Couldn't agree with you more. Two problems: the themes of the book are hammered home, and we are no longer left to imagine what becomes of the Little Prince, which is crucial.
It's such a shame, because I think the idea of framing the story as they did, and tying the death of The Little Prince to the inevitable death of the Aviator, was brilliant.
How about this for an ending: as in the movie, she comes home to find the Aviator about to be taken away from his home in an ambulance. She wordlessly squeezes his hand, they look at one another. He gives her a look she can't quite make sense of, then closes his eyes. The EMT's can't detect a pulse. They try in vain to revive him.
For two days she is inconsolable with grief, and incapacitated by it. Her mother is worried sick, because school begins in three days.
The day before school is to start, she forces herself to get out of bed. She looks at the stuff of the Aviator's that she has, and she realizes that that she has not read the end of the story. In fact the Aviator knew this when he said farewell to her (one of the things she has, perhaps, was something he gave her and is an overt clue that there's more to the story). He had saved the last pages for her to read after his inevitable final journey.
She goes to his house and finds the final pages, where the snake bites the Little Prince, and only then learns that you can look at the stars and hear the Little Prince's laughter, because he is back on his asteroid, because death is only leaving behind a shell.
She goes into the backyard. The airplane is gone. She climbs up to his telescope and looks out. She sees his plane flying into the stars.
(Of course, the plane may have been removed in the two intervening days, and she may have imagined it flying into the stars. It's important to leave both a real and fantastic reading.)
The coda, where she looks at the stars with her Mom, can remain. That was sweet.
Prepare your minds for a new scale of physical, scientific values, gentlemen.
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