Tumgik
#David Mi
babbeldumpsterfire · 3 months
Text
Bildad's battle cry in the italian dubbing always cracks me up...
In english he's like: "Woah woah woah there!" but in italian he's like "WOOOOOO OHOOH-WOWODBOLOBOWAWAWA".
8K notes · View notes
on-holidays-by-mistake · 11 months
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Illustrations to Les Misérables by David Sierra Listón (source)
1K notes · View notes
coffeeastronaut · 4 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Macbeth at Domnar Warehouse. Photography by Marc Brenner
381 notes · View notes
autumnalmess · 4 months
Text
For the consideration of the privy council: Grantaire introducing Enjolras to music and cinema.
Consider Enjolras who is "austere in his enjoyments" learning that there is such thing as music that is not just background music to work to, and film that is not just designed to teach you something.
Consider Grantaire gaping at Enjolras for never having heard of the Beatles, sitting him down and forcing headphones over his fluffy golden hair to force him to listen to 'A Day in the Life'.
Enjolras going "this is so stupid" until it hits the second verse and he suddenly becomes very quiet.
Grantaire dragging Enjolras along to the cinema to watch reruns of The Fellowship of the Ring, after which Enjolras grumbles the whole way home, but asks to see the next movie just to "make sure they're all bad".
Grantaire showing up on Enjolras' doorstep with an armful of DVDs because he just has to educate him.
Enjolras discovering Wes Anderson, and the concept of comfort movies, curling up to watch a film not because it means anything or has a deep political comment to make about the human race, but just because it's fun.
Grantaire watching Enjolras more than the film.
Grantaire letting Enjolras borrow his Spotify to find something he likes and almost tearing up when Enjolras says "have you heard of this band called Fleetwood Mac? I've been listening to a couple of their songs".
Grantaire desperately trying to explain to Courfeyrac that it's "not a date! Enjolras has just never been to a proper concert before!"
Enjolras suggesting they share wired earbuds because it's "more efficient" and definitely not because it means they have to sit closer together.
Enjolras learning that life is not about how efficiently you plough through it.
176 notes · View notes
onthecoverofamagazine · 5 months
Text
Tumblr media
David Bowie, 1973
Foto: Mick Rock
153 notes · View notes
Text
something something edinburgh 1827 and les miserables having crazy parallels and both reflecting the inherent connection between poverty and morality something something (i will make a full post about this if I remember. keyword if)
56 notes · View notes
lesmiserabelles · 1 year
Text
javert's suicide / david thaxton, 17 march 2023
i had to share this truly balls-to-the-wall rendition of javert's suicide. yes those howling/grunting noises are thaxton. he performed the whole thing swaying from side to side, sobbing. genuinely not a clue what was happening here
279 notes · View notes
ethereal-bumble-bee · 4 months
Text
Do you hear the people sing,
Tumblr media
Singing the song of angry men?
Tumblr media
It is the music of a people
Tumblr media
Who will not be slaves again!
Tumblr media
When the beating of your heart
Tumblr media
Echoes the beating of the drums
Tumblr media
There is a life about to start
Tumblr media
When tomorrow comes!
Tumblr media
65 notes · View notes
mjtheartist04 · 6 months
Text
@hypocriticaltypwriter lil sumthin for you wifey👀💖🫶
Tumblr media
119 notes · View notes
Text
David Tennant is everywhere....
Solution: I must draw him as Javert
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
101 notes · View notes
lalarose216 · 24 days
Text
Can we please see Ben Fankhauser as Marius
34 notes · View notes
shakirachyanne · 24 days
Text
Song: Washing Machine Heart- Mitski
Show: Good Omens
23 notes · View notes
pilferingapples · 3 months
Text
The Bishop in the Presence of an Unknown Timeline
David Montgomery, illustrious creator of The Siecle (gooooo go listen to it, read the transcripts, it's SO good) , today laid out the necessary historical timeline for the Bishop's visit to the Conventionist! I am copying that over here with permission:
Alright, I have consulted my sources and have interesting findings about the chronology of the Myriel chapters. Chapter X includes the following lines, reflecting popular comments about the Conventionist in town: He was a quasi-regicide. He had been a terrible man. How did it happen that such a man had not been brought before a provost’s court, on the return of the legitimate princes? ... As he had not voted for the death of the king, he had not been included in the decrees of exile, and had been able to remain in France. This references two things: the "provost's court" and the "decrees of exile." Both are real historical things, and both can be dated fairly precisely. The "decrees of exile" could refer to several different things. Promptly upon Louis XVIII's return after Waterloo, he issued a July 24, 1815 blanket amnesty for crimes committed during the Hundred Days — but exempted 56 Bonapartists from pardon. Most were allowed to (encouraged to, even) slip out of the country, where they had to remain for fear of prosecution for treason. But I think this most likely refers to another law, passed on January 12, 1816. This Amnesty Law (subject of fierce negotiations between the ministry and parliament, related mostly to whether it infringed on the king's prerogative of pardon and his July 24 amnesty decree) ultimately exiled the hard-core Bonapartists targeted by the July 24 decree, and also all Regicides who had sided with Napoleon during the Hundred Days. (Regicides who had stayed loyal were not banished.) Provost Courts were special tribunals where military provosts acted as accuser and prosecutor before a panel of civilian judges. Their was no jury, no appeal, and judgment (including death) was carried out within 24 hours. These had existed under Napoleon, but were abolished in 1814 at the First Restoration. Article 63 of Louis XVIII's "Charter of 1814" reads: "...extraordinary commissions and tribunals cannot be created. Provost-courts are not included under this denomination, if their re-establishment is deemed necessary." After Waterloo, the Provost Courts were re-created to deal with political criminals — seditious meetings, rebellion, and threats against the government and royal family. Crucially, however, the Provost Courts were re-established by a law of December 27, 1815. Given the textual references, if one assumes a realistic timeline and no authorial error, then Chapter X could not have taken place before January 1816, and likely (given that the exile decrees and provost courts are discussed in the past and not present tense) at least some time after that date.  Sources: Mansel, Philip. Louis XVIII. Rev. ed. Phoenix Mill: Sutton, 1999. Sauvigny, Guillaume de Bertier de. The Bourbon Restoration. Translated by Lynn M. Case. Philadelphia: The University of Pennsylvania Press, 1966. The Charter of 1814: https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/French_Constitutional_Charter_of_1814
33 notes · View notes
sonego · 6 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
"ma ci mancherebbe signor arbitro"
48 notes · View notes
onthecoverofamagazine · 5 months
Text
Tumblr media
David Bowie | The Idiot Tour | Rainbow Theatre, Londres, 1977
Foto: Ian Dickson
78 notes · View notes
honeyboo-us · 4 months
Text
Mi intención es hacerte saber que no tengo ojos ni mente para otra persona, eres tú y solamente tú, me llena de ilusión saber cuando falta poco para verte, tomar tu mano se ha vuelto mi parte favorita cuando salgo contigo, amo tu nobleza y tus besos, gracias por ser como eres y brindarle más alegría y amor a mi vida.
40 notes · View notes