May. 21st, 2024

anghraine: adora as she-ra looking over her shoulder with her brows lowered (adora (make it quick))
Just finished Mer-Mysteries!

It was, by and large, a fun and tense episode in a lot of ways.

The Adora-Glimmer tension over Shadow Weaver is interesting … on the one hand, I really like the Glimmer-Shadow Weaver dynamic, and on the other, I think Adora’s reservations are extremely well grounded in who Shadow Weaver is as a person and in her personal experiences of her.

I mean, Adora conceded that Shadow Weaver did “mom stuff” way back in the not!ghost episode, and Shadow Weaver’s manipulation and general approach to Catra and Adora from early childhood was obviously abusive (in different ways, but abusive). And nobody around Adora really seems to care about this? They care about her, sure, but not about her having her abuser living under the same roof with increasing freedom of movement and influence. She has every reason to be upset tbh.

Tagged: #i'm really entertained by sw honestly but i love adora and want her to have all the hugs #this is the opposite of hugs!
anghraine: catra and adora hugging after catra's rescue in "save the cat" (catradora (embrace))
I do like Glimmer, but … uh, I thought making Adora cry would be her low point, and whoa, was I wrong.
anghraine: adora touching catra's cheek in "save the cat" (catradora (face touching))
I just finished “Corridors” (5x03), and Catra’s arc has been so satisfying.

Tagged: #all the more because she did genuinely terrible things #onscreen!
anghraine: catra and adora hugging after catra's rescue in "save the cat" (catradora (embrace))
[personal profile] thatvolyova responded to this post:

OH YES YOU'RE ON SHE-RA

I replied:

Yes! Loved her as a kid and I'm loving the new show :)

turtletotem said:

"Corridors" made me BAWL with Catra feelings, I watched it twice back to back
anghraine: adora as she-ra holding an unconscious catra in her arms (catradora (save the cat))
Just watched “Save the Cat” and ahhhhhhhhhhh

No commentary, just feelings!!

Tagged: #THE HUG AT THE END AJKDF;JAFAJKDJHADFJ #also i continue to adore the perfection that is entrapta
anghraine: a close-up of a man with black eyebrows and grey eyes (dúnadan)
My icon has grey eyes and black hair just for Tolkien :P

So. I generally dislike Tolkien fandom's "canonicity discourse" (yes, I'm doing it anyway) and the idea of imposing a specific ranking of texts. That said, it's occurred to me that one of the reasons I feel deeply out of step with Tolkien fandom is that The Silmarillion (as in, the published book, not the in-story accounts) is on a drastically different level of canonicity for me than basically everything else with JRR Tolkien's name on it.

I don't dislike The Silmarillion or anything. I quite enjoy it! But for me, it shows its age—not in ~a man of his time~ sense, but in an editorial sense. Christopher Tolkien did an enormous amount of spectacular editorial work over the course of his life and we are deeply indebted to him. But I think he did pretty clearly get better at it over time, and particularly at presenting his father's mass of notes and documents and so on in a way that makes the texts as accessible as possible. At the same time, in later texts, he clearly differentiates between actual words JRRT wrote (whether in the main body or in notes) and his (CT's) own understanding and explanations as JRRT's confidant and literary heir. I do give a lot of credence to Christopher Tolkien's understanding of his father's work, actually, and I deeply respect (and am grateful for) CT's efforts to carefully and clearly explain things like dates of composition (and how this can be determined), direct context, how a given point relates to his father's broader work, etc, throughout these texts.

(Tangent: Facebook keeps recommending defensive Jackson stans griping about how Christopher Tolkien just didn't get his father's work like Jackson did and was so horribly ungrateful to the filmmakers and such an inferior scholar blahblah for the crime of disliking the films. FLAMES ON THE SIDE OF MY FACE!! I am not uncritical of Christopher Tolkien, and neither was Christopher Tolkien, but I think we owe an immeasurable debt of gratitude to him. Also, even to me, his response to the films seemed harsh at the time, but at this point, I think he was pretty much right, anyway, and correctly judged the films' impact and reflection of pop culture understanding of JRRT's work.)

So what is my issue with the published Silmarillion?

Read more... )

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anghraine: vader extending his lightsaber; text: and now for the airing of grievances! (Default)
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