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zanephillips · 8 months
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SKINS 3.01 "Everyone"
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eff-stonem · 5 months
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pisces71 · 1 year
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Lady Chatterley’s Lover (2022)
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fassylovergallery · 21 days
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j a c k
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possession · 1 year
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JACK O'CONNELL Bartek Szmigulski ph for for Wonderland (Winter 2022/2023)
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davidstirlings · 8 months
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AESTHETIC EDITS [6/?] SAS: ROGUE HEROES : P A D D Y M A Y N E x E O I N M C G O N I G A L
"There's a fellow here I knew in Ulster. Eoin McGonigal. He's from the other side, but we don't talk religion. If I sit up barking and howling at night, as I sometimes do, he takes me for a walk and throws a stick for me. When I find myself become a devil, he reminds me that underneath I am a poet."
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satansapostle6 · 2 months
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fire and ice | james cook
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Cook’s interest is piqued when an old childhood friend moves in across the street.
Warning: Mature themes/language. Drug use. Sexual content.
part one.
part two. the system.
“Oi! Tiff!”
Tiffany Wheeler turned around as she headed home from school, realizing Cook was following her, naturally.
“Cookie,” she remarked.
“Going home?” he asked her.
“Yeah,” she nodded.
“Me too,” he said with approval.
He walked by her side as they went in the same direction, heading back towards their shared neighborhood.
“Did you catch what that assignment was?” he asked her. “JJ had me distracted. Pulled a chocolate out of my ear. Don’t know where he found a chocolate…”
“Sure,” she nodded with sarcasm.
“What do you say, Wheeler?” he asked hopefully. “Help out your best mate? For old time’s sake?”
“Yeah. Whatever,” Tiffany scoffed.
“Alright!” Cook exclaimed enthusiastically. “Fuck yeah!”
Tiff just smiled as she walked, fully aware of Cook’s behavior.
“So, since you won’t be a good mate and shag me, how do I repay you?” he wondered. “Spliff?” he offered.
“Don’t love it, if I’m being honest,” she said as she plucked a cigarette from the pack she was holding and stuck it into her mouth as she lit it.
“Vodka, then?” he guessed. “Drugs?”
It was Tiff’s turn to give a mischievous grin, satiated by the offer.
“You’ve got a deal, mate.”
“Alright. Sorted,” he nodded, happy with their arrangement. “Come over to mine, then?” he invited her insistently.
“Yeah. Sure,” she agreed.
She objectively observed, somewhat fascinated, as he pulled out a spliff, loose somewhere in his pocket, smoking it out in the open as they walked home together. Tiff quickly realized that Cook constantly had to be doing something; if he was talking, he had to be loud, and animated.
If, for some reason, he wasn’t talking, he had to be active, running, or jumping, or otherwise doing something, like flicking or punching something. Cook had the mannerisms of a primary school student; he just needed to feel excited. All the time.
He found that he surprisingly didn’t mind Tiff’s silent, aloof demeanor, because even if she wasn’t speaking, she was always listening. And he liked to be listened to. Cook felt that Tiff had a unique way of fucking with people. It wasn’t in anything she said or did; it wasn’t in anything. Nothing about the way she would just stay there in silence was inherently wrong, or offensive, but just something about the space that she took up could make someone need more from her.
Cook kept rambling and raving throughout the entire walk to his house, secretly needing for Tiff to actually join in. She was speaking, of course, and fully engaging in whatever topic they had currently landed on throughout the entire ordeal, but she never brought herself up to his level and ranted or raved herself. She was almost always level, and cool.
“Say, Tiff,” Cook said as he sat down on his bed, passing her a half full bottle of vodka. “How come you moved back here?”
He remembered Tiffany Wheeler had moved away from Bristol just before their fourth year of primary school. At seven or eight years old, he had actually been quite disappointed when he didn’t see her that first day of school.
“My dad wanted to be close to the family again,” Tiff replied, searching her pockets as Cook held his hand out for the pack of cigarettes.
“Any reason why?” he asked curiously.
“You remember my brother, right?” she said as he took a cigarette.
“Yeah! Andrew, right?” Cook lit the cigarette. “What’s he up to?”
“He’s dead,” Tiff said matter-of-factly as he just stopped for a moment.
“Oh. Fucking hell,” James Cook remarked, seemingly genuinely taken aback. “When?”
