I don’t know exactly why but nothing will ever beat one character knowing another so well that they can immediately tell they’re being either mind controlled or impersonated because of some incredibly mundane personality trait. So satisfying
ANON you are so correct for this. and going beyond just knowing if someone is being mind controlled, there's when a character knows someone so well that it doesn't matter what form their soul takes, they know it's them. see:
bitingrippingtearing.png
but also this makes it all the more tragic that:
1) nobody knew Harrow nor Gideon well enough to recognize that Nona wasn't either of them!!! Cam and Pal *tried*, and they *CARED* but they still only spend like. 2 weeks? together, during most of which Harrow refused to speak to anyone and Gideon was forbidden to
2) over 10,000 years nobody noticed that G1deon was gone sometimes!!! like bro that's your son-brother-lover-saint!!!! but i guess when you are only God's third favorite... :/
anyway i NEED Harrow to meet Kiriona and instantly be able to tell without a doubt that it IS her Gideon, and i need the angst storm that would follow ❤️
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I wonder... did the Belmont clan knew that Dracula would come back to life eventually, after Trevor, and then Hector defeated him? Or was it a surprise?
I mean my guess is that they always had their doubt. If someone managed to bring him back once, especially so fast after his first death, then someone else could manage to do it again one day. But after one hundred years, maybe they were starting to think they were safe?
I can just imagine Christopher being raised to fight the night, being told the tale of Trevor and his friends, of Dracula's deaths, but grew up thinking that he will never have to face Dracula. He trained to become the best hunter, just like his family before him, but what were the chances that he could ever meet Dracula, a century after his death?
So it came as a surprise to him, when the Castle raised again after so long, and he felt the dark power calling for his blood, thirsting for it. He was prepared physically for this... but mentally? Not so much. Still, he couldn't ignore the call of his fate. So he went and confronted Dracula... but maybe the fear of actually fighting him, the shock of seeing him, and the weight of the responsabilities on his shoulders, clouding his mind, are the reasons why he did not realize he had failed to kill the Count the first time. :)
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*early in the morning*
Deidara: Danna, remember when I said me and you need to work on our communication skills?
Sasori: Yes?
Deidara: So why don’t you just tell me that you’re angry at me, hm?
Sasori: I’m not angry at you.
Deidara: So you take no issue at all with what I said about your puppets earlier?
Sasori: No.
Deidara: Danna … it’s 2 in the morning and you’ve been throwing kunai at a board for four hours now.
Sasori: There’s something wrong with sharpening my skills?
Deidara: There is when MY PICTURE is in the center of the board, hm!
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(still the same anon from all those Batman/Joker asks)
Be ready with those empty walls, pal, I'm on my way!! I've already thrown my suitcase in the car and filled up the gas-
You blew every expectation I had with that answer of yours and I don't know if I'll ever recover. I will absolutely respond to your answer but first I need to put my brain back together from being rearranged like a jigzaw puzzle. I'm definitely looking forward to reading that Jesus/side wound meta whenever you post it.
Until then I have a different question. I don't remember who said it but it was along these lines: "There are only three people in the world who find the Joker funny. Joker himself, sometimes Harley and lastly Bruce. And he feels so fucking guilty for it."
They pointed out how Batman does a lot of bad puns, same as the Joker, except he does it with a straight face and serious tone. For example: Bat-terry, Bat-bucket, Bat-arang, saying "hang in there Alfred" while Alfred is dangling off a metal beam. (Those are my rushed examples, not something the original poster brought up, so if they're unaccurate, that's my fault). Bruce will also just say the craziest shit and nobody is sure if he's serious or not. (Happens all the time)
I have a vague suspicion who it was but I'm not sure enough to @ them.
Joker and Batman's sense of humour and how they are somewhat opposed but still similar will drive me into an early grave I swear. Like that post that's still circulating somwhere that mentions how Bruce "lives and dies by the fact that nobody can ever tell when he's pulling their chain" and how Joker "craves to have his comedic genius acknowledged [but he's just not funny]".
