[quote="Flowertall"]the makers would never deliberately make a scene that suggests lovemaking took place afterwards.[/quote]
In the "Lady and the Tramp" DVD extras they say that was what they were trying to imply after "Bella Notte":
[quote]You kinda wonder what happend there... its a little risque and maybe too many people don't think about that but most likely, you know, they had a "romantic" night.[/quote]
It never even crossed my mind because it's a Disney movie but that explains why Jock and Trusty courted Lady: so that her puppies would be "legitimate" -- in that sense, they were defending her virtue.
The same happened to me with The Lion King. At first I thought "No, it can't be. It's a Disney movie." but after listening to the audio commentary and watching the Laserdisc bonus features I've changed my mind.
Don Hahn describes the end of CYFTLT as the "steamiest love scene in a Disney film ever" and Nala's look as a "come-hither look". And when Timon sees Simba go away while Nala is sleeping in a deleted scene, he acuses him of "loving and leaving" and then says "Smooth, kid, very smooth...". During the argument scene, Don says it took them a long time to have that talk, so maybe we're talking about two different nights. I have no clue about pregnancy but the idea of them having sex during that sequence is not that far-fetched. Brian Tiemann wrote an essay about this topic:(
http://www.lionking.org/~sichi/document/misc/TLKSX.TXT)
[quote]"Can You Feel the Love Tonight?" This song is truly the one which embraces the resolution to Simba's sexual development ("stealing through the night's uncertainty" is a good metaphorical
example). As for actual visual effect, this resolution is also characterized in what has been described as "the most erotic scene Disney has ever made," where the pair tumbles down a hill and collapses into a position with Simba standing over Nala, she with an extremely seductive look on her face and he-- at last reaching full adulthood at this moment--with a very understanding one on his.[/quote]
[quote]the love story is secondary to the main one, and the attraction between Nala and Simba is doubtful in no one's mind; therefore their physical relationship can (and is) explored in much greater detail. [/quote]
[quote]But it also lends credence to my theories about TLK being aimed toward a much older group on average than any of Disney's previous animated movies ever had been. It is loaded throughout with jokes and references that are aimed either specifically at the present parents of the young viewers[/quote]