Personally, I have only watched "The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe", and I always cry at the train station scene. I think because for some reason it really touches me each time when the kids are saying goodbye to their mother before they are sent away from where the Blitz is happening. Compared to the old version, this addition added a new dimension to the story, a kind of deeper understanding of what was going on at that time in history. I think that it fit that the newer version of "The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe" had that element added, as it was made so many
more years after WW2 (compared to when the old version was made, that is) that to many young people today it may seem like a very distant event, when it was actually relatively recent in the time span of the last one hundred years.
I can't remember the year the older version of this movie was, but I know that WW2 would've still be pretty recent in most people's memories.
Just my two cents.
