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Every Villain Is A Hero In Her Own Mind

@esmiralda15 / esmiralda15.tumblr.com

MBTI: INTJ/INFJ. She/her, bisexual. Mostly miscellaneous reblogs. Ask box is open for any questions.
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my blog’s theme is me. a compilation of every single thing i love. every interest. every musing. and everything in between.

Cursed non-criticisms of Disney that need to be dead and buried by 2031, AT LEAST"

“Belle from BEAUTY AND THE BEAST has stockholme syndrome!”

“Disney’s HERCULES is nothing like the mythology!!!”

ALADDIN is all about how lying is okay!”

BAMBI is about a dysfunctional household cuz his dad’s never home!”

“The toys in TOYS STORY are slaves!”

“The Beast from BEAUTY AND THE BEAST changes back into a human in the end. So much for ‘beauty on the inside’!”

THE LION KING ripped off KIMBA THE WHITE LION. They even traced parts of it!”

“Walt Disney was a literal Nazi and admired Hitler.”

“Simba and Nala are probably related.”

“Shang can’t actually love Mulan cuz she’s really a woman and he’s gay.”

“Despite what the film tells you, Elsa actually caused all the real problems in FROZEN.”

HUNCHBACK OF NOTRE DAME had a super dark ending in the book.”

“Can you believe Quasimodo was friendzoned like that at the end of HUNCHBACK?”

“Anita and Roger would never be able to pay to keep that many dogs in 101 DALMATIANS.”

“Did you know that clownfish change their gender to breed with the less dominant males? Guess we know why Marlin wanted Nemo back so much xD xD xD!”

For more facts and logic check out

“15 murderous, genocidal Disney villains who were right the whole time!"

its the no notes ghoast

tumblr’s code may change but no notes ghost stays the same

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Oh thank god

imagine the shit storm when tumblr finally becomes so dysfunctional that this post’s total notes is finally revealed

In case anyone’s curious about what happened to this post, it has to do with how we tally up notes. Likes and reblogs always add to the note count of the root post (the OP). However, the note count relies on the previous value of the root post before adding more notes to it.

Normally when you delete a post, it’s gone, but not gone gone. Just deleted from public never to be seen again. The database entry is still there, just inaccessible.

This post, however, the root post is just gone. Gone gone. Gone forever. Everything attached to it is still there, but since the root post is hard deleted (something that requires manual manipulation of the database), when the note counter tries to add notes to it, it gets nil to start with.

So it throws every new note into the void. Goodbye forever, notes.

I’m not sure if we’ll ever know the real number of notes on this post.

HEAVEN’S LIGHT AND HELLFIRE - From The Art of The Hunchback of Notre Dame

The powerful dynamic of light and shadow find expression in several musical sequences. The most dramatic of these is designed around Quasimodo’s song, “Heaven’s Light,” and its dramatic counterpoint, “Hellfire,” sung by Frollo. The scoring for the number not only incorporates original instruments of the Middles Ages but also makes reference to the Latin Mass, chant, and Ecclesiastical themes. The sequence begins with Quasimodo entertaining sweet hopes that Esmeralda might, against all odds, harbor tender feelings for him. It addresses the pain and frustration that Quasimodo expresses in the novel, on glimpsing the terrible contrast between himself and Esmeralda. In the book, he says:

When I compare myself to you, I can’t help feeling sorry for myself, miserable monster that I am. I must seem like some kind of beast to you. As for you, you’re a sunbeam, a dewdrop, the song of a bird! But I’m something hideous, neither a man nor an animal, something harder, more unshapely, more trampled on than stone.

