~To be as an Ocean, as a River
Changing, adding, losing and leaving marks in one's wake~
oooh ooh So i'm really very very normal about Deity Wally
He is sooo Gentle looking to me..
I just wanted to play with him..
He got a little Buoy as a tiny HAT!!
(I dont think he noticed)
Deity Wally @cloudysunflowr
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Audrey Hepburn and Pippin for Green Mansions.
Photographed by Bob Willoughby in 1959.
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Animated 2: Return to Neverland v The Pirate Fairy v Tinker Bell and the Legend of the NeverBeast
Return to Never Land {originial-Peter Pan (1953)} *spoilers?*
It follows Wendy's canonical daughter Jane, in every version of the story where Peter returns to the Darling's window, he meets Jane, and this story gives her her own adventure. with Wendy as a turn of the century child, it isn't too much of a stretch to assume Jane would be growing up in the middle of a deeply contentious time in British History, that being the London bombings of World War 2, and Unlike Wendy, whom needed to understand that she didn't WANT to never grow up and embrace her coming maturity as it arrives, Jane had been thrown into a position in her family where she had needed to grow up too fast, and in her trip to Neverland understand the importance of that child-like wonder she had nearly lost.
As such, she starts out deeply skeptical and frustrated by the nonsensical nature of Neverland, and being more trusting of adults than of children whose attempts of 'playing with her' were little more than bullying with the thin veneer of 'just a game', which ultimately allows her to be manipulated by Hook. But even then manages to grow attached to the lost boys and connect with Peter and due to her inability to fly for most of the movie had almost fully integrated into the world of Neverland and became the first Lost Girl by the time of the third act.
While it's held back by the painfully early 00's music it's ultimately a very compelling story about a child in a deeply traumatizing situation finding temporary haven in a place untouched by the war that had so deeply distorted her worldview and ultimately reclaiming her right to have a childhood after constant danger of death and destruction had nearly wrenched it from her entirely.
(also there's no racist Native American stereotypes that exist just for the sake of themselves and could have easily been some sort of fantasy species but nahhh it was the 50s so native americans were SUPER okay to be racist about/s)
The Pirate Fairy {original-Tinker Bell (2008)}
>none submitted<
Tinker Bell and the Legend of the NeverBeast {original Tinker Bell (2008)}
It centres around Fawn aka the best Disney Fairy, KT Tunstell did the soundtrack which absolutely slaps and is unironically on my main playlist to this day. It made me cry when i watched it for the first and subsequent times. Its just so sweet and wholesome. Also apparently spice girl Mel B voiced a minor character in the UK release??? The voice casting alone makes this one of the franchises and films of all time.
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animation for a scene in the original version for tinkerbell.
I think this is definitely one of the concepts I miss most from the deleted movie, how the believe from humans affects their existence, since that’s always been part of the Peter Pan lore.
I know Peter Pan 2 isn’t a universally loved sequel, but Jane’s disbelief in Tinker Bell and how it affects her is literally one of my fave things about it (bonus points for Jane’s character arc!)
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hello apples! (especially applesauce, which i can consume without irritation, unlike their mother)
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i bought a blush in the shade “baby doll” and that is just so me coded 🥰
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babygirl (:
beau, giggling, blushing, kicking his feet: shut up no i’m not
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@tetzoro ❤︎ ‧͙*̩̩͙❆ ͙͛ ˚₊⋆ your dates to the everwinter ball are... NANAMI KENTO & KAVEH!
"aims, darling, it looks like you zipped your dress up incorrectly, would you like me to fix it for you?"
"woah, woah, hold it, kenny boy; if you touch the zipper, you'll— um... you'll ruin the drapes of her dress! i doubt a man like you would be able understand the aesthetic purposes of... of... you know! the drapes of a dress?!"
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