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uwmspeccoll · 1 year
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It’s Fine Press Friday!
Death of a Salesman: Certain Private Conversations in two Acts and a Requiem, a tragedy by American playwright, screenwriter, and essayist Arthur Miller (1915-2005) is here published, with five etchings by American graphic artist, Leonard Baskin (1922-2000), by the Limited Editions Club (LEC) in a limited edition of 1500 copies signed by the playwright and the artist in 1984. 
The play, Death of a Salesman, first opened on February 10, 1949. It was incredibly popular, and is considered by some critics to be one of the best American plays. It has since been revived on Broadway five times and adapted to film ten times, and has won numerous awards. Salesman is a fine example of one of Arthur Miller’s dominant themes,the importance of the father-son relationship. It is somewhat inspired by Miller's short time working for his father. His biographer wrote:
Arthur particularly loathed the vulgarity and aggressiveness of the buyers, who treated his father and the salesmen with arrogant contempt, and he became acutely aware of the meaning of self-respect when he saw how cruelly it was abused.
The play is about the unrealistic expectations we have for ourselves and others, expectations that cause us to lose sight of what really matters even to the point of falling out of touch with reality. In this case it is the expectations a father has for his children. 
This edition marks Leonard Baskin’s third time illustrating for the Limited Editions Club. Other tiles he has worked on include, Eugene O'Neill’s The Iceman Cometh, 1982 and Aristotle’s Poetics & Politics, 1964, both of which we may feature at a later date.. The striking etched portraits are very characteristic of Baskin’s work. Baskin often works in themes of death. His etchings richly portray the mental degradation that the main character, Willy Loman, suffers from. 
This book was designed by book designer Benjamin Shiff, son of LEC owner Sydney Shiff. He selected American and English Monotype Bulmer fonts, which were set in type by Dan Carr and Julia Ferrarie at Golgonooza Letter Foundry. The text was printed at the Wild Carrot Letterpress by Daniel Keleher and the etchings were printed at The Heron Press by Bruce Chandler. The paper was made by Cartiere Enrico Magnani and the book was bound by Gray Parrot Incorporated. Our copy was a gift from our friend Jerry Buff. 
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– Teddy, Special Collections Graduate Intern
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bobbydigital407 · 2 years
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meeghanreads · 2 months
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WWW Wednesday — 21 February 2024
Hello friends!! Welcome to this week’s WWW Wednesday — 21 February 2024!! WWW Wednesday is a weekly meme hosted by Sam @ Taking on a World of Words, where you answer the three following questions: What did you recently finish? What are you currently reading? And, what do you think you’ll read next? Let’s see what I have been reading… (All images will link to Goodreads if you click on them.…
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littlefeatherr · 2 years
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Julia Ibbini, courtesy of Heron Arts
The United Emirates-based artist sources elements from Islamic geometry, embroidery, meenakari enamel work, and even electronic music to inspire the designs that compose her laser cut paper works. The complex patterns and layers of her colorful compositions are a metaphor for the artist’s multicultural background as a dual national from Jordan and the UK, and share elements of symbolism seen in the Middle East region. Ibbini uses computer algorithms to create digital designs that she laser cuts onto paper. She then layers these detailed pieces and hand-paints them with ink.
