“Do you know what I want to do again?” Victor asked, smiling self-consciously.
Yuuri had a few ideas of his own, but he knew that in that moment he’d agree to whatever Victor wanted. “What?”
“Dance with you again,” Victor fumbled with his phone until a jazzy song filled the quiet room.
“Vitenka, you sap,” Yuuri shook his head fondly while Victor threw his phone lightly into the sofa, but grabbed him when he moved closer, making their bodies touch.
They swayed to the rhythm of the music, inserting steps and turns between kisses and just keeping each other close. Goading each other to see but not really touch, making the dance becoame its own type of seduction. Yuuri wasn’t sure who was seducing who, but it didn’t matter.
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this is the single most important teaser image for infinity war
Nebula, in a low, threatening voice: I’ve only known Shuri for a day, but if anything happened to her, I would kill [voice gradually rises to an aggressive, rough shout] EVERYONE IN THIS ROOM! [low voice again, now even more hollow because she barely caught her breath] and then myself
Fact #1: laser sights don’t help your aim; they’re highly inaccurate at any range longer than a couple dozen yards and only good for rapid target acquisition
Fact #2: absolutely every precision shooter knows this
Fact #3: almost nobody else knows this because movies have erroneously taught people that snipers paint a red dot on the target’s chest before they shoot them
Fact #4: any nazi who notices a red dot on their chest while giving a speech is going to immediately stop talking and get off the stage, probably while shitting themself
Fact #5: laser pointers are cheap, legal, and easy to conceal, and unless there’s smoke or dust or something in the air, theres no way to know where it’s coming from
Happy Valentine’s Day first of all! I don’t know why, i felt like drawing this since forever. Vampire Viktor 🧛, trying to seduce Yuuri with his 3000 years old charm haha.
He does not like superhero movies and normally he falls asleep in the cinema. But not this time, he was on the edge of his seat and he said that he didn’t wanna miss a single moment. He absolutely loved the movie, the first thing he did when we got home was to call his african friend, yelling at him to go watch it as soon as possible. The second thing he did was ask me when the sequel will be out.
I asked my dad what he liked about the movie and he said everything. He loved that almost everyone was black and that they spoke Xhosa. He was so happy that they captured what life is actually like in many african cities in those scenes when they were walking around in wakanda. Seeing the people sit in cafes, buying food from food stands, kids running around with school bags, just people living their everyday life all the while being unapologetically african. He said he felt as if he was back home. And he was so happy that there finally was a movie where africans weren’t starving, or warlords, or dealing drugs. He told me that this is the kind of movie he has wanted to see for years, not alluding to the superhero stuff but the fact that they portray africans the same way that most if not all movies portray white people and not criminalize or dehumanize them but uplifting them. He loved every single character and especially M’Baku but his absolute favourite was the Queen mother Ramonda because she was so calm and collected while simultaneously being this strong queen. My dad, coming from a culture that really uplifts and value mothers and holds them above all, felt like the movie really captured that in Ramonda and that’s why he loved her.
He loved the soundtrack and how they mixed in djembe drums and traditional african singing with modern western music and he loved the costumes because a lot of the clothes look like the things people are wearing at all the african parties we go to.
The only complaint my dad had was that the sound was to high, which was his own fault for insisting that he sit at the end of the row right next to one of the speakers.
So yeah, representation do matter. I’ve never in my life seen him so happy about a movie. And he wanted to talk about it after it had ended which never happens normally. We joked around with the idea of him being a wakandan wardog stationed here and we did Shuris and T’Challas little handshake saying that is the only way we will now greet other africans. This movie gave my dad pure joy and happiness and it gave us a bonding opportunity because we finally have something that we both could geek out about.