I had to watch Tarzan for my developmental psychology class and thought this line was hilarious! I never noticed it before haha.
Wednesday, April 19, 2017
Monday, April 10, 2017
#toocooltuesday
I think these charts are interesting. They seem to show that good and evil are on a spectrum and characters do not simply fit into one or the other. More recent Disney animated films, like Maleficent, have made more of an effort to portray characters as whole people with both good and evil characteristics rather than have different characters representing all good or all evil qualities like in The Lion King.
Beginnings of Westworld?
According to this article, Disney has submitted a patent for interactive robot cartoon characters to walk around the parks. I'm not sure if I am excited for robots like Baymax to walk around the parks or freaked out by this strange similarity to Westworld.
Tuesday, April 4, 2017
Saturday, April 1, 2017
Response to Maleficent
Live blog:
This is my first time watching Maleficent!
Only a great hero or a terrible villain could reconcile the
two kingdoms. I wonder which Maleficent will be.
I can’t believe Stephen cut off her wings so that he could
be king! He was such a nice kid and I thought he loved her. This seems to show
that children are innocent and pure while adults can betray and be vile.
This movie seems to be focusing on the back story of the villain
Maleficent. It makes sense as to why she is so mean and villainous to Stephen,
his kingdom, and Aurora. She curses Aurora to fall into a deep sleep on her
sixteenth birthday when she pricks her finger on a spinning wheel. Aurora is
then sent to grow up with three fairies in the woods.
Maleficent watches her grow up in the woods and often makes the
fairies fight with each other. Maleficent continues to be characterized as both
evil and good. She makes life difficult for the fairies, hurts the soldiers
working by the wall, and calls Aurora “Beasty”. However, she also saves Aurora
from falling off a cliff and provides food for her. In this way, King Stephen
is portrayed more like a villain while Maleficent is depicted as someone good
who had been very wronged.
I think Maleficent is having a hard time deciding whether
she likes Aurora or not. At the beginning, I think she was jealous and hated
Aurora because she represented what Stephan had done to her. Later, however, she
starts to love Aurora for who she is. Maleficent tries to revoke the curse she
set on Aurora for this reason. I think she feels guilty because Aurora should not
have to pay for Stephens wrongdoings.
From Aurora’s perspective, Maleficent is the “evil that is in
the world.” However, according to Maleficent it is the greed and power
hungriness of men that are the evil in the world.
Aurora pricks her finger on a spinning wheel and falls asleep.
Both Maleficent and King Stephen do not believe in true
loves kiss. Maybe it is because they kissed when they thought they were in love,
and then they fell out of love. They both betrayed each other. Stephen cut off
Maleficent’s wings, and then Maleficent cursed his daughter. Their belief is
reinforced when the princess’s kiss doesn’t work. However, when Maleficent
kisses her, she wakes up! In this way, Maleficent
is similar to Frozen. Both redefine
Disney’s definition of true love. True love is does not only include romantic
love but also includes love between family, friends, and god parents and god
children.
Maleficent gets her wings back thanks to Aurora.
Maleficent is also
similar to Beauty and the Beast in
the end. Both protagonists have the opportunity to kill the villain but choose
not to. Then both villains try to kill the protagonists and fall to their
deaths.
“Not by a hero or a villain as legend had predicted, but by one
who was both hero and villain.” In the end, Maleficent is characterized as both
a hero and a villain. This sends the message that no one is all good or all
bad. Everyone is a mix of the two.
Response to Frozen
Live Blog:
I love this movie and the songs!
It is amazing how far animation has come when you compare
Frozen to Cinderella. All of the men in the first scene are visibly different
people with unique features which contrasts Disney’s normal portrayal of
background characters as not different from each other.
“Beware the frozen heart” I never noticed this foreshadowing.
Baby Sven is so cute!
“The heart is not so easily changed, but the head can be
persuaded.”
In the beginning of the movie the villain seems to be Elsa’s
powers. This is different from almost every other Disney movie where the
villains are very present and represented as people.
Disney does have a track record with killing off the parents
of main characters or having main characters with one or less parents.
I wonder if Elsa would have learned to control her powers if
she was socialized and not isolated in her room.
Frozen finally
showed a realistic scene of how people wake up in the morning. Anna has messy
hair and is drooling when she wakes up. Unlike Cinderella, who wakes up singing
and hair perfect, Ana does not. Although she does start to sing shortly after
she wakes up, it is only because it is a very special day.
“You can’t marry a man you just met.” Disney is trying to
fix their prior statement that you can marry right after you met. Marrying
right after they just met happened in Cinderella
and Aladdin and in many other movies,
characters get married after very little time spent together.
Frozen is similar
to Wreck-It Ralph. Both Ralph and
Elsa have a special and destructive power that can either be used for good or
bad. They both have to learn how control their power and end up using it for
good. Frozen and Wreck-It Ralph are also similar because they both have a villain that
is not revealed until later on in the film.
Elsa and Ana may be the first protagonists without animal sidekicks.
Kristoff has Sven but Elsa and Ana do not have animal sidekicks. Olaf fills in
the role of comic relief and replaces the role of an animal sidekick.
“Do you think she knows how to knock?”
Elsa only wants to be free to be herself and not have to hide
her powers from everyone. She also does not want to hurt anyone like she hurt Ana.
“I don’t have a skull. Or bones”
Frozen continues Disney’s theme of blending the line between
good and evil with the characters Elsa and Hans of the Southern Isles. Elsa
never intends to be evil. However, her powers have the effect of a villain.
Also in the beginning, Hans of the Southern Isles seems to have good intentions.
He helps the people of Arendelle deal with the frozen summer. However, his true
intentions are to marry Ana and kill Elsa so that he can rule Arendelle.
“We are not saying you can change him because people don’t really
change.” This is the opposite of the message in Beauty and the Beast. In that movie, it is assumed that Belle can
change the Beast if she tries hard enough. In fact, it is almost assumed that it
is her duty to change the Beast. Frozen communicates
a different and more progressive message to the audience.
Frozen also
redefines Disney’s definition of true love. True love is not only romantic love
but is also love between family and friends.
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