So one of the things the Kalluzeb fandom has come up with that I really love is the idea of them proposing to each other spontaneously after the second Death Star blows up, and when they go to Lira San, Kallus knows they're going to get married but he doesn't know where, but consider you this:
Neither Kallus nor Zeb has said anything about their feelings. The Rebellion is finally over and they can relax for a minute. Zeb is the single most important person in Kallus' life, and he's already determined that he would follow Zeb to the edge of the universe if he asks—and he does ask. Kallus has no idea if Zeb wants him to come along as a friend, or if maybe his feelings are reciprocated and Zeb wouldn't go to the edge of the universe without him, but even though it matters it doesn't. It wouldn't change whether or not Kallus boards a ship to who-knows-where.
Neither of them really proposes. They don't have to. The moment Zeb uncovers Kallus' eyes to show him Lira San, bursting with pride, and it's clear that he's been planning a life with Kallus on this planet for years, and when Kallus looks back at him with just a little bit of hesitancy but a thousand times more of joy, that's when they both know what's going to happen. So later that day, they get married. That was the point of the trip, after all. Zeb saying come across the galaxy with me, spend the rest of your life with me, and Kallus saying there was never any other future in my mind, I couldn't leave your side if I tried. They never have to ask will you marry me because their relationship has just been years of asking it in different words, saying yes in different actions.
"I think knives are a good idea. Big, fuck-off shiny ones. Ones that look like they could skin a crocodile."
And here is Ashley Johnson from 2015 playing with a butterfly knife and reverse-dubbing an iconic line from Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels, you're welcome.
November 1980. Bob Hoskins channels the spirit of Edward G. Robinson in this engrossing British crime drama about an ambitious Cockney gangster who's preparing to take his business international with the help of his savvy mistress (Helen Mirren), only to have his organization start to crumble beneath him at the worst possible moment, for reasons he doesn't understand until it's far too late.
Flavorful, tough, and dynamic, anchored by the charismatic performances of Hoskins and Mirren. Among the cast of familiar British character players, watch for a young Pierce Brosnan in a small but very significant supporting role. CONTAINS LESBIANS? No, although Harold is surprisingly open-minded about his gay associates. VERDICT: Satisfyingly solid, and one of Hoskins' best.
i'm not a tremendous shipper but my favourite genre of ship is two random people (possibly side characters) from a years-old standalone movie (normally action-adjacent). my little homosexual hands are gonna gayify your films