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- From: lgb2@po.CWRU.Edu (Linda G. Brashear)
- Newsgroups: rec.arts.animation
- Subject: Re: Saban's Little Mermaid movie
- Date: 17 Nov 1992 02:02:14 GMT
- Organization: Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio (USA)
- Lines: 36
- Message-ID: <1e9jr6INN19u@usenet.INS.CWRU.Edu>
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-
- According to my version of The Little Mermaid as written by H.C.Andersen,
- the mermaid did not totally die at the end. The version I have in my
- Andersen collection says that she turned into a "child of the air" or
- something like that, and that in 300 years (or a long time, anyway) she
- could earn herself a soul. The idea was that mermaids are born without
- a soul, but they live for 300 years, after which they are turned into
- sea foam. Humans, on the other hand, live for a short time, but they
- have an immortal soul, so they never die completely, 'cause their soul
- lives on. The little mermaid decided she would rather have a soul, so
- she asked her grandmother how to get one, and the old merwoman said a
- mermaid could only get one if a human loved her enough to share his with
- her. Then came the part about saving & falling in love with the prince,
- becoming human, and losing him to the other woman. When she refused to
- kill the prince, the mermaid jumped into the sea, but she felt herself
- rise up into the air, where the other "children of the air" told her that,
- because she was good and tried so hard to get a soul, she had a chance to
- earn one. The idea was that in 300 years, she could get one, but if she
- flew through a house where a child was crying, x amount of years would be
- added on to the time, and if she flew through a house where a child was
- happy, x amount of years would be taken off the time. So, since the mermaid
- originally wanted a soul and the prince was just a mean to that end, the
- ending wasn't really sad, cause she got what she wanted in the end.
- Theoretically, that is. It's still very sad in my opinion, cause it would
- have been nice for her to get her soul through the prince, but oh well. I
- didn't write it. This version is a really good illustration of the use
- of fairy tales to educate children in behavior--who want's to cry and be
- responsible for the mermaid having to wait longer for a soul? Anyway, that's
- how my version goes, approximately.
- Linda
- the fairy tale woman
- --
- "Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding"
- --Proverbs 3:5
- "Aw, Mom, you act like I'm not even wearing a bungie cord!"--Calvin
- "It's barbaric, but hey, it's home"--"Arabian Nights" from --Aladdin--
-