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#the icarus society
staticdreads · 2 months
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Prodigy
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apollos-boyfriend · 2 years
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anyways i genuinely hope all of these jokes about philza, jordan, etc being old and senile doesn’t get internalized by any of the kids in this fandom. you’re not old in your 30s. you’re not past your prime, you haven’t wasted away your “golden years”, turning 30 or even reaching your 20s doesn’t mean you’ve already passed the best years of your life. your teens and early 20s are most likely not going to be your peak. it’s okay if you haven’t had the big, life-altering coming of age story or life-changing trip by the time you’re out of high school or college. it’s okay if you haven’t blown up on content creation or haven’t had the opportunity to even start. as funny as some of the jokes can be, and as much as they’re meant to just stay jokes, it’s been shown that they’ve already had an impact on how some of the younger fans view aging and one’s lifespan, and i hope something can be done to counteract that at some point
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waywardhollowdaughter · 5 months
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i’ve decided that icarus was just a silly guy, giddy with joy at being being free from imprisonment, and that he loved the sun and the sun loved him too. so this is a poem from the sun to him.
(alternatively: i have been listening to “sunlight” and “i, carrion” by hozier too much.)
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taciturnpoet · 1 year
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okay here is the promised anderperry Icarus and the Sun/Apollo post because @73647e enabled me lol
this will be mostly rambling because I love this comparison (and use it a lot) so be happy if there is even a single coherent thought in this okay? talking about this makes my brain go FAST and I went over this about a thousand times so bear with me here
When I had first started thinking about this, I had originally thought of Neil being the Sun and Todd being Icarus. But then I realized no, their dynamic shifts and actually switches roles after Todd does the poem in Keating’s class.
In the beginning, Neil is the one that draws Todd into the group and persuades him to join the poets, all while also encouraging him to be himself and speak up more. While Todd is not only falling for Neil, he’s also trying to take Neil’s advice to heart since Neil is what Todd wants to be.
Neil could befriend a brick wall if left alone with it long enough. Everyone likes him and believes that he is made for great things (though not the same great things he wants to do), and you can tell that Todd wants to get to that point himself eventually. Todd’s been told his entire life that he will never amount to anything unless he becomes this thing he doesn’t even like, and Neil is more of what he aspires to be.
Then the poem in Keating’s class happens and things change.
After the poem, Todd starts to come into himself a little more. He’s gaining confidence in himself and his work—the work he wants to do, the work he’s passionate about—and he’s joking around and talking more with the poets. (Even though this scene is deleted, and I think that’s a crime) he reads a poem out loud to them and Keating at the end of the movie without Neil there.
Now, we know why Neil isn’t there, but that’s not important yet lol
Neil has been Todd's safety net, the person that kickstarted his self-confidence growth and made him truly embrace himself in the long run. By the end of the movie, Todd can show other people his work without Neil having to be there, which is a major development from Todd in the first poets meeting too afraid to speak and always looking to Neil for guidance.
When Todd is helping Neil practice his lines on the dock—another criminally deleted scene—he’s excited. He’s teasing Neil and playing around with him and becomes what he had the potential to be at the beginning of the movie with the help of Neil and Keating. 
Todd’s decided that he wanted to be his own person. He’s not going to try and live up to his parent’s expectations of him becoming a second Jeffrey, he’s going to pursue his writing and be his own person, and he appears to become so much freer after that realization. He’s embraced his passion for writing and poetry and pursues his art without hesitation, just as Neil wants to do with his acting, becoming a shining light of possibilities and potential, and most of all, freedom. 
After the poem, the glimpse of Todd’s brain, and his passion, Neil almost views it as something holy. In Neil’s eyes, Todd and his freedom are something to strive for, to look up to, and hope for like it's something divine. In a way, Todd becomes a symbol of freedom and passion, a beacon of everything Neil could be and wants to be/do.
I know we as a fandom talk about this a lot, but look at the way Neil looks at Todd after the poem, the way the sun is shining on his face and lighting him up only in the way it does whenever he’s having a Moment™ with Todd. No, seriously, it does that to him both when he decides to audition for the play and after the poem, but practically nowhere else in the movie.
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Insanity. Anyway.
But then, during this same time that Todd is embracing his freedom, there is Neil. Neil who is practicing and alive and passionate while preparing for the play, making plans for the future, and dreaming of pursuing this life as an actor.
 ["God, for the first time in my whole life, I feel completely alive!" // "Most people, if they're lucky, live about half an exciting life. If I could get the parts, I could live dozens of great lives!"]
And yet, there is another Neil. The Neil who gets confronted by his father and told to stop doing the play, to stop acting, and give up his dreams, his passions, and what he believes to be his life, all to stay stuck in the existence his father wants him in. The Neil that goes to Keating for help and cries that he’s “trapped.”
The moment Neil decides to lie to Keating and tell him that he talked to his father, the moment he chooses to continue with the play and acting despite everything that could happen is the moment he cements his place as the Icarus in their dynamic. He chooses to ignore his father’s warnings against participating in the play and does it anyways. He chooses freedom and passion over safety. Neil chooses to fly.
