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- From: avatar@wings.micro.umn.edu (Timothy Fay)
- Subject: Re: Belle's Character (was Re: Sanitizing Fantasia)
- Message-ID: <1992Nov19.104726.12019@news2.cis.umn.edu>
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- Date: Thu, 19 Nov 1992 10:47:26 GMT
- Lines: 49
-
- Andy G Ihnatko (andyi@world.std.com) wrote:
- >
- >First, unlike most Disney heroines up to that point, she makes it
- >abundantly clear that she wants nothing to do with marriage...
-
- Which is, of course, why she goes ahead and marries the Beast at the end
- of the film (but only _after_ he's turned into Arnold Schwarzenegger :) ).
-
- >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.
-
- Yes, but my point was that she found herself in this unfortunate situation
- as a result of her father's bungling and not as a result of her own actions.
- It would have been different if, for example, Belle had decided to stay with
- the Beast of her own volition, and not because of some threat to her father.
-
- >[Belle] stands up to angry mob, later enters a known battle zone.
-
- Yes, and I recall the angry mob immediately locks her and her father up,
- where she's little more than your typical "damsel in distress" until
- she's rescued, not by her own intellect or abilities, but by an underage
- teacup.
-
- Contrast that with other Disney cartoons, even a recent one like THE
- GREAT MOUSE DETECTIVE. When Basil was captured by Ratigan he had to rely
- on his intellect (with a little prodding from Dawson) to make his escape.
- No one came to his rescue--he rescued himself.
-
- >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.
-
- But the situations she was in were created by other characters, and not
- by her own will or actions. As I said earlier, Belle reacts to events,
- she does not create them, and that is not the hallmark of a "strong"
- character.
-
- >Hell, the reprise of "Belle" proves this beyond a shadow of a doubt...
-
- How?
-
- --
- Reply to: avatar@wings.micro.umn.edu
-
- "Why, my mental facilities are TWICE what yours are -- you pea brain!"
- -Percival MacLeach
-
-
-