@reye7663: the ending to this film is so sad #tristanandisolde #medievaltiktok #medievalromance #princessxknight #jamesfranco Scenepack: @gingeralefilms (logolessfiles2.0 on instagram) Audio: @kay🎧

reye7663
reye7663
Open In TikTok:
Region: GB
Saturday 01 November 2025 23:15:15 GMT
1284111
177295
692
9485

Music

Download

Comments

s.kprofit
ANIME WORLD 🌍 :
GOLDEN BROWN
2025-11-07 06:45:14
182
forsea.mmm
∵ M ∵ :
“I have a sword to protect you, but not a crown to have you”
2025-11-08 21:46:41
2770
txtiktok00100
TX :
2025-11-07 16:37:07
8723
jenniix541
J E N N I F E R🌙 :
this eyes..
2025-11-07 18:02:14
6945
bellamouce
bellamouce💅 :
what movie is this
2025-11-15 14:30:42
41
gigi.gigi7010
hadjer :
i think I just saw Henry Cavill
2025-11-07 10:49:15
1436
zeroy0388
zeroy0388 :
2025-11-07 17:53:39
1301
daynn084
DaynneStore :
I hate the ending 😭
2025-11-07 14:54:32
395
leoschel
OssiinAussie :
Which movie is it
2025-11-08 09:26:34
21
centuryxw
𝔏𝔦𝔩 𝔠𝔢𝔫𝔱𝔲𝔯𝔶 🪴🍂🍁🪴 :
can someone explain what happened at the end please 🥺
2025-11-10 19:19:31
1
nana_mksa
alice🦋🌹🍃 :
movie name
2025-11-09 17:35:09
2
mona_bni
Moon~🌙 :
is it sad ending?
2025-11-22 21:42:18
2
urmom.jk1
urmom.🙃 :
they deserve better
2025-11-03 15:54:53
474
jaydetheratguys_3
🎄 :
The real one
2025-11-09 17:24:45
146
alisonek1230
Alisonek :
they were together as trees ..
2025-11-05 14:22:46
276
h.h.hompo
h.h.hompo :
Everyone is talking about tristan and isolde, about sad ending, about tristan’s brother… Bot nobody is talking about the king, who raised tristan as his son, who lost his arm for his life, who was betrayed by his “son (tristan)”, who was betrayed by wife, who was betrayed by his people. I think the king should have more edits, than those two. The king wanted his wife to be happy, he wanted to have tristan near to him, he wanted the good future for his nation as a king.. But he lost everything due to the strong love of isolde and tristan
2025-11-30 19:28:37
3
ismashka1
исмаил🤍🤍 :
Я смотрел и просто задавался вопросом ну скажи ты королю ты же с ним как отец с сыном стал обьясни ситуацию нет молчит потом за спинной действует лжет 😭
2025-11-11 22:59:16
167
chvz._w_
R.William :
James franco🔥
2025-11-07 16:02:17
57
mu_lan13
.🌷~° :
the name
2025-11-08 18:29:31
6
imgabzzj57l
gabriela :
one of my fav movies 🙏🙏
2025-11-08 15:16:50
94
nadija_zelenjak_
💙💙💛💛НАДЮША 💙💙💛💛 :
Що за фільм👑
2025-11-27 11:18:43
0
i_am_rsa
𝙎𝙝𝙖𝙝𝙚𝙚𝙧 :
It's always Anakin Skywalker getting hurt in love 🥀
2025-11-08 07:06:35
7
baran.1707
BaRaN :
James Franco is handsome in every movie 👀❤..
2025-11-08 01:15:59
10
fadiyah.158632
fadiyah.158632 :
Name of the film ?
2025-11-21 13:42:01
0
likearollimg
Jalaor show :
name song
2025-11-16 01:30:25
0
To see more videos from user @reye7663, please go to the Tikwm homepage.

