I'm not going to go too deep into this whole Randall situation since I got skid marks from the last time I delved too deep into this. But I never and I do mean NEVER found him to be the type to be good or change his ways and all that kind of stuff.
Randall was a villain and at times, I found him to be a more villainous villain then even the head bad guy, Waternoose. I don't think he's a nice guy and I don't think he would change his ways, I also REALLY doubt that he survived his little bayou encounter.
The odds of those people throwing a man sized monster after slamming it's head in a few times back into the closet from where it came from is unlikely. Realistically, if I were them I'd kill it if something like that came out of my closet. No offense to Randall's army of fans but like I said, being realistic.
Taranchula is right on the fact that despite Disney's kid nature, they are not afraid to have people die. Syndrome and Hopper both died in their films, and that's not even counting the large amounts of VIOLENT deaths in the original animated Disney films. Some of their classics have serious gory demises.
The Little Mermaid
The Lion King
Tarzan
The Great Mouse Detective
Sleeping Beauty
The Rescuers Downunder
The Hunchback of Notre Dame
Lady and the Tramp
All of these films showed death, violence, and some had extremely dark and mature material to work with. Disney is not afraid to kill it's villains or some of it's characters. Of course, you'll notice Disney's favorite method of "villain removal" is dropping them off a cliff or very high ledge or something.
Dying from heights is a common Disney villain death because it's an easy way to kill someone without showing you the nasty after affect. Even though, like I said, Disney has showed some pretty dark stuff at times.
|