To be on a set and watch Prince Charming wake up Snow White surrounded by dwarves but have it be in a forest two hours outside of Vancouver or just writing Grumpy, or Mad Hatter or Alice and you feel that history and the power of these characters.
You just felt very grateful that we were able to write them because everyone grew up hearing these as their first stories and to be able to take them and make them your own was really a humbling experience.
Horowitz: I feel like we did what we wanted to do. Kitsis: We never felt like that had a place. I think that putting Chewbacca with Henry going to the library to ask Belle about a spell just felt wrong. I think it was universe specific. When we did Jekyll and Hyde and Frankenstein that was kind of pushing the boundaries.
We did weird references that no one got. But … Marvel and Star Wars were their own universe, and we just felt that their universe is so great because you get to be emerged in them so we never really wanted to reach out to those even though Star Wars , we always say, is our favorite fairy tale. Well, speaking of Star Wars , there are live-action TV shows in the works. Would you want to take that on? Kitsis: I would love to. Star Wars really brings out the fan in us.
Fortunately, she was able to get through to young Henry with love, effectively closing the portals that would trap the heroes in isolation. In order to thwart Wish Rumple and save Hook at the same time, Rumple ripped out his own heart, turning his Wish Realm alter ego to dust. Regina then set out to unite all the realms together in Storybrooke so no one would ever be separated again — she achieves this by casting another Dark Curse, but this time using love.
In the end, Regina is crowned the Good Queen, long may she reign over this newly combined realm. One she gets to enjoy with her entire family and friends, including Emma Jennifer Morrison and original Hook, who show up just in time for her to be crowned.
EW turned to executive producers Adam Horowitz and Edward Kitsis to get the inside scoop on their series finale. We saw what that would be, which was the Hades season, and this very much looks like they have moved on into a happier, happier place. And so I would definitely say, especially after the wedding, he has made it to heaven, he has redeemed his heart, and he has made it to Belle, and he has made it home. Why did Rumple in particular need to die? So for us, it felt like watching him selflessly and truly give his heart to somebody who was, at one time, his enemy and going to Belle truly redeemed the character and showed that he became the hero.
KITSIS: Yeah, we felt like her happy ending did not want to be somebody else or a wedding, her happy ending, as we saw last year, she finally grew to love herself. We wanted her happy to be what she always wanted, which was to go from the Evil Queen to the Good Queen. Gold does. He knows that the only way to stop his menacing fairy tale ego Rumpel is by ripping his own heart out. Doing so turns Rumpel to dust, literally Avengers: Infinity War- style.
Essentially, she has a plan to bring all the realms to Storybrooke. In the closing scene, we see Regina being whisked by car into a castle escorted by older Henry and Zelena. Emma Swan then busts in late for the ceremony, with family in tow.
The first six seasons of Once Upon A Time focused on Emma Swan and the weird and wonderful town of Storybrooke, Maine, but it took a new direction after most of the show's characters got their happy ending when the umpteenth curse was lifted in season 6's finale.
Once Upon A Time season 7 served as a soft reboot with the majority of the original cast departing. In the episodes preceding the season 7 finale, another Once Upon A Time plot twist was revealed - Eloise aka Mother Gothel had cast a curse that sent the characters back in time.
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