Friday, March 27, 2015

Absolutely Inspirational

http://www.buzzfeed.com/lorynbrantz/disney-princesses-as-office-supplies#.lxQJBoKD8

I'll just leave this here, it should really be seen by all. It's probably the most open-minded reimagining of Disney princesses and I'm proud that it'
s on the internet.

Thursday, March 26, 2015

Up is Probably My Favorite Disney/Pixar Movie, and Probably Always Will Be

I really love this movie. It's heartfelt, it's genuine, it's like a handwritten note from Pixar. What I mean by that is that even though it does have some fantastic pieces, like a flying house, talking dog, etc, but  mostly it's a slice-of-life piece that gets into real life as much as a children's movie can and should. In the opening sequence, Pixar shows the most equitable, realistic romantic relationship present in any of their movies. Ellie is basically the Rosie the Riveter of Disney, she could be an iconic feminist figure if Disney played their cards right. She takes control of her own life: when she's little, she likes Carl so she decides to be his friend (he has little hand in the manner), in the same vein when they finally get married, she leaps onto him rather than him whisking her away to some far away castle (like I assume the princes do to the princesses), and finally she has a thirst for adventure, not for a family, until she feels ready to start a family. Ellie isn't defined by her gender and need to conform to gender stereotypes as the other princesses are, she is a real person. And she undergoes hardship, and she mourns her inability to have children, and she moves on and enjoys the day-to-day. Some people might think of that as small minded, or not ambitious enough to be deserving of such a significant piece of the movie, but real life, like what Ellie and Carl experience in the first few minutes, is what brings the audience to tears literally every time they watch the movie. It's beautiful. It's much more delicate than some of the other messages that slap you in the face like "Bad things happen to bad people," and whatever. Maybe that's because it's silent so there's no forced comedy, instead it's like watching a memory.

There's beauty in Russell and Carl's relationship too, in the healing that Russell helps Carl undergo. Carl is obviously broken as a person once Ellie dies, however Russell's bouyancy revitalizes him and helps him reach the dream he once thought impossible, visiting Paradise Falls. He unknowingly achieves his and Ellie's other dream in tending to and nurturing Russell as he does on their trip to the Falls. It's not specified as an adoption, but there is obviously a message in the body of Up that your family can be those you choose to be your family if your biological family does not provide the support you need. Or that families don't have to be biological to be normal. Even after their wild adventure, Russell and Carl come back to their same small town, Russell gets his grape soda can badge from Carl, and the two sit on the curb talking about the passing cars. Even though they came together as a family under extraordinary circumstances, they ultimately became a totally normal family. If anybody should watch Up, it's adopted children because it doesn't force them to face their adoption, however it indirectly shows how totally acceptable it is for a child to not fit their biological family, but find all the love and care that they need in their adoptive family. (I'm not adopted but,  ugh, I just can't get over how profoundly comforting I found this movie, it felt like a hug from my parents. It was kind of what I needed right now with this pre-LDOC slue of work.)

Tuesday, March 24, 2015

The Periodic Table of Disney



Disney for the Chem Major, or those who learn by work association, they've created a Periodic Table of Disney characters. Is it too far? You decide.

Sunday, March 22, 2015

Home is What You Make It

I'm a little unclear on what the intention of "Home is Where the Heart Is: Pixar's Up" by Dennis Tyler is trying to communicate. On one hand it seemed to be saying that it was a white-centric movie putting excessive emphasis on the needs of Carl, the white, male protagonist. On the other it seemed to be saying that Up stresses the importance of family, even non-traditional family. I really agree much more with the latter than the former understanding of the movie. To me, Up is a case study on how family can effect and change your life for the better or for the worse. For example, Ellie brings out the best in Carl in that she makes him brave, she is strong and happy and wonderful. She is a powerful, feminist figure who really could exist without Carl yet she chooses to marry him (example, jumping on him at their wedding, obviously her choosing him, not becoming his property). Because of this I don't see their relationship as glorifying the patriarchy. If anything it shows what a healthy relationship filled with mutual respect looks like. The two decide mutually that they want to have a child. They decide mutually they want to fill their lives with adventure when they cannot have a child. They support one another through the highs and lows of their relationship, help one another, and love one another. Marriage in this context is an example of a constructive familial relationship the two people involved chose.

Russell is another great example. Even according to Tyler's examination of the movie, it seems like Russell comes from some kind of broken home. He does not have the same kind of support in his life that Ellie and Carl do, and so he went out of his home, I'd even stretch it to day that's why he's a boy scout to find a support system outside his family. Carl becomes basically a father figure to Russell over the course of their travels, even so far that Carl was Russell's "father" at his boy scout ceremony and presents Russell with his last badge. Kevin and Dug, in the same way as Russell, are attracted to the secure, warm, fatherly figure that Carl tries to conceal behind a grouchy, old-man exterior. Even as a viewer, you can tell Carl's a softee behind that tough exterior and obviously the characters in the movie could too. Dug is an innocent dog from a very repressive "family" that doesn't accept him because he isn't the right kind of attack dog that his owner wanted him to be. Kevin is a single mother with children to take care of and no other familial support. As a unit, the foursome become each others' family and take care of one another. If anything this is one of Disney's most beautiful messages.

It doesn't matter in my opinion, or apparently the opinion of the Disney animators, who is a part of this family. The family is about as non-traditional as it can be. Kevin is a bird, and a tropical bird at that, and the only female. Dug is a dog, a talking, sweet-hearted dog. Russell is an overweight,  possibly-Asian-American-possibly-White-boy. Finally, Carl is an elderly white man and acts as patriarch of this make-shift family. They don't all look the same. They aren't even necessarily the same species. However, each of these characters offers something to the rest of the group that they need to feel secure and that's all that family needs. Not everybody has the best biological family situation, so in some instances people seek solace in their relationships with pets, friends, teachers, or other mentors and Up's message tells children that this is ok, in fact it's sometimes just what you need.

Friday, March 20, 2015

I thought this was appropriate considering we're about to start watching and discussing Up, but somebody on the internet is a horrible person. I saw this and thought "How cute!" until the last frame, where my heart sank. Somebody on the internet is a cruel, cruel individual. #CarlandEllieForever

Somebody at the Disney Store has a sick sense of humor.

Kim Possible, Oh How I Miss You

http://www.buzzfeed.com/juliapugachevsky/reasons-kim-possible-was-the-best-disney-channel-show?sub=3378583_3271090#.hooRyYzbB

I just ran across this article and oh god do I miss Kim Possible. By far it was the best Disney Channel show, not just when it was on but I would argue ever. Kim was a feminine, yet strong, smart young woman who could just be friends with a boy, came from a good home, and fought crime. Literally what wasn't possible for Kim Possible. I don't know what happened to Disney's television shows, maybe just becoming so politically correct, so afraid of violence, etc. means that shows like this can't be on the air. Also the writing though, the writers for Kim Possible were some of the sassiest writers I think Disney has ever seen. While modern Disney TV shows try to emulate this same sass, it just comes off as trying too hard. The jokes were, and after reading this Buzzfeed article I realized still are, genuinely funny. I will never laugh at a joke told my Austin and Ally in Austin and Ally. I miss it, and I will probably spend the rest of my Friday binge watching Kim Possible on Netflix.