Get your first look at exclusive images from Thor: Ragnarok!
Why didn’t anyone tell me that Thor: Ragnarok was set in 1992?
Turquoise and magenta armor! Jeff Goldblum (in louche mode)! Badass women in black leather and dramatic eye makeup! Homage to the Star Wars Cantina via Total Recall!
Not just any 1992 – that last picture is some straight-up Australian children’s television from 1992, like Finder’s Keepers or Ocean Girl or something.
This blew my mind. Then I realised Waititi likely grew up watching all these Australian kids’ shows on NZ tv as he’s about the right age and my mind blew again.
hello yes, i’m experiencing Pure Joy.
I had never considered Thor crossed with Ocean Girl and now my life will never be the same.
Tag: spoilers
@lemonsharks I found us a thing omg
After this and Ghostbusters, I want more Chris Hemsworth comedies STAT.
A friendly reminder for CA3: Civil War
Gen. Thaddeus ‘Thunderbolt’ Ross: You did the right thing, calling us. Leonard, I need to know where they’re going. She’ll be in incredible danger as long as she’s with him.
Leonard: From who? He protected her. You almost killed her.
Ross: I give you my word, her safety is my main concern at this point.
Leonard: You know, it’s a point of professional pride for me that I can tell when somebody’s lying. And you are.
[beat]
Leonard: I don’t know where he’s going. I know she’ll help him if she can.
Ross: Then she’s aiding a fugitive. And I can’t help either one of them.
Leonard: I used to wonder why she never talked about you. Now I know.
Ross: [to himself] Where does she meet these guys?
– The Incredible Hulk
No matter what he says, no matter how factually accurate he is, no matter how reasonable his arguments, and no matter what anyone else’s motivations may be, General Thaddeus ‘Thunderbolt’ Ross is never to be trusted.
(also, Betty has fantastic taste in men)
F is for Funeral
Acorn-related symbolism realisation omfg
okay, bear in mind that I still haven’t seen the extended Life-Ruiner. But I hear that Bilbs plants the acorn in Dale. And I wondered – whu, but why?
I know that for a lot of people, the acorn symbolises love (and my bagginshield-shipping heart rejoices) and I totally think that’s awesome too and this isn’t meant to stomp on that interpretation. It’s just that I had to think again what it was that Bilbo says when he first reveals the acorn:
One day it’ll grow. And every time I look at it, I’ll remember. Remember everything that happened: the good, the bad… and how lucky I am that I made it home.
This hit me like a freight train…
Guys.
GUYS.
The acorn is memory. He’s planting it where he doesn’t have to see it every day. He’s not planting it at home, at Bag End. He’s planting it far, far away from the Shire. He can’t look at it without a ridic long journey.
Bilbo is purposefully trying to forget*. He doesn’t want to think of ‘the good, the bad, and how “”lucky”” [he] is that [he] made it home.’ He doesn’t want to remember.
THIS IS THE BAGGINSHIELD EQUIVALENT OF ‘IF THIS IS LOVE I DO NOT WANT IT, TAKE IT AWAY, PLEASE’
EDIT: okay, I am informed that they still don’t show where Bilbs plants the acorn, though I just checked and there was apparently a scene shot of him planting it in Dale (from the Hobbit Companion Book)
…
*Bilbo’s later memory-problems now 905725% more tragic, thanks so much BOTFA
Out of curiosity, do you have any head canons for Legolas’s mom? Will there ever be a scene with her? Maybe across the sea? On some white shores?

*irritably blocks YET ANOTHER untagged spoiler for AoU*
Only sleeping.
I wish.I’m torn apart. I need to be held.
Edit: Please click image for better view ;3;
AUGH OMG KAZI AUGH
thank you and ohhhhhhh bomburrrrrr ;o;
Chapter 35: where three awesome dads die and nobody is okay.
… i detect no lies.