“A… A few weeks ago,” she cleared her throat. “Or a month ago…? Honestly can’t remember, exactly. The funeral’s next weekend…”
“Jesus. Rest in peace,” he mumbled.
Tiff just nodded appreciatively. This was much more recent than he would’ve guessed. He began to feel guilty for his casual attitude, knowing he wasn’t exactly great with these things.
“How’d he die?” he asked, optimistically hoping for something standard like illness, or perhaps an accident.
“He killed himself,” she told him, seeming as if she was trying to spare Cook’s feelings more so than her own, which he found peculiar.
“Oh…” he thought awkwardly. “Was it peaceful?” he hoped.
“Car exhaust,” she informed him, as his face slowly twisted into an uncomfortable grimace. “Choked on exhaust fumes.”
“Oh.”
This certainly did not sound like a very ideal death to Cook, not that there really was any such thing.
“It’s alright. I can talk about it without turning into a weepy twat,” Tiff promised him.
Cook looked at her for a moment, nothing mischievous or teasing behind his eyes in that moment as he just nodded, silently conveying his unspoken apology for his general behavior.
“You know I, er… I remember Andrew. Sort of,” he offered. “He was a couple grades above us… Always trying to make friends with people. Drawing them pictures, and shit,” he recalled, taking a rough swig of vodka.
“Yep. That was Andrew,” Tiff nodded pleasantly. “Definitely Andrew.”
Cook did what he could to help, handing her the bottle as she accepted it gratefully, downing a decent amount of the foul-tasting alcohol as Cook handed her his cigarette.
“He was your best mate,” he said.
Tiff nodded. “Yeah,” she agreed pleasantly. “He was.”
Cook felt awkward and aimless in the heavy conversation, despite the fact that Tiff seemed complete fine. He took another long swig from the bottle, starting to really feel tingly in many different ways, between the spliff and the vodka.
“To Andrew,” he dedicated the thoughtful act of alcoholism.
She smiled, taking the bottle, compelled to drink more.
“To Andrew,” she echoed.
“Do you know why he killed himself?” Cook asked, past the point of knowing whether or not that was an appropriate question to ask.
Tiff strangely appreciated it, never having been asked that in conversation about it before.
“Yeah… I think so. Sort of,” she provided.
She thought for a moment before responding.
“He was… He was troubled. Fucked around with pills a lot. Like, a lot. I mean, I did too, but… He was just different. Like he knew that’s how it would all end, sooner or later,” she sighed. “I guess he chose ‘sooner’.”
“That’s right shit,” Cook shook his head.
Tiff nodded in agreement, finding his take almost profound in its own way. “Yeah. Yeah, it really is.”
“Was there something you think made him do it?” Cook inquired. “Like, something that set him off?”
“Oh, yeah,” Tiff nodded with certainty, a certain bitterness or irony to her tone. “Yeah.”
He listened silently, something he rarely did for anyone, curious to hear the answer.
“He, erm… He was spiraling, after college. Barely passed to begin with. It was all drugs and weird pastimes, every day. Sometimes he’d be gone for days at a time… Mum was at her wit’s end with him… She just didn’t know what to do,” she explained. “Hell, I wouldn’t have been surprised if she was the one to off herself.”
Cook still listened intently as she spoke, pondering on every word. He could tell this was a very recent and painful chapter in her life.
“Anyways. My brother. He was doing some really questionable shit, with really questionable people… It was fucked up. And I mean, fucked up. This guy, Seb, he used to party with? Rumor was, he would get fucked up on acid and do some crazy shit. I mean, like, dead cats crazy.”
“Jesus,” Cook thought, surprised at his own reaction.
“Mum had enough… She gave him an ultimatum. Either get his life together, and go to university, or get a job, at least,” Tiff recalled, “Or… he was out of the house,” she concluded.
Cook sat with this for a moment, not responding, just thinking as he tried to process. It took a considerable amount of silence, but he seemed to understand finally.
“So, Andrew…” the words strangely hurt him to say. “Your mum said he had to get his life together, so he killed himself?” he provided.
“Yep,” she nodded.
Cook gave her a funny look she’d never seen from him before in the short time she’d known him as an actual adult. It was almost a look of sympathy.
“Andrew… He would’ve rather have killed himself than try to live a healthy, functional life,” she admitted, an unimaginable pain in her eyes.
Cook truly had no idea how to respond.
