Ivo doesnt share food.
another oneshot of Jackson Healy and Holland March
This one has smutt.
https://archiveofourown.org/works/62245660
Never-ending debate in my head: Does Commodus have good eyeshadow game or is he just really sleep-deprived?
drew stobotnik kissing. very sleep deprived. might hate this in the morning. enjoy for now
We don't see a lot of Robotnik and Stone before Gerald comes in but like....they seemed so? Content?
Like other then the ripping his shirt off thing, Robotnik actually seemed to have so much respect for Stone at the start of everything? He refers to him as the only one he can trust, he makes little jokes with him, he let's him cut his hair, and he seemed like he was just? Fine hanging out there with Stone. (I also feel like they had to have watched their shows togther at some point)
There really is a shift in the way he treats Stone once Gerard comes into the picture. This isn't news, I've just been thinking about it. Like he becomes so enamored with the idea of finally having a family that it's easy to push Stone aside.
Like. When Stone calls him ans warns him something is wrong he doesn't believe him. He doesn't trust him. In that moment Stone wasn't the only person he can trust.
And then he realizes Gerald isn't what he thinks he is and then he thinks about Stone again and he makes the announcement. Nothing really happened between Robotnik and Stone after the phone call to make him realize,, it was just like...clarity.
Am I making sense. I don't know. Robotnik held a lot of respect for Stone before the events of this movie it was just hidden because he's bad with feelings and understanding people like him as a person
arthur in candle light
this mountain broke my fucking back
I got bored and saw that the Calico Critters website also has coloring pages.
Lazily done House Calico Critter.
Decently done Jackson Healy and Holland March from the Nice Guys as Calico Critters.
3:10 to Yuma (2007) needs more fics, or AUs, or fanart, it's an amazing film that goes over how grey the old west was rather than the dramatic black and white lenses we saw it through because of stereotypes and western films.
It goes over morals and values, we see this brought up when Wade mentions that Butterfield didn't even call attention to how many lives he took but rather talked about how much money he stole. Wade also mentions how McElroy has murdered like Wade before, and yet Bryon McElroy considers himself better, constantly shoving his faith into conversations as if to prove he is a good man when he never was.
The movie is like a coming of age story for William, a young 14 year old boy who is the son of Dan Evans, he sees his father's loyalty to God and his devotion to justice and how it's led to men like Hollander (the town banker and a saloon owner) to walk all over him. But by the end of the film his father became a brave man who had conquered one of the most wanted men in the west.
Daniel/Dan Evans is one of the main characters, through the film we see his achievements and his failures, we see his loyalty to his religion, how his family shares the same morals. More importantly we see the devastation in his family, lacking money for rent, for food, for anything. We see Dan face his sons despite their disappointment, we see him face his wife despite her lack of love. How poverty has strained the relationship between him and his wife, between him and his oldest son William, and even starting to disconnect him and his youngest son.
Ben Wade is an outlaw in the West, who had been abandoned by his parents and says he thinks doing good deeds might be "habit forming." He points out the flaws of each person he interacts with and seems to have a strong mindset of how the world around him is corrupt, only to have his view tested upon meeting Dan Evans.
Wade and Evans' dynamic is strong and well written out, they tell stories of their past to one another, they talk about morals and throughout the story get to know one another. Even briefly working together twice. At the end of the story, we can even see Wade almost shed a tear for Dan Evans.
Overall I think it's a good film with amazing story telling.
You caught him sleeping under that tree again, shirt unbuttoned halfway down his chest and his hat tossed aside along with his satchel and whatever else it was he always made sure to carry wherever he went.
Your heart always felt relieved when his decided it was time to come back home.
Sad were those sleepless nights when the closest you could get to him was by clinging to his scarf and a memory. But now he was here, right within reach, the light carving through the leaves above his head and reflecting off the sweat on his skin– a faint shimmer that bathed him in that sacred aura he never believed you when you told him about it.
He stirred, so you decided it was a good time to go check on him. His eyes slowly opened, and you could see the sun in them. Just like he could see the sun in you.
"Ya gonna stand there all pretty forever or somethin'?" He scoffed, voice rough and deep with sleep. "C'mere."
(a redraw of a painting I did back in October)
the ever terrifying and exhausting cycle of “i don’t want to share my writing bc it feels disheartening when not many people are interested in it” and “i have to post the writing for people to become interested in it”
My interests: 3:10 to Yuma(2007), Unhinged, The Exorcism (2024), and more!
228 posts