@caseylwilliams Its so subtle, the first two times I watched it, I couldn't place why that particular moment with Penny was so powerful, but its due to the framing, look on Ruby's face, and that haunting choral echoing in the background, stupendous job!
@kerryshawcross It was a tragic set of events, but so well portrayed. All of the losses and grief of everything since Vol. 3 was thrown back at Ruby with disastrous results for all involved.
@SteveLucky15 IF it was true (which it is not!), then yes. It would still be bad because it shows a prejudice with no room to grow and that is a tragedy. If one harbors hate in their heart because of other people's individual choices which aren't hurting people, then they are a sad person.
@ecmyers Personally, I'm hoping to see you write "The Girl Who Fell through the World" at some point in the future. You did such a fantastic job on showing CVFY's journeys in Vacuo and added another level to Neo and Roman (before I didn't care much about them). I'd love to see your take!
@jindianjun000 This is heartbreaking, especially the symbolism of Pyrrha and Penny's weapons stabbing into Ruby's back, the burden she bears, and the tea dripping from her fingers as spilling like blood, and the second shot with the Curious Cat's eyes adds a deeper horror to it all.
@SteveLucky15 that Yang and Blake were in a relationship, but that it made Ruby feel like Yang wasn't looking at her, when she needed her most. At the end of V6 she was fine with their budding love, here she feels it is stopping her sister from helping her from falling, losing her pillar.
@avidcableeater Spectacular way to show all the pressure that was pushing on Ruby. (clockwise...)
Pyrrha (hand curling in pain), Weiss, Blake, Summer (grasping her shoulder in a forceful manner), Salem, Oz (with his hand inviting, rather than seeking to grab), and Yang (reaching desperately).