#maggie rogers i miss you fr
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just remembered one of my old ocs was steve and sharon’s daughter and i had the audacity to name her margaret
who the fuck am i to judge the spence gals naming his daughter maeve
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happy birthday bestie!!! miss clarke (spoken reverently, like miss flo), you are theee brightest shiningest light of good things and great taste & aesthetics that this world has to offer!! world's most important and belovéd naturalist, southerner, barista, poet, photographer, etc etc ad infinitum folks she has it ALL 😤
love you the most and i'm so happy to know you and call you bestieee and a fellow libra 4 who finds the meaning and art in everything aspect of this life and the universe!!! have the MOST perfect birthday + birthday weekend (ugh we love a friday bday, iconic) do some Vigilante Shit worship Maggie Rogers find so many good things for your magpie jar and live it tf uppp <3
wow i’m crying fr 😭🥺
THANK yew bestieeee!!!!!! wow i love you so much it’s unreal 💕💫
#this is the sweetest fucking thing thank you words of affirmation is my love language 🥰😇#birthday bug#annie tag#love letters
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kirishima!! (for the ask game)
BABY BOY !! BABY BOY THANK YOU
favorite thing about them: EVERYTHING ABSOLUTELY EVERYTHING i love how kirishima is the epitome of manliness ! and i love how manliness, to him, is all about emotion, sticking true to yourself and your convictions, living life without regret, etc. he’s such a subversive character imo because while he can be incredibly stubborn and rough, he can also be super sensitive, well-mannered, and outgoing. the duality.....he has the range.
he has such a loud heart and i think it really shows in the way that he treats himself and others. he cares SO MUCH about everyone ! about fat, about tsuyu, about bakugou, tamaki, etc. ! and it hurts my heart that he doesnt feel like he’s good enough. his origin, while fairly common in his deep rooted sense of insecurity, is rly relatable and i like to see myself in him. sounds silly but he gives me strength !
least favorite thing about them: what does this say idk how to read
favorite line: im trying so hard not to quote all of volume 15 and 16 but, “i’ve confronted plenty of scary stuff so far...but there’s one thing that scares me more than anything...and that’s going back to how i used to be! that’s why i never want to regret anything ever again!”
i would quote the whole “what is chivalry to you” thing but i think those were all crimson riot’s words. i still apply them to him though !
OH and the quote where he says “i’ve got a long way to go” after mina asks if hes okay i JUST AAAAAAAH im going to cry in s4
brOTP: mina and kaminari fr fr
OTP: kiribaku and kirideku !!!!!
nOTP: mlm hc so none of the 1 a or b girls !
random headcanon: im not good w/ headcanon stuff so im gonna talk about stuff i like, such as his hair. i love when he wears his it down. i rly appreciate horikoshi’s drawing of him styling his hair, and it makes me think about him dyeing it !! i want to see him w his roots growing in !! i also love his headbands aa!! he’s gotta know how to do so many cool styles and shit. him and mina go wild playing w everyones hair, braiding it, etc. during sleepover nights. true wlw / mlm solidarity folks
unpopular opinion: kirishima was too easily sidelined in the joint training arc and i really miss him. i want him back , and i want him to fight this big battle where he’s proud of how far he’s come. feels like a lot of his story revolves around his insecurities and as a result leads to him losing more than he wins and i just ! i want him to come out on top ! smash his fists together and yell in victory !
song i associate with them: elyisum by bears den bc its my song so therefore its his song too (or light on by maggie rogers)
favorite picture of them: lmaoo you aint gettin out of here with just one pic
+ him and tamaki at the festival (cant find the pic :( ) and literally every picture to ever exist of him. ive watched that hr long kirishima compilation and ill do it again
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Villains Rule in the Third Season of Marvel’s Daredevil
by Allison Shoemaker
October 19, 2018 |
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The idea of the villain as a dark reflection of the hero is not a new one. Frank Miller did it decades ago; so did Sophocles, Shakespeare, and Robert Louis Stevenson. Comic book adaptations have soared or sunk based on how effectively they’ve pulled off this trope. When done well, it’s “Macbeth.” When fumbled, the results run the gamut from corny to positively insufferable.
The third season of Marvel’s “Daredevil” does occasionally land in somewhere in the middle of that scale. But in the six episodes provided to critics, the overall effect is so engaging that it’s easy to forgive those missteps (or most of them, anyway). That’s due, in no small part, to the return of one of Marvel’s best villains; it’s also the result of the introduction of another. But the bedrock of its success isn’t found in the characters that reflect the darkness in Matt Murdock. It’s in the reflection he sees projected back at him by his closest friends.
