When does life get interesting? Is it before or after the crushing reality that nothing matters
I love drawing the boys into my friend's pictures, !! To keep them company!! đđ„âŒïžđ
Come get ur cold soup
Some Stanford Pines Doodles while I was waiting at a doctorâs appointment waiting room đȘđ
idk man
(and credit to divorcedfiddleford for the video that inspired the first drawing)
giving additional context for some of these
3rd pic: So I have some very specific thoughts on how the "a better world" stuff all plays out but namely I don't think it was a.... painless or easy process trying to get bill out of both their dimension and ford's head. I think it's better if it's ambiguous
4th: more parallel ford including eye injury detail, he's in his 40's here
5th: okay now I'm really getting off the rails but please god bear with me. along the lines of "things probably didn't get easier right away if bill was still threatening parallel ford" I had this crazy 3 am thought of "oh man what if ford voluntarily had fiddleford erase something from his mind so he could come to terms with it Later when they weren't pressed for time." if the situation was dire enough for ford (say, leaving him unable to sleep or focus on protecting their dimension from bill) I think he could very well have been pushed to use the memory gun. then again maybe I'm insane
6: this is parallel fidds again sorry I'm obsessed with him helping ford build a fucking death ray to destroy bill
8: this has some dialogue I thought about when I was fleshing out jheselbraum for a waaay future ad astra chapter but I ended up cutting it. sad
crying sobbing this is put too well into words
I know Iâm a few years late to the Gravity Falls party, but I canât get over how effectively the Ford reveal flips the switch on Stanâs character. From what little Iâd seen of the show on Tumblr before I watched it, Iâd always assumed Stan was a pretty one-dimensional sleazy con man. And since it was a series aimed toward kids, I kind of assumed Stan wouldnât get that much development or story outside of Dipper and Mabel. I figured if he did have an arc, it would be the pretty common âgruff bitter loner guy who doesnât like people gets kids and learns to love themâ storyline.Â
And for like the first half of the show, this kind of seemed to be the case, aside from the mystery surrounding whatever Stan was hiding in the basement.
And then the Ford reveal / backstory happens and you see Stan in a completely new light.Â
Stan isnât a con man because he wants to be. Heâs a con man out of necessity - first because he was kicked out of his house and forced to make it on his own at 18, and then because it was helping him work to bring his brother back. He doesnât just run the mystery shack because he likes to lie to people and swindle them out of their money - he does it because he needed a way to make money and keep the shack while trying to figure out a way to reopen the portal. He has a fake identity because he needed to keep people from snooping around looking for Stanford and the easiest way to do that was to take his place.
All the things that make you think heâs selfish and shady throughout the first half of the series are revealed to be because heâs a desperate, heartbroken man who wants to bring his brother back. He isnât the traditional gruff guy who doesnât love anyone until some rambunctious kids come into his life at all - he loves his brother so much that literally everything he does is to get him back. And he lies to the kids in an effort to protect them and keep anything bad from happening to them like it did to his brother.
Great twists / mystery reveals donât just take the story in a new direction - they cast new light on everything that has come before. And Gravity Falls does that so well.
Just look at one of the first episodes in the series where Mabel makes a wax figure of Stan and Stan appears to fall in love with it and mourns it when it melts, going as far to host a funeral for it. Without knowing Stanâs backstory, this whole storyline just feeds into our view of Stan as a self-centered, ridiculous person. Itâs ridiculous he would cherish a wax figure of himself. Itâs so egotistical that he would host a funeral for it when it died and get honestly choked up about it.
But then you learn that Stan lost his twin brother and that whole storyline doesnât really feel like the story of a selfish, egotistical man anymore. Itâs the story of a man who felt like he got his brother back again momentarily and then had to lose him all over again.
Thatâs an effective twist. You canât learn about Stanâs backstory and then go back and view him the same way you did before it.Â
Just saw taming of the shrew and every piece of dialogue when straight over my head
its his âim the god of comedyâ face
how ice of you