Chirin no Suzu/Tear Jerker: Difference between revisions

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(Created page with "{{work}} Tear Jerkers in ''[[{{ROOTPAGENAME}}]]'' include: * Chirin's Mother's death. She's been eaten alive by Wor, but she managed to protect her son before dying. Chirin's utterly broken pleas for her to wake up complete with trembling jaw and blubbering mouth can almost be too much to bear. Anyone who has ever lost a parent will know his sorrow. ** And what follows is the start of a heartbreaking Roaring Rampage of Revenge as Chirin begin...")
 
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* As [[Ever After (film)|Baroness Rodmilla de Ghent]] once said to her [[Drew Barrymore|stepdaughter]]: "How can anyone love a pebble in their shoe?" That is what Chirin felt in the anime adaptation after the sheep bar him from the barn. He is a pebble and like all pebbles, he is an outcast. It doesn't help that the narrator even says that Chirin has no home at all.
* As [[Ever After (film)|Baroness Rodmilla de Ghent]] once said to her [[Drew Barrymore|stepdaughter]]: "How can anyone love a pebble in their shoe?" That is what Chirin felt in the anime adaptation after the sheep bar him from the barn. He is a pebble and like all pebbles, he is an outcast. It doesn't help that the narrator even says that Chirin has no home at all.
* It is implied in all versions of the story that Chirin died in the winter storm.
* It is implied in all versions of the story that Chirin died in the winter storm.
* Chirin is now remembered as a Freddy Kruger/Krampus-like figure who gores little lambs to death if they cry. This scenario only exists in other versions of the story.


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Latest revision as of 21:37, 21 May 2023


Tear Jerkers in Chirin no Suzu include:

  • Chirin's Mother's death. She's been eaten alive by Wor, but she managed to protect her son before dying. Chirin's utterly broken pleas for her to wake up complete with trembling jaw and blubbering mouth can almost be too much to bear. Anyone who has ever lost a parent will know his sorrow.
  • Chirin's theme song performed by the Brothers Four.
  • As Baroness Rodmilla de Ghent once said to her stepdaughter: "How can anyone love a pebble in their shoe?" That is what Chirin felt in the anime adaptation after the sheep bar him from the barn. He is a pebble and like all pebbles, he is an outcast. It doesn't help that the narrator even says that Chirin has no home at all.
  • It is implied in all versions of the story that Chirin died in the winter storm.
  • Chirin is now remembered as a Freddy Kruger/Krampus-like figure who gores little lambs to death if they cry. This scenario only exists in other versions of the story.

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