«Sansa thought of the games she would play as a young child, always insisting that Robb joined in. He could never refuse and so he would be the brave knight to her captured princess, with Arya often playing the villain. The rescue attempt would always end with a sword fight while Sansa cheered Robb on, and when he won he would pick her up and spin her around while she laughed happily, kissing his cheek and declaring him the bravest knight in the seven kingdoms.
Though they were silly games of pretend, still Sansa waited in King’s Landing with the hope that Robb would be her knight just one more time.»
commission for @⧗ nataliaxe ✪
need the asoiaf fandom folks to explain 2 me real quick why y'all are so lenient on male characters who do some fucked horrid shit and bunch of mistakes in this series but cannot afford the same lenience of "greyness" towards female characters
MY OWN PRIVATE IDAHO (1991) dir. Gus Van Sant
To keep being silly. – Guest Submission
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Ballad of a Soldier (Grigoriy Chukhray, 1959)
Cast: Vladimir Ivashov, Zhanna Prokhorenko, Antonina Maksimova, Nikolay Kryuchkov, Evgeniy Urbanskiy, Elza Lezhdey, Aleksandr Kuznetsov, Evgeniy Teterin. Screenplay: Grigoriy Chukhray, Valentin Ezhov. Cinematography: Vladimir Nikolayev, Era Savelyeva. Production design: Boris Nemechek. Film editing: Mariya Timofeyeva. Music: Mikhail Ziv.
Before the collapse of the Soviet Union there used to be jokes about how Russians claimed to have invented everything from the light bulb to baseball. During a thaw in the Cold War that led to an exchange of films between the Soviets and the Americans, American audiences learned that the Russians had at least improved on a familiar Hollywood genre: the glossy, sentimental wartime romance. Even Hollywood was impressed, giving director Grigoriy Chukhray and his co-screenwriter Valentin Ezhov an Oscar nomination for best original screenplay. Ballad of a Soldier was a substantial hit, thanks in large part to its appealing leads, Vladimir Ivashov and Zhanna Prokhorenko. Ivashov plays Alyosha, a private serving at the Front who single-handedly cripples two German tanks and is rewarded with a leave to return home and see his mother. But it’s not easy making it cross-country in Russia during wartime, and he is forced to bribe his way onto a freight car carrying bales of hay. At a stop, he is joined by another stowaway, a young girl named Shura (Prokhorenko). She initially takes fright at discovering she has a traveling companion, but they begin to fall in love, only to face an inevitable separation. The two young leads – they were both untried actors still in their teens when they were cast – are touchingly fresh and innocent, making the contrast with the harshness that surrounds them more poignant. It’s a road movie as well as a love story, with some fine character bits by people they meet along the way, especially Evgeniy Urbanskiy as a soldier embittered by the loss of a leg and fearful of how he will be received by his wife. Although the core of the film focuses on Alyosha and Shura, their story is framed by some spectacularly filmed battle scenes at the beginning and Alyosha’s painfully brief return home at the end, sequences that surround the love story with scenes of urgency. Chukray has a real gift for pacing and rhythm, aided by his editor, Mariya Timofeeva, though he sometimes allows his cinematographers, Vladimir Nikolayev and Era Savalyeva, to indulge in camera tricks: At one point when Alyosha is being pursued by a tank, the camera does a head-over-heels rollover shot that ends with Alyosha and the tank upside-down on the screen, a giddy, gratuitous bit of fancy photography. Ballad of a Soldier certainly didn’t break any new ground, but it managed to make its genre clichés feel fresh.
Kill Bill (2003)
“dany survived a childhood of loneliness and abuse, even at the hands of her brother. nobody ever protected her as a child and she fills that void inside her by protecting others. she becomes mhysa, mother to thousands: the breaker of chains.”
— daenerys iii, a storm of swords.
commission for lovely @mercyalayne ,
Inspired by Christian Birmingham’s artworks
the new 52 was bewildering but nothing will ever top that one fucking scene
Friedrich Von Amerling - Lost in Her Dreams, (1835)