whenlarrymetfreddy
whenlarrymetfreddy
When Larry Met Freddy
3K posts
because creamsicle, that's why
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
whenlarrymetfreddy · 7 years ago
Text
In summary: it gay
Why "Reservoir Dogs" is a Homoerotic Masterpiece
Warning: SPOILERS for Reservoir Dogs.
This isn’t so much a ship manifesto as it is an attempt to investigate the underlying themes of Quentin Tarantino’s Reservoir Dogs as exemplified by the profound and intimate relationship that is portrayed between “Mr. Orange” (aka Freddy Newendyke) and “Mr. White” (aka Larry Dimmick).  The film itself has a play-like structure that intermittently deviates from the “stage” of an abandoned warehouse to enhance the complexity of its various characters in the form of flashbacks.  
Through these flashbacks, it is established that the events of the film span over the course of a few weeks, from the time of Mr. Orange’s acceptance into crime boss Joe Cabot’s fold, to the powerful and tragic denouement after the botched heist.  In that short span of time, Mr. White and Mr. Orange form a connection so powerful that in order to preserve it, one man betrays his long-time friend and business partner, and the other tells a secret so devastating it will mean his certain death… even when salvation is moments away.
Tumblr media
Mr. White winks at Mr. Orange.
The film opens during an extended dialogue scene involving the main players: Mr. White, Mr. Orange, Mr. Brown, Mr. Blue, Mr. Pink, Mr. Blonde, Joe Cabot and his son/heir-apparent, Nice Guy Eddie.  The obvious psuedonymns are names given by Cabot to maintain plausible deniability among his for-hire thieves in the event that their jewelry heist doesn’t go as planned.  
Already Mr. Orange and Mr. White’s closeness is represented by their physical proximity to each other; throughout the scene they lean towards each other, exchange amused glances, and take turns draping an arm over the back of the other’s chair.  Perhaps the most blatant moment comes when Mr. White turns and winks at Mr. Orange before saying something particularly cheeky to Joe Cabot.  It’s full of playfulness and bravado, and emphasises Mr. White’s fondness for Mr. Orange, as well as a need to gain his approval.
Tumblr media
Mr. White begins to lose his composure.
After the title card sequence, we’re thrust into a moment of crisis.  Mr. Orange is shot, bleeding out onto the back seat of a car, while Mr. White frantically drives them to the rendezvous point.  White is clutching his hand, coaxing Orange through his excruciating pain with words of encouragement.  He makes Orange repeat his words like a mantra, as if the act itself will somehow be the man’s salvation.  White then repeats “correct!”, almost to himself, and his voice cracks with emotion.  He is on the verge of tears, but reins it back in.  In his mind, he is Orange’s protector and he must not show any weakness.  Yet it is obvious that he is devastated by the other man’s injury.
Tumblr media
Mr. White wipes away tears as he cares for Mr. Orange.
Orange is an incoherent dead-weight in White’s arms as they enter the warehouse. White tenderly lays him down on a service ramp and carefully undoes Orange’s fly to inspect the bullet wound.  At this point, Orange is referring to him by his Christian name, “Larry”, thus demonstrating that at some point, one or both of the men broke Cabot’s firm rule of anonymity.  Orange begs White to hold him, and White obliges, aligning his body next to the injured man’s, cradling his head on his arm. He gently combs Orange’s hair, wipes his brow.
Tumblr media
Mr. White whispers to Mr. Orange.
Then, in perhaps the most intimate moment of the entire film, White leans down and whispers something in Orange’s ear.  We, the audience, are not made privy to the words he says; only Orange’s giggling reaction.  In truth, what White says to him is unimportant.  What matters is that we weren’t meant to know; it is a secret that belongs to these two men alone.
At this point, Mr. Pink arrives at the rendezvous, rattled and declaring that the heist was a set-up from the beginning.  White takes him into a side room (much to Orange’s protestation), where the two have a conversation about the events that transpired at the diamond wholesalers, dissecting how and why the police evidently knew they were going to be there.  White reluctantly admits that the signs point to a rat; he tells a story about how an undercover cop had infiltrated the ranks of a job he’d recently worked on.  It is apparent that both he and Pink view police with hatred and disdain, even classifying them as sub-human.
Tumblr media
Mr. White reflects about Alabama with Joe Cabot.
In a flashback sequence, we are given a quick glimpse of Mr. White and Joe Cabot before the heist.  It is the single most revealing sequence in terms of establishing Mr. White’s character and motivation in the entire film.  Not only are we made aware of his long-standing professional history with Cabot, but also the near-familial nature of their relationship (White calls him “papa”, Cabot calls him “junior”).  
