• How I imagine it went down

    C.S. Lewis: I made you a character in my book!
    J.R.R. Tolkien: OMG me too!
    Lewis: You’re the man who created the wardrobe that leads to Narnia!
    Tolkien: …
    Lewis: Who am I?
    Tolkien: A tree
    Lewis: …………
    Tolkien: But, like, a cool tree

  • hatteress:

    sashayed:

    it-grrl:

    raccoonmama:

    mildlyamused:

    Thank you Disney. It took 70 years and a push from Pixar, but you FINALLY gave us a mother/daughter adventure.

    Bless you for not killing her/making her evil/pushing her off to the side.

    I just want to take a moment to have some serious gushing about the symbolism in this movie, because this gifset is actually really good for it. I was watching the commentary the other day after buying this  movie, and there’s a point where they mention how you can TELL Elinor used to be feisty and quite fiery in her youth, much like her very headstrong daughter, but everything about her now is that of a dignified lady who has had to rein herself in to be the diplomat for their kingdom.

    Early in the film, you see her walk in a very closed fashion. She holds herself tightly, does not gesture broadly, rarely speaks up. Even her weighted, heavy dress and the way she wears her hair show her as being restrained by the duties she has put upon herself.

    Then… the events of the movie occur, and in the end, you see her in a loose flowing dress that seems almost more like something Merida would wear. She’s excitable, going out and doing things with her daughter, and her long hair is no longer tied back, but instead neatly pinned and flowing. In essence, Elinor herself opened up. She let go and found herself becoming more accepting.

    Merida wasn’t the only person who learned a lesson about family and responsibility in this movie. Elinor learned that she had to let go now and then in order to relate to, and to understand, her daughter better. It wasn’t just Merida growing up, it was Elinor finding that middle ground and standing firmly on it, supporting her daughter’s beliefs when she realized that Merida wasn’t the only one who hadn’t listened.

    She hadn’t, either, and Merida was not the only one at fault. The result was not just a one sided lesson, but a beautiful, rounded story of a mother and a daughter finding out that their differences are what really make them so alike, and finding that place to stand together. Maybe they won’t always see eye to eye, but they’ve now learned that they must have open conversation and understanding to hold their family together, and both women grew up immensely in that moment of realization.

    In short: it’s not just my own Scottish heritage that makes me love this movie. It’s that this film is so indicative of the relationships so many young women feel themselves in with their mothers, and I personally am no exception. Elinor and Merida speak to women and daughters everywhere, young and old, and the lesson they learn is one we can all adhere to, no matter how hard it sometimes feels to accept that.

    I have something in my eye.

    Remember when I went to go see this movie with my mom and she had no idea what it was going to be about because she wanted to see “snow white and the huntsman” instead? And then ALL WE DID WAS HOLD HANDS AND CRY???

    It actually really, really frustrates me sometimes because every single one of my male friends wrinkle their nose when this movie comes up as one of my favourite Pixar films of all time. They’re all like, ‘the story though – the story wasn’t interesting’ and I just want to strangle them and go, ‘to you maybe, but that might be because for THE FUCKING FIRST TIME PIXAR ACTUALLY SPOKE DIRECTLY TO A FEMALE AUDIENCE AND THEY FUCKING NAILED IT SO HARD THE HOUSE FELL THE FUCK DOWN’.

  • Ralph is not a rule-follower like Lisa, nor a rule-breaker like Bart; Ralph does not observe the rules because he is almost completely unaware of them. More than any of the other students at Springfield Elementary, Ralph is a child. Bart and Lisa and Milhouse and Nelson and Janey are kids, and therein lies the difference.

    Ralph Wiggum’s Finest Moments

    “Child” versus “kid.”

    Wow. I’d never really thought about that distinction before, so, when I read this today, it hit me like a ton of bricks.

    My daughter is mostly still a child—not quite a kid—and a lot of stuff makes more sense if I keep that in mind.

    (via merlin)

  • You never need to apologize
    for how you chose to survive.

    Clementine von Radics (via hattiewatson)
  • moreleftthannot:

    I have yet to hear it explained more succinctly.

  • COOL NEW HACK TO GET MORE ICING FOR YOUR TOASTER STRUDEL

    toasterstrudel:

    1. Obtain a significant other from a country that doesn’t sell Toaster Strudel
    2. Marry them and start a family
    3. Offer to make your fam breakfast every morning
    4. Make them strudel with no icing
    5. They’ll have no idea Toaster Strudel even come with icing
    6. Take all six packets for yourself
    7. Avoid making eye contact with your reflection in the mirror for the rest of your life because you are a monster
  • sesamestreet:

    Coming soon to Sesame Street: Frank Underwolf. 

  • amamavas:

    Diagrama de flujo util: ¿Eres un zombi?