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#and adrien let it happen
anna-scribbles · 7 months
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just thinking abt stuff
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bluenoisen · 1 year
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tfw you learn the secret identity of your superhero partner (that you are in love with) while simultaneously accidentally revealing your own <3
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theerurishipper · 5 months
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My scalding hot take about the finale is that there is no way to ever make Bug Noire a valid writing choice because it goes against Marinette's arc of learning to stop taking all the burdens onto herself and learning to rely on others and their support, and also against Adrien's arc of learning to assert himself and his worth and independence after a lifetime of having others make decisions for him and dictating his actions. There, I said it.
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chatonlaveur · 7 months
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hair tie thief (affectionate).
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zodiac-senpai · 4 months
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Girl: *is mean because of abandonment*
People: she’s a terrible person
(Well, not everyone can keep their trauma/angst to themselves like you 😅)
I truly miss the “real” Chloé before they decided a grown man was more redeemable than a 14-year old victim of neglect and emotional abuse 😭
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rosie-b · 6 months
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🦮 fill this empty space (ask game)
(link to the summary)
This turned out to be... longer than a snippet, and like the summary, angstier than I expected. It's been that kind of week ig! But there's a promising ending because I needed one :)
It had been a warm summer day when the old Marinette died.
The new Marinette woke up surrounded by golden light, soft, green grass, and the soft murmurings of a stream in northern France. It was perhaps the best way for her rebirth to happen, in a calm, relaxing environment far from the place she somehow knew was home.
She met her family there. They already knew her, and called her "maman," or "ma femme," or "my lady."
Marinette was no one's lady. She never had been, but according to video evidence and the testimony of her husband and children and best friend, that was one of the many roles her past self had filled.
Marinette did not know how to fill any of those old roles anymore. But because of the secret, magical way she'd chosen to lose her memories, she couldn't let anyone know this fact. She had to study years worth of business lessons in mere weeks, preparing for her return to Paris and the international company she would soon be in charge of running again.
At least her past self had accounted for this new Marinette's incompetence. But no one else seemed to see that she wasn't the same woman she had been once, back when a kwami lived in her purse and villains of the day (and year) kept plaguing Paris.
Adrien, the man past-Marinette had married, professed to still be in love with her. He saw some of the differences between the new Marinette and the old one, but claimed they weren't nearly as big as Marinette thought they were. And he chose to spend most of his time around her, so maybe he was right. He whispered praises for each small thing she did, both when they were alone and in public; took the time to learn her new habits; made her fresh coffee for when she woke up two hours after he did; stayed out of her bed to help her feel comfortable.
Marinette could see why her past self had loved him. It was something both halves of her were beginning to share, a love for this man who found a way to bring joy to her life even when it had been turned upside down.
But it didn't change the fact that the new Marinette was not the same woman he'd married. That fact was written into the vows Adrien and the past Marinette had exchanged; the way they had split up their chores; the daily schedule that Adrien still remembered while the new Marinette did not.
To Marinette, this new self of hers was nothing more than a facade made to cover the void her past self had left behind. She was thirty years old and as empty inside as a newborn baby, with no memories to guide her through this unfamiliar world.
Marinette was an icon, the magazines said. A paragon of virtue in an age of corruption, one half of both Paris' favorite couples, a woman who managed to be a world-famous CEO and an attentive mother at the same time.
That wasn't the new Marinette's reality. She didn't even know her children's middle names, though she was learning their favorite desserts, sports, and hobbies.
Most days, it was like learning a foreign language, and it felt just as isolating when she got something wrong or tried to remember something she thought she knew but actually didn't. Sometimes, this new life of hers was crushing, a drain on her already empty self, taking the last bit of Marinette out of her.
But not always.
As out of place as Marinette felt in her own life, the people in it still felt right somehow. They'd been there for her when she woke up; they were there to hug and comfort her when she cried in the night, to help teach her about her own life and tell her about theirs, and to listen when she said she felt different. They loved her, that much was clear, and they promised to love her no matter which Marinette she was; the old one with all her memories or the new one just fumbling through life.
