Like, yeah, the guy did a stupid thing, but more out of desperation and him not realizing what he got himself and others into rather than entitlement or outright malice.
Obsession discourse is funny because its biggest boosters and its biggest haters here on Twitter mostly seem to agree that its message is "shy, awkward men still aren't hated enough." (I no idea if this is actually something the movie is trying to say or not, not having seen it.)
Every other criticism of Bear I've seen was that he was a "coward", "selfish" and whatnot. Hell, even his cat's death is attributed to his supposed negligence rather than it being an accident.
True, but I'd still like to see a werewolf that isn't just a furry or a "man-wolf", but actually seem like an organic, hybrid like take.
Like a werewolf that is primarily based on baboons since baboon skeletons look unnervingly primate and lupine at the same time.
I’m 35 (almost 36) and I love anime and idol games yes there are older fans on twitter. You don’t magically stop liking things when you hit a certain age
At this point in the story, Luke was the #1 Jedi Knight - the paragon of justice in the Galaxy. If there was even a slightest chance of a second Darth Vader emerging, even if the person was his own nephew, of course he would try to stop it from happening.
This is why Last Jedi discourse gets me heated: Defenders of the movie almost universally think sneaking into a boy's room at night, drawing a deadly weapon, and traumatizing him into the arms of the Dark Side is a charming quirk that makes Luke more relatable and sympathetic.
Clash of the titans.
Fighting animals, dramatic sky, lightning bolt… yes, I really am leaning into all those palaeoart cliches -because sometimes it’s fun to do the obvious!
Concept art for the book “When Archie Walked”, due for publication next year.