Okokok question for you. In your interpretation when brahms says "I'll be good, I will" is he really telling greta he wont do any more damage or is it purely him trying to come up with something that'll stop her from leaving?
-cute anon
Hm 🤔
Possibly a mix of both. I think he was probably aware he scared Greta at this point with his killing of Cole, (I think his name was that, the abusive ex) but may have been misguided in the sense that…
The way she reacted with fear was probably also because she just realised an unknown man was living in the walls. While we consider Brahms a slasher I don’t see him as someone who kills a lot, so maybe it was him trying to appeal to her by telling her he wouldn’t do that anymore? I also subscribe to the idea that the crying noise + water dripping scene was when he got that letter from his parents, so really yeah I think it was also lot just him not wanting someone else to leave him at all costs.
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the way it’s felix who runs to rodrigue when he’s dying in the bad ending of ag and says “no!” AND LITERALLY THROWS HIS FUCKING SHIELD TO THE SIDE before dimitri even has a chance to turn around just GETS me.
it’s not that dimitri was busy/concerned about byleth/sothis. it’s that felix didn’t even wait more than a second of byleth running off to literally fucking drop everything and turn around to see if his father was okay and felt immediate panic when he realized he wouldn’t make it and held him in his arms as he died.
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Going to check a scene from the hobbit films is like oh this an incredibly homosexual scene. what were they thinking that has to have been on purpose right. and why is it actually making me feel things. man these films could have been at least decent... I can admit the casting was solid, and the few good scenes like this show that there was some bit of heart put into them... And then it immediately cuts to the most absurd and simply made up shit and I think ah. Never fucking mind.
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