And somehow, even though she claimed not to feel anything more for them than for other strangers at first, Marinette still loved them back. Their presence soothed the ache she felt in her chest, the one she felt when she couldn't remember, and she found herself more than missing them when they weren't there. She looked forward to hearing about their day, to learning their middle names; she held on to the facts they told her about themselves like sweet gifts of gold and honey, like they were all she needed to survive, to fill the empty space her memories had left behind.
The new Marinette was not the old one, and she never would be.
But maybe that was okay. The new Marinette had her own space, too; it began here, in this remote, rural town near the seashore, and it would expand back to Paris, to the place where the old Marinette had lived.
Marinette's home had always been her family, the people she loved. That was something she knew without having to remember it, and something she was more sure of every day.
So she studied the journals her past self had written, re-learned how to design, baked bread beside Adrien, sang songs with her children and stayed by their side. If her mind was an empty slate, then she was going to fill it with love, the same love she'd chosen before and was choosing again.
And someday, this new Marinette would feel whole again.
Thanks for the ask! I hope you enjoyed <3
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erisluna35 · 9 months
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I think the reason why Chloe is the only one shunned by everyone, while the people that made her get away scot-free, is because in Astruc’s mind there’s not even the slightest doubt that Chloe is mature enough to know better, therefore the adults bear no responsibility. Astruc might be thinking, Chloe’s upbringing may have been questionable, but that’s ancient history because Chloe’s basically not a kid anymore. So who cares what her parents did? After all, people rarely bring up Hitler’s parents when they talk about his atrocities, and why should they? Especially when he had more than enough chances to change his ways. Why are you so obsessed with making this about Chloe’s parents? Weird.
@jameskillianreaper , thank you for clarifying, I'll edit this part. Sorry for getting mad. Next time, maybe add quotation marks or something. Its hard to read sarcasm through text. I am admittedly easy to provoke when it comes to this topic so please be more careful in wording it, especially after I ignored it the first time.
I wouldn't put it past That Guy to think this cause he already compared Chloe to Trump, another grown ass man who did real world horrible things, to a FICTIONAL TEEN GIRL in a show AIMED AT CHILDREN that sends a HORRIBLE MESSAGE.
Why are we so obsessed with making this about Chloe's parents? Because this is a KIDS show where almost all abusive parents gets away scott free. This piece of media aimed at children is saying child abuse is justified if the child is "bad". In what country would anyone call a 14 year old basically an adult anyway? Especially when the show is oh so willing to make excuses for adults who should know better?
Child abuse apologism in a kids show is such a fucked up thing. Do I need to explain the moral fundamentals of why that is fucked up? Especially when it's not just Chloe's parents getting this favorable treatment? Tomoe isn't at all held accountable in the end, Jagged Stone is instantly forgiven for abandoning his twins, the horrible implications of Emilie being in on making senti babies instead of adopting never being explored, GABRIEL AGRESTE... It's a pattern, not a coincidence. That Guy's author intent can go take a hike.
While the story is more focused on Chloe as Marinette's antagonist than Chloe's parents abusing her, the show keeps bringing them up. They keep saying they shouldn't be used as an excuse for Chloe's behavior while downplaying how badly their treatment affected her, like toning down her neglect to her simply leaving like not being there for most of a child's formative years is just a quick break or saying Audrey calling Chloe unexceptional in public doesn't count as verbal abuse. This is bad enough on its own but what pisses me off about this even more is it is not exclusive to Chloe either. Look out for how the show will downplay everything Gabriel has done in the finale just because his wish "benefitted" everyone in the epilogue while gaslighting his son into believing he was a "good" father all along. It. Is. A. Pattern. I. Can. Not. Forgive.
And the reason I keep dragging other cases into this is to emphasize the double standards. If I don't, I'd just get called a delusional Chloe Stan when I'm just calling out a bad narrative pattern.
