filmgifs:

FOOD SYMBOLISM IN FILM

  • Moonlight (2016)
  • Parasite (2019)
  • Little Women (2019)
  • Get Out (2017)
  • Inglourious Basterds (2009)
  • Raw (2016)
  • Call Me by Your Name (2017)
  • Gone Girl (2014)
  • The Shape of Water (2017)
  • Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone (2001)

cruciatuz:

“i don’t care!“ harry yelled at them, snatching up a lunascope and throwing it into the fireplace. “i’ve had enough, i’ve seen enough, i want out, i want it to end, i don’t care anymore!”

hermiione:

Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix (2007) | dir. David Yates

Anonymous asked:

hey do you think you could expand a bit on separating the art from the artist? clearly you’ve done it with jk rowling but what are your thoughts on it as a general idea?

fanonical:

Okay, but you’re not going to like the answer.

Here’s the truth: you can’t separate the art from the artist. Not entirely. HP Lovecraft was an incredibly talented, but much more incredibly racist man. It would nice to say you don’t agree with his views but you can enjoy his works without that leaking in but…. well, I’m afraid that would be misunderstanding his books entirely.

Consider, for a second, that Lovecraft’s works were horror stories about extradimensional creatures having mutant children with humans; they were about invasions from distant aliens; they were about the purity of quaint, white, American towns being tainted. Now consider how this may have all been influenced by the fact that he just simply despised anybody who wasn’t white. Consider how his opinions on “mixing the races” might feed into this; consider why being unable to maintain the “purity” of white Americans was the scariest thing of all to him.

This extends to Rowling too.

I would love to say we can just acknowledge that she is an awful, racist, antisemitic, transphobic person and then say “but at least her books are good,” because, well, they are, aren’t they? I would say so, for sure. But to suggest that one can separate her from them is…. ridiculous, and it’s an insult to fans, can know and do better.

Consider why an antisemitic woman wrote about a species of goblins who live among us, but who for the most part keep to themselves and are maybe a little discriminated against on an individual level, but also hold all the cards, all the money, run the banks.

Consider why a racist woman would write about a species of slaves who loved being enslaved, who enjoyed working for no pay, and cleaning up after humans, with the only small caveat of that they didn’t want to be beaten. Imagine that only the most radical of their species wanted to be free, and he still spent the rest of his life working for no pay and helping out a little white boy and his friends wherever he could. Consider why the only person in the story who thought they should be free, that they should have rights, was treated as an overzealous joke, who was acting against the wishes of those slaves who really LOVE being enslaved. Consider that Rowling went on to say that she kind of considers that girl to be black, now.

Consider why JK Rowling, an open and proud transphobe, wrote Rita Skeeter as having a large square jaw, thick “manly” hands, and dressing incredibly gaudily with the most obvious fake nails and fake teeth and fake hair and fake everything. Consider why a woman who tweets about how trans women are “foxes pretending to be hens to get in the hen house” might write this Rita Skeeter character to then illegally transform her body in order to spy on children.

Harry Potter is full of Rowling’s bigotry, start to finish. Not even tangentially, like, “oh the goblins are bad, Rita Skeeter is bad, the house elves are bad, but most of it’s good!” because the deeper you dig and the longer you think the more you realise the entire story is based on her prejudices.

Harry Potter pretends to be an aracial story about found family, but if that were true, why are Harry’s distant ancestors important to who he is today even in the seventh book? Why does Harry have to live with his cousin and aunt and uncle? Because magic inherently prefers blood ties. Whilst Rowling was writing a story that seemed to say, “your heritage is not that important and doesn’t make you better than others” she was still writing a story about a boy who got all of his money through his bloodline, who was protected by living with his bloodline, no matter how evil, who was uniquely able to stop Voldemort because his bloodline passed down the invisibility cloak for generations and generations. Any step Harry takes he is compared to his perfect parents who were exactly like him — he looks just like his father, but he has his mother’s eyes, you know! — consider WHY a woman who is racist might’ve written a story like this. A story that on its surface, condemns a blood caste, but still in every step it takes, validates the idea that blood is thicker than water, and your geneological origin is what makes you special.

