit the internal logic of the franchise or even the first film with the wide society of English-speaking aliens, which includes his own creator, the fact that he can understand spoken English quite well, and he spends most of his time with a girl with a complex vocabulary for her age. How could he not improve his English over time? ‘Cause he lacks “advanced language programming” that Reuben has but he doesn’t for some unexplained reason? Pfft. Give me a break.)
Stitch has become flat. His emotional complexity and character arc, the true aspects of him that actually made him a popular character in the first place (you really think it’s just his looks and chaotic actions that made people like him?), has been stripped away to almost nothing. These days, he’s become less of a person, and more of just the cutest, funniest, most awesome pet you’ll never get to have. I cared about him because I saw the person in his character. But I also see that there’s not as much discussion about the franchise beyond Stitch going around the internet. I believe there ought to be more or Lilo and the others and less of (but not outright removing) Stitch, and I want others to see the things past what’s the popular part in this franchise. I also believe that there are still ways to evolve Stitch’s character even further while still being true to himself, but for that to happen, he has to change in a way that actually matters, even if what changes and needs to change is going to upset some people.
But going back to the heart of the matter, Stitch isn’t going anywhere, and he’s only going to keep getting all the attention from Disney. Not only that, Disney knew what they were doing with Stitch all this time, even with all the backlash and controversies that those post-Lilo spin-offs got. They have always wanted to make the franchise all about him, going all the way back to before Stitch! The Movie was even released. (Heck, the original teaser trailer for S!TM promoted it as Disney’s Stitch!) Although it took a long while for that to truly happen, they’ve ultimately succeeded, and they can now get away with leaving out the rest of his 'ohana as much as they’ve had been lately. Sure, they’ll throw a bone once in a while to some of the other characters, but it’s usually in the form of cheap trinkets that won’t break the bank for them and aren’t really worth buying. As far as Disney is concerned, Stitch is the franchise, bar none, and we will continue to see that logo without Lilo’s name or the ampersand for a long time to come.
i don’t hate you too :: why maiko works
There’s the common fandom consensus — and misconception — that Zuko and Mai’s relationship is based on apathy or cruelty and that they fuel this apathetic life view in each other. That their relationship is based on shared misery. Most of this critique is directed, whether consciously or not, towards Mai for her aloof, apathetic attitude, or claiming that she is just another abuser in Zuko’s life.
All of this could not be more wrong, and here’s why.
The first thing that needs to be understood is that Mai and Zuko are both survivors of emotional abuse. Mai is abused by both her parents and Azula, and Zuko is abused by his father and Azula. Both Mai and Azula acknowledge the abusive nature of Mai’s parents, who are rather like Toph’s, strict and controlling in an upper class lifestyle. Zuko eventually comes to firm stance against Azula and stands up to his primary abuser, Ozai, while Mai eventually stands up to hers, which is Azula. And how these dynamics affect them, and how Azula effects their relationship, is something I’ll get into earlier, but simply put: if you don’t think that Mai has suffered from emotional abuse, then you don’t understand her character, and you frankly have very little sympathy for female survivors who don’t respond to their abuse in ways that you find acceptable or likeable.
Okay? Okay.
Onto more parallels between them, Mai and Zuko are both are also high ranking nobles in the Fire Nation with a shared base understanding for royal etiquette and expectations. Each character is deeply unhappy as a result of all of these circumstances, and see being taken from the Fire Nation as a cause; Mai is ‘bored’ and unhappy in Omashu, and Zuko is bitter and angry in his banishment, having traversed seemingly most of the Earth Kingdom sea before turning his search to the Southern Water Tribe. Both want a way out; Zuko is presented one by Aang’s appearance and Mai is ‘given’ one by Azula. Each way out is their primary narrative purpose for the first book of each of their characters. However, by the second (Earth for Zuko, and Fire for Mai) their motivations and circumstances have in some ways radically changed.
To a certain degree, they both wear masks to hide their true intentions. Mai hides behind the apathetic nature she’s largely created as a survival tactic, and Zuko hides behind the Blue Spirit, and both masks are thrown away in a moment of truth, in the wake of a Selfless deed. They’re both the older sibling in their families, seemingly less loved than their younger sibling as well, and both wield sharp metal items (Zuko’s dual swords and Mai’s knives) that represent their natures.