In the movie, he sings:

But suddenly an angel has smiled at me And kissed my cheek without a trace of fright I dare to dream that she Might even care for me And as I ring these bells tonight My cold dark tower seems so bright I swear it must be heaven’s light …

The camera swoops down through the cathedral where evening Mass is being celebrated, then, moving across the square, finds Frollo in a cold, sterile chamber in the Palace of Justice. Unable any longer to contain his turbulent passions for Esmeralda, he stands before a fireplace. In a hallucinatory chapter of of the novel titled, “Fever,” Frollo laughs

… hideously, then turned pale again as he considered the most sinister side of his fateful passion, of that corrosive, venomous, hateful and implacable love which had led to the gallows for one person and to hell for the other; she was condemned to death, he was damned.

In a wildly imaginative, unsettling sequence of the film, Frollo sings:

Beata Maria You know I’m so much purer than The common, vulgar, weak, licentious crowd Then tell me, Maria Why I see her dancing there Why her smold'ring eyes still scorch my soul … Like fire, Hellfire … This fire in my skin This burning desire Is turning me to sin

According to art director David Goetz, the moviemakers determined that “Hellfire” would be the one place where they would “very consciously retain the sexual tension around which the book seems to revolve.” As Frollo stands before a hearth, singing his confession of wild, obsessive thoughts for Esmeralda, whose scarf he caresses, the imagery becomes progressively more nightmarish, distorted, surreal. In the fireplace, Frollo sees visions of a lascivious, dancing Esmeralda. From beneath his feet spring rows of faceless, menacing, hooded, monk-like figures who unnerve Frollo, much as the hold statuary of Notre Dame had earlier. By the end of a sequence that marks the further disintegration of Frollo, he decides that Esmeralda will either succumb to him or burn at the stake.

Special effects supervisor Chris Jenkins says that suggesting the dancing Esmeralda in spectral form within the flames of a fire is “the essence of animation - moving shapes and flickers of light to so engage the audience that you suggest in their minds many things at once: a literal fire, a dance, a character, a feeling of sensuality.” According to Goetz, “In a sense, the third act of our movie is all about Frollo torching the city and countryside because he can’t face his feelings for Esmeralda.” Supervising animator Kathy Zielinski views the character as “someone who believes what he is doing is right when what he’s doing is evil.” Stephen Schwartz found the key to writing the “Hellfire” lyrics in Hugo’s prose and in his observation of contemporary society. The lyricist asserts that Frollo “projects his guilt onto others anytime he does something vile; to him, it’s Esmeralda who is making him feel the madness that consumes him.”

DISNEY MEME > [1/6] Villains  
↳ Judge Claude Frollo (The Hunchback of Notre Dame)
“Protect me, Maria. Don’t let the siren cast her spell. Don’t let her fire sear my flesh and bone. Destroy Esmeralda and let her taste the fires of hell, or else let her be mine and mine alone.”

Evil biology facts that fill me with Fear :)

hey, I heard y’all like evil biology facts like knowledge about horse blood types.

well! today I was researching alternative biochemistries extraterrestrial life could use and. man. I think Earth life is fucked up enough for me thanks

  • biological dark matter. WHAT DO YOU MEAN MY BLOOD HAS DNA IN IT FROM NO KNOWN SOURCE. YOU CAN’T JUST SAY THAT COME BACK HERE
  • One specific cave that has been sealed for 5.5 million years and has developed an ecosystem completely dependent on chemosynthetic bacteria.
  • Was anybody going to tell me that bacteria have decided iron is yummy and are eating the Titanic, or was I supposed to just read that myself
  • Terrible Berry (yes, that’s what the genus name means). This whole thing is so fucked up. These scientists were testing whether radiation could be used to kill pathogens in food, so they dosed a tin of meat with enough radiation to kill any known living organism (as one does) but guess what, it still fucking spoiled because of THIS BASTARD FUCKER.
  • (seriously, why is it like this? WHY has a bacterium evolved to chill in radioactive waste like it’s a soothing Jacuzzi tub? What does it know that we don’t know?)
  • (ANSWERS. I WANT ANSWERS, YOU CHERNOBYL ASS BITCH.)
  • Cursed worm, which has no mouth or digestive system and depends entirely on five (5) different species of bacteria, which consume hydrogen sulfide, hydrogen monoxide, and carbon monoxide, for food. How do you, a worm, even...figure out how to do...all that?
  • Bone worms. At least they like their bones already dead. I still could have gone without knowing this was a thing.
  • “Oh, parasitic plant, that sounds c—WHAT THE FUCK IS THAT THING”
  • I am like half convinced this is made up. Seriously, bacteria grow their own electrical wires and we just let them?

