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- Xref: sparky rec.arts.animation:5709 rec.arts.disney:6480
- Newsgroups: rec.arts.animation,rec.arts.disney
- Path: sparky!uunet!iWarp.intel.com|eff!world!andyi
- From: andyi@world.std.com (Andy G Ihnatko)
- Subject: Re: Belle's Character (was Re: Sanitizing Fantasia)
- Message-ID: <Bxy7tt.Grn@world.std.com>
- Organization: The World Public Access UNIX, Brookline, MA
- References: <Bxp1s1.FJA@world.std.com> <1992Nov14.102051.7674@news2.cis.umn.edu>
- Date: Thu, 19 Nov 1992 05:41:53 GMT
- Lines: 40
-
- avatar@wings.micro.umn.edu (Timothy Fay) writes:
-
- >Andy G Ihnatko (andyi@world.std.com) wrote:
- >>Yeah, as a fellow reader of folklore I thought it was pretty funny how all
- >>those local TV entertainment reporters (and not a few national ones) were
- >>commending Disney left and right for "PC"ing Belle and making her a strong
- >>female character, considering all the plot points they singled out for praise
- >>came straight from the classic version of the story.
-
- >I didn't see anything about Belle that indicated she was such a "strong"
- >character. Every situation she found herself in was the result of some
- >_other_ character's actions. For example, she winds up a prisoner
- >after her father bungles his way into the old castle, and in order
- >to manufacture a pretext for changing her attitude toward the Beast, the
- >writers had her running though the forest and attacked by wolves. (GOSH!
- >Ain't that the most original story idea anyone ever had--NOT!) A strong
- >character creates situations, while a weak character only reacts to them,
- >and Belle clearly was not a very "strong" character.
-
- >Belle's character reflects a very rigid, conservative view of women.
- >She is, at best, a very _un_-"PC" character (though certainly not the
- >worst example in that film, e.g., "The Bimbettes").
-
-
- Sorry, no. First, unlike most Disney heroines up to that point, she makes it
- abundantly clear that she wants nothing to do with marriage, is interested in
- developing her mind. Second, when her dad is captured, she goes out to find
- him and when she does, even though she's been told to get out of there as fast
- as possible, she sacrifices herself to save him. Is attracted by a guy's
- intellect, not by his appearance or (like Little Mermaid) what the guy can give
- her. Stands up to angry mob, later enters a known battle zone.
-
- At every turn, Belle (like Beauty in the original tale) makes her decisions
- based on her own instincts and conclusions rather than on what's expected or
- demanded of her. Hell, the reprise of "Belle" proves this beyond a shadow of a
- doubt...
-
-
- -- Andy Ihnatko
- andyi@world.std.com
-