Dear friends, today is my birthday, and I would be glad to see your reblogs of my arts and some kind words for me ❤️🔥
Saint Just for my school art assignment
Stanisława Przybyszewska - Thermidor
hey... can i have some more of dnd camille and robespierre please...
Yeeeeees anon ofc, im so glad you like this toxic yaoi
While the party was investigating the lair, they found multiple journal entries (which they later discovered were written by Dnd Robespierre). Here are some of them illustrated.
doodles more doodles MORE DOODLES
junot things (dukie is so me cus damn
the second one is for my most powerful enemy.... sweet holopenyo...(plus small collab haha)
napolington things which was earlier this week til today cus hehhahhah
I'm just making random stuff now. I've an unhealthy obsession with this movie. I don't even know what to say.
explodes again in Saintspierre
La révolution française with quotes from Mean Girls…what am I doing with my life?!
I found several stills from the movie Danton (1932), which I couldn't find anyone who had seen. Although the photos may make us laugh, here are a few that are relatively charming.
Gabrielle (she looks nice, but I can't judge her based on that alone, played by Andrée Ducret) and Georges(Jacques Grétillat):
and Camille (André Fouché):
I've seen some magazine articles from the time about the movie, and to be honest, it doesn't look all that interesting. Except that it is one of the few movies in which Gabrielle appears and I am studying French literature of the early 20th century, it might not be worth seeing. Did the actor who played Danton caricature him?
By the way, Stam & Raengo have stated in A Companion to Literature and Film that the movie may be partially based on Przybyszewska's The Danton Case, but I think this is unlikely. The play was apparently little known in France at the time, and I could find no mention of it in movie magazines. Besides, it doesn't seem to have any Stasia-like elements from any point of view. According to François Huzar, Robespierre appears to have very little in the film (the author does not seem to have seen the film itself).