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Ley-pump-it

@poppinslayerknight

Real life feelings

His Mother's Eyes

When it comes to the Harry Potter movies, certain complaints might seem trivial when compared to issues like worldbuilding fail or character assassination, but there’s a lot of reasons for fans to froth and vent over superficial change.

  • Harry Potter, the books repeatedly assure us, has eyes the color of a fresh-pickled toad. This is mentioned with a frequency comparable to the human birth rate.
  • Harry has his mother’s eyes. This is also mentioned approximately nine trillion times and is important to the plot.
  • In Deathly Hallows Part 2, there is literally a shot that fades from Lily’s eyes to Harry’s. Not only are neither of them green, but they are also not even the same color as each other.
  • You have your mother’s eyes, Harry. Except for the color. And the shape.“ - Ancient Proverb
  • As defenders will reference repeatedly, Daniel Radcliffe had an allergic reaction to his contact lenses. That’s so sad. It’s a shame CGI had not been invented yet.
  • Seriously, not even for the close-ups?
  • Was he also allergic to black hair-dye?
  • Book!Harry’s hair was as neat as a ruffled chicken. Messy hair is unusual; it’s rude; it’s an embarrassment at Aunt Petunia’s garden parties; it looks a bit out of the ordinary. Yet movie!Harry has either applied liberal amounts of Sleekeazy hair potion, or is blessed by photoshoot-ready genes. 
  • With tragic hilarity, it can be noted that Daniel Radcliffe has since appeared in other roles with much more Harry-like hair.
  • James Potter’s hair in the woefully inadequate Pensive scene was parted and combed flat. James Potter does not part and comb his hair. James Potter ruffles it, because he loves people knowing he plays quidditch, loves attention, thinks he looks cool, is a bit rakish (or wants to be), and eschews the rule-following respectability inherent in being well-groomed. It is vital character-building for someone with such a lack of screen time.
  • Worse, Hermione’s hair - bushy and the symbol of a girl who didn’t fall easily into the standards of beauty or uphold those standards as important - was styled and silky.
  • Never mind the importance of big hair as connected to the possibility of the character being of mixed ethnicity or a WoC.
  • Never mind that girls across the world - girls with frizzy locks and unusual looks and a love of books - sat down to read about this big-haired genius and identified with her, loved her, and saw themselves in her because bushy hair was now Hermione hair.
  • Why, oh why, was her Yule Ball gown pink, not periwinkle blue?
  • Ginny, on the other hand, did like pink. It would have been nice to see that preference on-screen.
  • (Or any hint of personality. At all.)
  • Wizards wear robes. Wizards wear robes so often that when trying to wear Muggle clothes, they don nightdresses and ponchos. Wizards do not wear school uniforms. Wizards have a long-standing ignorance of all things Muggle. The movies lost out on the chance to create an entire history and culture of fashion.
  • Historically and in modern times, both genders in cultures around the world have worn robes. There is nothing weird about it.
  • Professor Lupin’s mustache is an affront to humanity.
  • If facial hair is not specifically described in the text there is no need to just include hairy lip abominations willy-nilly.
  • The greatest mystery of the hair and wardrobe department is how they managed to make a vibrant personality like Natalia Tena - playing a character like Tonks - look boring.
  • And then there’s Sirius Black.
  • *disclaimer* Yes. Gary Oldman is a very good actor.
  • Sirius was cheerful and good-looking before twelve years of imprisonment and torture, and he was skeletal and depressed after. His aristocratic handsomeness was a product of his backstory and a factor in his characterization. The contrast of his post-Azkaban self was part of his story’s tragedy.
  • The man was an insolently good-looking rebel who hated his blue-blood background, rode a motorcycle, wore Muggle t-shirts, had his last chance to develop fashion sense at age 22, and in OotP wore robes. What part of that says ‘Edwardian gentleman in olive velvet pinstriped suit’?
  • Bill’s scars were barely visible. Good to know werewolf attacks aren’t a big deal.
  • Narcissa Malfoy’s hair was violently reminiscent of Pepe Le Pew.
  • No one needs that.
  • Voldemort would have been terrifying with red eyes. These were absent for fear of being ‘distracting,’ but consider this:
  • No.
  • PS: For a masterclass in letting voice and gesture supplant eye and facial expression, see Hugo Weaving in V for Vendetta.
  • Where to even start with Professor Flitwick?
  • Most of these things would have been so damn easy to fix. Fans make these changes every day, self-taught in gifsets slapped together with illegally downloaded amateur software during their spare time between classes, just for kicks.
  • Maybe the filmmakers thought wild hair and bright eyes and big scars and punk clothing and men in long robes were all not quite normal enough for them.
  • Maybe they didn’t think these details were important.
  • Maybe they didn’t care.
  • The greatest mystery of the hair and wardrobe department is how they managed to make a vibrant personality like Natalia Tena - playing a character like Tonks - look boring.

