In the story (or at least all the versions I've heard and read, that weren't heavily censored), they save Little Red Riding Hood by cutting up the wolf's stomach. So it's perfectly canon, I've just never seen it illustrated before.
In the story (or at least all the versions I've heard and read, that weren't heavily censored), they save Little Red Riding Hood by cutting up the wolf's stomach. So it's perfectly canon, I've just never seen it illustrated before.
I always wondered that why, after he cut open the wolfs stomach and rescued Red Riding Hood and her grandma, the hunter would fill its belly with stones so that when the wolf gets thirsty it would drown in the well.
If you're going to kill it, why not just kill him when he was sleeping anyway?