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carpisuns · 1 year
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cant stop thinking about how elation might have played out if:
a) marinette did not repeatedly refer to herself as a "fan" but rather a friend, since they have been through a lot together and have hung out and gone to the movies. and she has also yelled at him angrily multiple times, unlike any other starstruck fan he's ever met
b) andré ran a normal business and just like. served the customers who approach his cart lol
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iwasbored777 · 1 year
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I'd be chilling and then I jump like "ADRIENETTE IS CANON IT'S ACTUALLY CANON"
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motherofplatypus · 9 months
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So, like, if we build a lego, insert an amok and make a senti, then take the lego apart, does that mean each piece contains the amok and everyone who has a piece can control it?
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fawnpls · 9 months
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i feel like they set s5 up in a very specific way to make it clear both adrigami and lukanette are like deader than dead…
but i also feel like it’s almost a given that they’re going to have adrinette break up for drama at some point in s6 or s7…
and if they do split for a significant amount of time the only logical conclusion to keep the romance aspect of the show going is…
ladynoir comeback? :D
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rainbow-arrow · 1 year
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imagine being hugged by luka couffaine and reacting like that smh
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imperfectpompom · 7 months
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Marinette teaming up with Adrien to help him make horrendous outfits to wear to piss off his dad after the pancake conversation.
It starts off as small changes to Adrien's go to outfit but slowly becomes more and more obnoxious every day.
Gabriel draws the line at his son wearing heeled crocs to school.
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Season 5:
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Me: *has flashback of what TA said about heroes becoming villains and villains becoming heroes*
Félix: hero (Flairmidable) -> villain (new peacock holder)
Nathalie: villain (Mayura) -> hero ???
Please let this be a thing. Let Nathalie do the right thing for Adrien’s sake.
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blueberry-macaron · 1 year
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I think the problem wasn't the advice itself, but, like a lot of things in this show, the execution.
I'm not sure that I agree, because I really don't see how Adrien's advice was good. If you'd like to explain why it might've been good advice, I'll gladly listen. Here's what I think:
The way the dialogue was framed (I assume that's what you mean by execution) gave off the impression of Adrien being the wise one and Marinette having to listen to him. The narrative doesn't treat Adrien's advice as his opinion and much rather as a fact that exposing Lila would be bad because "Making people suffer won't turn them into good people" and Marinette is in the wrong for wanting Lila to face consequences, for example in the form of loosing trust from the class. So the message of the episode is "Don't try exposing bad people or calling them out because is makes them sad lol just keep suffering"
This directly contradicts "The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good people to do nothing", which for me makes more sense and just fits the series better. Half the show is two teenagers fighting an evil terrorist, they actively do something so that evil won't triumph. Like, fighting HM/SM/Monarch won't make him a good guy, so why bother anyway? Oh right, because he causes suffering. So why should the case with Lila be any different? Adrien is portrayed to have a strong sense of justice, yet still he's willing to let Lila get away. And it somewhat makes sense for him to think that way, because Adrien, at that point, was very forgiving and tried to see the best in people like Lila or Chloe, even if it meant his friends were being lied to. But just because he thinks that way doesn't mean he's right about it. Especially because a few episodes later, Lila manages to get Marinette expelled. Adrien said to do nothing, so Marinette did nothing and it came back to bite her. Marinette faces undeserved consequences for the lack of action because of Adrien's advice. At this point, nobody can argue that this was actually the right thing to do. And even after that, Lila was able to further wrap the class around her finger and became class representative. So yeah, Adrien's advice didn't have any positive outcome and that's why I think it wasn't good.
Also, regardless of the advice, I like that Adrien is actually questioning the way he saw things in the past and that he might've changed his view on things. I want his character to grow and develop, the reason I dislike him is that he didn't do that. I've already made posts how I didn't like how a lot of his issues were just brushed off and magically don't exist anymore, so having him admit that he thinks he had made a wrong decision back then is something that I can appreciate.
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anastuffsstuffs · 6 months
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holy ground by t.s. is a ladynoir exes AU song.
enjoy
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