You do realize in the book it doesn’t mention the color only that the eyes look like his mother (I could be wrong, so please point it politely out to me PS I will not bash on you if you find out that it does say he has the same COLORED eyes as Lily). Harry had the same potential in his eyes as his mother, the same braveness, the same knowing but ignorant eyes.

She had thick, dark red hair that fell to her shoulders, and startlingly green almond-shaped eyes - Harry’s eyes.“ - Order of the Phoenix, Chapter 28

His Mother's Eyes

When it comes to the Harry Potter movies, certain complaints might seem trivial when compared to issues like worldbuilding fail or character assassination, but there’s a lot of reasons for fans to froth and vent over superficial change.

  • Harry Potter, the books repeatedly assure us, has eyes the color of a fresh-pickled toad. This is mentioned with a frequency comparable to the human birth rate.
  • Harry has his mother’s eyes. This is also mentioned approximately nine trillion times and is important to the plot.
  • In Deathly Hallows Part 2, there is literally a shot that fades from Lily’s eyes to Harry’s. Not only are neither of them green, but they are also not even the same color as each other.
  • You have your mother’s eyes, Harry. Except for the color. And the shape.“ - Ancient Proverb
  • As defenders will reference repeatedly, Daniel Radcliffe had an allergic reaction to his contact lenses. That’s so sad. It’s a shame CGI had not been invented yet.
  • Seriously, not even for the close-ups?
  • Was he also allergic to black hair-dye?
  • Book!Harry’s hair was as neat as a ruffled chicken. Messy hair is unusual; it’s rude; it’s an embarrassment at Aunt Petunia’s garden parties; it looks a bit out of the ordinary. Yet movie!Harry has either applied liberal amounts of Sleekeazy hair potion, or is blessed by photoshoot-ready genes. 
  • With tragic hilarity, it can be noted that Daniel Radcliffe has since appeared in other roles with much more Harry-like hair.
  • James Potter’s hair in the woefully inadequate Pensive scene was parted and combed flat. James Potter does not part and comb his hair. James Potter ruffles it, because he loves people knowing he plays quidditch, loves attention, thinks he looks cool, is a bit rakish (or wants to be), and eschews the rule-following respectability inherent in being well-groomed. It is vital character-building for someone with such a lack of screen time.
  • Worse, Hermione’s hair - bushy and the symbol of a girl who didn’t fall easily into the standards of beauty or uphold those standards as important - was styled and silky.
  • Never mind the importance of big hair as connected to the possibility of the character being of mixed ethnicity or a WoC.
  • Never mind that girls across the world - girls with frizzy locks and unusual looks and a love of books - sat down to read about this big-haired genius and identified with her, loved her, and saw themselves in her because bushy hair was now Hermione hair.
  • Why, oh why, was her Yule Ball gown pink, not periwinkle blue?
  • Ginny, on the other hand, did like pink. It would have been nice to see that preference on-screen.
  • (Or any hint of personality. At all.)
  • Wizards wear robes. Wizards wear robes so often that when trying to wear Muggle clothes, they don nightdresses and ponchos. Wizards do not wear school uniforms. Wizards have a long-standing ignorance of all things Muggle. The movies lost out on the chance to create an entire history and culture of fashion.
  • Historically and in modern times, both genders in cultures around the world have worn robes. There is nothing weird about it.
  • Professor Lupin’s mustache is an affront to humanity.
  • If facial hair is not specifically described in the text there is no need to just include hairy lip abominations willy-nilly.
  • The greatest mystery of the hair and wardrobe department is how they managed to make a vibrant personality like Natalia Tena - playing a character like Tonks - look boring.
  • And then there’s Sirius Black.
  • *disclaimer* Yes. Gary Oldman is a very good actor.
  • Sirius was cheerful and good-looking before twelve years of imprisonment and torture, and he was skeletal and depressed after. His aristocratic handsomeness was a product of his backstory and a factor in his characterization. The contrast of his post-Azkaban self was part of his story’s tragedy.
  • The man was an insolently good-looking rebel who hated his blue-blood background, rode a motorcycle, wore Muggle t-shirts, had his last chance to develop fashion sense at age 22, and in OotP wore robes. What part of that says ‘Edwardian gentleman in olive velvet pinstriped suit’?
  • Bill’s scars were barely visible. Good to know werewolf attacks aren’t a big deal.
  • Narcissa Malfoy’s hair was violently reminiscent of Pepe Le Pew.
  • No one needs that.
  • Voldemort would have been terrifying with red eyes. These were absent for fear of being ‘distracting,’ but consider this:
  • No.
  • PS: For a masterclass in letting voice and gesture supplant eye and facial expression, see Hugo Weaving in V for Vendetta.
  • Where to even start with Professor Flitwick?
  • Most of these things would have been so damn easy to fix. Fans make these changes every day, self-taught in gifsets slapped together with illegally downloaded amateur software during their spare time between classes, just for kicks.
  • Maybe the filmmakers thought wild hair and bright eyes and big scars and punk clothing and men in long robes were all not quite normal enough for them.
  • Maybe they didn’t think these details were important.
  • Maybe they didn’t care.
  • The greatest mystery of the hair and wardrobe department is how they managed to make a vibrant personality like Natalia Tena - playing a character like Tonks - look boring.

