theblackship:

tittybasket:

steamboat-willies:

This scene brings about one of the many reasons why I love Tarzan. Even after Clayton had betrayed him, imprisoned his family in cages, and shot Kerchak, Tarzan still showed forgiveness. Tarzan did not kill Clayton. The jungle, a world “blessed with love”, ultimately brought upon Clayton’s death. 

I never notices Clayton’s shadow, I always concentrated on Tarzan and the blade. But it gives me the chills when I watch it.

I have only seen this movie once, when I was about 11 or so - I was a morbid kid, and noticed the shadow right off the bat, and was amazed (still am) that a Disney film actually went there explicitly, rather than just implying the death.

DAMN DISNEY YOU SCARY.


All will be well, be not afraid.






ukidoki:

bad bitches in disney movies

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  • certified cunt to everyone
  • attempts murder
  • conspires with enemies
  • attempts murder again

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  • dresses in drag to join the army
  • kills thousands of huns in a fucking avalanche
  • is the only disney princess with a body count
  • doesn’t give a fuck about it

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  • in the first 5 minutes establishes she is not to be fucked with
  • only is interested in the hot bara son of Zeus when she is obligated to be
  • banters with satan
  • crushed by a pillar but stays alive for like 5 hours

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  • a black female in the 1920s who becomes a small business owner because she fucking wanted to
  • is a frog but will get more game then any of us will in a month
  • watches a man get dragged into hell and is just kinda like “oh ok”

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  • i’m just going to put tinkerbell here again

nooby-banana:

forever-pretty-awkward:

chalkandwater:

Can we appreciate John Smith here for a second? He’s so into it.

i aM LAUGHING SO HARD HELP



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nooby-banana:

forever-pretty-awkward:

chalkandwater:

Can we appreciate John Smith here for a second? He’s so into it.

i aM LAUGHING SO HARD HELP



As king, you need to understand that balance and respect all the creatures, from the crawling ant to the leaping antelope. » Favourite Disney Movies → The Lion King

As king, you need to understand that balance and respect all the creatures, from the crawling ant to the leaping antelope. » Favourite Disney Movies The Lion King



animationalley:

Making gifs of Meeko for a request…and I just can’t with his animation.

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LOOK AT HIM. 

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HE HAS NEVER BEEN MORE EXCITED.


the fox and the hound is my favorite movie because it’s the oldest of tropes

and yet, and the end of the movie i still with they could be friends

but they never will be


disneywithswank:

Introducing Meg the Feminist


godsdammitk:

killerdraco:

memewhore:


disneyworldwonders:


Can I just say that I think this is the way Mulan should appear int the parks. In the beginning of the movie they make it very clear that the dress she wears to meet the matchmaker is not comfortable nor does it represent her personality. She spends the whole of the film proving that she is not a prize to be won or just a pawn to be married off at earliest convenience. She proves her worth in this outfit. She saves China in this outfit. She falls in love in this outfit. She risks her life, makes her strongest friendships, and changes the entire country IN THIS OUTFIT. Then they have her walk around the park in the same outfit she wore in the first scene of the movie and I think it is really negative toward her character. That is not who she is.





I’ve seen this post pop up on my dash time and time again, and it’s never quite sat right with me. I agree 120% with the idea that the pink “matchmaker dress” is a poor way to represent Mulan in the theme parks, but… so is her soldier armor. It’s just as much not who she is as the pink dress. It represents her pretending to be Ping, and her deceiving everyone around her. It is her pretending to be a man, to be someone else entirely. Honestly, if you want to talk about the outfit that best represents her, I’d suggest this one:

The outfit she wore when she defeated Shan Yu. That is who Mulan is; a warrior, but still a woman. It displays all of the strength that she truly has, yet still manages to be true to who she truly is. This it the outfit that she changed the entire country in; would anything have changed if she was still pretending to be a man? I doubt it. This proves that a woman can be strong, but still be feminine. Given that many people tend to equate being feminine with weakness, I think portraying that the two are not mutually exclusive is a damn powerful message to be portraying to kids in theme parks.
Just my two cents.

I wouldn’t mind either, tbh. Women in armour are hot as fuck, and the blue outfit is what she’s wearing when she kicks a whole bunch of ass. It’d be cool if they switched! To show that you don’t have to choose between the two, because gender is an expression of Self and is a fluid thing. :3

godsdammitk:

killerdraco:

memewhore:

disneyworldwonders:

Can I just say that I think this is the way Mulan should appear int the parks. In the beginning of the movie they make it very clear that the dress she wears to meet the matchmaker is not comfortable nor does it represent her personality. She spends the whole of the film proving that she is not a prize to be won or just a pawn to be married off at earliest convenience. She proves her worth in this outfit. She saves China in this outfit. She falls in love in this outfit. She risks her life, makes her strongest friendships, and changes the entire country IN THIS OUTFIT. Then they have her walk around the park in the same outfit she wore in the first scene of the movie and I think it is really negative toward her character. That is not who she is.

image

I’ve seen this post pop up on my dash time and time again, and it’s never quite sat right with me. I agree 120% with the idea that the pink “matchmaker dress” is a poor way to represent Mulan in the theme parks, but… so is her soldier armor. It’s just as much not who she is as the pink dress. It represents her pretending to be Ping, and her deceiving everyone around her. It is her pretending to be a man, to be someone else entirely. Honestly, if you want to talk about the outfit that best represents her, I’d suggest this one:

image

The outfit she wore when she defeated Shan Yu. That is who Mulan is; a warrior, but still a woman. It displays all of the strength that she truly has, yet still manages to be true to who she truly is. This it the outfit that she changed the entire country in; would anything have changed if she was still pretending to be a man? I doubt it. This proves that a woman can be strong, but still be feminine. Given that many people tend to equate being feminine with weakness, I think portraying that the two are not mutually exclusive is a damn powerful message to be portraying to kids in theme parks.

Just my two cents.

I wouldn’t mind either, tbh. Women in armour are hot as fuck, and the blue outfit is what she’s wearing when she kicks a whole bunch of ass. It’d be cool if they switched! To show that you don’t have to choose between the two, because gender is an expression of Self and is a fluid thing. :3