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Are agatha and sophie gay
I just finished the movie and the whole time I was getting gay vibes from Agatha but I just ignored them until Agatha LITERALLY kissed Sophie on the lips.
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Happy lesbian visibility day!! Thank you to ofthickettumble for putting an ask in my inbox about my first post about this and pumpkinpaperweight for reminding me I never elaborated on it shjdsksjkdfh.
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Yes, perhaps even 'true' love. The love of friends, that doesn't have to be romantic and sexual. The love that should have bound them in their troubles and made them stronger but that Sophie certainly never appreciated.
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I am so sick of people guilt tripping lesbians when we that say we feel queer baited by Sophie and Agatha. Aside from them already being heavily queer coded as individuals I already made a separate post about that -- they fucking kissed in the movie.
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While the relationship between Sophie and Agatha is largely platonic, there are subtle hints that it can be something more. If you are wondering whether they end up together in the film, here is what we know.
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See Featured Authors Answering Questions. This question contains spoilers… view spoiler [i don't get it.
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Sophie and Agatha have been best friends since before the School for Good and Evil, although it was more one-sided and Sophie treated Agatha either as a Good Deed or a sidekick.
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See Featured Authors Answering Questions. This question contains spoilers… view spoiler [i don't get it.
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Sophie and Agatha’s love story subverts this damaging trend: not only are they both female characters, but their relationship is given equal importance relative to any heterosexual pairing in the book.
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The six novels in the series are unabashedly a female fantasy, where men suffer the same objectification that women do in real life, and all the tables are turned. Tedros and his princely counterparts are most often the damsels in distress, and Agatha and Sophie are the bold, swashbuckling heroes who can slay the beast while also looking glamorous and talking about their feelings, inhabiting all the multitudes of feminine magic.
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