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#tv: The night manager
bebx · 1 year
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olemisekunst · 1 year
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The Night Manager (2016) dir. Susanne Bier
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sometimes ya just gotta scribble your favorite character giving you words of encouragement. even if that favorite is a guy from your own brain
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smolvenger · 1 year
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The Meeting of the Tom Hiddleston Characters (a la Twisted from StarKid)
Prince Hal: I only wished to prove I was worthy for the throne!
Thomas Sharpe: I only wished to appease my abuser and save my wife from getting killed!
Dr. Robert Laing: I only wished to save myself from the loneliness of capitalism!
Loki: I only wished to gain power and control over my life!
Jonathan Pine: I only wished to protect England from napalms!
James Conrad: I only wanted to survive a dangerous island for my job!
Coriolanus: I only wanted to find a way to live in peace when all I've known was war!
Captain James Nicholls: I only wished to serve my country!
Thomas Sharpe: I only wished for people to love me!
Johnathan Pine: I only wished to have safety!
Coriolanus: To not feel lonely or depressed!
Loki: To be included!
Johnathan Pine: To live in harmony!
Captain James Nicholls: For once!
Prince Hal: I never truly knew my father!
W*ll Ransome: I only wished to cheat on my dying wife with a Pick Me Girl Widow!
(The others turn around to look at him in disgust and shock and voice disapproval)
Loki: WHY WOULD YOU DO THAT?????
(Inspired by "Twisted" from Starkid's musical parody Twisted. Specifically this part from 4:26- 5:22)
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misscrazyfangirl321 · 7 months
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Polls are a spectator sport
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dailyshowchica · 4 months
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So this is all Loki (2021)’s fault: I remembered that Tom Hiddleston exists and is a cutie. So I watched The Night Manager, and I noticed something:
All of the names Tom Hiddleston’s character uses are plant based.
Jonathan Pine (kind of tree)
Jack Linden (also a kind of tree)
Thomas Quince (fruit/tree)
Andrew Birch (tree, that was on purpose in-universe)
I have no idea if this means something, if this was intentional on the part of the show’s writers, or on John Le Carre’s in the original novel. I just noticed it, and I wondered if anyone else had, too.
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swashbucklery · 2 years
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Have you seen the queer baseball show? There are butches! On TV! And like good storytelling and everything. Teamy goodness! People trying to figure out how to be queer! Some of them together!
Anon I mean this in the kindest way possible but like. Yes. Oh my god, yes. I have blacklisted that show to avoid spoilers and my dash is a wall of invisible posts. I'm extremely aware that there is a new show that has lesbians and it's good.
I also have had just. A really garbage August. And I really want to watch the thing, but what I've found through COVID as a HCW is like. If I'm super overwhelmed by work + life commitments and I just force myself to watch the thing On Time because that's what everyone else is doing, I don't enjoy it as much. I know my life and my heart and I know when I'm ready to sit down and enjoy a new story. And when I let myself have the time and space that I need, I have so much more fun and enjoy the thing so much more.
I know it means that by the time I get around to it, the internet will have moved through 423094 different fandom cycles and the show will be Over. But also, rushing and rushing to consume the media just to spare myself from internet FOMO is honestly a terrible way to live. TV isn't an emergency. There are important IRL things that are time-sensitive that I am perfectly able to push myself to do, but in my downtime one of the greatest gifts I can give myself is moving slowly.
It's on my list. The gay pirate show is on my list. Finishing CR Campaign 3 so that i can prove to the internet that Im*dna is Superc*rp is on my list. I want to watch S2 of Picard and also the new Trek show with the butch pilot and also the RDM show about the sad lesbian astronaut president. I want to rewatch Legends from the beginning and I want to do a Buffy/Angel rewatch and I want to rewatch Supergirl S6 straight from the box set without the internet screaming about Supercorp not being canon the entire time. When I make the time, I'll be sure to share.
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denimbex1986 · 2 years
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‘Quick, somebody get Hiddleston a Hobnob! And sharpish — because he hasn’t a second to spare. It’s early May in North London, and the actor has generously agreed to share one of his rare days off at the pub with Gentleman’s Journal...
Except there aren’t any Hobnobs. And these iconically British biscuits, the actor tells us, are among the things he misses most when working abroad. Coupled with dog walking, West End theatre and the reassuringly dulcet tones of BBC Radio, the humble Hobnob is a cosy allegory for everything he loves about London — and the green and pleasant land that lies beyond.
