Wikipedia wrote:
Honey, I Shrunk the Kids is a 1989 soft science fiction-family film. The directorial debut of Joe Johnston and produced by Walt Disney Pictures, it tells the story of an inventor who accidentally shrinks his and his neighbor's kids to ¼ of an inch with his electromagnetic shrinking machine and throws them out into the backyard with the trash, where they must venture into their backyard to return home while fending off against insects and other obstacles.
@Nurylon
It was a cold winter's evening, the deep blue night sky flecked by the white of stars and snow; the arctic air blew through mountains and frozen plains alike, scouring anyone caught outside with the bite of frost. But several feet below the surface, safely tucked away beneath the howling gale, two dragons nestled against each other; they were caught by the storm while travelling, and forced to hide. Aurora, a Coatl -- a female, lavender scales and shimmering mulberry feathers -- had her head buried in her mate's warm fur, and was fast asleep. Glacier, Aurora's companion -- a Tundra male with white fur and blue wings -- was barely awake himself; but he had to make sure the fire was still going.
The Tundra cast a spell, and the fire roared with new life, filling the cave with a warm glow. Some of the fire's light shined off the Coatl's wings, making purple light dance across the cave's walls. And though they were stuck in this tiny space, hiding from the storm above, he didn't feel like he was trapped. He mused to himself--perhaps he wouldn't mind staying in this cave forever, the two of them together...perhaps any forever was tolerable, as long as Aurora was there with him.
---
Several years had passed since then. The two traveled onwards, now meandering through the Wandering Contagion, summer's muggy heat bearing down on them. But now they had two children in tow. The children, both Tundras, had never been to Plague's territory before, and were relying on their parents' foggy knowledge from when they'd been here before.
"I'll set up camp," said Aurora, leaving Glacier and the two children to scout for food. As they headed into foreign territory, the older sister Elina was quite eager to explore the danger; but Edgar, the younger brother, was more nervous. Deep down, Glacier was a little nervous too. The scents of the land were different from what he remembered, and his landmarks were all gone. Corpses had been moved, picked clean, or rotted; newly slain prey littered the area.
But despite his foggy memory, Glacier did have one trick up his sleeve -- he was aware of another world. Beyond the world and the universe of dragons, there was another, full of strange creatures who watched the world of dragons; in this alien world, he was but a shadow, and the aliens saw him as a mere shadow -- but he saw the other world in full. In other words, he had the ability to break the fourth wall, or at least look beyond it.
After a long afternoon under the sun, they found a patch of dying grass and tough plants, sprouting in the middle of the wastes. Edgar and Elina began pulling them out of the ground, heads buried in the soil as they tugged the plants loose. Glacier kept watch -- in this land, one could never look away from the horizon, for fear of being mobbed by a pack of Mirrors.
But it was such a warm day, and they'd been walking so long, and he was exhausted...if only he could just, rest a moment...
Glacier blinked his eyes for just a moment, and opened them to see a Mirror in his face, staring at him.