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readyforevolution · 24 days
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The Revolution Will Not Be Televised
Song by Gil Scott-Heron
You will not be able to stay home, brother
You will not be able to plug in, turn on and cop out
You will not be able to lose yourself on skag and
Skip out for beer during commercials
Because the revolution will not be televised
The revolution will not be televised
The revolution will not be brought to you by Xerox
In four parts without commercial interruptions
The revolution will not show you pictures of Nixon
Blowing a bugle and leading a charge by John Mitchell
General Abrams and Spiro Agnew
To eat hog maws confiscated from a Harlem sanctuary
The revolution will not be televised
The revolution will not be brought to you by the
Schaefer Award Theatre and will not star
Natalie Woods and Steve McQueen or Bullwinkle and Julia
The revolution will not give your mouth sex appeal
The revolution will not get rid of the nubs
The revolution will not make you look five pounds thinner
Because the revolution will not be televised, brother
There will be no pictures of you and Willie May
Pushing that shopping cart down the block on the dead run
Or trying to slide that color TV into a stolen ambulance
NBC will not be able predict the winner at 8:32
Or report from 29 districts
The revolution will not be televised
There will be no pictures of pigs shooting down
Brothers on the instant replay
There will be no pictures of pigs shooting down
Brothers on the instant replay
There will be no pictures of Whitney Young
Being run out of Harlem on a rail with a brand new process
There will be no slow motion or still lifes of Roy Wilkens
Strolling through Watts in a red, black and green
Liberation jumpsuit that he had been saving
For just the proper occasion
Green Acres, Beverly Hillbillies, and Hooterville Junction
Will no longer be so damned relevant
And women will not care if Dick finally got down with Jane
On "Search for Tomorrow" because black people
Will be in the street looking for a brighter day
The revolution will not be televised
There will be no highlights on the eleven o'clock news
And no pictures of hairy armed women liberationists
And Jackie Onassis blowing her nose
The theme song will not be written by Jim Webb
Or Francis Scott Key, nor sung by Glen Campbell
Tom Jones, Johnny Cash, Englebert Humperdink or the Rare Earth
The revolution will not be televised
The revolution will not be right back
After a message about a white tornado, white lightning or white people
You will not have to worry about a dove in your bedroom
The tiger in your tank or the giant in your toilet bowl
The revolution will not go better with Coke
The revolution will not fight germs that may cause bad breath
The revolution will put you in the driver's seat
The revolution will not be televised, will not be televised
Will not be televised, will not be televised
The revolution will be no re-run, brothers
The revolution will be live
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sylwiadomanska · 3 months
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Projekt "Saidalo" dedykowany jest naszej przyjaciółce Ewie Ampulskiej, której już nie ma z nami na tym świecie, jest jej cudowna córka Gaja i to właśnie Gaja jest twarzą naszego projektu..Wczoraj była premiera, dla ciekawskich link w komentarzu..Piszę ten post, dlatego, że potrzebuje również podziękować wszystkim zaangażowanych w tworzeniu tego projektu, jako Siostry Bui - Bui Film. Ten projekt był tworzony w bardzo specyficznych warunkach, dlatego ogromne podziękowania dla wszystkim osób które brały w tym udział..OGROMNE PODZIĘKOWANIA dla wspaniałych Laboratorium Pieśni / Song Laboratory 🎼💚 🌙💫✨jesteście cudowną inspiracją!.🧡 Cristal Iluminate 🖤, Michalina Dooda, Dzidziuś Ewy „Pszczoły”, Gaja Grabowska, Greta Morgane, Maria Ruddick, Beata Godlewska,  Joanna Sokołowska, Kalina Chodzicka, Renata Szkup, Marolina Kicuła, Klaudia Lewandowska,  Anna Maria, Blanka Katarzyna Dżugaj, Jagoda Bee-Gie, Urania Pi Wo, Anna Kopec, Sylwia Domańska, Sylwia MP, Emka B-ka , Kasia Krzymowska, Karoll Koral, Magdalena Tarnawska-Stus, Joanna Bednarczyk, Joanna Cichocka, Ewa Józefowicz , Pola Irkin, Monika Jabłonowska, Edyta Błachnio , Malgorzata Kraszewska , Monika Masłowska , Asia Kaniewska , Jośka Chomko, Julia Jaise, Szmuda Anna, Aleksandra Kałużny , Anka Król, Karolina Matej, Ola Rykowska,  Oliwia Czarnecka, Oliwia Jagodzińska, Patrycja Kurkiewicz, Ra Nae, Marta Szarzyńska, Kris Wawrzak, An Ja, Desi Kunsa, Maï Bui, Nam Bui Ngoc, Yvonne Heron, Katarzyna Sałdak - Kostiumograff, nyphiris. Taniec z Wachlarzami Bojowymi, Wachlarze Bojowe.
