Ghost
(via ghostsinthehall)
Trio of awesome!
(Sidenote: Dominic Cooper was amazing in An Education, much more so than Peter Sarsgaard. Just so you know.)

(via ghostsinthehall)

Trio of awesome!

(Sidenote: Dominic Cooper was amazing in An Education, much more so than Peter Sarsgaard. Just so you know.)

A nice, quick summary of why Emma Thompson is one badass and therefore hot lady.

Laura Linney, Colin Firth, and Emma Thompson consuming cool, refreshing beverages together.
This picture made me gasp because I fucking adore Laura Linney like whoa.

Laura Linney, Colin Firth, and Emma Thompson consuming cool, refreshing beverages together.

This picture made me gasp because I fucking adore Laura Linney like whoa.

  • Karen (Emma Thompson): Tell me, what would you do in my position?
  • Harry (Alan Rickman): What position is that?
  • Karen (Emma Thompson): Imagine your husband bought a gold necklace and come Christmas gave it to somebody else...
  • Harry (Alan Rickman): Oh, Karen...
  • Karen (Emma Thompson): Would you wait around to find out if it's just a necklace, or if it's sex and a necklace, or if worst of all it's a necklace and love? Would you stay, knowing life would always be a little bit worse? Or would you cut and run?
  • Harry (Alan Rickman): Oh, God. I am so in the wrong. The classic fool.
  • Karen (Emma Thompson): [voice breaking] Yes, but you've also made a fool out of me, and you've made the life I lead foolish too.
  • (Love, Actually)
I guess Dustin Hoffman’s tie is delicious.

I guess Dustin Hoffman’s tie is delicious.

A big reason why I liked Love, Actually, despite my intense aversion to romantic movies, was because of Emma Thompson’s character’s storyline. In a movie that was high on portraying love and life as bastions of hope, Karen’s downward-spiraling journey towards discovering her husband’s infidelity completely and utterly broke my heart. I remember being absolutely in awe of how well Emma Thompson played the character, and how spectacularly she was able to portray absolute pain with a simple shift in her facial expression.

A big reason why I liked Love, Actually, despite my intense aversion to romantic movies, was because of Emma Thompson’s character’s storyline. In a movie that was high on portraying love and life as bastions of hope, Karen’s downward-spiraling journey towards discovering her husband’s infidelity completely and utterly broke my heart. I remember being absolutely in awe of how well Emma Thompson played the character, and how spectacularly she was able to portray absolute pain with a simple shift in her facial expression.

Button Theme