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There’s another cliché at play here: the whole “Netflix’s Marvel series are too long and too slow” thing, which isn’t so much applicable as wholly reinforced by the first half of season three. Refreshingly, that familiar bloat is front-loaded, and is the result of a commitment to making recovery (physical and emotional) for Matt Murdock a slow process, rather than the need to stuff the back half of the season with narrative contrivance designed to delay the climax. In short, it’s an encouraging kind of flaw, the result of a commitment to character that much of the second season of “Daredevil” lacked. That commitment is reinforced in showrunner Erik Oleson’s approach to exploring the lives of Karen Page, Foggy Nelson, and the rest of the show’s strong supporting characters—some new, some returning. And it’s most keenly felt in the two villains that drive the first half of this season. Wilson Fisk was already great. Bullseye could be every bit his equal.
But before either can really enter the picture, Matt Murdock (Charlie Cox) has to recover from having a building dropped on his head. (If you missed “The Defenders,” here’s what’s going on there.) He does so under the care of the sharp-tongued Sister Maggie (the terrific Joanne Whalley), and makes for an extremely recalcitrant patient. The physical component of getting dumped on by a skyscraper is nothing to sniff at, and much of the early action of this season concerns Matt’s struggle to navigate the world—well, the basement of a church—without his enhanced senses. (A particularly important scene involves a Neti Pot—not something I would have predicted from this, or any, superhero series). Meanwhile, Karen (Deborah Ann Woll) and Foggy (Elden Henson) struggle to move on with their lives as they process (or refuse to accept) the fact of Matt’s “death.”
Grief is only one item on the menu, and while the borderline glacial pace of the first three episodes can be frustrating, the ideas explored and groundwork laid are invaluable. As Matt Murdock rejects that name, drowning in his own rage and self-loathing (and even in his own blood), Karen and Foggy suffer the consequences of a close connection with a person whose death they can’t even accept as certain, a bona-fide hero with undeniably toxic qualities. We see that darkness play out in real time with Matt, and wee see the havoc he wreaks on those in his life, even from a distance. And when Wilson Fisk (Vincent D’Onofrio) re-enters the picture, that havoc spreads farther. Another classic superhero trope: the villain punishes the hero by targeting those he loves, as the hero makes it worse by pushing them away.
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The stumbles in these six episodes mostly center around Murdock and Fisk, and that makes perfect sense—nearly all the big swings that the show’s writers take center on those two, and Cox and D’Onofrio each give the kind of performance that would encourage the creation of big speeches and epic moments. Some of those work, implausible though they may be (Hell’s Kitchen is apparently full of people more than usually accustomed to listening to lengthy monologues, and prison guards and FBI agents are almost equally patient.) Some of them don’t. An early speech about the greatest prison of all, love, is particularly irksome. But the ambition, and the awkward, physical force of D’Onofrio’s performance, make even those sticky moments pardonable, and once the wheels really start turning on the season, nearly all such concerns vanish.
Unsurprisingly, much of that momentum comes when one of the great Daredevil foes enters. Wilson Bethel’s Bullseye—here called Benjamin “Dex” Poindexter, a sniper for the FBI—doesn’t begin this story as an out-and-out antagonist, and his gradual transition into that role isn’t something I’d spoil for all the world. It’s obvious that Oleson and company put a great deal of thought into crafting the character’s tragic origins, which relate in no small part to mental illness; the result is considerably less troubling than many such stories, though there’s still some of the jagged camerawork and quick camerawork that too often categorize “crazy.” But Bethel’s empathetic performance, and the careful plotting associated with the character, ensure that the good far outweighs the bad.
But much of the appeal of “Daredevil” has always been the fights, and there’s a real gem near the center of this season. There are others that are good, though the impact is somewhat lessened by a tendency of the show to double-down on what worked before (You like hallway fights? You like prison fights? Here’s a prison fight in multiple hallways!) Yet when Dex becomes who he becomes, the leap in interest, intensity, and quality is striking, to say the least.
Where “Daredevil” will go in the back half of its third outing remains to be seen, and it’s totally possible that there’s more of heavy-handed speeches, creaky tropes, and Marvel-Netflix bloat in store. But what’s clear is that Oleson and his staff course-correct after an over-crowded second season, returning the focus to the people who live in this story, their actions and the resulting consequences, and the messy, frustrating contradictions that make them who they are. There’s darkness in everyone, we know (seriously, “Daredevil,” we get it). There’s often love, too. People can elate and disappoint, frustrate and entrance. So can television shows. This one does, and quibbles aside, the risk of disappointment is well worth the possible thrilling rewards.
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Source: https://bloghyped.com/villains-rule-in-the-third-season-of-marvels-daredevil/
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