And with that all said, let’s begin.
[Warning: this got way longer than expected so just… get prepared for like 10k of meta lmao]
BOOK TWO: EARTH
Return to Omashu written by Elizabeth Welch Ehasz
As this is Mai’s introductory episode I’m mostly going to be talking about her, but I will get more in depth to Zuko as well. This episode develops most of Mai’s primary relationships, including foreshadowing her future one with Zuko, showing that it was in the cards early on.
Keep reading
Deadline to unlock this stretchgoal is April 20!! ⏰🤯Go GO GOOO! Reshare on twitter, tumblr, and twitter!! If we don’t get at least 200 reshares by the end of April 20, this mystery stretch goal will not be produced!!
Mamamoo fighting!
Just two precious dorks in love.
[Todomomo & Kamijirou]
Wordless done right ... Fantastic job and so adorable.
she a good gorl
Incredible digital painting of best girl...
Here’s all the pages for Stay on This Journey with Me (minus the cover page)!
when my little brother was even littler my mom came up with the 小兔子 bunny game to get him to eat
(it took forever for him to finish meals)
My heart for Mama Midoriya and Baby Deku... 😍
bit of a snow white hanfu moment
I kind of want to cosplay this someday??? 😯
got sidetracked and drew a maleficent look
Beautiful
ȶɦɛ ǟʍɛȶɦʏֆȶ ʄʟʊȶɛ
Ru (襦) Tutorial
Here are the basics on how to draft a Ru (top) that has parallel collars.
This is my favorite style of top thanks to its versatility and elegance. You can even wear it with with modern clothes as hanyuansu.
Traditionally, this is a women’s Hanfu garment that is pared with a Qu (skirt).
Please read @ziseviolet‘s post about the different types of Hanfu, ru, and the difference between crossed and parallel collars.
First, did you take your measurements? Please see my post on measurements if you are drafting! (x)
Next, let’s look at a technical flat.
The top consists of:
Bodice x2
Sleeve x2
Collar x1
Ties x2
The ties are very easy, they are just long strips of cloth that are folded and sewn wrong sides together to create a band with a finished edge. They don’t require specific pattern.
Another thing to remember when creating hanfu is that there is no shoulder seam. So the front half flows across the shoulder to the back as one piece. You can cut the back on fold if you want, or make them separate pieces that are joined at the back with a seam.
I’ve made the mistake of not having a long enough piece of fabric to cut the front and back as one piece, so I’ve definitely made hanfu with a shoulder seam before. Not the end of the world, but not what you want.
Please do not Repost. Click for better quality.
Hello! Would you consider wearing just pieces of hanfu with other clothing (such as just the top of the ruqun with jeans, or maybe beizi/banbi with Western style clothes) as part of the hanfu movement? Is hanyuansu considered part of the movement?
Hi, thanks for the question!
Yes, I consider wearing hanfu pieces with other non-hanfu clothing as part of the hanfu revival movement. I also consider hanyuansu/汉元素 (hanfu-inspired fashion) to be part of the hanfu movement. Keep in mind, though, that there are also people who don’t consider these to be part of the hanfu movement. I used to be more “orthodox” (I didn’t accept anything besides traditional hanfu), but now I consider hanyuansu and combining styles to be essential parts of the hanfu movement.
Like you mentioned, you can wear just the top of the ruqun with non-hanfu pieces such as jeans, or miniskirts, like in the examples below:
You can also wear just the qun (skirt) with different types of tops. This is the most common way to wear hanfu separates:
Feel free to get creative - like this combination of a chest-high qun with a turtleneck top:
It’s also popular to accessorize with a piece of hanfu outerwear, such as beizi:
And hanfu ku (pants) are easily paired with other pieces, such as this simple camisole and weimao-inspired hat:
For more hanfu mix-and-match fusion inspiration, I recommend checking out these two articles from Newhanfu: 1 & 2. ^^
Images: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9
Chinese hanfu by 风熏堂-则宁
All the layers and patterns ...