Friday, December 22, 2023

Wishing Stars and Goats Too – Disney’s Wish movie

Why We Need Disney Princesses: An Intro 

Rachel Beth Ahrens 

Opinions are my own, 2023 Lady in the Blue Box Publishing. All Rights Reserved.

Reader Discretion is Advised for most of this blog post. This is geared towards people 16+ in age. This is an op-ed article for those wanting to know more about why we need Disney, even though things are crappy in this day and age.

Spoilers galore of multiple movies. You are warned.

 

After a long sabbatical from my Blogger account to tend to my Patreon page, I am back and writing again for my blog, Lady in the Blue Box.

I know I haven’t written in months since I saw Hamilton at the Hippodrome in Baltimore in 2022, but I think the wait is over for me to write more about things that are currently on my mind at the time of the holidays.

For more information on how my writings are doing, please visit my new Ream page- reamstories.com/rachelbethahrens

Also, if you haven’t done so already, become a patron of my Ream account to see my completed unabridged version of Debutante of Cassiopeia, now live on my Ream page! Or, if you want to support my female neurodivergent owned small business, become a patron on my Patreon here: patreon.com/arachelbethahrenscreation

Now, let’s get down to business on why I’ve started another brand new Disney-themed mini dissertation on the Disney girls… And why we need them…

Now, I know what you’re thinking and you’re definitely right. Disney’s methodology has changed in recent years to be more inclusive and more progressive, which is actually a good thing, but the whole hero’s journey bit with every Disney Princess out there has got to stop. That is absolutely true, I’ve got your back. Every Disney Princess through each movie with a female character is told and programmed to work hard to make their dreams come true, and honestly, after what I’ve seen of the things people say on social media and in real life, yes, it’s got to end and I empathize. I’m sick and tired of seeing Mary Sue types and tropes out in media.

The only exception is in the movie Strange World, where there are strong female characters as well, but only as two dimensional characters in the background for the most part, with the exception of the mother character who pilots the ship around the land to find out what is making the energy source Pando sick. We’re mostly following teenager Ethan Clade, his father Searcher, the farmer and botanist who grows Pando in the backyard, and Ethan’s grandfather, the legendary traveler and explorer Jaeger Clade, who decided to go under the mountains to keep exploring their world. 

Strange World is super cool because this is the first time we see a three dimensional young character as Ethan, a gay teenager who loves this super awesome card game that’s all about working together with your resources and other players to make a living with what you have, which is a clue on how to save their planet—(Spoiler here) Besides, the entire civilization of people in this movie is living on the back of a big creature that looks like a turtle!

Of course, this movie got horrible reviews and bombed in terms of revenue as the 61st animated movie of Disney Animated Studios, because people thought it was “too woke” and too progressive for people and kids—To which I say, fuck DeSantis and all this garbage about how this movie should be banned. I happen to LOVE Ethan Clade the most, he’s the best character in it and he ends up showing his dad and grandfather the best and most noble part, the moral part of the story: TAKE CARE OF YOUR PLANET, YOUR PLANET WILL TAKE CARE OF YOU! It’s the same principle in Pixar’s WALL-E, but in doing so, showing the evil darker side of capitalism in that if you don’t take care of your planet, bad things will happen for your future and other generations to come.

Now, back to the Disney Princesses, I’m going off on a tangent here… But I adore Strange World, it’s a great movie to show your kids. Screw this garbage about LGBTQ hate—Ethan is an awesome character, and love is love for God’s sake…

If you remember Disney’s Encanto in my December 2021 episode of The King of Broadway is Dead…, I made it perfectly clear on how Mirabel Madrigal is definitely fitting in nicely as the newest Disney Princess in the fold, especially for the big number 60 in the number of animated movies by Disney Animation Studios, before there was Strange World and Wish. In the same principle of this theme of Disney Princesses, not only did Mirabel win the hearts and minds of many children and audiences around the world, translated into many languages, including Spanish for it was even shown as far as Mexico and South America, Encanto is one of the biggest movies to do well in the Box Office after 2020 with COVID19, especially doing phenomenally well on streaming on Disney+. Even though the numbers at the Box Office in 2021 were staggering to make ends meet, it was really because of COVID19 that those numbers didn’t do so well at theatres when people went to the movies. A ton has changed since 2020 with streaming, and sad to say, Lin-Manuel Miranda still didn’t get his Oscar for the award winning song, they gave it to Billie Eilish for James Bond’s latest film No Time To Die.

(Who cares, in my opinion—because I preferred Adele’s theme from Skyfall. How many times do they have to give Oscars to the Bond movies? Can the Academy stop being racist and give the Oscar to Lin-Manuel Miranda just once and stop feeding the masses with Hollywood’s richest white people??? Also, I hated the last Daniel Craig Bond movie because of the ending, my father would have hated it also- for the love of all that’s holy, don’t kill off Bond.)

