I’ve brought a precious gift for you too. This slave! Especially bought for you. He has the guile of a wolf and the agility of a cheetah.
He will serve you in every way possible.I honestly thought this was a cut scene from Assassin’s Creed
I am the king having a squeeing clapping shitfit in the second to last gif.
So clearly I need to watch this Bollywood movie immediately….
This is called Padmaavat! I know literally nothing else about it other than it came out this year.
I ship this.
ekebolou why i am reminded of rev? *laughing*
this looks fantastic. please tell me it’s the main plot, not a 30 second villain cutscene in the middle of the same old ‘girl with 9 identically dressed dancing sisters is in love with gallant mustache but her parents forbid it’ plot.
Looking at the wiki it looks there is a romance plot but it’s more High Court Drama and Intrigue than thwarted love.
Though wiki’s can be deceiving.
i do love high court intrigue. especially if the love interest is a stabby princess. tell me she’s a stabby princess.
Tag: I ship it
ghost in the house: GET OUT. I WILL TAKE YOU-
real estate agent: chill, its me.
ghost: oh hey. have you sold it yet.
real estate agent: obviously NOT, idiot.
Caffeine Challenge 23
Dialogue Prompt: “Their job wasn’t to save you.”
Alright, I confess-this ran a little bit over an hour (I started early). I…got a little carried away.
“Oh, sir, thank you,
thank you for saving me from those awful men!”Lillie
very nearly winced to hear the words even as they came out of her
mouth. That had to be
laying it on too thick. If she’d done any acting that bad back in her
brief sojourn into college theatre, her own classmates would have
dragged her off the stage. But the man in the mask and goggles didn’t
seem to notice. Supervillains generally didn’t, she’d found; it was
like you weren’t speaking their language if you didn’t ham it up as
much as possible.“Save
you? My dear, I’m afraid you
misunderstand the situation.” The man in the mask chuckled darkly.
His smug declarations could have benefited from a deeper voice and
probably a British accent, but he actually wasn’t doing too badly
with a slight Midwestern drawl, and Lillie had to admit, he did
have a pretty good dark chuckle.
Not the best she’d heard, but better than she would have expected for
essentially an amateur.
Things I am never ever going to get over:
• The fact that the scene at the end of Hamlet where Horatio goes to drink the poison to join Hamlet in death is an exact perfect parallel of the scene at the end of Romeo & Juliet where Juliet goes to drink the poison to join Romeo in death, which is not at all a coincidence.
• The fact that the entire play Horatio is calm and level-headed but the moment Hamlet is dying all that goes out the window as he becomes a grief-stricken mess, completely unprepared and unwilling to live without Hamlet.
• The fact that the word “sweet” has historical significance as a deliberate indicator of homosexual love and how that means the inclusion of “sweet prince” at the end of the play is a completely deliberate indication that Hamlet and Horatio were in love.

Confidences by Lewis Baumer, The Tatler, England, September 12, 1923

the sort of catwoman content i like












