The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe/YMMV: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Fridge Horror]]: How horrible would it be to return to being a common child in 1940s England, with all the knowledge of twenty or so years of being an adult King or Queen in Narnia?
* [[Fridge Horror]]: How horrible would it be to return to being a common child in 1940s England, with all the knowledge of twenty or so years of being an adult King or Queen in Narnia?
** In the books, it was stated somewhere that memories of the real world become faint, dreamlike, when in Narnia long enough, and vice versa. This was apparently not noticed in the film adaptation of ''Caspian''.
** In the books, it was stated somewhere that memories of the real world become faint, dreamlike, when in Narnia long enough, and vice versa. This was apparently not noticed in the film adaptation of ''Caspian''.
** [[Laser Guided Amnesia|That doesn't make it better.]]
** [[Laser-Guided Amnesia|That doesn't make it better.]]
* [[Tear Jerker]]: Aslan's death (which I'm surprised no one has mentioned), especially since the scene is a symbol of Jesus' death and resurrection if you're a Christian.
* [[Tear Jerker]]: Aslan's death (which I'm surprised no one has mentioned), especially since the scene is a symbol of Jesus' death and resurrection if you're a Christian.
* [[The Woobie]]: Edmund, while the White Witch's prisoner.
* [[The Woobie]]: Edmund, while the White Witch's prisoner.

Revision as of 15:11, 9 January 2014


  • Complete Monster: The White Witch.
  • Everyone Is Jesus in Purgatory: Word of God says the book is hypothetical speculation on Christianity if Jesus existed in worlds that were quite different from ours. Of course, most people just thought it was a charming fairy tale.
  • First Installment Wins: The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe is the best-known and most adapted book of the series.
  • Fridge Horror: How horrible would it be to return to being a common child in 1940s England, with all the knowledge of twenty or so years of being an adult King or Queen in Narnia?
    • In the books, it was stated somewhere that memories of the real world become faint, dreamlike, when in Narnia long enough, and vice versa. This was apparently not noticed in the film adaptation of Caspian.
    • That doesn't make it better.
  • Tear Jerker: Aslan's death (which I'm surprised no one has mentioned), especially since the scene is a symbol of Jesus' death and resurrection if you're a Christian.
  • The Woobie: Edmund, while the White Witch's prisoner.