I want to marry this post and make babies with it

There are people dying in small countries with war

I am grateful to you for informing me of this fact. I had been entirely ignorant of it before. Thank you, person who has never in their life been disappointed by something they are a fan of and grumbled about it.

Actually, no, this is a serious issue, and assuming that comment was anything other than an attempt at trolling, it deserves a serious answer. The answer is this -

I spend plenty of hours in my day absolutely infuriated about the state of the world and the injustices repeatedly perpetuated within it. Much of my personal blog is about real-life problems that people face; many of my thoughts are about how horrible things are and how little power I have to do anything whatsoever about them, because there are only so many petitions a girl can sign in a day or donations she can send on her very limited budget or bigoted assholes she can try and fail to shout down.

I am completely and wholly aware that there are people dying in small countries with war - and big countries, too, and suffering in countries of all sizes from all causes - and how utterly fucking useless I am sitting here at my laptop hitting a fucking ‘Reblog’ button once in a while about institutionalized prejudice or sexual violence or civilian body counts or police brutality or a million other things.

It doesn’t mean that I - and a million other people - can’t be passionate or pissy or indignant about the things we enjoy, and discuss them. If waiting until there was no more war to do so would in any way help those wars end, I would gladly and immediately desist.

I think we’re all aware that it would not.

His Mother's Eyes

When it comes to the Harry Potter movies, certain complaints might seem trivial when compared to issues like worldbuilding fail or character assassination, but there’s a lot of reasons for fans to froth and vent over superficial change.

  • Harry Potter, the books repeatedly assure us, has eyes the color of a fresh-pickled toad. This is mentioned with a frequency comparable to the human birth rate.
  • Harry has his mother’s eyes. This is also mentioned approximately nine trillion times and is important to the plot.
  • In Deathly Hallows Part 2, there is literally a shot that fades from Lily’s eyes to Harry’s. Not only are neither of them green, but they are also not even the same color as each other.
  • You have your mother’s eyes, Harry. Except for the color. And the shape.“ - Ancient Proverb
  • As defenders will reference repeatedly, Daniel Radcliffe had an allergic reaction to his contact lenses. That’s so sad. It’s a shame CGI had not been invented yet.
  • Seriously, not even for the close-ups?
  • Was he also allergic to black hair-dye?
  • Book!Harry’s hair was as neat as a ruffled chicken. Messy hair is unusual; it’s rude; it’s an embarrassment at Aunt Petunia’s garden parties; it looks a bit out of the ordinary. Yet movie!Harry has either applied liberal amounts of Sleekeazy hair potion, or is blessed by photoshoot-ready genes. 
  • With tragic hilarity, it can be noted that Daniel Radcliffe has since appeared in other roles with much more Harry-like hair.
  • James Potter’s hair in the woefully inadequate Pensive scene was parted and combed flat. James Potter does not part and comb his hair. James Potter ruffles it, because he loves people knowing he plays quidditch, loves attention, thinks he looks cool, is a bit rakish (or wants to be), and eschews the rule-following respectability inherent in being well-groomed. It is vital character-building for someone with such a lack of screen time.
  • Worse, Hermione’s hair - bushy and the symbol of a girl who didn’t fall easily into the standards of beauty or uphold those standards as important - was styled and silky.
  • Never mind the importance of big hair as connected to the possibility of the character being of mixed ethnicity or a WoC.
  • Never mind that girls across the world - girls with frizzy locks and unusual looks and a love of books - sat down to read about this big-haired genius and identified with her, loved her, and saw themselves in her because bushy hair was now Hermione hair.
  • Why, oh why, was her Yule Ball gown pink, not periwinkle blue?
  • Ginny, on the other hand, did like pink. It would have been nice to see that preference on-screen.
  • (Or any hint of personality. At all.)
  • Wizards wear robes. Wizards wear robes so often that when trying to wear Muggle clothes, they don nightdresses and ponchos. Wizards do not wear school uniforms. Wizards have a long-standing ignorance of all things Muggle. The movies lost out on the chance to create an entire history and culture of fashion.
  • Historically and in modern times, both genders in cultures around the world have worn robes. There is nothing weird about it.
  • Professor Lupin’s mustache is an affront to humanity.
  • If facial hair is not specifically described in the text there is no need to just include hairy lip abominations willy-nilly.
  • The greatest mystery of the hair and wardrobe department is how they managed to make a vibrant personality like Natalia Tena - playing a character like Tonks - look boring.
  • And then there’s Sirius Black.
  • *disclaimer* Yes. Gary Oldman is a very good actor.
  • Sirius was cheerful and good-looking before twelve years of imprisonment and torture, and he was skeletal and depressed after. His aristocratic handsomeness was a product of his backstory and a factor in his characterization. The contrast of his post-Azkaban self was part of his story’s tragedy.
  • The man was an insolently good-looking rebel who hated his blue-blood background, rode a motorcycle, wore Muggle t-shirts, had his last chance to develop fashion sense at age 22, and in OotP wore robes. What part of that says ‘Edwardian gentleman in olive velvet pinstriped suit’?
  • Bill’s scars were barely visible. Good to know werewolf attacks aren’t a big deal.
  • Narcissa Malfoy’s hair was violently reminiscent of Pepe Le Pew.
  • No one needs that.
  • Voldemort would have been terrifying with red eyes. These were absent for fear of being ‘distracting,’ but consider this:
  • No.
  • PS: For a masterclass in letting voice and gesture supplant eye and facial expression, see Hugo Weaving in V for Vendetta.
  • Where to even start with Professor Flitwick?
  • Most of these things would have been so damn easy to fix. Fans make these changes every day, self-taught in gifsets slapped together with illegally downloaded amateur software during their spare time between classes, just for kicks.
  • Maybe the filmmakers thought wild hair and bright eyes and big scars and punk clothing and men in long robes were all not quite normal enough for them.
  • Maybe they didn’t think these details were important.
  • Maybe they didn’t care.
  • The greatest mystery of the hair and wardrobe department is how they managed to make a vibrant personality like Natalia Tena - playing a character like Tonks - look boring.