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fuckitfireeverything · 4 months
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okay I watched ONE HUNDRED AND THREE MOVIES THIS YEAR so I'm ranking
top 10 new movies I saw in 2023
Bottoms (dir. Emma Seligman)
Talk to Me (dir. Danny and Michael Philippou)
Godzilla Minus One (dir. Takashi Yamazaki)
Guillermo del Toro's Pinocchio (dir. Guillermo del Toro)
John Wick: Chapter 4 (dir. Chad Stahelski)
Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse (dir. Joaquim Dos Santos, Justin K. Thompson, Kemp Powers)
Polite Society (dir. Nida Manzoor)
The Boy and the Heron (dir. Hayao Miyazaki)
Suzume (dir. Makoto Shinkai)
Fingernails (dir. Christos Nikou)
honorable mentions: Poor Things (dir. Yorgos Lanthimos), Shortcomings (dir. Randall Park), Nimona (dir. Troy Quane, Nick Bruno)
top 10 new-to-me movies I saw in 2023
Ravenous (1999, dir. Antonia Bird)
The Descent (2005, dir. Neil Marshall)
The Banshees of Inisherin (2022, dir. Martin McDonagh)
The Host (2006, dir. Bong Joon-ho)
Memoria (2021, dir. Apichatpong Weerasethakul)
I Blame Society (2020, dir. Gillian Horvat)
La Llorona (2020, dir. Jayro Bustamante)
The Black Cat (1934, dir. Edgar G. Ulmer)
In the Mouth of Madness (1994, dir. John Carpenter)
Raw (2016, dir. Julia Ducournau)
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scotianostra · 11 months
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Poets Heads Edinburgh Park.
Jackie Kay
Jackie was born to a Scottish mother and Nigerian father in Edinburgh on 9th November 1961, and was adopted as a baby by Helen and John Kay, who had already adopted a boy, Maxwell. The family lived in Bishopbriggs, Glasgow, where John worked for the Communist Party of Great Britain, and Helen was the Scottish secretary of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament. Kay has drawn on her unconventional upbringing in her poetry, and described it with humour and great affection in her autobiographical account of the search for her birth parents, Red Dust Road, which she has called a ‘love letter’ to her adoptive parents.
The poem here is Life Mask,( for Julia Darling and as usual it is not my favourite of Jackie's I like poems I can relate to a wee bit, and the second one hits the mark. Check it out, George Square, now I can relate to that straight away, and the subject, also, if I live to be the age of her father, in the poem, I hope I am still able to attend protests rallies.
Life Mask.
When the senses come back in the morning, the nose is a mouth full of spring: the mouth is an earful of birdsong; the eyes are lips on the camomile lawn; the ear is an eye of calm blue sky.
When the broken heart begins to mind, the heart is a bird with a tender wing,  the tears are pear blossom blossoming, the shaken love grows green shining leaves,  the throat doesn’t close, it is opening
like a long necked swan in the morning,  like the sea and the river meeting,  like the huge heron’s soaring wings: I sat up with my pale face in my hands And all of a sudden it was spring.
My seventy-seven-year-old father put his reading glasses on to help my mother do the buttons on the back of her dress. ‘What a pair the two of us are!’ my mother said, ‘Me with my sore wrist, you with your bad eyes, your soft thumbs!’
And off they went, my two parents to march against the war in Iraq, him with his plastic hips. Her with her arthritis, to congregate at George Square, where the banners waved at each other like old friends, flapping, where they’d met for so many marches over their years, for peace on earth, for pity’s sake, for peace, for peace.
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tempogrotto · 1 year
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Julia Ibbini, courtesy of Heron Arts
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julialong183 · 5 months
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How does writing demonstrate creativity?
Writing demonstrates creativity because there are so many different types of writing.
You can convey statistical information: Julia believes 100% of people should love her boyfriends dog (pictured)
You can convey whimsical stories: The 800 blue herons stood in their place, in adoration of the fairy.
You can depict business writing: The Walt Disney Company stocks have declined since the streaming platform, Disney+ came out.
