#ofmd spoilers

LIVE
sator-the-wanderer:That Good Omens scene but it’s Bonnet and Blackbeard (and a very angy Lucius afte

sator-the-wanderer:

That Good Omens scene but it’s Bonnet and Blackbeard (and a very angy Lucius after being thrown in the ocean by Ed)


Post link

fuckyeahisawthat:

fuckyeahisawthat:

While we like to joke about Izzy being in the wrong genre, I would argue that there are in fact at least five distinct genre universes in the world of Our Flag Means Death, and all of them have different rules.

Stede Bonnet, and his crew when they’re around him, live in a Muppet movie. I didn’t come up with this analogy but it’s so accurate. Insane physical comedy and comedy-action where no one really gets hurt. Mild peril but you know everything is gonna work out. Terrible puns and sight gags, but room for sweet, genuine emotional moments too. The rules of time, space, probability and logic will bend for a good joke.

Izzy Hands is in a grimdark action/drama where if someone gets stabbed in the gut they will behave normally and fucking die. (Probably slowly and painfully, of sepsis.) Crucially I think Izzy also lives in a genre where you can only be subtextually queer, and violence (done for or with or to each other) is the only acceptable form of intimacy between men. This is why being forcibly dragged into Stede’s world, where everyone is busy having silly low-stakes misadventures and being gay and emotionally available all over the main text–and seeing his Subtextual Boyfriend go into this world and love it–sends him round the twist.

The British, Spanish and other imperialist militaries are in a Master and Commander-style naval adventure where they’re the heroes. This is why they all take it completely seriously when Stede (unintentionally) kills Badminton and takes hostages, even though we can see that he bumbled his way into it ass-backwards. This is also why Stede is so shocked to get actually for real stabbed aboard the Spanish ship. (“Did you mean to do that?”) He didn’t realize until that moment that he’d stepped into a different genre. The stabbing is one of the first Surprise Genre Switch moments we get and in retrospect it’s very important for setting up that in this world, the threat of getting hurt or killed is very real–which we need to understand to know that there are real stakes much later, when Stede almost gets executed by the British.

Keep reading

#you’ve forgotten jim’s genre which is a spaghetti western complete with being raised by nuns to kill

#Jim is also native to grimdark action/drama although a slightly more gonzo version than Izzy lives in#they’re definitely from a genre where Bad Shit Happens To People and specifically Bad Shit Happens To Women#and you have to be a specific kind of Action Girl to maybe be allowed to survive#and then Olu and to a lesser degree the rest of the crew kind of just… coaxes them into comedy#helps them settle into a genre where they can have personality traits other than Stabbing#(although the stabbing is still very welcome in pursuit of a joke)#a genre where they don’t have to be an action girl. they don’t even have to be a girl at all.

@theglasscat@bramblepatch excellent additions peer reviewed thank you

lamberts: Ed’s “I can’t believe I’m in love with this dork” faceslamberts: Ed’s “I can’t believe I’m in love with this dork” faceslamberts: Ed’s “I can’t believe I’m in love with this dork” faceslamberts: Ed’s “I can’t believe I’m in love with this dork” faceslamberts: Ed’s “I can’t believe I’m in love with this dork” faceslamberts: Ed’s “I can’t believe I’m in love with this dork” faceslamberts: Ed’s “I can’t believe I’m in love with this dork” faceslamberts: Ed’s “I can’t believe I’m in love with this dork” faceslamberts: Ed’s “I can’t believe I’m in love with this dork” faceslamberts: Ed’s “I can’t believe I’m in love with this dork” faces

lamberts:

Ed’s “I can’t believe I’m in love with this dork” faces


Post link
ocida: With a lot of the other stuff I’ve done, it’s just been a cameo or something short. You just ocida: With a lot of the other stuff I’ve done, it’s just been a cameo or something short. You just ocida: With a lot of the other stuff I’ve done, it’s just been a cameo or something short. You just ocida: With a lot of the other stuff I’ve done, it’s just been a cameo or something short. You just ocida: With a lot of the other stuff I’ve done, it’s just been a cameo or something short. You just ocida: With a lot of the other stuff I’ve done, it’s just been a cameo or something short. You just ocida: With a lot of the other stuff I’ve done, it’s just been a cameo or something short. You just ocida: With a lot of the other stuff I’ve done, it’s just been a cameo or something short. You just ocida: With a lot of the other stuff I’ve done, it’s just been a cameo or something short. You just ocida: With a lot of the other stuff I’ve done, it’s just been a cameo or something short. You just

ocida:

With a lot of the other stuff I’ve done, it’s just been a cameo or something short. You just walk [in and out] of one scene… Eking this out over the six episodes that I’m in, it was great to have the time to set up the relationship. We were building and building and building to that moment on the beach and yeah, it was really fun.