“It’s fine,” she added quickly, her tone changing. “It’s whatever. My own brother would’ve rather have killed himself than stop doing drugs.”
“I’m sorry, Tiff,” Cook said after a pause, “If I’m being completely honest… I only got to talking to shag you.”
He waited guiltily for a response of any sort as she just looked at him for a while, fully aware of his patterns. Cook half-expected her to get uncomfortable in some way, or scream, or yell, or throw him out of her home, but she did no such thing. He watched in awe as she didn’t even seem to bat an eye at the confession.
“I figured,” she said, prompting him to wonder if this was all she had to contribute.
Completely flabbergasted, Cook began to spiral as he tried to communicate with her.
“You—You did?” he asked cautiously.
She nodded emptily, no longer worried about being allowed to attractive people. He still found himself praying she wouldn’t punch or disembowel him.
“Of course I did,” Tiff responded indifferently. “Most people only hang out with me because they want to shag me.”
“Yeah, I reckon so,” he said regretfully, a guilty expression on his face.
“But it’s okay,” she said, reading him easily. “I have a system; I always hang out with people at least three times. If they leave by then, then I know they just wanted to shag me.”
“But… what if they’re playing the long game?” Cook geniunely wondered.
“Well, at that point,” she thought. “If I want to shag them, then, I do.”
A large grin slowly spread across Cook’s face as he shifted the mood back to lighthearted stupidity.
“So, what if I’m still here after the third time?” he proposed excitedly.
“Then I’ll know you’re an idiot,” Tiff concluded.
-
part three.
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reyenii · 1 year
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"the were like chalk and cheese. eoin was more mellow in his manner, speech and movement, and extremely good at telling "tall tales" - a skill which tied in well with his role as the camp's letter writer. 'despite being the youngest officer, he was far more eloquent than paddy, whereas paddy was more like ares, the greek god of war - it was a dangerous combination; eoin could talk them into all sorts of trouble and paddy could get them out of it, a perfect friendship.'
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sunnysand-rpg · 1 year
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tygerland · 5 months
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Effy & Cook 2009 by Boo George.
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undertheskins · 3 months
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eff-stonem · 6 months
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ebrarhq · 4 months
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aglitchinmatrix · 1 year
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Emma Corrin in Lady Chatterley's Lover (2022)
Director: Laure de Clermont-Tonnerre
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luckydiorxoxo · 2 months
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satansapostle6 · 1 month
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fire and ice | james cook
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Cook’s interest is piqued when an old childhood friend moves in across the street.
Warning: Mature themes/language. Drug use. Sexual content.
part four.
part five.
Tiff shrieked loudly with laughter, feeling particularly drunk and high that Friday night. Cook was even higher as the two of them sat up in Tiff’s bed, drinking. They were both laughing hysterically as Cook slowly crawled over Tiffany’s body on the bed, his eyes dark with intoxication.
“Here comes the Cookie Monster!” Cook gave a toothy grin as Tiffany writhed with both amusement and discomfort at the same time.
“No, stop!” she cackled with laughter as he tickled her. “Cook! Stop it!”
He could hardly keep it together as he watched her squirm, alarmed by the sensation in her intoxicated state
“Tickle fight!” Cook announced, loving the attention.
Tiff couldn’t stop laughing against her own will, her skin feeling as if it were on fire wherever he touched her. She hated being tickled, but somehow, with Cook, it didn’t quite bother her in the same way; it didn’t come with that unsafe feeling it usually did, like being molested by an uncle. With Cook, it was just something funny.
Tiff panted heavily as his fingertips tickled her stomach, looking up at him as he was positioned over her body, looking into her eyes. He suddenly felt rather bashful as he saw her lightly panting underneath him, chest softly rising up and down with each breath. He slowly pulled himself off of her, allowing her a moment to compose herself as he did the same.
“You’re really fucking something, you know that?” James Cook said under his breath, eyes slowly raking over her.
“Cook. Stop it,” Tiff said, this time less playful as she involuntarily made a face.
“No, no, I’m serious,” he assured her. “I mean, like… you’re more than fit.”
“Thanks,” she replied curtly.
He loudly sucked his teeth in exasperation, frustrated as she didn’t seem to understand what he had meant by that.
“No, Tiff, I mean like… Your features and stuff, yeah?” he questioned, hoping she followed.
“What about them?” she inquired.
“They’re just… I don’t know. They look right,” he expressed, strangely impassioned, “You know?”
