
"To me, the very definition of the word "broken" suggests that
something can be fixed."
- Elijah
disney: making us question our morals since 1992
screw you both i AM attracted to a cartoon lion because for a lion Kovu was FIINNE
Elijah and Klaus are killers with different methods and this also reflects in the clothing that they wear. Klaus uses his teeth. He bites in and tears out and more often that not, he uses the “monster” hybrid part of himself to make a kill. He uses theatrics and bold moves with recklessness. He dresses in black jeans and a t-shirt, and he fits into the modern age, but he kills as an animal does.
Elijah, in his suit and tie, with his soft words that command that you listen to him and doesn’t need to give you because his entire being demands respect - but don’t mistake the even tone for kindness, for Elijah is far more cruel than his brother. Elijah kills with his hands. He will tear out hearts and snap necks and cut off the head, he will tell another to kill themselves. Elijah gets his hands dirty, he uses the “human” parts, his hands, more often or not to kill.
Klaus is the mad dog best kept on a short leash. Elijah is the cool and detached killer. Klaus is all emotion. Elijah is logic. They are complements but they are both monsters.
Whenever someone says that Elijah is a “gentleman”, a “good and caring man” I just start laughing. I’m with Daniel Gillies on this one. Elijah is an old time mob boss who wears a suit and shined shoes because he likes how it looks when he steps across a bloodied floor.
Shooting in Lafayette Cemetery No. 1 was already a thrill for Interview with a Vampire fan Morgan, but that’s also where the climax of this episode was shot. ‘‘So, when you see Elijah and Klaus in it that cemetery,” Morgan teases, ”get ready to get excited.”This is the scene Plec was referring to when she tweeted, ”I was just brought to tears in take 1 of a super-wide master shot,” during shooting in mid-March. She got emotional because it was in Pirates Alley where she, writer-producer Michael Narducci, and her writer’s muse, Marguerite MacIntyre (TVD’s Sheriff Forbes), sat in a bar and discussed the story and characters during a research trip last December - It’s a really emotional fight between the brothers,”Pictured is the final scene between the brothers. ”It’s a beautiful, simple scene where they talk about their potential future in the town,” Morgan says. ”After all of the confrontations and all of the history, it’s really nice to have a simple scene just about two brothers.” - (x)