⤷ Taika Waititi for IndieWire


Post link
That Good Omens scene but it’s Bonnet and Blackbeard (and a very angy Lucius after being thrown in t

That Good Omens scene but it’s Bonnet and Blackbeard (and a very angy Lucius after being thrown in the ocean by Ed)


Post link
edwardbonnets: stede + his “oh so this is what falling in love is” eyes appreciation posted’s versioedwardbonnets: stede + his “oh so this is what falling in love is” eyes appreciation posted’s versioedwardbonnets: stede + his “oh so this is what falling in love is” eyes appreciation posted’s versioedwardbonnets: stede + his “oh so this is what falling in love is” eyes appreciation posted’s versioedwardbonnets: stede + his “oh so this is what falling in love is” eyes appreciation posted’s versioedwardbonnets: stede + his “oh so this is what falling in love is” eyes appreciation posted’s versioedwardbonnets: stede + his “oh so this is what falling in love is” eyes appreciation posted’s versioedwardbonnets: stede + his “oh so this is what falling in love is” eyes appreciation posted’s versio

edwardbonnets:

stede + his “oh so this is what falling in love is” eyes appreciation post

ed’s version


Post link
edwardbonnets: ed + his “oh my fucking god im gay” eyes appreciation poststede’s versionedwardbonnets: ed + his “oh my fucking god im gay” eyes appreciation poststede’s versionedwardbonnets: ed + his “oh my fucking god im gay” eyes appreciation poststede’s versionedwardbonnets: ed + his “oh my fucking god im gay” eyes appreciation poststede’s versionedwardbonnets: ed + his “oh my fucking god im gay” eyes appreciation poststede’s versionedwardbonnets: ed + his “oh my fucking god im gay” eyes appreciation poststede’s versionedwardbonnets: ed + his “oh my fucking god im gay” eyes appreciation poststede’s versionedwardbonnets: ed + his “oh my fucking god im gay” eyes appreciation poststede’s version

edwardbonnets:

ed + his “oh my fucking god im gay” eyes appreciation post

stede’s version


Post link

laniidae-passerine:

Our Flag Means Death Reductress headlines (1/?)

secondbeatsongs:

I hope this has been pointed out already, but I think it’s important for you to know that Doug from Our Flag Means Death is played by Tim Heidecker

who some of you might know better as…the Free Real Estate guy

image

but anyway, that’s not why I’m making this post.

this is why I’m making this post:

Doug, looking at the empty place in the family that Stede left behind:

image

you’re welcome

fuckyeahisawthat:

While we like to joke about Izzy being in the wrong genre, I would argue that there are in fact at least five distinct genre universes in the world of Our Flag Means Death, and all of them have different rules.

Stede Bonnet, and his crew when they’re around him, live in a Muppet movie. I didn’t come up with this analogy but it’s so accurate. Insane physical comedy and comedy-action where no one really gets hurt. Mild peril but you know everything is gonna work out. Terrible puns and sight gags, but room for sweet, genuine emotional moments too. The rules of time, space, probability and logic will bend for a good joke.

Izzy Hands is in a grimdark action/drama where if someone gets stabbed in the gut they will behave normally and fucking die. (Probably slowly and painfully, of sepsis.) Crucially I think Izzy also lives in a genre where you can only be subtextually queer, and violence (done for or with or to each other) is the only acceptable form of intimacy between men. This is why being forcibly dragged into Stede’s world, where everyone is busy having silly low-stakes misadventures and being gay and emotionally available all over the main text–and seeing his Subtextual Boyfriend go into this world and love it–sends him round the twist.

The British, Spanish and other imperialist militaries are in a Master and Commander-style naval adventure where they’re the heroes. This is why they all take it completely seriously when Stede (unintentionally) kills Badminton and takes hostages, even though we can see that he bumbled his way into it ass-backwards. This is also why Stede is so shocked to get actually for real stabbed aboard the Spanish ship. (“Did you mean to do that?”) He didn’t realize until that moment that he’d stepped into a different genre. The stabbing is one of the first Surprise Genre Switch moments we get and in retrospect it’s very important for setting up that in this world, the threat of getting hurt or killed is very real–which we need to understand to know that there are real stakes much later, when Stede almost gets executed by the British.

Keep reading

loading