F2: Pansy and Ginny for the ask game. 🥺👉👈
Wanna see them girlies menace each other (in a gay way)
Hello dearest!! I wanna see that toooo~
((Btw sorry these are taking so long, guys 💖 I want to do all of them for you since you all ask so nicely but they keep multiplying… ))
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Two royalty au Blue posts in a row tonight let’s gooooo
Anyway playing with the idea for a while now that Blue never actually dies. Eventually as they get older their magic really starts to consume them- until they do just fade into pure magic. First they slowly start to have a hard time touching things, they’re no longer entirely solid and so picking things up and using door handles and stuff gets harder and harder as their body just passes through it. Then their memory starts to fade, over time going from having a harder time recalling words to pacing their tower all day (with their feet phasing through the floor) trying to remember who anyone is.
At last they just become a lonely miserable cloud of magic haunting the castle (long after Mads and NFenton and everyone else has died of age), that doesn’t even have enough of a consciousness left to remember why it’s sad. And in the end that dissipates too.
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Okay, so I finally finished the live action atla and I have some thoughts.
I feel like they have stripped away the soul of the cartoon. By taking away Aangs fun, Kataras angriness, and Sokkas humour the story feels empty. Also, someone said Zuko doesn’t say honour once, which is truly detrimental to his character.
By not having any filler episodes, we didn’t get to learn who these characters were, and they didn’t get to bond with each other, so it made no sense when they kept telling each other they were family like guys you met a week ago.
I think they tried to make up for it, including as many fan favourite moments as possible, and by sticking to the key original plot beats. But in doing this they’re getting there in very different ways, which don’t always make sense, and feel really crammed together and rushed. I think they needed to let some of these moments go and tell their version of the story, because let’s be honest, the show really doesn’t hold up on its own and I think the main reason people are enjoying it is because of these references, not because of the story as a whole.
It seems like they’re trying to make a live action cartoon rather than a live action adaptation of a cartoon. All the wigs are terrible, Yues in particular. All the costumes look really cheap, I think partly this is due to them sticking too close to the cartoon and wanting the characters to look exactly the same when it doesn’t fit in this new medium. I think another reason for this is that particularly the water tribe costumes don’t look fit for use, the coats are all way too thin and I cannot believe that they would keep anyone warm enough at the poles. I think another reason for this is none of the clothes look worn, and they all look freshly ironed, which makes it difficult to believe in this world.
I will give them credit though, making the 41st Zukos crew was so smart and I love it.
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I was deffo left cold by last nights Doctor Who episode. I do get it— often Doctor does have sad endings— but that always felt impactful to me. A companion lives but can’t be with the person they journeyed with, or they die but live on in a new way, or the Doctor finally dies— but we get something new. It’s often sad, it’s often hopeful— and I think it’s fine to just end things sometimes.
I liked the first two episodes quite a lot. This bigeneration just felt confused and silly. If the 14th Doctor is just going to have a quiet life with Donna, then fine— but if 14 keeps popping up just because David Tennant’s doctor is popular, if this really is so we can have a multiverse of Doctors— that’s exhausting and I just don’t want that. Most ‘multiverse’ stories wear out pretty quickly— we’ve seen that with comics, the MCU is faltering, the DCEU never worked, I don’t think audience interest is actually here. Bringing back David seemed a great thing to do for an anniversary and revitalise interest, and wrap up the Donna storyline. But sad endings and consequences mean something as well, and I still think the ending of series 4 was just better written than this. It really felt like something pulled out of thin air, then letting someone die. We couldn’t have 14 regenerate happy this time, surrounded by people he loves and cares— it had to be universally happy, we can’t have happy and sad feelings at once. The toy maker was beaten easily, the ending felt rushed, the latter half of this episode felt weird.
There’s a lot I love about RTD, and this episode reminded me there’s a lot of bullsh*t that comes with him to. He isn’t some amazing writer with no flaws, and I wonder how this next series will land with both casual fans (who are needed if we want ratings to stay good) and also hardcore fans.
I just want Doctor Who. I don’t mind that 15th’s introduction was ‘stolen’ by the presence of 14– regeneration stories are often the last hurrah of the previous Doctor, then the next episode we’ll see 15 and I’m excited. But I am filled with dread of them just regurgitating the greatest hits of previous Doctors instead of something new instead of letting 15 stand on his own.
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