Scott Gardener wrote:I was just remembering crying in the theater during Star Trek III, when they blew up the Enterprise. Oddly enough, I kept it pretty straight when they totalled the Next Gen Enterprise-D in Star Trek: Generations.
Did you feel better when they revealed the Enterprise A? If so, maybe that's why it was easier to watch D crash than the original; the ship we all came to love in
The Next Generation was the 4th edition, and when they were evacuating the crash site, Captain Picard said he had a feeling it would not be the last Federation ship to carry the name 'Enterprise.'
I guess you could compare it to the difference of a character dying in
Dragonball and
Dragonball Z. In the latter, you know they'll just raise em' all with the dragonballs later (the Earth has been destroyed how many times?)
And I'm suddenly ashamed to say that I've never seen
The Shipping News or
What Dreams May Come. Maybe once classes start, I've found employment and I know just how much free time I have to deal with between them, I'll have to look for those.
Black Shuck wrote:A few months ago I went and dug All Dogs Go To Heaven out of the shed and watched and I bawled at the end. I never did when I was little, which was weird...
I did the same about a year ago, and though I wasn't exactly moved to tears, I did find that my childhood memories weren't entirely accurate. Now looking back, it's occured to me: Don Bluth deals with some pretty hefty subject material considering his target audience. Really, when was the last time somebody sold his soul to the devil (Rasputin in
Anastasia and Carface in
ADGTH 2) in a Disney movie?