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rêveuse;

@inhkeart / inhkeart.tumblr.com

brie | xxv | she/her the world is quiet here
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Reblogged

Thinking about Farid's death again because it still makes me sick to my stomach. Meggie and Dustfinger haven't been close pretty much since he first betrayed her in Inkheart: Her trust in him has been destroyed for good, even if they have started working together again (the fact that she has reason to suspect he banged her mom can't have helped). To him, she is forever a reminder of the coward and traitor he used to be. But then Farid dies, and they both cradle his body. They both cry for him. They sit together and grieve. Dustfinger refuses to let anyone near Farid except Meggie because he knows she is the only one who loved him as much as he did. It still fucks me up to this day.

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lesbophobes

everyone is deleting the caption to this but this work is called “perfect lovers” by the gay artist felix gonzalez-torres. the piece is about the illness and death of his HIV-positive partner ross laycock:

For Untitled (Perfect Lovers) (1991), he synchronized two industrial clocks placed side by side. Inevitably, because batteries fail and things tend toward entropy, the clocks would slowly begin to advance at differing rates, out of sync, having moved, however briefly, perfectly together. (x)
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dissociatves

“Don’t be afraid of the clocks, they are our time, time has been so generous to us. We imprinted time with the sweet taste of victory. We conquered fate by meeting at a certain time in a certain space. We are a product of the time, therefore we give back credit where it is due: time. We are synchronized, now and forever. I love you.” (Gonzalez-Torres, 1988)

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Reblogged macbcth

My favorite Shakespeare thing is when he writes a major plot point but just has someone tell us about it to save on special effects.

Hamlet gets kidnapped by pirates but we don’t see that part. It’s a letter.

The Oracle of Delphi shows up in the Winter’s Tale and rather than do all the special effects required to make that adequately supernatural, two guys come on stage and go “woah that was cool”

There’s a big storm on the night that Duncan is murdered and we learn about this when half the cast of Macbeth says “sure was stormy last night”

Shakespeare, the OG low-budget director taking the easy way out.

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