Other Videos

Most people imagine collapse as everyone running in different directions. Empty streets. Violence. Lone wolves fighting for scraps. But history tells a different story. When big systems fail, people do not scatter. They come together. They form smaller, tighter, more capable groups. Not because it feels good, but because it is the only way humans have ever survived hard times. If our modern world ever shakes, America might rediscover something it lost. The village. Not the romantic version. The real one. A community built on shared food, shared water, shared defense, and shared skills. Families growing different essentials and trading every day. Neighbors rotating watch. Kids learning real skills from parents and skilled adults instead of screens. People becoming valuable again because everyone has a role. Collapse does not always destroy society. Sometimes it shrinks it into something stronger. In a world where global systems fail, small communities survive. In a world where the tech dependent struggle, the capable thrive. And in a world where meaning has been lost, crisis can bring purpose back. If things ever break, America will not turn into isolated chaos. It will turn into a nation of villages. Small. Local. Capable. Resilient. And if you are learning skills, building food security, raising animals, storing water, and teaching your family how to contribute, you are not preparing for the end. You are preparing to rebuild what comes next. Would crisis tear America apart or bring communities together again?
Most people imagine collapse as everyone running in different directions. Empty streets. Violence. Lone wolves fighting for scraps. But history tells a different story. When big systems fail, people do not scatter. They come together. They form smaller, tighter, more capable groups. Not because it feels good, but because it is the only way humans have ever survived hard times. If our modern world ever shakes, America might rediscover something it lost. The village. Not the romantic version. The real one. A community built on shared food, shared water, shared defense, and shared skills. Families growing different essentials and trading every day. Neighbors rotating watch. Kids learning real skills from parents and skilled adults instead of screens. People becoming valuable again because everyone has a role. Collapse does not always destroy society. Sometimes it shrinks it into something stronger. In a world where global systems fail, small communities survive. In a world where the tech dependent struggle, the capable thrive. And in a world where meaning has been lost, crisis can bring purpose back. If things ever break, America will not turn into isolated chaos. It will turn into a nation of villages. Small. Local. Capable. Resilient. And if you are learning skills, building food security, raising animals, storing water, and teaching your family how to contribute, you are not preparing for the end. You are preparing to rebuild what comes next. Would crisis tear America apart or bring communities together again?
Normalcy Bias Is America’s Biggest Threat Most people think danger announces itself with alarms and headlines. The truth is the opposite. Real disasters show up quietly. They build slow… then arrive all at once… and most people are caught completely unprepared because they believed tomorrow would look exactly like today. That mindset has a name. It is called normalcy bias. And it is the most dangerous lie people tell themselves. Normalcy bias is what made people stay in their homes before Katrina. It is what made investors ignore the warning signs before 2008. It is what made entire nations shrug off risk before every major collapse in history. People saw the signs… they just convinced themselves it could not happen here. Not now. Not to them. Look around at the world today. The signs are everywhere. Solar storms stronger than any we have seen in decades. An aging grid that can barely handle summer heat. Political division that is slicing the country in half. An economy stretched thin by debt, inflation, and global instability. AI accelerating faster than anyone can regulate or understand. Tensions rising internationally while our supply chains depend on foreign stability. Most people scroll past it and go back to life as usual. Not out of stupidity. Out of comfort. Normal feels safe… even when it is an illusion. Prepared people see things differently. They are not fearful. They are aware. They pay attention to patterns. They accept that systems fail, governments miscalculate, technology breaks, and nature does not care about convenience. Preparedness is not about doom. It is about responsibility. It is about refusing to put your family’s future in the hands of chance. It is about building the strength to stand when others are caught flat footed. If things keep getting better, preparedness makes your life more stable and independent. If things take a turn, preparedness becomes the difference between panic and confidence. Normalcy bias tells people to wait. Preparedness tells people to act. Which voice are you listening to today? What signs do you think most Americans are ignoring right now?
Normalcy Bias Is America’s Biggest Threat Most people think danger announces itself with alarms and headlines. The truth is the opposite. Real disasters show up quietly. They build slow… then arrive all at once… and most people are caught completely unprepared because they believed tomorrow would look exactly like today. That mindset has a name. It is called normalcy bias. And it is the most dangerous lie people tell themselves. Normalcy bias is what made people stay in their homes before Katrina. It is what made investors ignore the warning signs before 2008. It is what made entire nations shrug off risk before every major collapse in history. People saw the signs… they just convinced themselves it could not happen here. Not now. Not to them. Look around at the world today. The signs are everywhere. Solar storms stronger than any we have seen in decades. An aging grid that can barely handle summer heat. Political division that is slicing the country in half. An economy stretched thin by debt, inflation, and global instability. AI accelerating faster than anyone can regulate or understand. Tensions rising internationally while our supply chains depend on foreign stability. Most people scroll past it and go back to life as usual. Not out of stupidity. Out of comfort. Normal feels safe… even when it is an illusion. Prepared people see things differently. They are not fearful. They are aware. They pay attention to patterns. They accept that systems fail, governments miscalculate, technology breaks, and nature does not care about convenience. Preparedness is not about doom. It is about responsibility. It is about refusing to put your family’s future in the hands of chance. It is about building the strength to stand when others are caught flat footed. If things keep getting better, preparedness makes your life more stable and independent. If things take a turn, preparedness becomes the difference between panic and confidence. Normalcy bias tells people to wait. Preparedness tells people to act. Which voice are you listening to today? What signs do you think most Americans are ignoring right now?

About