(However, for the record—Billie Eilish’s song from the Barbie movie dir. Greta Gerwig, which was called “What Was I Made For”, was beautiful and poignant, definitely worth a Golden Globe award for Best Song. The song plays at the right moment between Barbie and her creator, and that moment almost drove me to tears a second time—the first time I actually cried in the theatre watching Barbie was America Ferrera’s incredible feminist speech about how women are all tired of the bullshit we’re fed by men and the patriarchy of this country. It’s well written and well executed. There, I’m done.)

Anyway, I felt so much for the people who made Encanto, in my opinion, because Disney finally won an Oscar for Best Animated Feature for that movie, which was well deserved. In my book, that’s a big win for those who needed representation, and it’s a flawless, whimsical, colorful, gorgeous film about Mirabel Madrigal, a teenager with no gift in her magical gifted family and a magical house, only to discover that the magic and the miracle are both fading, and it’s because she was given no gift and Mirabel is underrepresented in her family.

It's about time that Mirabel is given the opportunity to shine as the newest Princess, because she actually DOES get a gift at the end—from the get go, we know that Mirabel talks to the house, Casita (Spanish = little house), and the house itself is sentient, having sweet reactions to everything she says and does. Mirabel is only trying to help her family, and Abuela Alma tries to crush it because she still believes Mirabel has no gift and is a problem child for only getting in the way of everyone. But Mirabel is actually misunderstood, and everything Abuela is doing to stop her is literally crushing her soul—we hear Mirabel’s voice as her soul is being crushed in my favorite song “Waiting on a Miracle”. But in the end, we discover when Mirabel gets a brand new doorknob as a gift from her family, after rebuilding the house from the ground up because it had to break and fall apart when she and Abuela were fighting. As a result, when Mirabel puts in the new doorknob that has an M on it, M for Madrigal, but also notice that Mirabel’s initials are M.M., the only Madrigal family member with those initials, that means, the magic of the house belongs to her!!! The magic and miracle of Casita return, restoring the factory settings on the house. And we really do discover at the end that her magical family gets all their gifts back, but it's all because of HER, Mirabel. 

After all, after the song “Dos Oruguitas”, when Abuela Alma returns with Mirabel and Bruno in her arms, she sings, “The miracle is YOU.” That’s a clue that the real miracle goes to Mirabel, she’s next in line in the family to have the house belonging to her. She does have magic.

Also, unlike the rest of the Disney Princesses- Mirabel does NOT need a man to save her!

The whole hero’s journey and the whole patriarchy of said trope needs to stop, you’re absolutely right. They mention this problem call back in Wreck It Ralph: Ralph Breaks the Internet, where Princess Vanellope Von Schweetz meets the other Disney Princesses, back before we had Disney’s newest Princesses in Encanto and Wish. Back when we just added Elsa and Anna from the cursed Frozen (Sorry, but I’m kind of sick of that movie, it’s been done to death in the media, and I’m sick of hearing about Olaf the Snowman. Every Christmas, I get tired of hearing about Frozen, my bad, so sorry, it’s my least favorite Princess story from the conglomerate), Queen Elsa mentions if Vanellope has magic hands like she does, and Vanellope says no to all of the Princesses’ questions. From that to, “Kidnapped or enslaved?” and Vanellope says, “Ew, no! Is there a problem here, should I call the authorities?”

Until she says, finally, “I don’t even have a mom!”

Princesses (the ones who have no moms, like Ariel and Jasmine): ”Neither do WE!”

And finally, Rapunzel asks the million dollar question trope of the mother of all hero’s journey issues with all the Princesses in Disney itself: “Do people assume that all your problems were solved because some big strong man showed up?”

Vanellope: “YES! What is up with that?”

All Princesses: “She IS a Princess!” (Snow White sings.)

Yes, it’s a funny joke that even makes me laugh, but only up to a point because that was the whole Walt Disney methodology until VERY recently. It’s getting tiresome and it’s about fucking time that the princess saves herself and she doesn’t need a man to show up and save her ass.

The hero’s journey trope does need to stop, because we want to be more inclusive of status, sexual orientation, gender, and neurodiversity.

It’s about damn time that the hero’s journey was blown apart with movies like Encanto and especially Wish. Here’s why.