...the actor has had a busy time of things of late, and his precious days of rest have been few and far between. Next week, he heads back to set to begin production on the second season of the masterfully mischievous Loki. He can currently be found starring in The Essex Serpent...And he’s just been revealed as the lead of yet another new drama series for Apple. So, while the actor has certainly earned some time off, he doesn’t seem to be getting any.
And yet, for just these few fleeting days, Hiddleston is happy kicking back and enjoying being home. So unwind with us, savour this dash of downtime, and savour the actor’s many wisdoms and witticisms. Because, whether you want marvellous Marvel secrets or you’re hoping for stories of his 2017 Hamlet, there’s something for everyone when you hobnob with Tom Hiddleston…
TH: I do miss chocolate Hobnobs. And, yes, BBC Radio. Also, now more than ever, I miss the land and the air in Britain. The smells and the sounds of the parks and the country in every season. The way the birds change their tune and routine. The feeling, when you’re home, of knowing the way. The coming of spring and early summer in London every year is a joy — every time. The streets here now have layers of memories too. As life goes on, those small familiarities are a comfort.
And my Sundays. Now, Sundays are for all the things there wasn’t time to do in the week. An extended run, a walk with the dog, an afternoon film, planning the coming week and trying not to go mad. Pubs were a part of my social life when I was younger, but not so much now. And that’s nothing to do with the pubs, more to do with life getting fuller.
Hiddleston will, however, always make time for reading. Many of his most lauded roles — from The Night Manager‘s Jonathan Pine to High-Rise’s Dr. Robert Laing —  took their first breaths on the page. The actor even embodied The Great Gatsby author F. Scott Fitzgerald in 2011’s incandescent Midnight in Paris. But, whether it’s J.G Ballard or John le Carré, the bookshelf still looms large, and remains a surefire way to stoke Hiddleston’s imagination.
TH: I am more of a reader now than I used to be. Books are new worlds to be explored, learned about and understood. I buy, and am gratefully given, books at a rate faster than I can read them. There is still much I don’t know, and want to know, and reading can be a way into the minds of others. I didn’t really have an angsty go-to novel as a teenager, but I read Tolstoy’s Anna Karenina when I was twenty-one and was (am still) blown away. I find Levin’s journey extremely moving. It will never get old.
Hiddleston’s next project, The White Darkness, will adapt the true, tragic tale of British explorer Henry Worsley. It’ll stream on Apple TV+, where the similarly sorrowful The Essex Serpent is currently courting Emmy attention for the actor. To bring Sarah Perry’s bestselling gothic romance to the small screen, Hiddleston slips on the clerical collar of troubled vicar Will Ransome — a shrewd-but-subtle performance that, whilst well worth a watch on your next day off, the actor says stems from the script and novel.
TH: I read it over Thanksgiving in 2020, and had a week left on Loki. I was in America, so we had four days off. And I knew that Clio [Barnard, BAFTA-nominated director of The Arbor] was directing it. I just read all six scripts and I genuinely thought that they were brilliant and deep and complex. And Clio sent a beautiful letter with it, about Will and all the things he was wrestling with. It just seemed new and rich and I wanted to do it.
While we were filming, walking along the beach, I actually had the book with me. And I kept suggesting that we put things back, lines from the book. Perhaps that wasn’t always that helpful. But there was a line from the book that we did end up putting in the series, where Will’s trying to explain how he ended up on the east coast of Essex. And he says: “What I wanted was purpose, not achievement. Do you see the difference?”.
And I remember thinking that was just extraordinary. It really resonated with me, this need for purpose. Because purpose is so releasing, it’s a kind of freedom.
The show itself was also something of a release for Hiddleston, who relished the return to British soil after a slew of stateside projects — including the ongoing Avengers franchise, Kong: Skull Island and the Hank Williams musical biopic I Saw the Light (another of our day-off Hiddleston recommendations; he does his own singing). But The Essex Serpent’s exploration of religion also appealed to the actor; worship is not in his wheelhouse.
TH: Inhabiting Will’s faith felt like a really new challenge, and I really wanted this to be a portrait of a complex man — someone who wasn’t constrained by an easy definition — and the journey that he goes on. I was raised in London, in the United Kingdom, and I was very much raised in the Judeo-Christian inheritance of Western Europe. I went to chapel at school and I was, of course, aware of the meaning of Christmas and Easter, and the Christian tradition.
And, when I was at school, I did religious studies. But I also did biology. And, while we studied the Old Testament and the New Testament, we’d also study Darwin and the theories of evolution. As a young person, for me, Darwin was completely accepted as a way of explaining life. So I kept having to remind myself, on The Essex Serpent, that these ideas were new for these characters — they were fresh ideas that were challenging the status quo. And they were not only challenging what people believed, but also how they found meaning in their lives.
