the hangover: part iv
One thing I really enjoy about Sephiroth fans is how everyone consistently references the fact that Sephiroth "dies" in Nibelheim, but it's always spoken wistfully. Like a young man who dies far before his time.
And yeah, stating the obvious that on a physical level, he's dead. But that's not really what we're talking about. Talking to other Sephiroth fans, they view this not so much as a physical death as it is the death of...well...Sephiroth the man. Sephiroth the human. The reality is that with the exception of Genesis, ALL the Firsts die young, Sephiroth included. They are destroyed by the very vulnerabilities that ruled their souls in life.
For Angeal, it was his pride as a soldier, his responsibility as a provider, both as a son and as a friend.
For Zack, it was his blind loyalty and devotion to others, to the point where he was willing to sacrifice his own life in the name of love for his friend.
For Sephiroth, it's the death of the human soul itself, the critical coming of age into adulthood. He loses his life in that he regresses. He returns to metaphorical infancy and returns to Jenova. He is no longer the same man we knew before, no longer the same person who loved his friends, cared for his men, and sought to protect others through compassion. He's a hollow shell. Sephiroth doesn't just die physically. He is severed, both body AND soul. He is damned. He is fundamentally transformed beyond recognition. He has become the very thing he never wanted to be--a monster.
Idk I still don't think a Sephiroth redemption arc is ever happening. Simply because Sephiroth's story as a character is kind of already over after Nibelheim. He's already gone through his character climax and is changed by the time he reaches his resolution. I don't think there's any fixing that. It's no longer the same person anymore.
Sephiroth is dead.
And Sephiroth is dead.
How do they keep making later and later stages of late-capitalism
this was sooo sexy. to me.
Beginning & End, X-Men: First Class
just a thought, magneto would’ve been much more successful as a villain if he wasn’t gay and in love with the enemy
Riding Habit
c.1770-1780
England
Royal Ontario Museum (Object number: 2013.17.3.1)
lestat & magnus / ellen & orlok
i was able to get the last two images from this gifset by @hermit-frog. godbless you op i could not find those anywhere
“My child is completely fine” your child wants to get their back blown by a 60+ year old man with a former addiction problem
the wicked movie teaches important moral lessons like "be bisexual in college" and "don't trust politicians" and "if you push someone who's in a wheelchair without their permission, someone might throw a bench at your head with their mind"
not on here much but if interested you can find me on Twitter as @botticelli4ngel :)
152 posts