ALL DOGS GO TO HEAVEN Clip - "Nightmare" (1989) Don BluthPLOT: In this animated feature, canine casino owner Charlie (Burt Reynolds) is killed by gambler Car. In 1990, when All Dogs Go To Heaven was first released to VHS, the ones who bought it mostly received the official movie, as one would expect. The one where the nightmare doesn't last as long, has two scenes removed, and Charlie makes it out as the puppies wake him and he falls off of a broomstick.
The vivid depiction of Fire and Brimstone Hell from Charlie's nightmare, forever putting the fear of divine punishment and existential dread into God-fearing children. Charlie imagines that his pocket watch has stopped, thereby ending his borrowed time, as he hears the Heavenly Whippet's voice echo "You can never come back.". All Dogs Go to Heaven is a 1989 animated musical fantasy comedy-drama film directed by Don Bluth and co-directed by Gary Goldman (his directorial debut) and Dan Kuenster.
[3] Set in New Orleans in 1939, it tells the story of Charlie B. Barkin (voiced by Burt Reynolds), a German Shepherd who is murdered by his former friend, Carface Carruthers (voiced by Vic Tayback). Charlie escapes from.
Aside from Charlie being brutally murdered in the film's opening act, the most disturbing part of this entire film is a sequence that takes place mid-film, when Charlie has a nightmare about falling into Hell. All Dogs Go To Heaven: Charlie's Hell Nightmare (Full Uncut Scene) Aaron Stewart 429 subscribers 3.4K. The majority of cuts involved two scenes.
The first was the scene where Charlie is killed by the car that graphically showed the car hitting the dog and Charlie's body flying off the pier and into the river. The other reduction came in the nightmare where Charlie envisions Hell. The Hellhound is the overarching antagonist of the 1989 Don Bluth film All Dogs Go to Heaven.
He is strongly implied to be the canine equivalent of Satan himself. He was voiced by Dan Molina. The Hellhound takes the form of a giant brown dog-like demon with glowing yellow eyes and a gray snout that can breathe fire to create imps.
About halfway through the movie, Charlie has a nightmare in. At one point in the 1989 movie, Charlie has a nightmare about Hell, which was edited by the studio after test screenings indicated it was just too intense. Via Wikipedia.
Alternate versions All Dogs Go to Heaven Although Charlie's nightmare about Hell was trimmed in the common cut of the film, a personal director's cut by Don Bluth ' included the scene's full length. The Blu-ray release plasters the United Artists logo with the MGM logo. The VHS releases omit the "Distributed by MGM/UA" text.