At first, it’s not really canon that Mirabel has magic powers like the rest of her family, because when she was a child during the gift ceremony, the door disappeared before her eyes and the magic candle of Casita flickered in Abuela Alma’s hands. That was a clue that maybe Mirabel didn’t deserve that happening to her, and it was a clue that Abuela was wrong and Bruno’s visions never lied—The house had to fall apart because the family was dysfunctional, even though the townspeople of Columbia thought the family Madrigal was perfect. It was far from perfect. I mean, Abuela Alma had to raise her triplet children from birth by herself, and she was dealing with a ton of trauma from losing her husband, Abuelo Pedro, after he was killed in front of her by the Columbian soldiers during the civil war of the late 1890s. Abuela Alma couldn’t keep the house running all by herself without help from EVERYONE in the family, she couldn’t afford to leave anyone out, but she left someone out anyway… Poor Mirabel and Bruno.

This is not really a hero’s journey that we’re talking about in Encanto, per se, because this was really a person versus society and family trope in the plotline of the movie.

With Disney’s Wish, same thing. There are a ton of tropes of new progressive plotlines in the movie that I saw last weekend with my boyfriend Alexander: Asha, the newest Disney Princess, is the very first ever Princess who is of Afro-Caribbean-Latina descent, as she’s also played by an actress who identifies as Afro-Latina and queer, Hamilton’s Ariana DeBose. And this time, there is NO big strong man in her way to get what she wants in this plotline! Asha’s best friend Dahlia is also the very first Disney best friend character to have a disability too! This is fully awesome to end all antiquated Walt Disney tropes going as far back as the 1930s.

As a matter of fact, this is the first time we see Chris Pine playing a villain, as King Magnifico, who is incredibly vain and full of himself, doing what Disney Princes do at some parts. But he’s more of a Gaston character who is arrogant and conceited, but he’s got magical powers that he eventually abuses later in the film. This debunks another conglomerate trope that eventually too much power corrupts someone. If we think about this politically, King Magnifico is definitely corrupted not just by magic, but having ultimate power as a sorcerer and a king. This is why our Founding Fathers of the United States back in the late 18th century said no more kings, we need to elect a President and only allow him to serve limited terms, so that the government is rigged to protect itself. We do not want a dictatorship or we’d end up with someone worse than Hitler in WWII, and we don’t want another oligarchy because nobody wants apartheid either. We don’t want people in power too long because corruption happens all too often and greed can turn people into something ugly.

Unfortunately, this is also how I feel about the positions of Congress and Supreme Court, that at some point, something’s got to give, and honestly, those seats in Congress and SCOTUS both need to serve limited terms at some point, that way it’s fair. We keep voting for the same people every 2-4 years for each Delegate and Senator, it’s getting maddening out there when each of those people gets their tenure renewed and no one is doing anything about it. It’s got to stop. Also, DeSantis is a bastard anyway.

Now, back to Wish: The thing about Asha is she’s an honest hero trying to rip open the truth about the corrupted King of Rosas, but no matter what she does, he keeps getting in the way of her. The most amazing part of this is, Asha has this big MAJOR wish that she wishes on a star that literally comes to life in her own forest, granting so much magic and energy for all plant life and animals too. Her goat Valentino talks! (Voiced by the legendary voice actor and former pilot of the Firefly Serenity, Alan Tudyk) And we all love the goat, he’s hilarious. With the help of Star and Valentino, Asha makes it a mission to give everybody in the city their wishes back. But King Magnifico things that granting everybody’s wishes are just too dangerous, when he’s already corrupted and becoming too dangerous himself, and even his wife, the Queen, sees it! The Queen of Rosas sees right through him and actually becomes a secret double agent for Asha, plotting a plan to take down the monarchy and the corrupted king himself, which is warranted. A double cross on a very bad monarch. This is feminism in the right way, people.

Also, if I might add, this movie has been in the making for a good century, guys. Since Disney was founded in 1923, Walt Disney’s dream started with a wishing star during a movie. That movie that he made later in the 1930s and 40s was eventually Pinocchio, where Jiminy Cricket is singing the classic Disney song that paved the way to be the theme song for Walt Disney Pictures, for all of his movies long after Walt’s death from lung cancer in December 1966. Walt Disney wanted to make a picture based on a wishing star character, but he never got around to making it, because he died before making that dream a reality.

In 2018, more than 50 years since Walt’s passing, the creative team at Disney Animation Studios got to work on the movie Wish, as a tribute to Walt Disney’s dream. This time, it was constantly scrapped, in rewriting and revision numerous times, and in 2020, COVID19 hit, and the movie was on hold for another year or two because of the virus killing millions in hospitals and putting production on hold for all movies in Hollywood.

