“Oh, come on, Harry, it’s not Quidditch that’s popular, it’s you! You’ve never been more interesting, and frankly, you’ve never been more fanciable.”

“Oh, come on, Harry, it’s not Quidditch that’s popular, it’s you! You’ve never been more interesting, and frankly, you’ve never been more fanciable.”

(Source: darylsbitch, via christinapotter09)

           
(originally from darylsbitch)
HHr

     

girlwithtulle:

artemistory:

doctoramanda:

When asked about which character in Harry potter is JKR more like –“I am Hermione” she answered– true enough she was quite geeky like Hermione in her childhood and she accepts it.


At the session earlier in the day, questions about love were directed at Rowling herself. When asked by…

Omg no way…. I’m in the aircraft and doing last minute tumblring. This is awesome! Perfect otp.

yeeeeeeeeeeees, YEEEEEEEEEEEEES. IT’S CANON! IT’LL ALWAYS BE CANON!

NEIL MICHAEL MURRAY

(Source: doctoramanda, via tonystaarks)

       
             
 
It’s like she’s coming out of his soul. What don’t surprise me, they’re like one soul divided in two bodies..

It’s like she’s coming out of his soul. What don’t surprise me, they’re like one soul divided in two bodies..

           

harmonyhhrotphp gifsmy stuff

 
“Irving Berlin said it best: “There may be trouble ahead, but while there’s music and moonlight and love and romance, let’s face the music and dance.” 
That was written in 1936, during the Great Depression and a short while before the world was engulfed in a terrifying war. There is an intentional evocation of World War II in “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows”: refugees, heads hunched over the wireless for a spot of news, a forearm with “mudblood” carved on it a bloody tattoo. And in the midst of this terrible darkness there is a tiny, memorable moment of lightness, offered up in a tent which has itself come to remind us of internments and refugees.
Harry and Hermione dance. There’s rich tradition of this sort of thing (people grabbing an improbable breath of happiness amid suffocating darkness, in life and in fiction). It’s the scene from this movie people will remember, perhaps because it’s so desperately needed by the time it comes.
The dance does not come from the book, and it opens up an interesting little can of worms. There’s a little hint of the Forbidden Amish Jitterbug scene in “Witness,” and the dance goes on for quite a while, until we are clearly invited to ask ourselves what we think is happening. Does it represent the never-to-be-spoken-of-again acknowledgement between two attractive young people that, although their hearts and destinies lie elsewhere, they are not immune to one another’s charms? Or is it the kind of thing two very good friends can do because each knows the other has absolutely no interest in benefits? Or, when death is tapping at your window day and night, do you love the one you’re with?
I’m sure we are not meant to know the answer. And that the answer each person picks is a revelation about that person.”               
- Colin McEnroe

“Irving Berlin said it best: “There may be trouble ahead, but while there’s music and moonlight and love and romance, let’s face the music and dance.”

That was written in 1936, during the Great Depression and a short while before the world was engulfed in a terrifying war. There is an intentional evocation of World War II in “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows”: refugees, heads hunched over the wireless for a spot of news, a forearm with “mudblood” carved on it a bloody tattoo. And in the midst of this terrible darkness there is a tiny, memorable moment of lightness, offered up in a tent which has itself come to remind us of internments and refugees.

Harry and Hermione dance. There’s rich tradition of this sort of thing (people grabbing an improbable breath of happiness amid suffocating darkness, in life and in fiction). It’s the scene from this movie people will remember, perhaps because it’s so desperately needed by the time it comes.

The dance does not come from the book, and it opens up an interesting little can of worms. There’s a little hint of the Forbidden Amish Jitterbug scene in “Witness,” and the dance goes on for quite a while, until we are clearly invited to ask ourselves what we think is happening. Does it represent the never-to-be-spoken-of-again acknowledgement between two attractive young people that, although their hearts and destinies lie elsewhere, they are not immune to one another’s charms? Or is it the kind of thing two very good friends can do because each knows the other has absolutely no interest in benefits? Or, when death is tapping at your window day and night, do you love the one you’re with?

I’m sure we are not meant to know the answer. And that the answer each person picks is a revelation about that person.”               

           

harmonyotphhrmy stuff

 
Harry, the way you treat Hermione makes me want to cry. He has so much respect for her (since the beginning, that’s the difference). Flawless human being <3

Harry, the way you treat Hermione makes me want to cry. He has so much respect for her (since the beginning, that’s the difference). Flawless human being <3

           

harmonyhhrOTPmy stuff

 
 Harry &amp; Hermione (promotional pics) - Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1

Harry & Hermione (promotional pics) - Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1

           

harmonyhhrotpmy stuff

 
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you can call me jo!
living in constant hysteria because of feelings I can't handle. bears, beets, battlestar galactica.
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