There are so many different types of writing and it allows different options for creativity. Fiction and creative writing are often the styles found using the most creativity.
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thespoonisvictory · 4 months
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Happy New Year! Here's everything I watched and read in 2023
And also some misc. thoughts on the things that made an especially good, bad, or striking impression. If the thing is in purple, it was a rewatch! books are all rated out of five because there was a reasonable number of them. top five from each category are in the bottom for funsies.
*not including podcasts/dropout content. I'm up to date on make some noise, gamechanger, wbn, and d20 (mostly). I also watched the emily axford guest episodes and chapter 2 of candela obscura on CR
Movies
The Menu
Glass Onion
Romeo and Juliet (1996) (this is one of my fav movies of all time, I'll never get sick of it. just gorgeous top to bottom)
Rosaline (I went into this knowing I wouldn't like it and came out thinking it was just alright. lead actress is good, but I hate derivative Shakespeare works that don't understand the original story)
Hamilton
Tangled
Secret World of Arrietty
Honor Among Thieves (just a damn good movie, love the practical effects)
Mamma Mia!
Barbie and the Three Musketeers
The Three Musketeers (1993)
Spiderman: Into the Spiderverse
The Last Unicorn (rewatched this for the first time in at least a decade, what a gorgeous vibey fantasy film. something about the dark scenery and tone really sticks with me)
Nimona (thought Ballister was a great character and enjoyed the design choices for the world, a good piece of Knight (tm) media. however, I thought the animation was lacking and didn't think it deserved a best picture nom like a lot of people did. it was cute, not lifechanging)
The Green Knight (watch it)
80 for Brady (a request from my mom, surprisingly funny)
The Visit
Sweet Home Alabama (bad)
Barbie!
Sharkboy and Lavagirl
Pride and Prejudice 2005 (another one of my all time favs)
Sleeping Beauty
The Aristocats
La La Land
Red White and Royal Blue
The Princess and the Pauper
Barbie and the Three Musketeers (again)
Howl's Moving Castle
Girl Vs. Monster
10 Things I Hate About You
500 Days of Summer (made me cry, which I didn't expect. can you tell I had a joseph gordon levitt moment lol)
Get Out
Twilight
The Conjuring (I watch this every year, one of my fav horror movies)
Scooby Doo: The Witches Ghost
Kiki's Delivery Service
Barbie and the Twelve Dancing Princesses
The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes
Love, Actually
Honor Among Thieves (again, but with my DnD party)
The Holiday (I mean. it's Jude Law)
The Boy and the Heron (holy fucking shit this was so good)
Asteroid City
National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation
In The Tall Grass
Books
Harrow the Ninth by Tamryn Muir: good! I fucking struggled at the beginning getting through but it paid off. (3.5/5)
The Falls by Joyce Carol Oates: a fun gothic romance/tragedy set in Niagra Falls which took an environmentalist angle I was not expecting at all. Picked it up at a Goodwill and enjoyed it much more than I thought I would. (4/5)
A Game of Thrones by GRRM: I mean, it's a classic. The way the plot unfolds at the end really is incredible, but from the first chapter it grips you. (4/5)
The Three Musketeers by Alexandre Dumas: HOLY SHIT if you read one book because of me let it be this one, it is criminally underrated for how well known it is. It is thee action-adventure novel of all time, hysterically funny and easy to read. (5/5)
The Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern: I took a little dip into YA to bring some autumn vibes to my summer internship. Plot was bad, vibes came through. (2.5/5)
Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte: fucking slaps!! anyone who thinks it isn't romantic is dead wrong, I found it much more engaging than Jane Eyre, the other Bronte novel I've read. (4.5/5)
Just Above My Head by James Baldwin: a gripping account of two black families before and during the civil rights movement, of which one son becomes a famous gospel singer. Julia, one of the daughters and a child evangelist, stuck with me long after I finished it (5/5)
Nona the Ninth by Tamryn Muir: enjoyed it more than HTN, Nona asking about her birthday present made me cry, as did Campal :( (4.5/5)
That Summer In Paris by Morley Callaghan: put me in a massive reading slump over a silly little Goodwill read, never have I been less entertained by what was essentially a book of entirely gossip about 1920s writers. (2/5)
The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins: read it immediately after ABOSAS, holds up in its entirety, particularly in the environmental descriptions (4/5)