It was basically the Sleeping Beauty problem, as I’ve been calling it lately. My mom once told me during early 2020 when COVID hit Maryland next, that it was just like the fairies putting the townspeople to sleep for 100 years because they didn’t want anyone to find out that Princess Aurora’s curse came true and she was in sleeping death by the poisoned spindle by the evil witch. The same thing happened in 2020, in a more modern time, because more people were dying of this horrible illness, and we needed to stop the spread of illness in its path. We didn’t want people to get sick with this terrible thing, and we also wanted to keep our people safe, so the only way we could do that was sleep away the year 2020, putting every project, every job, every family meeting on hold for the entire year until we had the first COVID vaccine. Does that make sense?

Therefore, Disney’s Wish proves something very important in the end of the film—Spoiler here…

The transition in Act Three of the film almost got me to cry at the end of the film, and I started forming tears after the climax of the movie was over. The biggest clincher was when the true colors of King Magnifico were revealed to the entire City of Rosas, and he was intent of destroying everyone’s wishes, their dreams, their deepest desires, as well as Asha’s wish that became Star. He was just about to use Star’s abilities for his own cause and draw in all the power for himself, blocking out all the stars in the sky with clouds, and conjuring vines throughout the city to make everyone kneel at his mercy. (A little Sleeping Beauty reference with those vines and thorns there…)

But the thing here is, Asha was the only one standing to get up against King Magnifico’s wicked ways. She started singing her rendition of the song “This Wish” from the beginning of the film, as a reminder to the people of Rosas that you can make anything happen for YOU, for yourself, and to hell with what men making your dreams come true.

The king is furious as hell. He starts beating her to the ground with his new dark magic staff made of mirrors and a wicked potion in his forbidden spell book. It works, and I’m about ready to tear up because I feel like King Magnifico was going to murder Asha in cold blood by stabbing her in the chest with his staff.

But then the amazing happens—the town of Rosas is SINGING with her. The same lyrics of “This Wish” was echoing back to her, just as the wishing well of Snow White and the Seven Dwarves was echoing back to Princess Snow White herself in Walt’s first ever movie, the Disney movie that started everything. That’s what breaks the vines, and hurtles Star back up in the sky, forcing the curse to break and putting King Magnifico trapped in his own spell in his mirror staff. Damn.

Even better than that, I’m not going to spoil the real true ending that happens later, but something magical happens between Star and Asha that she eventually gets the power of a magic wishing wand, becoming the first ever fairy godmother. The magic wand also represents the same wishing wand that is used by the beautiful Fairy Godmother in a later Disney movie, Cinderella, of course. And no, there is no romantic love scene between Asha and some dude, Asha gets her own happy ending, because this is a Disney animated movie, number 62 in the number of animated features Disney produced, it’s also 2023 now, so feminism reigns supreme in getting the rest of the nation to wake up and see that no woman needs a hero to save her to achieve her dreams and desires.

That said, we all know the hero’s journey trope all too well, but this here with Wish is the exception.

Princess Asha, the origin story of the very first fairy godmother, is a feminist character telling her story of how heroes don’t need a man, and if you set your mind to things, you can do and be anything you want.

She was giving viewers and children HOPE. The promise of hope for a better tomorrow.

That’s why her 100 year old grandfather, Sabino, voiced by acting legend Victor Garber, in the last cut scene of the film after the credits, is playing a lute. And he plays the song expertly.

What song, you ask?

Jiminy Cricket’s song, the most famous song of Disney Pictures, the theme song, “When You Wish Upon a Star”. And the scene melts perfectly into the brand new Disney Pictures logo and title for 100 Years of Wonder. Disney 100.

Effing brilliant.

Also, you need to see all of the credits to get to the end of the movie, bar none, because the end credits sequence is beautiful, showing you 61 Disney characters from all 61 animated movies, from Snow White, the very first ever directed Disney movie from Walt’s mind in the 1930s, all the way to movies number 60 and 61 with Encanto and Strange World, respectively. And each of the Disney characters are all outlined and sketched in glittering gold paint throughout the credits. It’s unbelievable.

This may be a love letter to Walter Disney, the man who created the wishing star story to all the movies that followed even after his passing in the 60s, but it’s also a call back to the true Disney mission statement that has been revised for 2023 for the future of movies and everything we love. This was probably revised since long after Walt died along with the whole antiquated white man frame of mind that needed to be finished and gone a long time ago.

This is my take on Disney’s new ideology for 2023 into 2024: To bring joy, innocence, love, light, and hope to the future generations to come into this world, no matter what age, no matter what race, ethnicity, sexual orientation, pronouns, gender identity, class, disability, or neurodiversity.

This is the reason why I end all of my Patreon posts with this statement:

“Everyone deserves love.”

Happy New Year, 2024. And a very Happy Holidays to all. Welcome to beyond 100.

To be continued in part two… 

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