Me after learning some students have to read and study “The Sign of Four” (my favourite Sherlock Holmes story) by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (my favourite author) for their English class in school
I am distraught, I am in ruins, I am a shell of a man.
Not gonna lie, Crowley taking his anger out on his plants instead of Aziraphale is high-key very wholesome and cute.
Oh, honey, you’ve seen nothing…
…yet
i finished season 1. i feel a lot about this. first of all THEY WENT ON A FUCKING DATE WHAT THE FUCK I CAN'T OH MY GOD
Or should I?..
😉
i finished season 1. i feel a lot about this. first of all THEY WENT ON A FUCKING DATE WHAT THE FUCK I CAN'T OH MY GOD
As a fan of fictional characters whom I fancy,
I shall be gifting this quote to…
…Mr Darcy (Pride and Prejudice)
You can also gift this quote to your fictional crush!
Felt like writing. Actually writing it felt like the only fitting poetic fix.
Currently studying this in Year 11 for my English Literature GCSE exam.
got thoughtful about opinions on bad books so here’s an inverse: what’s a book you had to read for school that you actually enjoyed/have grown to like? mine is Lord of the Flies
Our favourite Ineffable Couple (Aziraphale & Crowley) never said “I love you” to each other. Instead, they showed their love for each other.
Actions speak louder than words.
Their love really is Ineffable “It is beyond understanding and incapable of being put into words.”
I LOVED the movie.
I love how different and real this felt compared to most hero movies. There was no scene where Sir Nicholas Winton delivered an emotional heroic speech to a crowd to get help and donations (given the time period and place they were in, that would’ve been incredibly unrealistic as freedom of speech was limited). “Show, not tell” was achieved beautifully in this film. Instead of everything working out in a night, they showed Nicky, Doreen and Trevor working long hours, racing time day and night.
Instead of Sir Winton saying he loved and cared about kids, they showed it by him photographing kids and doing everything within his power to find foster homes for them. I also loved the scene where he gives kids small pieces of chocolate and how happy the kids look during that scene. It also makes the viewers realise how small things most take for granted, such as chocolate, can be a privilege to some and how fortunate we are to have it.
I also loved how they showed Sir Winton grieving the loss of the children they couldn’t save. The producers didn’t change it to a perfect happy ending where everyone lives. Instead, they mentioned what happened to those who weren’t as fortunate, but the 669 lives they rescued are worth celebrating.
I also appreciate at the end of the movie, they told us what happened to Nicky’s friends. They weren’t just forgotten; instead, they were mentioned without too much screen time, as this movie is about Sir Nicholas Winton and the children he saved.
Destiel Putin Covid, you were named after the most memorable events that happened in 2020.