- That certain night, the night we met,There was magic abroad in the air.
true in general, for all couples
- There were angels dining at the ritz,
If you notice, Aziraphale and Crowley always dine at the Ritz together.
- And a nightingale sang in berkeley square.
The event at the end of the book
- I may be right, I may be wrong,
But I'm perfectly willing to swear
That when you turned and smiled at me,
A nightingale sang in berkeley square.The moon that lingered over london'town
Poor puzzled moon, he wore a frown.
How could he know that we two were so in love?The whole darn world seemed upside down.
Hm, interesting.
- The streets of town were paved with stars,
It was such a romantic affair.
And as we kissed and said goodnight,
A nightingale sang in berkeley square.
~interlude~
- When dawn came stealing up, all gold and blue
The next day after the Apocalypse was all about the dawn.
- To interrupt our rendez-vous,
I still remember how you smiled and said,
"was that a dream? or was it true? "
A lot of the characters walked away thinking if it was true.
- Our homeward step was just as light
As the dancing of Fred Astaire,
And like an echo far away
A nightingale sang in Berkeley square.
What do you make of it? See anything there? And what do you think Terry Pratchett and Neil Gaiman were doing there?If there is a couple, who do you think is the narrator?
- Summer Glau could play Anathema Device really well... A pretty pale skinned brunette with touches of cuckoocloudlander-ness.
- There's growing support for Tom Hiddleston as Crowley and, by virtue of the fact that they have established rapport (Wallander, Thor, etc.), Kenneth Branagh as Aziraphale. It's an understatement to say this would be ALL KINDS OF AWESOME.
- I second Tom as Crowley. He was literally the first thing that popped into mind when I read his description. I can't quite see Kenneth Branagh as Aziraphale though. I keep seeing Martin Freeman.
- Stephen Fry is Aziraphale—gay, intelligent, extremely English, well-read, middle-aged, even has a habit of calling people "dear" ...
- Which means that Hugh Laurie is Crowley.
- These two could be put to far better use as minor characters. Creative cameos!
- Mark Gatiss is Aziraphale. Martin Freeman is Aziraphale. Benedict Cumberbatch is Aziraphale.
- Too much Sherlock baggage on all of them at this point, although Freeman could've done Newt ten years ago.
- Colin Farrell is Crowley. I'd even say Paul Bettany is Aziraphale.
- For my money, Colin Farrell might make a good Newt, and Paul Bettany would make a perfect Metatron.
- David Tennant...oh, bugger it for a lark, he could play either of them. Brilliantly.
- Actually, I'd love to see him as the Delivery Man. It's a minor role, but a crucial one, and he'd play it with appropriate whimsy!
- Tennant playing Crowley with Benedict Cumberbatch as Aziraphale.
- Confirmed: David Tennant will be playing Crowley in the TV adaptation of the book.
- Mark Sheppard is Crowley. (He's already played a demon named Crowley...)
- From what this troper's seen so far, that particular name match-up has provided a great excuse for crossover fic.
- Really not sure I could see him as Crowley (his manner's not quite right), but what about as Hastur or Ligur?
- Noel Fielding as Crowley and Julian Barratt as Aziraphale. That is all.
- Tom Hardy as Aziraphale. I don't know why, it just works.
- Imelda Stauton as Sister Mary Loquacious.
- Simon Pegg and Nick Frost as Hastur and Ligur.
- Andy Serkis as Shadwell.
- Matt Gordon as Crowley, appearance-wise. He's the Paco Rabanne model for 1 Million. This troper's not so sure about his acting skils, but that's what he should look like. It's the cheekbones, what can I say?
- Suranne Jones (played Idris in Doctor Who) as Anathema.
- Steve Buscemi is Crowley, Stephen Fry as Aziraphale. That would be utterly perfect in my opinion.
- Vinette Robinson (yes from Sherlock) as Anathelma Device. Just think about it. It works, in my opinion!
- Thomas Sangster as Adam. Scarlett Johansson as War. (See what I did there?) James Earl Jones as the voice of Death. Hey, it could happen... in a quantum sense, anyway.
- Tim Curry as Death
- This trope is always going to be disappointed that she'll never get to see young Kyle Mac Lachlan as the delivery man. Or Aziraphale.
- Cillian Murphy as Famine. It works.