And, in the last five years, this idea of where we derive meaning in our lives has certainly been one that I can relate to. Because I’m in the middle of my life — perhaps I’m even further into my life than the middle. As a 41-year-old, I know that I’ll be fortunate if I get another 40. I’d be among the lucky ones. And I think we all deeply need our lives to have meaning. So, looking for it, or searching for a source of it, has certainly been something that has resonated with me. And inhabiting Will and his faith — the combination of his intellect, heart, mind and soul — and what he chooses to believe, this led to an openness, and a desire within myself to understand and connect.
I think curiosity is the key to all of it. It’s a vital engine in life — just to keep looking, to keep searching. And, if you can, to fearlessly ask questions. Because fear closes the mind; curiosity keeps it open.
And Hiddleston is nothing if not curious. Whether braving the viper’s nest of religion for The Essex Serpent or excoriating class and corruption in 2015’s High-Rise, the actor’s roles have frequently been characterised by big, bold ideas. And nowhere does he conjure up these principled performances more confidently than on stage.
He could be embodying vengeance in Coriolanus or wrangling with morality as Othello’s Cassio (a turn which reportedly won him the role of Loki in Thor), but Hiddleston has always best succeeded in unknotting the Bard’s tangled and tortuous emotions when face-to-face with an audience. The actor’s Hamlet, at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in 2017, remains one of the most scintillating Shakespearean performances of the last decade. There’s a rumour he even knows the play by heart.
TH: Not all of Hamlet! Some of it is definitely still in there, but I don’t think that’s singular or unique to me. I think, perhaps, once you have learned or played Hamlet, that it stays with you forever. The poetic clarity and profundity of those words: about grief, the vulnerability of the soul and the experience of being alive. It doesn’t get much deeper than that.
So, yes, I can recite some of it, if pressed. I was once invited as a guest onto The Late Show with Stephen Colbert — who is classically trained himself — and in the middle of the show’s planned segment we found ourselves in an impromptu Hamlet tennis rally of ‘To be, or not to be’. I could tell he was challenging me, in the most good-natured way, to see if I really knew it. I hope it was an entertaining rally. Shakespeare was the winner.
Since his Hamlet, Hiddleston’s theatre work has been comparatively rare. A run of Harold Pinter’s Betrayal gave the actor his Broadway debut in 2019 — and introduced him to his now-fiancée, fellow actor Zawe Ashton. Tonight, the couple are heading to the National Theatre to enjoy a new adaptation of Small Island. As for his own return to the stage? The hard-pressed Hiddleston’s schedule may not allow it for some time.
TH: I’d love to do more theatre. I don’t know when that may be — but I hope I always will want to. Let’s see what transpires. There’s always fun to be had in reviving classical work. I find that so rewarding. When you’re having a conversation through time, when there are certain moments in plays that have endured, when they continue to resonate in surprising ways — that’s when you realise why these pieces of art have endured. There’s something timeless inside them; what’s being explored about the human condition. And discovering them anew is always, I find, a genuine joy.
But there are also occasional pieces of new writing that seem to capture the moment. And I’ve done less of that, to be honest. I haven’t done much of that at all. But let’s see what comes around. It would be nice to be in a theatre again. It’s that thing of doing anything live, where the audience is as much a part of the performance as the performers.
Theatre may always hold a place in Hiddleston’s heart, but the last decade of the actor’s career has been dominated by a single, slicked-back, slyly pitched performance — Loki, God of Mischief. A recent revival series for the Marvel character has generated even more Emmy buzz than The Essex Serpent — a handsome pay-off for a character Hiddleston has already played in eight separate projects (and counting). And, while the actor is remarkably dissimilar to the wisecracking trickster in real life — more ‘low-key’ than Loki — he reveals that the comic-book creation bestowed upon him the most profound moment of his professional career so far.
TH: On the last day on set of Loki‘s first season, after the very last shot, we all, without instruction, seemed to stand in a circle — with nowhere to go, with the job done, and clapped. It’s hard to describe the feeling of relief, of the gratitude we felt for each other, for every member of our cast and crew. Filming had been interrupted by the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic one third of the way into our planned schedule — we locked down for five months — and we restarted after that first hiatus to resume exactly where we had left off, and to finish the story.
For the next twelve weeks, everyone working on Loki was in a contained bubble. And finishing those last months was, for most of us, during that time, our only human contact. On that last day, we had made it through the pandemic and told our story, before any vaccine against Covid-19 had been made available, and with a company, a cast and crew, who — in my experience — supported each other with a spirit, care and kindness in a way I have never seen before. ‘Whatever happens to this series’, I thought, ‘whichever way it goes, the making of it was meaningful. There is meaning in the doing’.