You can enjoy Harry Pottwr, of course you can. There are fantastic parts. I love a small group of teenagers deciding to become anarchist rebels and train to fight against fascism in secret. I love the murder mystery plots, I love how the series tells kids that it’s a good thing to be brave, and a good thing to fight injustice, and a good thing to challenge the government. But I cannot separate it from its author because it is such a product of its author. All of the structures of the world, the way things work in the universe, are drenched in Rowling’s beliefs, her bigotries. Of course they are: she made them.

Again. This doesn’t mean you cannot enjoy it. But I think we are past the day where we can pretend that disavowing a bigoted author is enough, and that that somehow separates the text from its bigotry. I think we are past the day where we can pretend that Harry Potter isn’t a deeply, inherently bigoted piece of media. Even the bits we love. I think we are beyond the day where we can truthfully pretend to separate it from her, because she is present through all of it. We MUST recognise its flaws. We MUST admit that she is in every part of it.

buffysummers:

Hermione Granger + favorite looks

Anonymous asked: why did the daily prophet post about hermione’s love life in gof why was the wizarding world interested in the love affairs of a 14 year old girl why would someone see “this random 14-year-old may or may not be dating some cool people but it’s not like there are more important matters such as the fucking hunger games going on you know” and say,,,,, this some Good Stuff.

fanonical:

the daily prophet is a (very well utilised) parody of the UK newspaper The Daily Mail and…… It’s seriously…. Like that irl oops

spelliarmus:

There is no shame in what you are feeling, Harry. On the contrary… the fact that you can feel pain like this is your greatest strength.

Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix (2007) dir. David Yates

downey-junior:

HARRY POTTER AND THE DEATHLY HALLOWS - PART 2 (2011)

Directed by David Yates

Cinematography by Eduardo Serra

Aspect Ratio: 2.39:1

Anonymous asked:

I always believed that the fallout with Petunia impacted Lily more than the one with Snape.

thejilyship:

I don’t really think these two things are comparable, strictly speaking. I mean, they both hurt her of course, but they weren’t the same thing?

Petunia and Lily’s relationship deteriorated over a long time, and they went months without seeing one another and it probably hurt differently because your family is supposed to love you unconditionally. To have  your parents accept something wholeheartedly and then have your sister talking about it with disdain and derision had to hurt a lot. But it was a private kind of hurt, something that she dealt with when she was home, the consequences, while awful, were contained to herself, her sister and her parents. It was an ongoing thing, there was no final moment. 

However, the fallout with Snape was very public and there was a final moment. There was a lot of build up, but when he called her a mudblood, it was in front of half the school. In the middle of a war. Where muggle borns were being killed simply for their blood status. This is a different can of worms entirely with a whole lot of implications and consequences. 

The people in Lily’s life hurt her, and I think that was one of the reasons she made sure that she was ‘there for [others] when no one else was.’ She knew how it felt to be treated poorly, and I think she made sure that she never made anyone else feel the way she did. 

riddlemarvolo:

After all this time? Always.

liz-jennings:

Harry Potter has to go into the lake and find his Wheezy. Find my what? And take his Wheezy back from the merpeople! What’s a Wheezy? Your Wheezy, sir, your Wheezy — Wheezy who is giving Dobby his jumper! Dobby plucked at the shrunken maroon sweater he was now wearing over his shorts. What? Harry gasped. They’ve got… they’ve got Ron? The thing Harry Potter will miss the most, sir! 

generalgrievousdatingsim:

sorry for acknowledging harry potter on main but one thing about the books that haunts me to this day is what happened to harry’s dragon miniature that he got in the triwizard tournament. the last time it’s mentioned he puts it down on his bedside and it curls up to sleep and then we never hear about it again. what happened to the dragon. nobody let jkr see this because i don’t want her to pull something out of her rancid ass but i need to know what happened to that dragon.