Being a bird racer like nod and having one of the fastest birds and during one of your guy's races one of the other racers played dirty knocking you off of your bird and nod loses his place as he goes to save you.
"You know I kinda like this me saving you and all we should do it more often, it's nice to see you flustered when you thank me"
[ID: A digital drawing of Ronin and Queen Tara from the movie Epic. Ronin is standing in Tara’s embrace, wrapped in vines, but leaning forward so their foreheads are touching. He is smiling softly and looking at Tara, whose eyes are closed as she grins and holds onto him. Vines wrap around her loosely as well. Cutting through the image is a Boggin arrow; it pierces through both of the characters and emerges from Tara’s back. The image is colored in warm pinks and purples, although the arrow casts a deep shadow over both of them. The artist’s signature is visible above the feathers of the arrow. End ID.]
not to post niche fan art of a movie from 2013 but i rewatched Epic recently and these two INVENTED tragic romance. it’s about her being the life of the forest and him dedicating his life to protecting her, and how he wasn’t enough when it mattered most. it’s about how she was a lifeline for everyone, not just him, so he tries to be selfless about losing her, but still falters when it aches too much. it’s about how she chooses to give him her last words both times. it’s about how he only ever wanted to keep her safe, and she only ever wanted to see him smile. its about them being visually connected by the thing that tears them apart. AAAAAAAAAAAAA.
A compiled a lot of the other studio's characters into one poll because there weren't a lot of options between them, some studios only had kids in their movie, some studios also don't exist anymore (RIP Blue Sky) I probably missed a lot of them but these are the ones I could find.
The Birth of Japan/The Three Treasures (Video, 1959)
Toho's epic three-hour-long 1000th film, the longest kaiju film ever made. This is a subtitled version of the orginal three-hour-long cut, rather than the 112-minut subtitled version from 1960. You can watch it here.