#we could be having homoerotic scar sharing scenes. if you even cared.
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Honestly why haven't I seen posts about Koala x Boa?? Their parallels and divergences.... Imagine there's a girl out there who went through the things you did but instead of being half-saved she was saved all the way through. She has a mark on her back just like yours except it's not like yours at all, is it. Yours is only shame, terror, and agony, but there's love and healing added to hers. Where you escaped only to have the weight of the world placed on your shoulders she was raised up and cared for by the very person who freed you. Who left you behind. You were so little. She was so little. Was she more deserving than you? You live in a debt you can never repay to a person long gone. She found a way to repay it, little by little. She never stops. You never started. Would she hate you? Would she be disgusted with how you have hidden? Not just yourself, but the valor of the person you both owe everything to? With your power the whole world could have known. You let him be scorned, you have your own world to take care of. One that can never know. She wears her mark with pride. You'd die to hide yours. She has to understand. You never had a choice. She has to understand. She has to understand. Please forgive me please forgive me please forgive me
#like. it's insane.#we could be having homoerotic scar sharing scenes. if you even cared.#koala x boa#my posts#fishman island arc#amazon lily arc#boa hancock
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Review of The Green Knight
As a lover of Arthurian legend and medieval reenactment and a once-upon medieval literature student, the new movie The Green Knight of course was on my to-watch list. Especially after reading qqueenofhadesâ excellent essay. I finally watched the movie last week. And I have some Thoughts to share.
There are a lot of things to like about this movie. It was delightfully non-sensational and devoid of GoT-like violence and political power struggles. There was some really beautiful cinematography, partly thanks to the beautiful Irish mountains this movie was shot in. I love that TGK not just adopted, but instead reworked the legend. The main moral themes and outcomes, while not a literal copy, felt authentic to the Christian medieval context of the poem, involving questions around honor, courage, hospitality, greatness, humility and what it means to be a good knight, or even a good person. The movie made it beautifully clear that Gawainâs main problem could have been avoided had he just given the Green Knight a scratch, but because he chose to behead the knight while said knight was lying kneeling and harmless at his feet, there is no escaping from facing the consequence of that action, which is neatly echoed throughout the movie. The green knight, the knight with the green belt and the lord who goes hunting in the green. The lover, the saint and the temptress. What you give, you will receive, and the other way around. The cast was great (too asexual to be thirsty for Dev Patel, though, sorry). The messing up of the mistaken image of medieval europe as just white is also always appreciated. I too liked that the film didnât care to explain some of the wonders and mysteries, like the giants and the saint who lost her head, they just were accepted as part of that world. Being somewhat puzzled and enchanted is sadly rare in media nowadays where everything has to be explained or else itâs a âplot holeâ. The liberty this movie takes with time, with multiple possible versions playing out and the reoccuring circular motives were impressive. However, the film as a whole didnât quite work for me and I donât really care to rewatch it. I think there are two fundamental reasons why.
The first is that the viewer isnât given reason to care about the main character. I think this choice is deliberate, as we see Arthur asking Gawain to tell a tale of himself to get to know him, and Gawain replies that he has none, and after Gawain takes on the Green Knightâs challenge as an opportunity to gain a tale for himself. Questions about telling and re-telling tales and achieving greatness are a central theme. However, this narrative choice poses a problem, as it results in a movie where we see Gawain wrestle through difficulties on his quest and heâs this strange identity-less puppet, escaped from the childrenâs puppet show. We as audience are set up to be detached from him, which makes it hard to root for his success or even his survival, despite how pretty and sad Dev Patel may look in a dirty-and-distressed state. This could have been solved without removing those identity themes by giving Gawain, if not great deeds, at least some establishment of his character at the start of the film. He doesnât have to be likable, but he has to be something more than a drinker and brawler with a faint sense of wanting to prove himself. That is just not enough to make us attached to Gawainâs wellbeing and involved in the quality of his decision making. The rest of the movie doesn't quite build Gawainâs character either. We get that heâs uncertain and afraid, yes, but his actions remain inconsistent, his motivations unclear. His main character arch - that he needs to give up the protection of the enchanted green belt, needs to face fear and consequences rather than to rely on the treacherous protection of witchcraft - doesnât come off the ground because we only learn close to the very end that the belt is a problem to the completion of his quest. Thatâs no arch, thatâs an exhausting flat march and a sudden steep slope right before the finish line.  Â
The second problem ties into the first. Namely, you donât need a strong emotional tie to the characters if thereâs a light tone, an adventure with a side dish of some fun and humor perhaps. This movie, however, is anything but light. Itâs dark. Itâs grim. Itâs cold. Itâs wet. Thereâs exactly zero humor. Above all, itâs slow. So slow. Apart from an emotional connection, you also need a sit-on-the-edge-of-your-seat amount of story tension for this kind of dramatic tone and slow pace to work, and the script just doesnât build that tension. A shot of Gawain riding through the moor after he leaves his home is just that: the confrontation with the Green Knight is still far away, thereâs no looming threat weâre aware of, thereâs nothing else to be told or resolved. Together with our emotional detachment it makes for a movie that switches between boring and ridiculously overdramatic, while occasionally looking stunning and taking on deeper questions and parallels. Overall it just makes for a frustrating viewer experience that lacks impact. I was left with a thorough âmehâ. Which is a shame, because this movie is very interesting and could have been so good. That clever panning shot showing Gawain as a tied up skeleton should have been devastating. I should have been shouting âNo DONâT do that, you IDIOT!â at the screen the moment Gawain scares away his adorable guardian fox. Instead, I couldnât care less. Come on, Green Knight. Off with his head.   Â
Some final details to note: erotic movie scenes are normally already awkward, but the scenes in this movie take the usual akwardness next level. At least itâs handled consistently - whether straight or homoerotic, itâs basically all a dissapointment. (That cum shot has scarred my brain forever). Which has its own merit, I guess, but does make for an odd contrast to the cameraâs loving, even somewhat objectiving depiction of Dev Patel and the way about every character tenderly touches his face. Iâm left wondering what the point was of this choice. It tells something about Gawainâs failure to meet chivalry standards, maybe. Â
The scenes which show witchcraft was used to make the Green Knight appear were rather clichĂ© and I donât think they added anything, as the Christian morality and consequences of relying on witchcraft are already addressed in the theme of the enchanted green belt. Also, itâs frustrating to keep seeing scratched-in runes used as literal magic. As far as our limited knowledge goes, runes were a whole writing system, magical only in the sense that writing something down can have a power of its own. Please, movie makers, think of something original.
Also, torches are terrible for indoor lighting. They burn out quickly and are horribly sooty, so itâs lanterns or candles you want indoors. But the use of the pentacle shown as a common talisman for protection rather than a specific symbol for evil or magic was nice. Iâm not equipped to comment much on the choice of costumes and they didn't try to be accurate to a specific historic period and place anyway, but would have loved to see more men in long robes like the beautiful ones they gave king Arthur. Somehow, medieval themed movies only seem to go for the pants and knee-length tunic style for men, while long dress-like garments were in fact very common. Gawainâs beautifully patterned yellow mantle was the brightest point of the entire movie. Â Â Â
#the green knight#Dev Patel#movie#film#review#medieval#history#medieval literature#chivalry#arthur legend#movie critique
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