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#Blocksberg
martinkrammer · 6 months
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Hexentanz Wimmelbildsujet für ein Puzzle, freie Arbeit
36 x 48cm
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Ich habe mir heute etwas sehr Wichtiges gekauft
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there is no heterosexual explanation for this
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captbexx · 1 year
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Bibi & Tina XD
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chateau7afra · 3 months
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I don't know about ya'll. But I loved the final scene of Ole Munch, or Oola Moonk, as we now know showing up at the family house.
Dot is gentle parenting the eldritch nightmare and navigates the situation so eloquently, while Wayne and Scotty are just so adorably domestic. Everytime the music builds up and he's going to be all like "a man has to..." Wayne just puts something to drink into his hands and Ole Munch is like ??? I'm gagging on that dialogue. Munch: "A man has freed a tiger, so she can finish her fight. That doesn't mean a man is finished with her." Wayne: "We saw a tiger once, at the Minneapolis zoo! :) Munch: A man has a code and the code and-" Scotty: You're in the way. Munch: *steps back for Scotty*... a man has a code-" Wayne: Here ya go! :) *gives him a cold beer"
Cried at the end though. Bless him.
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kittyprincessofcats · 6 months
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When you're listening to the very first Bibi Blocksberg Hörspiel ever made ("Hexen gibt es doch" from 1980), and there's this exchange:
Narrator: "And only women can become witches. It's always been that way." Barbara Blocksberg: "And it's always going to stay that way, Boris." Boris Blocksberg: "But mom, if you magic me into a girl, then I could become a witch, right?" Barbara: "No Boris, then you'd only look like a girl. But your soul would be a boy, and you still couldn't do magic."
So here we have the very first Bibi Blocksberg episode ever, from 1980(!!!), explicitly making a difference between physical sex and "what gender your soul is", and clarifying that the latter is what matters for their "only women can do magic" rule.
WE STAN.
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foolishlovers · 6 months
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so.. do any of you ever randomly start writing the most ridiculous, unneeded fic premise ever that has absolutely no target audience or is it just me
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Ja oder ja?
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muedemuedemuede · 6 months
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🐎tina martin core🐎
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romantoy · 1 year
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Bibi Blocksberg (2002) dir. Hermine Huntgeburth
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tedtrashdump · 2 years
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In Germany we Have only two genders
And its Elephant and Witch
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Which one is you?
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the-delta-quadrant · 9 months
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ich lass das einfach mal hier liegen
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Here come Michael and Sly
On Amadeus and Sabrina
With wind in their hair
They're riders with flair
Because they are boyfriends
Because they are boyfriends!
the song for context below cut:
youtube
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captbexx · 1 year
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Bibi & Tina Another one, sorry!!! XD
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chateau7afra · 3 months
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Folklore in Fargo
Spoilers ahead, Sailor.
One of the things I loved about Fargo this season so far, is the incorporation of Folklore, suberstition and God. We meet Ole Munch (Sam Spurrell) in the first episode. He seems to be a regular hitman of sorts, who is set on Dorothy (Juno Temple) He comes across a bit excentric and the way he talks and dresses seem very anachronistic. We also learn, that Dot is not the regular homemaker and loving mum, she seems to be. Munch and his handyman set out to kidnap Dot. Munch and his handyman aren't able to capture her and the handyman was killed in the process. We get to know Roy Tillman (John Hamm) who was the one who sent Munch on his mission, but because he failed the task, Roy is not paying Munch, which sets off a rather bleak storyline in which Roy and his son Gator (Joe Keery, my love) try to kill him. He escapes! The most intriguing thing about Ole Munch is one, the ritual he performs at the Tillman Farm. He kills a goat, covers himself in it's blood and leaves a message for Roy over his Daughter's beds. And two, the flashback to Wales in 1522. See now, this is where it gets weird. And where I had to google some stuff.
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We see a character, dressed in what seems to be clothes of the lower class, entering a house full of upper class people who are in mourning, dressed in black and weaping. We have a funeral on our hands here. The poor person looks like Ole Munch. Is it him? Is it an ancestor of his? We dont know. On the belly of the deseiced is a plate with food. When Munch enters the house, there is a tense energy in the room. Munch walks up to the dead body and consumes the food offered on the plate in an almos animalistic fashion. The people in the room gasp, some of them disgusted, some of them afraid. Or both. Before Munch leaves, he gets two silver coins. Which must have been a lot of money back in the day, I did not research that. But we clearly witnessed some sort of ritual happening. It turns out, sin eating was a practice rich people took part of in Wales, Ireland and England in the 1600s. A willing poor person was invited to literally eat the sins of the deseaced person, so they could be welcomed at the pearly gates, with a clean record. All the sins are transferred, to the person who ate the food. A grewsome fate for people at the time, but hey, a mans gotta eat. The world is bleak, so I don't go with the rational reason in fiction, ever. I like to think that Ole Munch ate so many sins, that he became a spirit, that can not die, who is forced to wander around the earth forever, and for some reason chose america. His very beautifully written monologues would suggest that. They almost sound shakespearian.
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But how does this play into the bigger theme of Fargo S5? Well, if you think about it, the whole season is about unpaid depts and consequences. Dot ran away from Roy and the farm, because of domestic violence. In Roy's book, she owes him, because she made a pledge to him, when they got married. Ole Munch sees a debt not paid, because he didn't receive paymant for "eating the sin" of kidnapping Dot. Dot's husband's mother, who is a very rich lady played by the brilliant Jennifer Jason Leigh points out "What is the point of being a billionaire, if you can't get someone killed.", while on the phone with an ex-president, apparently Bill Clinton, if I remember right. It's like, we never got over the sin eating, because with money and power, you can pay your way out of any circumstance, be it kidnapping or murder. There is always going to be someone who needs the money more than their soul. And there is always going to be someone who takes advantage of that. Roy Tillma, quotes the bible a lot. He thinks of himself as a right and just man and leader, even though he likes to bend the law to his will. He does not give a flying fuck about the law as it is "dictated by washington" and funds a right wing militia with taxpayer money. He is the law of the land. These scenes sent shivers down my spine.
Anyway. All of the storylines in this show are so amazing and worth writing about. Go watch it, you won't regret a second.
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praezisia · 7 months
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