In the course of their conversation, Cabot asks after Alabama, a former partner-in-crime and flame of White’s.   White reveals that he and Alabama broke it off: “you push that man/woman thing too long and it gets to you after a while.”  Put in simplest terms, White reveals that he has trouble maintaining a clear separation between his personal and professional lives.  He becomes too emotionally attached; it is a weakness he recognized in himself, which is why he severed ties with Alabama.  Once that attachment forms, all his other allegiances become blurred.
Flash-forward to the warehouse.  Pink and White heatedly debate what to do with Orange; Pink argues that Cabot will likely wash his hands of the situation, leaving them on their own.  White discloses that Orange had begged to be taken to the hospital, willing to risk jail in order to get medical attention.  Pink agrees that it’s his choice to make, as the rest of them won’t be implicated if Orange doesn’t know anything about them.  This is when White ruefully admits that he told Orange where he was from (“in natural conversation”) and his first name.  
Pink balks at this, demanding to know why White would make such a hot-headed blunder.  White becomes enraged and defensive, arguing that Orange was his responsibility, and he wasn’t going to deny a dying man the knowledge of his name.  Pink shoots back (“I’m sure it was a beautiful scene”), declaring that they can’t risk a hospital; White has essentially doomed Orange by sharing too much sensitive information with him.  White loses his mind, punching and kicking Pink to the ground. He is obviously emotionally compromised.
Tumblr media
Mr. White loses his composure while discussing Mr. Orange with Mr. Pink.
Events unfold to reveal that (MAJOR SPOILER if you haven’t yet seen the film) the rat is none other than Mr. Orange, an undercover LAPD cop.  White isn’t present when the audience is made aware of the revelation.  We are treated to a flashback; Mr. Orange, aka Detective Freddy Newendyke, meeting with his superior at a diner.  He explains that Joe Cabot wants to talk to him about doing a high-risk job; a diamond heist with five other men.  
Freddy expresses fondness for the LAPD’s informant, Long Beach Mike, who put in a good word for him with Cabot.  Like White, Freddy has difficulty compartmentalizing.  With this off-hand comment, we are made aware of his tendency to humanize the men he’s been sent in to bring down.  He is the type of cop that gets in too deep when he goes undercover; moral lines blur.  
In a subsequent scene, Freddy (Mr. Orange) is waiting to catch a ride with Nice Guy Eddie, White, and Pink to a pre-heist meeting held by Joe Cabot.  As part of his preparation (which involves a motivational speech to himself in the mirror), we see him pull a prop wedding ring from its hiding place in a jar of change.  What Freddy is attempting to add to the fake persona of “Mr. Orange” with this wedding ring is a point hotly debated by film aficionados.  In my opinion, it acts as an emotional barrier between him and the other men.  The ring signals that he is domesticated, settled, unavailable.  It gives him the illusion of responsibility to counter his youthful appearance and habits (his apartment is covered in comic book posters, he eats cereal as a meal).  It is a detail that undoubtedly gets noticed by Mr. White.
Tumblr media
Mr. White and Mr. Orange relax together during a stakeout.
The pre-heist stakeout scene involving Orange and White together in White’s idling car is very interesting.  The two men are relaxed, casual; dressed in everyday clothing.  White is quizzing Orange on the details of the job, and casually points to a woman crossing the street in front of them, asking: “that girl’s ass?”  
What was he attempting to glean from Orange with this flippant question?  Orange’s immediate and hyper-heterosexual response (“sitting right here on my dick”) elicits a sharp and almost surprised bark of laughter from White.  He’s learned two things: Orange was quick to establish his masculinity, and inadvertently revealed that perhaps he isn’t the type to remain faithful to his (supposed) wife.  
White then goes on to describe which violent acts can be utilized with greatest efficacy if they are met with resistance during the hold-up.  Orange listens with a mix of awe and disgust; it is apparent he is starting to like White, against all better judgment.  
Tumblr media
Freddy (aka Mr. Orange) is conflicted as he watches Mr. White shoot the police.
Orange’s escalating inner-conflict about his feelings for White is brought to a head in the post-heist getaway scene.  Their driver, Mr. Brown, has suffered a gunshot wound to the head, crashing their car.  Orange and White get out of the vehicle, only to be boxed in by an approaching squad car.  White postitions himself in front of Orange and shoots at the officers behind the windshield, killing them.  He is ignorant of the expression of sorrow and desperation on Orange’s face.  
Tumblr media
Mr. White throws a protective arm around Mr. Orange as they leave the crime scene.
If Detective Freddy Newendyke had been uncompromised, he would have shot White while his back was turned to him, commandeered a vehicle to the rendezvous point, and told the rest of Cabot’s thieves that White had been killed by the police.  None of them would have been the wiser; Mr. Brown was already dead and wouldn’t have contradicted his story.  
