Am I the only one who thinks that the main issue with Dixon was not about race, but homophobia/repressed sexual identity? Am I crazy to think that he takes out on Red specifically because he likes the guy but in denial? Or maybe just acting like a homophobic bully because he's confused and directs his angers toward the one gay guy he knows? It seems super personal how he keeps going back to Red to showcase his darkest, most violent act when the guy literally did nothing to him and is totally harmless?
Totally jamming to ABBA , the famous bar scene with comments about Cuba killing gays (getting soooooo close in Reds personal space to provoke him), what the chief says in his letter (to deal stuff with love, "if anyone thinks you're gay, arrest them for homophobia"), taking out on Red all his rage while not going after Mildred or anyone else for that matter, apologising to him in tears at the hospital in total regret and emotional breakdown...
Not to mention his general concentrated effort in being/looking like a "tough guy", trying so hard to be respected as an alpha male when he is nothing but... afraid to show love or any vulnerability, most likely closeted and suffering on his own within his fragile sensibility, craving for kindness and love he never received in his life other than from the Chief... shouldn't all this reach one conclusion?
Man I fucking love this character so much, could think about it all day
arbrutus - simplicity, 'you are the only one i love'
marigold - pain and grief, cruelty
love lies bleeding - hoplessness.
(click for better quality!!)
Haha he said the thing-!!!
YOUR PRINCESS IS HEREEEE~ 💕💕💕
“Blondie” only has a nickname because Tuco Benedicto Pacifico Juan Maria Ramirez stole his name to add it to his collection
so i might've rewatched inside job