A Clash of Kings by GRRM: I've already posted about this a ton but holy shit, it's slow getting there but the payoff is incredible. really excited to keep reading bc George absolutely sold me on this web of political and personal relationships. (4.5/5)
A Place Bewitched and Other Stories by Nikolai Gogol: the cap for the year, bleak Russian short stories about weird little tales. would hit harder during fall. (3/5)
Shows
The Last of Us (as good as people said it was. sold me on zombie media as someone who does not like zombie media)
TLOVM S2
You S4 (a decent ending, parts with Love Quinn were the best lolol)
Succession S4
Shadow and Bone S2
Partner Track (CUTE. wish netflix didn't cancel it)
Marvelous Mrs Maisel S5 (a letdown tbh)
Game of Thrones S1
BBC Musketeers (I had a big three musketeers phase this year; this was my fav adaptation I watched. a lot of heart and a lot of silly, I am very biased about it)
BC Strike
Bridgerton - Queen Charlotte (I watched this in French, had a miserable time)
The Terror
The Bear (twice)
The Summer I Turned Pretty S2 (steven and taylor!!!!!)
Legends of Tomorrow S1-5 (rewatching with Roommate)
Yellowjackets S1
Over The Garden Wall (I watch this every autumn)
Gilmore Girls, Seinfeld (continuously)
The X Files S1-2
Blue Eye Samurai (shockingly blunt and visceral in everything from it's depiction of racism to fully committing to animating a boner).
Unfinished: Fionna and Cake, the Fall of the House of Usher. we're working on it.
Top Five Movies (no rewatches):
5. 500 Days of Summer
4. Get Out
3. The Green Knight
2. La La Land
The Boy and The Heron
Top Five Books:
5. Wuthering Heights
4. Nona the Ninth
3. A Clash of Kings
2. Just Above My Head
The Three Musketeers
Top Five Shows:
5. The Last of Us
4. Yellowjackets
3. BBC's The Musketeers
2. Blue Eye Samurai
The X Files
If you made it this far send me an ask telling me what ur favs were this year or thoughts you have on mine :)
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byneddiedingo · 2 years
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Lauren Bacall, Rock Hudson, and Robert Stack in Written on the Wind (Douglas Sirk, 1956) Cast: Rock Hudson, Lauren Bacall, Robert Stack, Dorothy Malone, Robert Keith, Robert J. Wilke, Grant Williams, Edward Platt. Screenplay: George Zuckerman, based on a novel by Robert Wilder. Cinematography: Russell Metty. Art direction: Robert Clatworthy, Alexander Golitzen. Set decoration: Russell A. Gausman, Julia Heron. Film editing: Russell F. Schoengarth. Costumes: Bill Thomas. Music: Frank Skinner. In All That Heaven Allows (1955) and Imitation of Life (1959), Douglas Sirk demonstrated his unsurpassed skill with the "woman's picture," centered on the problems women face in trying to conform to society's demands. But in Written on the Wind, Sirk delivered an essential twist on the genre: a woman's picture about men. There may be no keener exploration of impotence than this portrait of the inability of Rock Hudson's Mitch Wayne and Robert Stack's Kyle Hadley to live up to the concept of masculinity. Kyle is the more obvious example of the problem: He is so terrified that he's sterile that when his wife, Lucy (Lauren Bacall), becomes pregnant, he turns on Mitch, his best friend, accusing him of impregnating her. Granted, he's tricked into this by his malicious sister, Marylee (Dorothy Malone), who is taking her revenge on Mitch for spurning her advances. But this also brings into focus Mitch's problem: Everyone -- Marylee, Lucy, and, yes, Kyle -- is in love with him, and he can't satisfy all of them and remain true to himself. He has been set up by Kyle's father (Robert Keith) as a kind of model of masculinity -- a rags-to-riches success story -- so Kyle, who has never known anything but riches, both admires and resents him. No wonder Mitch wants to escape from the turmoil of the Hadley household and go to work in Iran. Seething under all of this psychodrama is a subtext we now know in greater detail: Hudson's secret life as a gay man. It's reasonably sure that Sirk, who boosted Hudson's career, elevating him into a major star, knew about the actor's off-screen life, so Written on the Wind has grown in stature over the years as one of those films in which a star's personal life deepens a character's backstory. As usual, Sirk and cinematographer Russell Metty provide a rich Technicolor environment for the story, with a masterly use of metaphoric shadows and (as in the still above) reflections. Sirk also made the most of the Universal art department, crafting a milieu of excess and sometimes dubious taste for the Hadleys: Notice the array of bottles and geegaws on the dresser in that image. And Bill Thomas's costuming, including some retina-burning reds and oranges for bad girl Marylee, contrasting with muted tones for good girl Lucy, is almost eloquent in what it says about the characters. Written on the Wind is usually cited as a precursor of those 1980s prime-time soaps about the superrich, Dallas and Dynasty, but Sirk gives it more edge and wit than they ever showed.