Instead, Orange allows White to lead him away from the scene (hand held protectively against his back).  They try to strong-arm a random civilian out of her vehicle, but she unexpectedly draws a weapon from her glove compartment and shoots.  Orange is hit in the gut; he fires back without thinking, killing her instantly.  In that moment, the cop has completely lost himself to his undercover persona.  He’s now no better than the men he led into a trap.
Tumblr media
Mr. White threatens his long-time friend Joe Cabot to protect Mr. Orange.
Fast-forward to the warehouse.  Orange knows that the LAPD is waiting for the boss, Joe Cabot, to arrive before they move in from where they are waiting a few blocks away.  When Cabot does finally make his entrance it is with accusations; he knows that Orange is the rat, the one that tipped off the LAPD to the heist.  Orange is almost delirious with blood loss and pain, but he maintains his innocence.  
White is aghast at Cabot’s claims.  He refuses to believe the man he’s come to care so deeply for is a cop.  He demands proof from Cabot, who replies: “with instinct, you don’t need proof.”  White draws his weapon on Cabot, his old friend and business associate, and threatens: “Joe, if you kill that man, you die next. Repeat: you kill him, you die next.”  In one moment, he’s thrown years of loyalty and allegiance into the wind for a young man he’s only known for a few weeks.  Cabot fires, hitting Orange.  White shoots back, killing both Cabot and his son Eddie, but not before taking a few bullets himself.
Tumblr media
Mr. White pulls himself over to Mr. Orange, cradling the other man in his arms.
In the gutwrenching final scene, White pulls himself, bloody and moaning with pain, over to where Orange is lying.  Both men are drenched in blood, wheezing through their injuries.  White lifts Orange’s head and tenderly places it in his lap, caressing his face.  Orange reaches up, enveloping White with his arms.  Their faces are inches from each other as they form a perfect pieta.  
Sirens blare in the background; Orange knows that his salvation has arrived.  White looks down at him, resigned: “I’m sorry kid, it looks like we’re gonna do a bit of time.”  Unspoken is the word “together”. (Aside: if Orange hadn’t signalled his unavailability with the wedding ring, I am positive that White would have asked him to replace Alabama as his new partner. His emotional attachment to Orange was that intense.)
Tumblr media
Still holding Mr. White, Mr. Orange reveals his true identity.
Up to this point, it has been a matter of debate whether Orange’s feelings mirror White’s.  His job is now essentially complete; all he has to do is wait for the LAPD to burst through the door and take him to a hospital.  Instead, he does the unthinkable: he confesses his true identity to the man he has betrayed.  As Orange sobs, “I’m sorry, I’m sorry”, White continues to stroke his face, then howls like an animal, as if his heart has been cleaved in two.  White pulls his gun and places it against Orange’s jaw.  The police burst into the warehouse; White is now crying, almost hysterical.  He pulls the trigger, knowing it will mean his own death; that he and Orange will die together.
Tumblr media
Mr. White sobs as the police enter the warehouse.  
Many of the underlying themes of Orange and White’s relationship can be likened to tenets established by Japanese culture.  Orange’s confession was the equivalent of “jingy”; essentially, honor and humanity.  It is the thing you know you MUST do, even if you don’t want to.  In his heart, he knew he owed it to White to tell him the truth, regardless of his own safety.  He preferred to die with a clean soul than survive knowing that he’d lied to a man who loved him.  
White was an individual who strived to live according to a kind of thieves’ “bushido”, a chivalric code that emphasized loyalty and professionalism.  Orange knew that in White’s eyes, death was preferrable to dishonor, and he was willing to make that sacrifice.  It is also a valid interpretation to see White and Orange’s relationship as a modern-day representation of “wakashudo” (a practice engaged in by all members of the Samurai class; when a seasoned warrior took a younger male as a lover who was apprenticed to him in warrior etiquette, martial arts, and the Samurai code).  
Throughout the film, White constantly declares himself Orange’s protector and mentor.  He feels responsible for Orange’s injuries even though his actions didn’t cause them in any way.  They share a level of physical intimacy onscreen that is undeniable; holding hands, caressing, embracing.  But most telling is their almost mutual decision to die together on that warehouse floor, when survival was so easily within their reach.
433 notes · View notes
whenlarrymetfreddy · 7 years ago
Text
Existing while bi:
bi person: “I’m bi”
people: “source?”
people: “may we see your relationship history pls?”
people: [citation needed]
people: “where’s the receipts?”
people: “are you sure though :/// maybe I, a complete stranger, know more about your sexuality than you do”
bi person: “me: the source is me!! I’m the source!! I’m bi you SUBMORONIC FRUITCAKES”
420 notes · View notes
whenlarrymetfreddy · 7 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media
1992 → 2015
1K notes · View notes
whenlarrymetfreddy · 7 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
That’s a lot of eyebrow action, which I love! 