I want to marry this post and make babies with it

There are people dying in small countries with war

I am grateful to you for informing me of this fact. I had been entirely ignorant of it before. Thank you, person who has never in their life been disappointed by something they are a fan of and grumbled about it.

Actually, no, this is a serious issue, and assuming that comment was anything other than an attempt at trolling, it deserves a serious answer. The answer is this -

I spend plenty of hours in my day absolutely infuriated about the state of the world and the injustices repeatedly perpetuated within it. Much of my personal blog is about real-life problems that people face; many of my thoughts are about how horrible things are and how little power I have to do anything whatsoever about them, because there are only so many petitions a girl can sign in a day or donations she can send on her very limited budget or bigoted assholes she can try and fail to shout down.

I am completely and wholly aware that there are people dying in small countries with war - and big countries, too, and suffering in countries of all sizes from all causes - and how utterly fucking useless I am sitting here at my laptop hitting a fucking ‘Reblog’ button once in a while about institutionalized prejudice or sexual violence or civilian body counts or police brutality or a million other things.

It doesn’t mean that I - and a million other people - can’t be passionate or pissy or indignant about the things we enjoy, and discuss them. If waiting until there was no more war to do so would in any way help those wars end, I would gladly and immediately desist.

I think we’re all aware that it would not.

Stephenie McMillan, set decorator of the Harry Potter movies and three time Academy Award nominated, passed away two days ago.

RIP, and thank you for making Hogwarts real and alive.

Avatar

One movie-related thing I can’t and won’t complain about are the sets, because they are perfect.

Rest in peace.

The Greek Gods of Hogwarts:

Gryffindor: Gryffindor is represented by Ares, the Greek God of War, famous for his courage and valor in war. 

Hufflepuff: Hufflepuff is represented by Hephaestus, the Greek God of Smithing, renowned for working tirelessly to make armor of the gods and Zeus’ lightning. 

Ravenclaw: Ravenclaw is represented by Athena, the Greek Goddess of Wisdom, who valued intelligence and wisdom above all else. 

Slytherin: Slytherin is represented by Hades, the Greek God of the Underworld, who is famously feared for his association with death, although he is fair in judgment. 

“Andromeda was my favourite cousin. No, Andromeda’s not on here either, look. Andromeda’s sisters are still here because they made lovely, respectable pure-blood marriages, but Andromeda married a Muggle-born, Ted Tonks, so —”

Pretending you're okay with me is not okay. It's hard to pretend. You pretend you're alright when you're with me hurts. Because I, too, pretend I'm alright and you're alright, just as you asked. I don't like seeing you hurt. It hurts me too.