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aconissa · 2 years
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tagged by @lesmiserabelles ❤️ thanks carmella!!
last book I bought: ursula k. le guin’s the word for world is forest and the eye of the heron published in one volume, which I found in a secondhand bookshop
borrowed: I’m currently reading our wives under the sea by julia armfield which @pastelpatroklus lent me, I’m really loving it so far!
was gifted: my partner gave me sujit sivasundaram’s waves across the south: a new history of revolution and empire for our anniversary because how else do you celebrate your love than with a book on colonial history?
gave/lent to someone: notes of a native son by james baldwin, leant to my partner’s mum
started: I’m reading several books and can’t remember when I started them all but it’d either be yellow jessamine by caitlin starling or ten steps to nanette by hannah gadsby
finished: time is a mother by ocean vuong, which I loved so so much. I’ve been listening to every podcast interview with vuong I can find ever since (npr’s fresh air podcast did a great one, would recommend)
gave 5 stars: time is a mother, and before that was bright dead things by ada limón and kirsty logan’s the rental heart and other fairytales
gave 2 stars: I had to dig back to 2020 on goodreads to work it out and apparently it was the betrayals by bridget collins. I loved the binding so was super keen for this but it ended up being boring, unrealised, the characters totally unlikeable and the whole book trying so hard to be ~~dark academia~~ that it just completely failed to examine it’s world in any depth
didn’t finish: I hate not finishing books and I usually power through them even if they’re awful but I did abandon world war z by max brooks a while back when I realised that the book was basically military/zionist propaganda :/
tagging: @pastelpatroklus @snailmailthings @antiscorbutic @sainthoratio @kinklock @pendraegon
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randomnameless · 2 years
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25, any headcanons?
Pff
25 headcanons for the meme then
Mareeta eventually meets Larcei in the post FE4/FE5 world and beats her soundly because Major Blood makes people OP, it's unfair but that's Jugdral
Velthomer robes have always been black and red, even for the people associated with the Velthomer court, but Saias wears inverted colors to make sure no one knows he's secretly a Velthomer himself. It's a foolproof plan.
Roy is Ninian's son, and him being part dragon is what enables him to use the Sword of Seals ; Harmut came to believe in a future where dragons and humans could live together, Roy's the living proof of this (and Sophia cannot uses swords!).
Everyone expects Leanne's Raven Boy to be a little terror and make Uncle Reyson get grey hair, but it's actually the Heron Girl who has a lot of fun messing with everyone. Naesala is a proud dad.
After the base convo with Ike, Rafiel tried to eat meat. That's the reason why he couldn't join everyone in the Goddess's Tower.
Grandma Eleanora taught Roy how to dance
Rhea and Macuil always insisted on sleeping in Cichol's bed when they were younger with their big bro - Cichol used to think it was uncomfortable because each of them had beds and they were cramped in his, but after Zanado he misses it.
