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* While it is played mostly for morbid laughs, the Ethical Bug’s [[BreakTheCutie emotional turmoil over the increasingly obvious realization that Big Jack Horner is irredeemably evil in spite of several attempts to get him to see the light]]- culminating in him calling him out in outrage for his actions. [[KickTheDog Only to be casually flicked away and mocked by Jack for not figuring it out sooner]].

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* While it is played mostly for morbid laughs, the Ethical Bug’s [[BreakTheCutie emotional turmoil over the increasingly obvious realization that Big Jack Horner is irredeemably evil in spite of several attempts to get him to see the light]]- culminating in him calling him out in outrage for his actions. [[KickTheDog Only to be casually flicked away and mocked by Jack for not figuring it out sooner]]. Even worse, in the junior novel, the Ethical Bug gets a vision of Jack sucking the magic out of Puss and Kitty, turning them into ordinary, feral alley cats.
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* Perrito's backstory: his family would regularly try to abandon him, but he would keep coming back because he thought they were pranking him. They finally managed to get rid of him for good ''by tying him up in a sock with a weighted rope to attempt drowning him'', and while Perrito sees the silver lining in everything, Puss and Kitty are both mortified at hearing this once they figure out what he is talking about.

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* Perrito's backstory: his family would regularly try to abandon him, but he would keep coming back because he thought they were pranking him. They finally managed to get rid of him for good ''by tying him up in a sock with a weighted rope to attempt drowning him'', and while Perrito sees the silver lining in everything, Puss and Kitty are both mortified at hearing this once they figure out what he is talking about.about, and Kitty expresses disbelief that Perrito doesn't have a wish.
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* A small and subtle one with the brief cameo of Pinocchio -- the man next to him is Geppetto, meaning this version of Pinocchio didn't have an pair of evil con-men, neither an evil puppeteer or a coachman who abused his magical nature. It was his own father, ignoring his son to count his money. And by the time ''Shrek'' rolled around, said father willfully abandons his son under the new rules.

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* A small and subtle one with the brief cameo of Pinocchio -- the man next to him is Geppetto, meaning this version of Pinocchio didn't have an a pair of evil con-men, neither an evil puppeteer or a coachman who abused his magical nature. It was his own father, ignoring his son to count his money. And by the time ''Shrek'' rolled around, said father willfully abandons his son under the new rules.
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''Puss in Boots: the Last Wish'' may be the most emotionally charged of all of Dreamworks's films, and this page is a testament to that.

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''Puss in Boots: the Last Wish'' may be the most emotionally charged of all of Dreamworks's [=DreamWorks'=] films, and this page is a testament to that.
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''Puss in Boots: the Last Wish'' may be the most emotionally charged of all of Dreamworks's films, and this page is a testament to that.\\

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''Puss in Boots: the Last Wish'' may be the most emotionally charged of all of Dreamworks's films, and this page is a testament to that.\\that.
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''Puss in Boots: the Last Wish'' may be the most emotionally charged of all of Dreamworks's films, and this page is a testament to that.

to:

''Puss in Boots: the Last Wish'' may be the most emotionally charged of all of Dreamworks's films, and this page is a testament to that.\\

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