“My face looks right?”
“Stop being a tit!” Cook complained. “I’m trying to tell you… Your face… It’s just perfect-looking. Like, if I was to try and picture good eyes, or a good nose, or good bones, it would be yours, every time,” he breathed, in awe of her.
“You’re fucking pissed out of your mind,” she concluded, more than observant of the way he was slurring his words.
“I am,” he admitted, “Which means I’m being extra-honest!”
“But you also just want to shag me,” Tiff reasoned.
“Two things can be true at once, can’t they?” he pointed out. “I can want to get you naked and think you’re beautiful. Wouldn’t I want to shag you because you’re beautiful?”
Tiff stopped for a moment, a satisfied grin on her face.
“The Cook thinks I’m ‘beautiful’?” she concluded.
She was delighted to watch as a look of realization slowly took over his features as he caught his mistake.
“Did I use that word?!” he exclaimed.
“Yes, you did!” Tiff cackled triumphantly.
“Shut the fuck up!” Cook complained, angrily tossing a pillow at her.
She caught it with ease, fully aware of the fact that he’d made it seem like he’d thrown it harder than he had. That was the thing with Cook; he always made his throws look harder than they were. The only reason Tiff hadn’t written him off when they’d first met as just another shallow, thoughtless wanker who could’ve cared less about her was because of the way he treated her.
Yes, Cook was wild, and funny, and playful, but he was rarely mean-spirited. Cook’s behavior was hardly ever targeted; it was just impulsive and essentially coincidental. Most boys Tiff had known would constantly be tearing others down or trying to prove themselves superior in every wild, crazy thing they did. That wasn’t necessarily the case with Cook.
Cook hurting someone was almost always a coincidence rather than an act of inconsideration. He treaded more carefully than one would’ve expected him to. Tiff knew that, when he hurt people, it was never intended at all. In fact, Cook usually meant to do the opposite. His outlandish antics and reckless behavior were meant to entertain and inspire; he was strangely inclusive in his antics.
Cook watched quietly as Tiff took another brutal swig of less-than-chilled vodka, gulping it down as she sat beside him.
“Tiff?” his voice cut through the pregnant pause between them.
“Yeah?” rasped as she looked back up at him.
“…Will you touch me?” he asked her with a concerning politeness.
Tiff just scowled, automatically writing this off as another weird joke.
“Go fuck yourself,” she replied, meaning what she said quite literally.
“No, not like that,” he said dismissively, a haze of intoxication guiding him as he chased his every whim. “I mean, like… Just hold me, or something. Like I’m your friend.”
“…You are my friend,” Tiff reminded him, starting to realize that this wasn’t a joking moment.
“Then will you just… be here with me?” he asked hopefully, blue eyes glassy as he fought the drunken urge to fall asleep.
“What about the girls you fuck?” she asked him. “Don’t they hold you after? Or, whatever it is you’re into.”
“Sometimes,” he remarked, deep in thought. “Not as often as you’d think, though. Besides. Doesn’t feel like you.”
“How do you mean?” she questioned, expecting a flirty response of some sort.
“I mean, like… When they touch me, it’s like I know we’re about to fuck. Which, you know, is cool, and everything,” he chuckled, eventually snapping back out of it. “But, I don’t know, Tiff, when you touch me, it’s different. Like when you touch me, it doesn't feel like you want something… Like, I can just be, you know?”
“I think I do,” she nodded. “Cookie… Is it possible that you appreciate that I’m not just here to fuck you?” she guided his thought process.
He paused for a moment, having to really consider.
“Maybe,” he conceded. “But, I’d still be game if you wanted to play with my willy a bit,” he added in quickly, prompting her to roll her eyes.
He just laughed as he laid down on her pillow, looking up at her for permission. She laid down beside him, reaching to turn her bedside lamp off before she settled in completely. Tiff laid down on her side of the bed as Cook slowly leaned into her, his body curling into a ball as he used her like a pillow, comfortable as his eyes began to close.
*****
Tiff’s eyes slowly opened to let in the light dimmed by the black curtains. And as she’d half-expected, Cook was gone in the morning. The only trace of him left behind in her bedroom was the empty bottle still rattling around on the messy bed, and the nearly empty pack of cigarettes left behind on the bedside table littered with garbage.
That was all Cook was, Tiff realized. Empty. Empty, and garbage. Empty garbage.
-
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