Of course, not every project can sing with such glorious purpose. And, whether voicing an Aardman claymation character in Early Man or reading the CBeebies Bedtime Story (Hiddleston told the tale of a benevolent crime-fighting spud named Supertato), many of the actor’s more recent appearances show off his playful side; not the cerebral, hard-lined Hiddleston of his many movies, but rather the casual, whimsical Hiddleston who joins us at the pub today.
But that’s a mean measure of the man’s acting ability; that he could raise chills in Guillermo del Toro’s Crimson Peak and share a scene with Kermit the Frog within the space of two years (Hiddleston says the Muppets offer remains the most surreal phone call he has ever received, in “prospect and reality”). But having honest fun, whether that be with Shakespearean superheroics or a guest spot on The Simpsons, seems key to the actor’s process. There’s even, would you believe, a signature Hiddleston dance move.
TH: Good heavens. Yes. I always used to do a sort of manic double-time hopscotch thing. I have never called it that until today. I sort of jump my legs out past my hips, and then jump back, one leg crossed in front and one behind. It looks absolutely as mad as it sounds.
I don’t know where it started. It ended up in a scene in Shakespeare’s Cymbeline on stage at the Barbican many years ago, in a montage in Ben Wheatley’s High-Rise, and in an appearance on Alan Carr’s Chatty Man in 2013, which I’m told resurfaced recently on somewhere on TikTok, which I am too old to understand.
When next the ‘manic double-time hopscotch’ might emerge, Hiddleston doesn’t know. But, with such a motley mix of upcoming projects in the pipeline, the actor isn’t altogether sure where he’ll end up, either. For now at least, he’s just happy to be back in Britain, relishing every precious day off, sun-soaked dog walk and Hobnob that comes his way. Because, for Hiddleston, there’s no place like home.
TH: It’s a spectacular country, but I forget that. And it’s really interesting — when I was younger, I wanted to travel all the time. I wanted to travel to Europe, I wanted to travel all over the world if I could. To America. But I think that’s maybe just the nature of being young. I wanted to see as many different places as I could. And I found that travelling broadened the mind, opened your horizons. It was expansive, it was new. And, in work, I was so fortunate that I got to travel all the time.
And it’s only more recently — since I’ve come back — that these islands are so unexplored by me. I’d seen certain cities I suppose, but there were places I hadn’t spend much time, didn’t know very well, and have been so surprised by. I find it very humbling. The happiest times in my life are when I’ve been humbled by nature; when I feel folded into it. There’s nothing better than feeling small in a natural environment that has majesty to it. For me, there’s nothing in the world bigger or more profound. It’s vital.’
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parcoeurs · 1 year
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anyone have book or movie recs :)?
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bebx · 1 year
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olemisekunst · 1 year
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The Night Manager (2016) dir. Susanne Bier
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aceteling · 10 months
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good news: the stray kitty i'm feeding got neutered
bad news: she's stuck inside for a recovery period and it's day 3 and i cannot get a wink of sleep
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andthroughthewire · 1 year
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don't you just love it when you're watching an old sitcom and a famous actor shows up in a minor role
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newsintheshell · 1 year
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Nel frattempo che aspettiamo gli annunci, poi, vi ricordo che sempre su Anime Generation stanno ancora venendo pubblicate:
LA MIA MAESTRA NON MOSTRA LA CODA 
FANTASY FARM - AVEVO COLTIVATO SOLO LE MIE ABILITÀ LEGATE ALL'AGRICOLTURA, MA SONO COMUNQUE DIVENTATO PIÙ FORTE 
LA PRINCIPESSA BIBLIOFILA  (L'ultimo episodio è uscito giusto ieri)
LA NOVELLA ALCHIMISTA APRE BOTTEGA
TENKEN - REINCARNATO IN UNA SPADA
VERMEIL IN GOLD - IL MAGO A RISCHIO BOCCIATURA E LA CALAMITÀ PIÙ FORTE SI FANNO STRADA NEL MONDO DELLA MAGIA
CALL OF THE NIGHT - IL RICHIAMO DELLA NOTTE
TOKYO MEW MEW NEW
Nell'altro post mi sono scordato di puntualizzarlo, ma di Call of the Night, The Eminence in Shadow, Tenken e Lamù e i casinisti planetari sono già in corso i doppiaggi! Se siete curiosi, trovate qualche video sneek peak sulla pagina di Yamato Video.
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lifeisablackhole9 · 2 years
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