I don't know about Joker wanting to be acknowledged as funny because I don't think he considers himself to be in the clown business. He definitely ranted about this to a captured Damian in a comic once. But he does make a lot of bad jokes. Maybe he doesn't think himself funny, either?
Any thoughts?
(Btw I'm not done pestering you yet, be ready to receive an ask about the Batman: I Am Suicide comic and about Martha and Thomas Wayne in the next few days. I still have to gather my thoughts though.)
(Can I just say that every single one of your answers has made my brain release a huge amount of serotonin? Or is that too much? Eh, whatever, it's the truth anyway. You've brightened my week considerably, thank you so much!!)
❤️❤️ hi friend, i adore receiving your asks and getting to exchange interpretations with you, and i can only hope that my superturbonexus unhinged answers have brought half as much joy to you as your questions have brought me 🥰
I kinda took my time with this ask (sorry!) because it's a rather big bite out of an intricate can of bat worms for me, can included. I also found and reread this particular post by @distort-opia , which put more a dozen more interesting worms in my metaphorical can— i'm not sure though if it was the post you were initially referring to.
So! The concept of jokes and generally being a funnyman is a subjective talk, and my personal preferences regarding where Joker and Batman place on the funnyman scale deviate considerably from what the general consensus in batman fandom seems to be (or the lot i have seen of it), so i guess i'll just take this opportunity to do personal talk, probably more than usual 😂 take it all with a grain of salt! (an ingradient that you'll find this answer contains a fair bit of actually—)
I dont think Joker is funny one bit, and i dont think he's particularly trying to be in the general sense of the word; to imply that he's "funny" both in-world and on a meta level would mean that being funny is his core motivation and the heart of his actions, that it's the foundational component, and to me it's not. A bit more a matter of personal taste on my part, but i actually feel lowkey irritated with Joker portrayals that lean too heavily on the "HE MAKES JOKES HE'S SO FUNNY!!!!!" act at the expect of every other significant characteristic he has, because like, funny is not who he is, it's just one of the 500 things he does. Sure he started as a fun character meant to bring in a dash of psychopathic delight to the early Batman works, but he has evolved to become so much more than that, which i like better than the more simplistic "he's a funny fun guy!!!!" characterizations. To me Joker is not funny, he is not supposed to be the way you pour salt on your dish but it's not supposed to taste salty, it's supposed to taste /right/. His jokes aren't the main dish, they're an added flavour meant to bring home a certain act: the performance. He's a showman, he's here to put on a good show, and that show doesn't have the end goal of being "fun", it has the goal of being iconoclastic and real and raw. But he can't exactly do raw, raw and sincere scares him, in a way he's a slave to his fear and tries to cage it and tame it and understand it the way Batman is scared of bats and everything they represent and he made them his very persona. Joker tries to be true and geniune and sincere but he can't, so he infuses his actions with jokes to soften the blow, shift the taste a bit. He also has the genius' disease; he wants to be seen through, interpreted, understood and reimagined, mirrored, and it's an itch only a certain fellow fucked up intellectual can scratch for him.
Batman deeply understands the value of a good performance and a viciously planned persona, he is a performer both as Bruce Wayne and as Batman after all. And he has the expertise to dissect and bring out all the nuance in Joker's performance, it's probably why he finds him funny. He understands the theatre piece, both when it's executed in a stellar fashion and when it falls flat on its face. noone else can bring this level of discernment to interpreting Joker like Batman does because what other villains do is actually less performance and more.... outright insanity. I think this is also the reason why Batman enjoys saying the most insane shit and making weird jokes at weird times and have everyone be confused by him, it's part of the performance. There are these little almost invisible acts that Batman and Joker catch of each other, that they want to catch of each other, "i'm shaking the persona a bit", like when an actor improvises a moment to keep the role fresh, but only the people in on the script catch it, to others it feels in accordance, not off enough to catch attention. It's one of their core points of connection and similarity actually, they both have their performances and they both wiggle in its frame, sometimes threatening to break through the confines.
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