To clarify

Evil (affectionate and admiring)

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They took the unkillable bacterium and put a Disney song inside of it.

“In 2003, U.S. scientists demonstrated D. radiodurans could be used as a means of information storage that might survive a nuclear catastrophe. They translated the song "It's a Small World" into a series of DNA segments 150 base pairs long, inserted these into the bacteria, and were able to retrieve them without errors 100 bacterial generations later.”

*opens worldbuilding notebook* *takes further notes*

Scientists sure are scientists, huh.

This is why I’m still in my Hell major.

Screenwriter Tab Murphy Talks “Hunchback,” “Atlantis” and “Brother Bear” During Walt Disney Family Museum Happily Ever After Hours

by Tony Betti | Source (x)

Over the weekend I had the fortunate opportunity to attend the Walt Disney Family Museum’s Happily Ever After Hours Virtual Program featuring screenwriter Tab Murphy.

Tab Murphy has a wide embodiment of work for the screen, but this program primarily focused on his work for what is now known as Walt Disney Animation Studios. He contributed to The Hunchback of Notre Dame, Tarzan, Atlantis: The Lost Empire, and Brother Bear.

Right off the bat, Tab said that his first foray into animation was a bit jarring. He wrote the script, and then partnered with Alan Menken and Stephen Schwartz who, as he put it, had the script posted on walls all around a room and would then go up to certain sections and draw big Xs through the words and say “this is where we think a song should be.” As they worked together though, Tab said he realized how right they were to do that, and the end result is simply amazing.

Anybody familiar with the original story of The Hunchback of Notre Dame may recall that there are a ton of characters present in the original novel aside from the namesake Hunchback, Quasimodo. He said that was where one of the hardest parts of writing the movie adaptation lied, especially for a Disney animated film, noting that there was a certain “checklist” of sorts for a Disney film that the characters had to hit. So they developed the film around the characters that would best fill the roles of the principal lead (Quasimodo), the Hero (Phoebus), and the Princess (Esmeralda), along with the obvious villain, Claude Frollo. He said that the story was exceptionally dark for a Disney film, but he found the heart in it when you would take away everyone else leaving Quasimodo to do his own thing with the birds or the gargoyles, and the world got bright and colorful. This sentiment is actually echoed in the production design of the film, whenever Frollo is present, the colors are grays and dark shadows, and muted and boring hues, but whenever Quasi is involved in his own thing there are far more colors and brightness.

He also elaborated on his love for writing the character of Esmeralda, saying he felt that she was Disney’s original activist, and she was most definitely not a damsel in distress, standing up for the issues, with Tab citing the line (though he flubbed it a little) “You mistreat this poor boy the same way you mistreat my people. You speak of justice, yet you are cruel to those most in need of your help!”

When asked about the development of Quasimodo, Tab pointed out that more classic adaptations of the story, such as an earlier incarnation from Universal in their horror movie craze, took the character and turned him into a literal monster, some sort of terrifying creature. “This is a human being,” Tab said, adding that his version would not scare you but draw out empathy. But he still had to be realistic. He couldn’t be the hero either, that wouldn’t be true to the source material, but he echoed thoughts and ideas shared by animator James Baxter in a recent program from the museum, that he needed to be gentle and warm to reinforce that this was a human and not a monster.

