Riona (
rionaleonhart) wrote2018-12-16 08:46 am
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It's Beginning to Look a Lot Like a Non-Denominational Holiday.
It turns out that people really don't know how to react when they're offering their cat a treat, and you take the cat treat out of their hand and pop it into your mouth.
(She yelped and reflexively hit me, then said, 'Oh, I'm sorry I hit you! I didn't know what else to do!')
Talking about this with my housemates later:
Ginger: I want to know what was going through your head.
Riona: I was on the sofa with the cat next to me. RD had the packet of cat treats, and she took one out, and I was just lying there thinking, 'The cat treat is going to come into my range. I could eat the cat treat. There's nothing to prevent me from eating the cat treat.'
Rei: Oh, so it was premeditated. You schemed.
Riona: No! I wasn't actually planning to eat it; it was hypothetical! I wasn't expecting to do it! And then I did!
In other news, Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse is a genuinely excellent film. The visual style was extremely cool. Very comic-book inspired. I've never seen anything quite like it before.
Spoilers below the cut:
Miles Morales is endearing and feels very much like a teenager. The moment when he was struggling with his uncle and pulled off his own mask, exposing his identity and not knowing whether that would be enough to make his uncle spare him, absolutely shredded my heart.
This poor kid. He wasn't ready for any of this.
It didn't occur to me until after the film, but Gwen's backstory included 'I couldn't save my best friend Peter Parker'; it must have been very strange and painful for her to be working with an older alternate-universe version of her lost friend. The film never really addressed that. There might be scope for fanfiction there.
While I'm under the cut, I want to record my favourite joke in the entire film:
Security guard: I know you snuck out last night, Morales.
Miles, thinking: Play dumb!
Miles: Who's Morales?
I really enjoyed this film, and I recommend it if you have any fondness for Spider-Man or interest in animation at all. I'm generally tired of superhero films, but this felt like something fresh and fun.
(She yelped and reflexively hit me, then said, 'Oh, I'm sorry I hit you! I didn't know what else to do!')
Talking about this with my housemates later:
Ginger: I want to know what was going through your head.
Riona: I was on the sofa with the cat next to me. RD had the packet of cat treats, and she took one out, and I was just lying there thinking, 'The cat treat is going to come into my range. I could eat the cat treat. There's nothing to prevent me from eating the cat treat.'
Rei: Oh, so it was premeditated. You schemed.
Riona: No! I wasn't actually planning to eat it; it was hypothetical! I wasn't expecting to do it! And then I did!
In other news, Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse is a genuinely excellent film. The visual style was extremely cool. Very comic-book inspired. I've never seen anything quite like it before.
Spoilers below the cut:
Miles Morales is endearing and feels very much like a teenager. The moment when he was struggling with his uncle and pulled off his own mask, exposing his identity and not knowing whether that would be enough to make his uncle spare him, absolutely shredded my heart.
This poor kid. He wasn't ready for any of this.
It didn't occur to me until after the film, but Gwen's backstory included 'I couldn't save my best friend Peter Parker'; it must have been very strange and painful for her to be working with an older alternate-universe version of her lost friend. The film never really addressed that. There might be scope for fanfiction there.
While I'm under the cut, I want to record my favourite joke in the entire film:
Security guard: I know you snuck out last night, Morales.
Miles, thinking: Play dumb!
Miles: Who's Morales?
I really enjoyed this film, and I recommend it if you have any fondness for Spider-Man or interest in animation at all. I'm generally tired of superhero films, but this felt like something fresh and fun.
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I probably would have frozen up and let you eat the cat treat.
In other news, Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse is a genuinely excellent film.,
Oh good!
It didn't occur to me until after the film, but Gwen's backstory included 'I couldn't save my best friend Peter Parker'; it must have been very strange and painful for her to be working with an older alternate-universe version of her lost friend.
Spider-Gwen! I love her! She's the Spider-Gwen whose comics I've been reading! And yes, it was strange and painful! (I have read all of the Spider-Gwen comics, although I haven't seen this movie yet, which...probably a super-weird position to be in when it comes fanfic ideas. I might try to go see it today. But if you have any questions about Spider-Gwen, her backstory, or her universe, I've read just about all of her comics!)
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I'm not sure how I would have reacted, either. Probably just gave you some raised eyebrows and the offer of a glass of water.
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I was with friends when I got this comment notification, and I told them you'd said this, and they all just went 'yep'.
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I love that everyone present for this action on your part was startled by it. Except maybe the cat, I guess. Did the cat seem to take it in stride?
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Also, I noticed you liked a couple of my posts with, um, very specific tags on tumblr. Have you seen Edge of Tomorrow? Because I suspect it's ridiculously up your street. (It concerns a weak and cowardly character who gets stuck in a time loop, and grows some courage while dying a lot.
And also turns into the best sub. It's not canon, but it's canon.)no subject
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It was so painful! And then I had feelings about how hard his uncle tried to be there for him in the few remaining moments he had. Now I have to look for fanfic where Miles encounters an Uncle Aaron from elsewhere in the multiverse.
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Oh no, that would be heartbreaking! I was fascinated by the way Peter Parker and Gwen Stacy were working together when they'd loved and lost each other in their own universe; it must have been rough.