- Richard Ayoade as Azirphale, Sendhil Ramurphy as Crowley, Oona Chaplin as Anathema, and Dev Patel as Newt. Think about it.
Search your feelings, you know it to be true.
- God I hope so.
- Yes, but... but... Bat out of Hell!
- And "Under Pressure," and "Good Old-Fashioned Lover Boy," come to it.
- But you can't forget "A Nightingale Sang in Berkeley Square."
- Additionally, Brian May and/or Roger Taylor will make a cameo. And the world will collapse because of the overload of pure epicness.
- Confirmed!
- Alternatively, Adam went on to become Owl City.
Alternatively, they would - but because they're human, they don't fulfill the roles properly and the apocalypse never actually comes to pass.
Pepper is War. She's always getting into fights. Brian is Pollution - he's constantly dirty and crisp packets apparently accumulate on the ground wherever he goes. Wensleydale is Famine. He's very fastidious and therefore is probably very careful about what he eats, just as he's very careful about everything else. Adam is Death. He's everywhere, all the time, and you can't really get rid of him.
- I noticed the parallel on my last re-read and assumed it was deliberate. Adam was supposed to be the Antichrist, but instead he grew up human. So instead of changing the world with the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, he gathered his own horsemen (well, horseboys and -girl) and turned the world over to human control, rather than starting a war that would end in either Heaven or Hell controlling the Earth.
- It's interesting how this overlaps with Piers Anthony's idea of the Incarnations of Immortality, that each Personification keeps the job until they die/get bored with it, and nominates a successor.
- Problem: It's mentioned Madame Tracy cooks meals for him and leaves them at the door. Shadwell waits just long enough for her to leave before opening the door and taking the food.
- Who says he actually eats the food though? He could just take it because of the sheer inconvenience of leaving it outside the door to pile up and start smelling a bit.
- He's a British old-age pensioner living on bugger all money who finds it difficult even to make rent. Of course he'd eat free food, even if he isn't grateful for it.
- This sounds like a brilliant WMG, but how would you explain Him getting killed?
- He doesn't actually get killed though. Even after meeting Death, He appears at the end of the last battle.
- He IS ineffable.
- Or he could be Jesus, since the Seals are meant to be broken by 'The Lamb of God'.
- That's because Adam lives there. He wants it to be nice, so it is.
- At the end of the book, Adam climbs up an apple tree and reflects on how "there never was an apple... that wasn't worth the trouble you got into for eating it". Based on that alone, I'd say the above WMG is completely true, if never explicitly stated.
- Keep in mind Agnes' prophecies were not written in chronological order of happening. The last prophecy could as well be the first one that came true.
- I don't know if you invented the Armageddon't, but it is magnificent.
- This overlaps quite nicely with Piers Anthony's idea of the Incarnations of Immortality, that each Personification keeps the job until they die/get bored with it, and nominates a successor.
This is not quite incompatible with the highly significant plot point that eating the fruit of The Tree of Knowledge (of Good and Evil) gave humans mortality. Humans have been shown in The Bible to be able to attain immortality (through divine intervention, or after death, but still). If having eaten of the fruit personally made Adam, Eve, and their unborn child/children exceptionally human, they could easily have become some of the Anthropomorphic Personifications of humanity, and the ones who happened to be tasked to ride out (by God or fate or a poorly addressed package) in the event of an apocalypse.
- Or to make zombies.
- Pestilence spread the idea that vaccines caused Autism.
- Or he's working at a community and owns a green pinto.
- He doesn't seem to be all that happy about what happened during the Spanish Inquisition. It's at least vaguely hinted that he drinks to forget.
- It's hinted that everything just might have turned out the way it did because of God's ineffable Plan. Which means every player on the field was in the exact place he/she was needed to be for it all to go off without a hitch. If the Plan was all along for Adam and Eve to get kicked out of Eden, maybe he was the only one with the ability to pull it off. Also maybe his role as Hell's not-so-evil representative on Earth was important as well in some way even though his and Aziraphale's actions seemed to have no effect on Adam Young's decision to not go through with Armageddon.
- He likes making games for his friends to play, and this was one such game. They were roleplaying, and each person had multiple characters. Besides, each WMG page simply must have one Character's Imagination guess.
- Johnson notably is never actually seen during the story, so he could be the unnamed award-winning fish breeder.
- It's outright stated in one of the footnotes that Greasy Johnson is "Baby B"