365filmsbyauroranocte:

Seven Samurai (Akira Kurosawa, 1954)

Delightful scene, funny, awkward, tender. Nature is a character, unspoiled by violence and fear. The corresponding scene in the 1960 Magnificent Seven replaced the androgynous flower picking with the young male apprentice playing bullfight with a gentle cow. The young woman’s sex was revealed better in the Kurosawa film. Otoh, the young woman in the American film has a few more lines, has a tiny bit of agency in the second gunfight, and has a significant, dignified moment at the end. Otoh again, women have a few more lines in Kurosawa’s film.

realisaonum:

“If you inherently long for something, become it first. If you want gardens, become the gardener. If you want love, embody love. If you want mental stimulation, change the conversation. If you want peace, exude calmness. If you want to fill your world with artists, begin to paint. If you want to be valued, respect your own time. If you want to live ecstatically, find the ecstasy within yourself. This is how to draw it in, day by day, inch by inch.”

Victoria Erickson  (via sonnywortzik)

withoutaconscienceorafilter:

batneko:

cinderella marries the prince

and it’s… fine. The prince is great! They’re in love, he’s very sweet and passionate, writing her poems and songs, giving her anything she wants. The time she spends with her husband is great.

but cinderella is not royalty, her family was noble but she never spent time in those circles. She’s used to being busy, she’s used to cooking and cleaning and mending. There are hours, days, where she has nothing to do.

time passes. cinderella learns the fancy lady type of needlework. Learns to ride horses. Reads a lot.

as is normal for royalty at the time, they travel and are hosted by nobles or stay at castles owned by the king. But even that variety begins to become routine. The prince is distracted, there’s a lot of young women living and working on their route. Daughters of nobles. Younger and prettier with soft hands that have never done a day’s work.

cinderella needs something to spend her time on, and there’s a part of her thinking a couple-only trip might get her husband’s attention again, so she suggests making an old castle that’s fallen into disrepair their “project.” It was built in the time when castles were made to be defensible, so it’s quite sturdy, but it’s overgrown and secluded. The prince doesn’t know why his family stopped living there either. A hundred years ago it was their summer home.

so they go. And they work. And for a while it’s great! But when they leave for winter cinderella’s husband forgets her once again. cinderella resolves to make the best of her life and stop worrying about a man who has gotten what he wanted from her.

summer comes again and this time cinderella goes alone to the old castle (minus staff, of course, but cinderella manages to narrow it down to only repair workers and one maid). She can cook and clean and mend again, but this time it’s her own choice. She is happy.

this summer they make more progress on repairs. The workers say that most of it can be salvaged, except one tower that’s been completely overgrown with vines and briars. It will have to come down, eventually, but for now it can be safely ignored.

cinderella has more free time now. The old castle has a surprisingly untouched library, though time and moisture have damaged many of the books. Behind a collection of greek poetry cinderella finds an old diary. Very old, in fact, at least a hundred years. It’s rude to read a diary, of course, but whoever wrote this is long dead, and cinderella is bored, so…

from the description of activities the author looks to have been nobility. Maybe even a princess. She’s sensitive and sweet and smarter than she seems to realize. If circumstances had been different cinderella wishes they could have been friends…

after the summer ends cinderella returns to her husband. He’s spending a lot of time with a young musician and cinderella can’t even work up the energy to care. She does some research about the castle and the family she’s married into, finds out the name of the princess who wrote the diary.

aurora. Cursed and forgotten. She died young, they say, in a plague that also took out the castle staff and her own parents. Luckily they avoided a succession crisis, but not so lucky for the dead.

time passes. cinderella goes to the old castle again and again, even out of season. Soon enough all that remains to be done is the old tower, and the builders say they should tear it down and fill the gaps before it gets cold.

one night cinderella is restless. The princess from the diary had been fond of that tower, and cinderella is far more attached to a dead woman than she ought to be. She gets out of bed, reads by candlelight, and finally goes to walk the empty halls.

she finds herself going to the tower. Pushing past the vines that don’t seem so troublesome really. They almost part before her. The stairs are perfectly intact, the door at the top is already cracked open. As if she should have done this years ago, cinderella steps into aurora’s bedroom.

she’s as beautiful as the stories say. And sitting under her hands, crossed across her stomach as it rises and falls, is a book of greek poetry.


years later, people will tell the story of cinderella as a cautionary one. Don’t seek above your station. Don’t marry for prestige. After all, a girl who grew up as a servant once married the crown prince, and disappeared after only three years. She ran away, they say, she couldn’t handle the lifestyle.

two old women who run a bookshop together agree with the lesson. Marrying for the wrong reasons never ends well. It’s best to wait for someone you have things in common with, shared interests.

or, failing that, the more linguistic of the two says, wait a decade or ten for someone to fall in love with you from your diary.

her partner laughs and hits her with the socks she is mending.

husbandpirates:

So I just watched About Time and now I’m thinking about a Silverflint fic where Silver can travel through time into his own past. And it’s trial and error, changing his life as best he can. So when the ship he’s in is invaded by pirates, he says he’s a carpenter and it doesn’t work and they’re going to kill him. So he travels back in time and he says he’s a cook it works.

And when he’s being chased in the doldrums, his first route delivers to Vane, but he manages to travel before Vane kills him. And his second route delivers him to Flint but he still has the page so Flint is going to kill him. So he travels again and this time when Flint captures him he has the page in his head.

And when they want the names he can’t travel in time, so he’s tortured and loses his leg. By the time he’s familiar enough with the pain in his leg, he knows what is like to have Flint’s gaze on him, his respect. He knows what it’s like to see him without the mask and he can’t lose that. So he decides not to travel back and risk keeping his leg but losing Flint’s intimacy.

And then he meets Madi. And Madi loves him and he loves her. And he loves Flint too but he knows Flint doesn’t love him back in that way. But he has his friendship and that’s enough. That’s enough.

So by the time the war develops and he starts seeing that nothing has changed since his childhood. That everything is horror after horror and the war will mean losing Flint and Madi. And then, the cache is hidden in a forest and Madi is finally safe but he knows it won’t last. And Flint ask him what’s he’s doing and their hearts are breaking. Silver realizes that Flint loves him but war is twisted and anger darkens the heart.

“I didn’t want this,” Silver says and he kisses Flint for the first and last time and he’s glad he already kissed Madi.

So he travels back in time, further further than ever, eleven years into the past. And he’s planning an assassination. Alfred Hamilton dies killed by a young thief that was never caught. Thomas Hamilton manages to obtain pardons and Lieutenant McGraw delivers them.

Silver doesn’t travel back to the present then. He travels only a year at the time, and makes sure to keep tabs on Captain McGraw who oversees the Navy for Governor Hamilton. And when Richard Guthrie leaves Nassau, Eleanor emancipates Mr. Scott and his wife and the girl she grew up with as a sister. And they know nothing of Long John Silver for is a story that was never told. And Silver is sad but he’s glad. They’re happy and alive and that’s enough. That’s enough.

Piracy was never erradicated completely, so when Silver’s almost back in the present the merchant ship he’s in is invaded by pirates. This time, when they find him, he says he’s a carpenter.

This time he doesn’t travel back in time to fix it.

Good grief (literally). So beautifully plotted. So heartbreaking. The last line. Thank you for thinking of this.