Everyone keeps comparing Pinocchio/August to Jiminy. But their situations are completely different. Jiminy was originally human, then was transformed into a cricket by magic. It made sense that he was human in a world without magic. Same thing with Sidney, who was presumably originally human, then turned into a Genie, then into a mirror. I'm not sure what will happen to them with the magic back, but I think they're probably remain human unless a new spell is cast. Just because there is magic in Storybrooke now, doesn't mean that everything is reset to how it was before they left it.and unless I blinked and missed it he didn't suddenly transform into a cricket... Which would I think mean that August is still wooden man lying in a bed.Still love the one look on Jiminy's face. "oh shit, I'm a cricket".
It didn't seem like the curse being lifted made physical changes, just mental/memory changes. Although Mr. Gold letting magic loose may bring about those reversions.
Emma was the "savior" and the only one who could have broken the curse in Maine. She needed to believe, and she was the only one who could break the curse with true love.So, Regina NEVER kissed Henry, on his sickbed, or ever before that, or her love was impure?
Or nobody ever loved anyone truly in Stroybrook?
True love doesn't have to be romantic love. It's a really narrow-minded and ridiculous concept, and I'm glad the show has at least rejected that idea. (Even though they're sticking to the sappy "everyone has their own romantic heterosexual true love" trope I'm not the biggest fan of.)Hmm? Then why wasn't the curse broken at the beginning of the episode rather than the end?Whoa. The curse over the town wasn't broken by Emma kissing Henry, it was broken because Emma suddenly believed in magic.
The logic of Emma believing and the curse being broken were both pretty sketchy and conveeeenient. As was the notion that Emma's kiss was "true love." Motherly love, sure, but since when is that the same as the fairy-tale-kiss kind of love? I'm a purist, dammit! A pre-adolescent boy does not have a true love of that sort. It's not possible - his hormones haven't kicked in yet!![]()
Maybe it's Regina's bitch of a mother, as someone has speculated.Regarding the Queen of Hearts, yea, I suspect there's something big going on there, they deliberately kept her face hidden, for a reason (Maybe because it's someone we know, or will meet soon, or maybe simply because they haven't decided who to cast for the role)
What makes you think Pinocchio is dead? At worst, he's wood but a spell would make him a real boy (man) again.I would have thought Jefferson's remark stemmed from his knowledge that Henry was magically poisoned, not from personal intervention and that this was a piece of dialogue meant to amp up foreboding about Henry dying, and his presence was more or less coincidental;
that kissing Henry broke the curse and we know this because it had the same effect that Charming kissing Snow White had (although I have no idea what the radiating effect did in Fairy Tale Land);
that Rumplestiltskin has sacrificed true love (albeit his was in a bottle) to cast his own curse on Storybrooke and that's why the clock's stopped again;
that the Queen is smirking because she believes either she has Belle as her ace in the hole or that she believes she'll have magic again (and can fight back) or both;
that Pinocchio is dead;
that Ruby and Granny are now werewolves;
One will be a "spoiled rich girl" called Anastasia, while the other is described as "a cool badass Asian chick" named Magnolia.
It has also been suggested that Magnolia "is an accomplished fighter and rider" who could be a "bit magical".
The character is expected to have a recurring role in the ABC hit’s eagerly awaited second season.
TVLine has learned exclusively that Bolger’s recurring character, Princess Aurora, will be introduced during the sophomore run of Once, which was last season’s highest-rated freshman drama.
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