Behold, the most damaging deleted scene of all time.

The removal of this scene fundamentally alters the relationship Lilo has with Stitch in their early stages, reducing her affection to Stitch to her simply being a nice girl. 

This scene establishes her patience and always blindly optimistic attitude towards Stitch as transference from her parents, contextualizing their entire relationship.

“I needed you.”

As for the sadness of the scene, it is nothing that can’t be found in Fox and Hound, or many of the other Disney Renaissance Film.

(Source: crashic)

(Reblogged from skagerak)
(Reblogged from thegang)
(Reblogged from 100leaguesunderthesea)
(Reblogged from 100leaguesunderthesea)

(Source: caoine)

(Reblogged from skagerak)

a bouquet of clumsy words: you know that place between sleep and awake where your still dreaming but it`s slowly slipping? i wish we could feel like that more often. i also wish i could click my fingers three times and be transported to anywhere i like. i wish that people didn`t always say ‘just wondering’ when you both know there was a real reason behind them asking. and i wish i could get lost in the stars.

listen, there`s a hell of a good universe next door, let’s go

e.e.cummings (via awarew0lf)
(Reblogged from kaskuin)
(Reblogged from foggy-autumn-nights)
(Reblogged from prettybooks)

(Source: imsensitive)

(Reblogged from mymlen)
riotgrrrljacksonville:


Seventeen-year-old Bianca Passarge of Hamburg dresses up as a cat and dances on wine bottles in June 1958. Her performance was based on a dream. She practiced for eight hours a day to do this.
Photo by Carlo Polito 

I’ve always wondered the story behind this picture.

riotgrrrljacksonville:

Seventeen-year-old Bianca Passarge of Hamburg dresses up as a cat and dances on wine bottles in June 1958. Her performance was based on a dream. She practiced for eight hours a day to do this.

Photo by Carlo Polito

I’ve always wondered the story behind this picture.

(Source: tamburina)

(Reblogged from who-let-the-nerds-out)