Get me someone who looks at me the way Gilbert Blythe looks at Anne.
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@undosshehasthepower
Get me someone who looks at me the way Gilbert Blythe looks at Anne.
What I loved the most about Gilbert's letter to Anne was that the boy's only 18 and he could still tell her with such confidence that he loved her so much he was never going to be engaged to someone else although he thought Anne didn't love him back.
The AWAE fandom through season 3 explained by Charles Boyle:
*Anne runs away from Gilbert*
*Gilbert gives Anne the most insanely heart eyes ever*
*Anne and Gilbert not being together for 9 eps*
*Anne and Gilbert KISS LIKE 5 TIMES*
You are the fond object of my affection and my desire. You, and you alone, are the keeper of the key to my h e a r t.
Anne: I look like my mother...
Gil: She mustâve been breathtakingly beautiful
#the way he pulls her closer to him while theyâre kissing #thatâs it #thatâs the post
oh wow what a finalE!
Anne: idontknowwhattosayhow amisupposedtoandeveryoneisandnowyoujustandimPIRATEandweneverevenandinparisandyouarenevergonnafindthatmuchiknowsohowi-
Gilbert:
One of the things Anne with an E does best is represent intentional families.
AwaE is fantastic for portraying that nuclear families (Dad + Mom and 2.3 kids) are not necessarily the ideal we should be striving for. In fact, all the families that are blood-related, and therefore forced to be a family, have major relationship issues - think the Pyes, the Barrys, or the Andrews. Letâs look at a few intentional families in the show:
The Cuthberts
Matthew and Marilla are siblings who, for one reason or another, never married or had children. As would have been socially acceptable at that time, they lived together because Marilla wasnât able to be on her own as an unmarried woman. They acquire Anne by accident, and come to love her almost immediately. Although they have their fair share of squabbles, the three of them support each other through a multitude of issues - from health problems and financial instability, to identity crises and romance troubles. They may not be conventional parents, but Matthew and Marilla raise Anne the best they know how, and with all the love they have to give.Â
The Blythe-LaCroix Family
Perhaps the âoddestâ family portrayed by the show, we have Sebastian Lacroix, a labourer who has emigrated from Trinidad; Gilbert Blythe, an orphaned teen whose father left him a farm; and Delphine, the infant daughter of Bash and his late wife, Mary. Gilbert and Bash call each other âbrotherâ, and to Delphine, Gil is referred to as âUncle Gilbyâ by others. Initially, they worked together on the boat, and later on the Blythe farm. Now, they live together as a family, cook and share meals, and provide emotional support to each other as they face many hardships. The death of Bashâs wife hits the entire family hard, and they are forced to accept help from many women in their community to raise Delphine. While they have occasional arguments (usually related to miscommunication), Gilbert and Bash are the ultimate example of intentional family.Â
Josephine Barry + Cole Mackenzie
An elderly âspinsterâ (widowed after the death of her female life partner) and a gay teen runaway make the perfect pair. After growing up in a working-class family, and struggling to be himself in a closed-minded community, Cole heads for Charlottetown, and is welcomed, as well as unconditionally accepted for exactly who he is, by Josephine. She has company after being alone for many years, and he has someone he can relate to. Also, it helps that Aunt Josephine has money, so they can have extravagant parties with all their flamboyantly gay friends. Itâs beautiful, and I love it. Â
In conclusion, Anne with an E features beautiful relationships between people who are a family because they choose it daily, not because it is required of them because of their genetics.Â
Gilbert's flashback of Anne
when anne was like âi love gilbertâ and marilla went so serious like GO TELL HIM NOW!!!
and anne was like âi love gilbertâ and matthew was like ârightâÂ
LIKE I LOVE THEM
ONE HOUR UNTIL THE EPISODE DROPS AND ALL HOPE FOR MY FUTURE HAPPINESS IS RIDING ON A PEN!!!!!!!!Â
But...
That scene between Anne and Marilla about the Blythe boys is literally everything I've wanted since season one so at least there's that
Anne, is at once, the most chaotic, sensible girl I have ever seen. She really said:
"I'm in love with you.
But also, give me my pen back. lmao. - Anne"
I have to laugh