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- From: rcook@sdcc13.ucsd.edu (Robert Cook)
- Newsgroups: rec.arts.animation
- Subject: Re: Shallowness in TLM, BATB (Was Re: Cheap Animation)
- Date: 22 Dec 1992 15:45:25 GMT
- Organization: University of California, San Diego
- Lines: 40
- Message-ID: <1h7d6lINN9da@network.ucsd.edu>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: sdcc13.ucsd.edu
-
- In article <BzMCEM.23K@ccu.umanitoba.ca> umcho000@ccu.umanitoba.ca (Connie Cho) writes:
- >
- >I liked [Beauty and the Beast] a lot, though more for the visuals than the story.
- >What does bother me, though , is-
- >if Belle had been a grotesque hag would the Beast have
- >taken one look and fled to his tower and locked himself in?
-
- How ugly do you think a person can be? :-)
-
- >With all these protestations about how his looks shouldn't matter, why are
- >we constantly reminded about this gorgeous girl, even in her name?
- >Seems a tad hyporitical. I suppose making her bookish serves as
- >redemption, as does giving her a 'scientist' father.
-
- The message I got was that you could be brainy (or at least bookish)
- and beautiful at the same time. It's fairly clear that this is also
- a feminist tale. Beast obviously wasn't impressed with Belle's
- looks in the beginning. The only time I remember him mentioning it
- was when he worried whether such a beautiful woman could see
- anything in someone as ugly as he. That ties into the central focus
- of the story! Disney happened to apply this moral lesson to BOTH
- Belle and Beast, rather than only the former. In the end, Belle sees
- through Beast's ugliness (which allows his inner beauty to come forth
- physically, figuratively speaking). Beast did not fall in love with
- Belle because of her looks. She had to be beautiful to provide a
- contrast with the ugliness of the Beast. In Disney's version
- specifically, Belle's beauty adds a sense of danger, as Gaston is
- obsessively attracted to her (danger that greatly overshadows the
- threat from Beauty's sisters in the short French versions).
-
- Disney's story tries to say a lot: "beauty is only skin deep," being
- beautiful or a woman or both does not mean that you are stupid, and
- something about persecution (some lyrics: "we don't like what we
- don't understand, in fact that scares us."). It's not easy to do,
- and I think it works very well. Even if the audience doesn't think
- on so many levels, I think the movie is still superficially entertaining,
- which is more than I can say about most "meaningful" movies I've seen.
-
-
- - Robert Cook
-