Interestingly, Tab said that he had not watched the film in its entirety since the world premiere back in 1996 up until about two weeks before the program, forgetting how beautiful the final product turned out. He said he cried his eyes out and believes that story holds up because of that emotion, something that everyone can relate to at some point in their lives, that they’re different and feeling alienated and an outsider who overcomes that. “Everyone who worked on that movie, everyone was on their A-game.”

After Hunchback, Tab was assigned to tackle Tarzan, though he openly admitted he wasn’t as involved in that one as much as people think he was. Shortly after he began, Gary Trousdale and Kirk Wise (directors of Hunchback) asked him to join their team for a radical new movie that would buck the trends of Disney Animation, Atlantis: The Lost Empire. According to Tab, the pair pitched him the idea while comparing it to Disneyland, saying “You know how you go in to [the park] and go right into Fantasyland, through the castle, see the princesses and fairy tales. Well, we’re going to take a hard left straight to Adventureland.”

Tab was excited, this was going to be something so out of the ordinary and he would be a part of it. He noted that he was especially excited because of the subpods that would shoot out of the Ulysses. At another point in the session, Tab mentioned that he was never worried about budget when writing for Disney animation, noting that the animators were so good they would figure out how to get what he wrote onto the screen successfully, with the Subpods off the main submarine as they battled the Leviathan an excellent example of that. He also elaborated on what he referred to as “movie moments,” those special quotes that you know, when writing them, people will always remember and associate with the movie, with Atlantis having one of his favorites, when Helga is firing the flare gun at Roarke’s balloon and uses his own words, “Nothing personal.”

As many know, the film was not an immediate box office success. It didn’t do poorly, it just didn’t reach the numbers that Disney likes to see. Because of that, Tab thought he had written Disney’s first flop. The film came out in 2001, and he said it wasn’t until last year when he was stuck at home that someone had exposed him to the following that Atlantis: The Lost Empire has acquired over the years. He even started getting letters and messages from fans, some saying that the film had inspired them to be linguists or archeologists as those who were younger when they saw it are now adults exploring their career path.

Tab has an almost Jeff Bridges-like quality to him, almost channeling the Dude from The Big Lebowski, and elaborated on the sentiment of career paths, commenting that when he was in school, he was studying forestry and biology. In one of his best pieces of wisdom from the session, he said that “Part of knowing what you want is knowing what’s not meant for you.” It was his love of movies that continued to grow prompting him to get into the industry as a screenwriter. However, that background in forestry and wildlife would come in handy on his next assignment, Brother Bear.

Tab said goodbye to the kids, and jetted off to Florida for a short-term residence at the Yacht Club resort where he would go to the Animation studio that was part of the Disney-MGM Studios (now Disney’s Hollywood Studios) where Brother Bear was in production. Most of the original story, he said, was created from campfire stories that he and director Aaron Blaise would share. Together they wrote the original story which was mostly similar and had Kenai being transformed and subsequently mentored by an older bear named Grizz, voiced by Michael Clarke Duncan. He packed up and left and only after that did they change one prominent piece of the writing. Grizz would now be dropped for a younger bear, Koda, and that one “movie moment” as Tab says, where Kenai has to say the “he did something bad.”

Tab said the story of what happened on Brother Bear is truly the story of animation. It’s living and breathing. Things get dropped, added, changed, tweaked. He felt like a starting pitcher in a baseball game, there to set you up for success and then be moved or changed out to make sure the game is won, but also only one part of the greater team as a whole. When asked about how he would draw out emotion in his writing he said he would only put the words down, and it was the rest of that same team that would succeed in making you feel something, adding that he might have words that touch you emotionally in scene, but the rest of the team knew how to enhance those words and make it something truly special.

THAT FIRST SITE IS EVERY WRITER’S DREAM DO YOU KNOW HOW MANY TIMES I’VE TRIED WRITING SOMETHING AND THOUGHT GOD DAMN IS THERE A SPECIFIC WORD FOR WHAT I’M USING TWO SENTENCES TO DESCRIBE AND JUST GETTING A BUNCH OF SHIT GOOGLE RESULTS