Neil chose to take a chance, to try and escape and join Todd on the other side of freedom and authenticity, where he could pursue his dream and become an actor. He has his moment to shine, to taste the warmth of the stage lights akin to sunlight as he brings the play to life. All the possibilities, hopes, and dreams, all within his reach in the form of a crown made of sticks and leaves in a small-town theater. He can see his friends and his teacher in the crowd and feels invincible and in his element, bigger than life.
But then comes the melting of the wax and the plummet back to earth as he sees his father’s angry face in the back of the theater, and he knows.
He knew that there was no going back now, no reversing what he’d done, the fact that he’d lied to the two most influential men in his life for just a chance to join the other side. And yet, as someone pointed it out recently (I can’t find the post right now, I’m so sorry), there is a moment when Neil comes out after the play, and he smiles at his father, an attempt to see if maybe he won’t be falling tonight. But then his father doesn’t smile back, and everything goes by in a rushed blur of a freefall.
All of the poets try and reach out to him, to talk to him and congratulate him on his way out, but the only one he looks at is Todd. Todd, who’s so excited to see him afterward, tries to talk to him and get him to come back with them, but Neil smiles sadly at him and lets himself be dragged away. He knew he couldn’t put off this fight with his father forever and decided to stop hiding from it. He’s falling and isn’t trying to stop it.
I think Neil looks at Todd the way he does before they leave because a part of him knows he’s not coming back. He doesn’t want to go, but he can’t slow it down and spends his last moments with them looking at the boy whose become his Sun.
The descent is quick after the car pulls away, and Neil cannot stand up to his father. Every moment that led to Neil’s decision to be a part of the play, to follow Todd, is in the sun's bright light. It makes sense then that he’d die at night, with death embracing him with the sound of a gunshot rather than water splashing.
Todd finds out about Neil's death after sunrise. It's gray and quiet, but the sun still rises even after he knows Neil isn't rising with it.
And he's devastated, and he's angry, and he's no longer afraid to show that. He gets mad at Cameron for blaming Keating for Neil and believing he would kill himself under any circumstances other than his father. [“That is not true, Cameron, you know that. Keating didn’t put us up to anything. Neil loved acting!”]
Then, he gets mad at Nolan, talking back to him in front of his parents in that sham of a conference and in front of Keating's class as Keating is leaving. The same Nolan Todd nearly cried in front of on his first day at Welton because he was so afraid to speak his mind, to stand up for himself.
Todd is grieving, he is angry, and he is stronger than he was at the start. While he stands on his desk for Keating in a show of support, in thanks, he is also standing on his desk in thanks to Neil. For Neil.
Neil's gone. And yet, Todd shows his strength. He stands up for the ones he loves and is thankful for while also standing in defiance for those who played a hand in Neil's end and killing their dreams. He appears to smile ever-so-slightly when Keating looks at him, and Keating must know he'll be okay. 
His best friend is dead. The actor who brought a play to life and cast light everywhere he went was gone, but Todd isn't. Neil's light only reflected what Todd still had and would dedicate to Neil.
The freedom, art, and life that Todd now held were what Neil fell for, and Todd would spend his life creating in memory of the boy who fell trying to join him. Todd had to ensure that everyone would know the story of Neil Perry as much as they did Icarus. They were so similar, after all.
(this started to change halfway through, so idk if it makes sense but that’s fine. please talk to me about anything like this I get so excited about it lol)
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altijd-november · 5 months
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can't stop thinking about neil perry as an icarus variant
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nancy-drewdles · 10 months
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What if Carson moves into Jean's house when they have their baby?
What if he gives the Drew house to Nancy?
What if Ace moves in with her?
What if the final scene is Ace hanging the sign in their front yard with Nancy giving him directions?
And after he finishes and moves to stand by her's side, the sign is revealed:
Drew Hardy Investigations.
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My wings have gone to
ash.
My lungs are pockets for the
sea.
Melted wax
stains my back
because of what
Icarus
was to me.
-
He was a muse for my
retelling,
a source of magic
in my pain.
He was a victim
driven mad,
forced to stomach
all the blame.
-
Between the pages they will tell you
he's just a stupid, little boy.
Between the lines I'll keep writing
how deprived he was of
joy,
-
because
he wasn't stupid,
self assured,
he didn't think he knew it
better.
He simply wanted all too much,
and all too much
is what he
got.
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Iron Maiden  - The Trooper
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withheartsaligned · 9 months
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and did i ever get to tell you what you meant to me? and did you know that you were always like a fantasy?
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whatsitzface · 9 months
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➹Icarus and Apollo❂
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towritecomicsonherarms · 11 months
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Prodigy: The Icarus Society #3
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apollos-boyfriend · 1 year
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this is what i feel like whenever i post about this song. cmon guys we do this every other month at this point
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calyroco · 11 months
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jamietukpahwriting · 2 years
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Icarus Oh, Icarus You taught us well
But who among us has learned your lesson without scorched feathers igniting our downfall
~~~~~
“Icarus” by Jamie Tukpah
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pitty-aegis-parlor · 6 months
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PIIIIIIIT!
You and Red are being babied again!
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*Sigh* We know.
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I’m the brightish side, I’m also being babied along with Dark Pit, so the two of you aren’t alone.
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I am getting tired of this!
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I’m fine with that….. people expect way too much from me in my world.
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