43 notes · View notes
whenlarrymetfreddy · 7 years ago
Text
me, talking about my fave male characters:
Tumblr media
95K notes · View notes
whenlarrymetfreddy · 7 years ago
Text
“Creator Chose Not To Use Archive Warnings”
If you see this on AO3, that means that any of the usual warnings - any of them - may appear in that story without being tagged. This is literally explained on AO3, and in the little pop ups about content warnings.
If a creator tags a work as chose not to warn, then it is on you, the reader, to decide if it’s worth the risk that any content that would usually get a warning might appear without you knowing. If you choose to proceed (which on AO3, unless you tell the site not to, means that you will get a specific little notice essentially asking “are you sure?”), then it is on you, not on the author, if the story contains content you wanted to avoid.
In my experience, most writers use chose not to warn sparingly and for specific reasons. Speaking for myself, I use it for stories with potentially triggering content that doesn’t really fit the profile of the existing warnings (eg, recovery from sexual assault doesn’t feel like it fits into non-con, but I also don’t want to spring it on someone as “no archive warnings apply” - also for suicide talk, which I can’t in conscience tag as smooth sailing, but doesn’t have a specific warning), or that seriously spoils a story, but I also try to use appropriate tags that give more information so people can make wise decisions.
“Chose not to warn” =/= “no archive warnings apply”. Some writers use them inaccurately or inappropriately, and that’s a pain. Some use both, when they’re basically opposites, which is fairly maddening.
But, as a reader, if someone has told you that there may be content warnings that they haven’t been explicit about - that there may be upsetting or triggering content in this story (which is exactly what CNTW means) - and you chose to continue anyway, then whining at or being angry at the author is wildly inappropriate and unfair.
Honestly, the only somewhat-exception to this I can think of is if an author has used both CNTW and NAWA, though even then, it’s best to proceed as if the CNTW warning is in place, because it’s safer that way.
It isn’t an author’s fault if you ignored the warning.
It isn’t an author’s fault if you didn’t read the description of what the warnings mean.
It isn’t an author’s fault if other writers don’t use the tags like they’re meant to be used.
It isn’t an author’s fault if they took all steps to warn you about content and you ignored the information you were given.
It doesn’t make them irresponsible or dishonest or untrustworthy. It is your responsibility if you were given warnings and clicked on a story anyway.
Read the content warnings. Take heed of them. Proceed accordingly.
Don’t shit on writers because you didn’t take the time to learn how the system works.
77 notes · View notes
whenlarrymetfreddy · 7 years ago
Text
how dare there not be a fic for this very specific au i have in my head
182K notes · View notes
whenlarrymetfreddy · 7 years ago
Text
Fanfic Prompt Game
ao3tagoftheday.tumblr.com/random
Until you get a tag you like.
Send it to me with a pairing/fandom.
Go! 
I look forward to the chaos.
32 notes · View notes
whenlarrymetfreddy · 7 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
“Don’t pussy out on me now. they don’t know. they don’t know shit. you’re not gonna get hurt. you’re fucking Barretta. they believe every fucking word ‘cause you’re super cool.”
10K notes · View notes
whenlarrymetfreddy · 7 years ago
Conversation
family: so what are your post-college plans?
me: tim roth retires from shitty acting roles and focuses on directing beautiful art house films. he spots me in a cafe and I become the karina to his godard
23 notes · View notes
whenlarrymetfreddy · 7 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
reservoir dogs
21 notes · View notes
whenlarrymetfreddy · 7 years ago
Text
Honestly Larry talking about “pushing that man/woman thing for too long” is one of the most bisexual things I ever heard
90 notes · View notes
whenlarrymetfreddy · 7 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
reservoir dogs
21 notes · View notes
whenlarrymetfreddy · 7 years ago
Text
@ladyneeko
Imagine Tarantino movie but instead of feet he had other weird fetishes
4K notes · View notes
whenlarrymetfreddy · 7 years ago
Text
can we just take a moment to appreciate freddy’s word choice here tho
Tumblr media
60 notes · View notes
whenlarrymetfreddy · 7 years ago
Text
I know i’ve said this before but Freddy is definitely SUCH a size queen and he’s usually a really calm and composed person but he gets drunk with Larry one night and they kind of mess around a little like kissing and stuff, nothing serious, but then Freddy sees the outline of Larry’s rlly thick cock through his jeans and he straight up loses it, just drops to his knees right there and begs to suck him off
70 notes · View notes
whenlarrymetfreddy · 7 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
315 notes · View notes