Finn taught everyone in Fiana how to ride a horse - it doesn't mean everyone can fight horse back, but they at least can ride one.
The first shipment for trade between the two nations of United Archanea and United Valentia involved flour and oranges. Legend says Marth enjoyed oranges so much he wanted to give orange juice to everyone in his realm.
Nyna, Tatiana and Zeke are living happily in Rigel with their 6 children.
Eliwood really wanted to grow a mustache like his father, but when he saw Hector's beard he gave up.
Sanaki and Miccy try to be on amiable terms, but the "you tried to fry me remember" and "remember when our ancestor talked to you and ignored me, and wanted to destroy the world because he forgot I existed while playing with you?" are hard to get over with. They are on good terms as rulers of different nations, but they are not on good terms as sisters.
Every ruler from FE10 went to visit at least once Goldoa, and Rajaion's son. Ena was overjoyed, even if she didn't know what to do with the 52 plushies.
When Citrus told Rhea she wanted to marry Jerry, Rhea wondered what she did wrong, Jerry has a rat tail ! Maybe by constructing Citrus she forgot to program the "what is pretty from what is not pretty" software?
Hilda is Arvis's half sister and one of Victor's bastards
Ephraim using so much of Renais's funds to rebuild Grado is very unpopular post FE8, some people of Renais think Grado deserved it because their Prince consorted with demons - something Ephraim actively refutes whenever he can, as a result his reign is not a very popular one
After Mila'n'Duma went asleep, Valentia mages cannot use magic without staves/tomes
During his journey, Nergal learnt his wife died, but unable to accept this fact + the promise he made to the children to bring her back pushed to dwelve deeper and deeper to the Dark Artes, and we know what happened.
Julia's major Naga son will start a new conflict in Jugdral against Seliph's children
After the events of FE4/FE5, Silesse decided to base their hereditary monarchy on Queen Erinys's heirs, regardless if they have a Sety brand or not (given how both father and son ditched the country during various wars).
Cyril sees Shamir as his teacher and Catherine as some sort of annoying older sibling who gives him noogies even if he told her he dosn't like it
Seteth named his wyverns after his dead companions
Ismaire offered Joshua his trademark hat when he told her he was leaving to "discover the world". It's the only thing Joshua will never bet on.
Hugh becomes the first Elibian mage to master Light and Anima magic, but he dies before Niime, who could never told him how proud she is of him, even if he doesn't use dark magic.
Scatach eventually learns how to use an axe after asking his cousin Iuchar(ba?)
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virginia-hicks · 2 years
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Started this fun and flamboyant great blue heron on Julia today! It’s good to be home 🏡 Done at @holyoak_tattoo (at Portland, Oregon) https://www.instagram.com/p/CiRMY7RLdPg/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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wahwealth · 16 days
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🌴Rudyard Kipling's Story Jungle Book (1942) Full Movie in English Color HD
Jungle Book is a classic 1942 independent Technicolor fantasy action-adventure movie.  The film was made by the Korda brothers, and it is loosely based on Rudyard Kipling's The Jungle Book which was written in 1894.  The story focuses on Mowgli, a feral young man kidnapped by villagers who are cruel to the jungle animals, as the village attempts to steal a dead king's treasure.   The treasure happens to be cursed. The film was nominated for four Academy Awards. Best Art Direction-Interior Decoration, Color (Vincent Korda, Julia Heron) Best Visual Effects (Lawrence W. Butler, William H. Wilmarth) Best Original Score Best Cinematography Cast Sabu as Mowgli Daniel and David Valdez as Baby Mowgli Joseph Calleia as Buldeo John Qualen as The barber Frank Puglia as The pundit Rosemary DeCamp as Messua Patricia O'Rourke as Mahala Ralph Byrd as Durgaived Faith Brook as an English girl Noble Johnson as Sikh Mel Blanc as Kaa, Gray Brother Martha Wentworth as White Hood Never miss a video. Join the channel so that Mr. P can notify you when new videos are uploaded: https://www.youtube.com/@nrpsmovieclassics
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