While others in the mind palace, even Moriarty, communicate with Sherlock, Mary stays completely silent, barely moving but still intimidating. The room of the mind palace in both cases is a hall similar to where we saw John running in A Study in Pink trying to find Sherlock and save his life. Mary does the opposite in first: she stops Sherlock from finding something to fight the shock, moreover, he imagines her shooting him again in his mind palace, wearing her wedding dress and her ring. For the later “encounter” Sherlock places her in an open space so he can walk round her and see all of her but deduces nothing but the word Liar. Her most sacred truth in his eyes has become a betrayal (already reflected in how she is dressed as a bride as she shoots him) and now Sherlock can’t see whether even the slightest details he deduced about her before are actually true.
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what are you thinking? how are you feeling? what have we done to each other? what will we do?
Audrey Hepburn photographed during the production of Funny Face in Paris, France, 1956.
We need more queer genre movies.
Give me gay action heroes and lesbian super-spies and genderqueer androids and trans werewolves. Give me bisexual pirates and lesbian detectives and queer spaceship captains. Give me pansexual space cowboys and queer elves and lesbian mermaids. I want them all. Because “LGBT” should not be a genre in its own right.
not to mention that we don’t see a genre called heterosexual because, from the “outside” point of view, that is considered normal so it doesn’t need an specific genre. that’s bullshit. we are normal, too, if you didn’t noticed that yet. we don’t want an specific genre, we want to be included in genres in which the characters are known for their acts of heroism and all that jazz, not just for whom they love, and whom they like to have sex with, alright? actually, scratch want, we deserve it.
Just a reminder that trans people’s pronouns aren’t “preferred”, they’re correct.
Perks of Being Pansexual #347
If you see a cutie you dont have to worry if they a boy or a girl or something else because YOU DONT CARE
How do we talk about queer characters in richer, less dismissive ways? I’m not sure. It’s hard. Which is why the conversation that Talley started is so important.
One approach might be to include identity cues while also talking about what characters do in the story. This manages to not erase or minimize or dismiss queerness while also making for a better description. Not “an astronaut who happens to be gay” but “a gay astronaut who goes to Mars.” Not “a teenager who happens to be a lesbian” but “a lesbian teenager who runs for student council president.” Not “a woman who happens to be trans” but “a trans woman who falls in love with a cowboy.” Aren’t those fuller, richer, more interesting alternatives?

marsup