HOMELAND, REVISITED | “Q&A” | Every Peter Quinn Scene Ever ↳ “This is Peter’s show.”
i don't do bad sauce passes
wallacepolsom
will byers stan first human second
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
trying on a metaphor
AnasAbdin
Keni

Product Placement

shark vs the universe
Peter Solarz
🪼
cherry valley forever
Cosimo Galluzzi
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
Jules of Nature

blake kathryn

titsay
Monterey Bay Aquarium
we're not kids anymore.

seen from Türkiye

seen from Türkiye

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from Germany

seen from Malaysia

seen from Türkiye
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Australia
seen from Singapore
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seen from Türkiye
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seen from Switzerland
@tiliontea
HOMELAND, REVISITED | “Q&A” | Every Peter Quinn Scene Ever ↳ “This is Peter’s show.”
Is it satisfying that Homeland has had to promote THREE characters just to try and fill the void you left? And also that everyone knows that it won't be enough?
Fucking right it is.
A Letter to Homeland Creators
Dear Mr. Gansa and Mr. Gordon,
As avid fans of Homeland since season 1, we would like to thank you for such an intriguing show and for giving us characters that we have enjoyed for so many years. So much were we consumed by the world you created that we started blogs and forums to discuss it with thousands of like-minded fans from around the world.
After the season 6 finale, however, we can’t help but feel devastated. The callous way in which Peter Quinn, a character we have come to love so dearly, was killed off has left us reeling with sadness.
That we’ve become so attached to a fictional person, of course, speaks volumes of the quality of writing and acting on Homeland. We were equally invested in the journey of Carrie Mathison, the protagonist. Her arc, we thought, was one of personal growth, with Quinn – a man with a strong moral compass – as her partner.
We were invested in Quinn because we were invested in Carrie. With Quinn gone, we’re not quite sure what Carrie’s journey will be, but if Quinn’s relentless suffering is any indication, we expect it will end badly. Forgive us, but we can’t invest eight years of our lives on rooting for a character whose suffering will never be rewarded. We invested five years on Quinn and the result was unabated heartbreak.
Real life hands us enough tragedy, we don’t need to seek it out in fiction. Times are bleak, as you well know, and we turn to artists for some hope, optimism, for a way to put into words and pictures the things we are feeling. We turn to stories for things to make sense and for good people to triumph ultimately over evil.
Homeland was bleak, but we willingly endured the bleakness awaiting a payoff. We got none. Quinn was a fighter and we expected him to overcome his demons and prevail. What we got this season was the exact opposite. He died full of self-loathing; that, we cannot forgive. With no reward for Quinn, the Dar reveal on the dock and Astrid’s tragic death feel entirely gratuitous, not to mention the two years of physical torment he suffered.
And what kind of a message have you sent to depressed and disabled veterans and stroke survivors around the world who saw themselves in Quinn? To victims of sexual abuse? That they’re better off dead? What an abominable message. The unceremonious manner in which Quinn was killed off, with no vicarious closure for the audience in the form of a ceremony or proper displays of grief from his friends, was just cruel.
We are sorry to say that we feel utterly betrayed and manipulated by the way you chose to portray Quinn’s journey over the past two seasons. The season 5 fake-death cliffhanger in retrospect feels like a cheap way to bait Quinn fans into sticking with the show for another season. So does the way you developed the Carrie/Quinn romance arc, which you yourself said was the emotional center of the season. Another story lopped off carelessly without resolution or payoff.
We also find Homeland’s message to be antifeminist. A woman with drive and determination destroys everyone in her path. A woman with a calling has to sacrifice her personal life. These are harmful stereotypes and we urge you to consider the special responsibility you bear by having a female protagonist.
Is your intended message one of utter hopelessness? The fight is futile and the bad guys will win? We are sorry, but nihilism is not the same as realism. Ambiguity is not the same as artistry. Your commitment to ambiguity now comes across as an inability or unwillingness to commit to your stories or characters; building the plane as you fly it, as a lack of vision and planning. Ambiguity has become your go-to excuse to avoid criticism: when “anything goes” is the name of the game, there is no accountability.
Finally, having no comment or statement from the showrunners following the death of a much-loved character like Peter Quinn has made things even worse.
What the Homeland
Very clear and beautiful written!
Very true and beautifully said! This, especially, breaks my heart:
“And what kind of a message have you sent to depressed and disabled veterans and stroke survivors around the world who saw themselves in Quinn? To victims of sexual abuse? That they’re better off dead?“
We thought it was a story of hope. We were wrong.
This show became a real clusterfuck. What the fuck was Gansa doing?
I hope you are sending this to them for real. They need to know how this feels. It’s been nearly two weeks and I am still angry as fuck. Pardon my French.
The next morning.
“oh, what? you think i’ve never kissed a handsome mouth before?”
“17th century traditional residence #Sifnos #Greece #Greek_Islands #Cyclades https://t.co/iV4r1hXaey”
This traditional 17th century residence in Artemonas village is excellently located on the main pedestrian street, which is lined with neoclassical buildings and mansions. It faces south and has a marvelous, unobstructed view of the traditional settlements, the monastery of Profitis Ilias, and the ancient Acropolis of Agios Andreas. The building and its location are of great architectural interest, since it constituted, along with two or three others, the nucleus of the first permanent settlement outside the fortified village of Kastro, when - in the mid-17th century - piracy in the Aegean Sea was in decline and life outside Kastro became safe. While the house has been reverently preserved by its artist-owner, maintaining its magnificent traditional character, it has all the necessary comforts. It is equipped with the authentic furniture of an island home, antiques and works of art, as well as examples of the great ceramics tradition of Sifnos.
Peter Quinn + thinking | requested by anonymous ↳ “Tell me what you’re thinking right now.”
This traditional 17th century residence in Artemonas village is excellently located on the main pedestrian street, which is lined with neoclassical buildings and mansions. It faces south and has a marvelous, unobstructed view of the traditional settlements, the monastery of Profitis Ilias, and the ancient Acropolis of Agios Andreas. The building and its location are of great architectural interest, since it constituted, along with two or three others, the nucleus of the first permanent settlement outside the fortified village of Kastro, when - in the mid-17th century - piracy in the Aegean Sea was in decline and life outside Kastro became safe. While the house has been reverently preserved by its artist-owner, maintaining its magnificent traditional character, it has all the necessary comforts. It is equipped with the authentic furniture of an island home, antiques and works of art, as well as examples of the great ceramics tradition of Sifnos.
I really think that at the end of season 8 we will see the death of Carrie or Saul. Preference?
Saul
2 months. Feelings, thoughts?
Cynthia:
Sara:
Julie:
Ashley:
Sydney:
Frangi:
Rupert Friend for Variety
“I’m not sure I’d ever seen a character who had been through what this guy had been through. I wanted to be quite truthful in what we were portraying.”
About RF not wanting back to HL even if they asked him to. First, I dont think RF said that HL died with Quinn, he is much more modest and polite about it, he said HL died, for him, without Quinn. But his way of talking about the show after S6 gives impression that he was tired of it all. Along with the statement from casting lady that he wanted out after s5 (not blaiming him for this, that was a bad season on all levels imaginable). S6 was even worse, so him wanting out is not strange at all.
His exact quote is, “For me, maybe Homeland died with Quinn.”
In any event, we’re basically saying the same thing.
“I’m here waiting for you.”