thefingerfuckingfemalefury:

zehumanparachute:

bamonbrigade1:

ruby-white-rabbit:

korrawarriorprincess:

vampireapologist:

vampireapologist:

vampireapologist:

book: “she has naturally red hair”

screen adaptation:

book: “she has naturally curly hair”

screen adaptation:

book: “red hair, freckles”

screen adaptation:

Book: “she was black”

Movie adaptation:

Book: She was asian

Movie:

reblogging for the last two

Book: he asked calmly.

Movie:

True Fact that wasn’t even scripted and Daniel Radcliffe felt Genuine Terror at this moment

gyhldeptis:

beachdeath:

theglowpt2:

straight men trying to make Serious war dramas and accidentally making incredibly tender homoerotic cinema is the funniest thing

In his essay, “Masculinity as Spectacle,” Steve Neale seeks to extend Laura Mulvey’s work on the male gaze and to challenge her assertion that the male or male-identified spectator can never look upon the male body as an erotic object. To challenge Mulvey’s assertion, Neale identifies the mechanisms mainstream Hollywood cinema uses to represent the male body as erotic. One way of doing this, Neale argues, is by making the male body the target of violence. In the war film, a soldier can hold his buddy – as long as his buddy is dying on the battlefield. In the western, Butch Cassidy can wash the Sundance Kid’s naked flesh – as long as it is wounded. In the boxing film, a trainer can rub the well-developed torso and sinewy back of his protege – as long as it is bruised. In the crime film, a mob lieutenant can embrace his boss like a lover – as long as he is riddled with bullets. Violence makes the homoeroticism of many “male” genres invisible; it is a structural mechanism of plausible deniability.

Kent Brintnall

…I finally get the whole “we hate each other until we have a fight and then we’re friends” trope. 

note-a-bear:

untilstarsfall:

destinyrush:

🗣🗣🗣

Stop whitewashing adaptations of media meant to feature people of color and our narratives. Just a thought.

Stop throwing remakes to whatever producer’s kid/nephew/cousin/barber gave you the best compliment and actually scout new talent.

Instead of threatening to sue fan filmmakers and student filmmakers, cultivate them to be future creators.

Invest in small films with solid effort put into them rather than relying on blockbusters to carry your company.

Not everything needs to be a franchise

Maybe not make the same mistake 40x a year