
sherlockholmeson answered: I am still sad there wasn’t Bilbo finding Thorin in the dungeon scene so maybe that to the tune of Feast of Starlight.
I will always be bitter

sherlockholmeson answered: I am still sad there wasn’t Bilbo finding Thorin in the dungeon scene so maybe that to the tune of Feast of Starlight.
I will always be bitter
His enormous heart.
Thor is deeply, profoundly, compassionate. He’s quick to reach out to others and befriend them. Witness how he reaches out to Loki again and again, but also how quickly and easily he bonds with the Avengers or with Valkyrie. How open he is to Jane and Erik and Darcy, even when he’s lost and confused; how he doesn’t hold Gamora’s relation to Thanos against her even in the midst of extreme grief.
He’s open-hearted and, at his core, kind. Deeply loyal and intensely affectionate.
I love the adjective great-hearted for Thor. It’s not one that’s in usage a lot these days, but it encompasses such a range of meaning: brave, bold, courageous, but also generous and noble. And if that’s not Thor in a word, I don’t know what is.
san junipero + face touching
drink makes Legolas very physically affectionate.
this evidenced by how many of the Rohirrim observed his attempt to crawl into Gimli’s lap and curl up there, burying his face and hands in Gimli’s hair and murmuring happily in Sindarin
(they were also impressed with how red a dwarf’s face could go, even as he curled his hand protectively around the back of Legolas’ neck. His gaze dared even one of them to comment on how Legolas’ legs hung, akimbo, over Gimli’s lap, and so none of them dared. The axe was within reach, and glinted with sharp promise of retribution.)