UmbrellaFish wrote:Personally, I think the question is rather, "Is the Disney Princess franchise long-term damage?", rather than, "Are the Disney Princesses Long-term Damage?". Making a good wholesome movie is not damage to a company. Making a good wholesome movie and turning in into a franchise with off-model pretty faces plastered on pink back-packs is damage. You can't say that Snow White, Cinderella, Aurora, Ariel, Belle and Jasmine are damaging to Disney.
Unfortunately in the 90's when Disney started this franchise they also started the belief that Disney is for girls. I a straight male fan of Disney, but believe it or not, most people don't know what my favorite movie is. They do know that I "love" Disney, but they think I'm only a Mickey Mouse fanatic. Nope, I'm not! I like the princess films, and I also like the films that feature no or very minor roles of princesses. But because of this franchise, all Disney is to the public is a bunch of princesses and a mouse.
In my honest opinion Disney should lay off the princesses and start marketing the boys, but in edgier ways. Also, make the older films and shorts seem more classy rather than child-faire. Totally! Why is it I can find a million stylized Ariels but no stylized Aladdins. If Disney did that and make it seem "cool" to them, their next "Treasure Planet" might actually do well. And Disney films have so much history to them, it's a shame people look down upon them as "kiddy cartoons and movies". They're not!
I'm sorry but I've had to deal with people in my life who say Disney's for babies. That angers me. These people are my best friends, yet they can't appreciate these films that I love. It's not their fault really, it's Disney's marketing to girls rather than boys. I have very little Disney things in my room unless they're Mickey Mouse, mainly because most Disney merchandise is too kiddish for my tastes. I'm really excited for Enchanted and The Princess and the Frog because in all three golden ages, each started with a princess movie. But during that period people began to appreciate Disney more. I wasn't around for much of that.
You are so right!
I agree.
The (princess) classics should be treated much classier, like the masterpieces they are. I can't believe how the company is presenting them with all the pink girly franchise.
People around me react just like that. Disney? That's for little girls.
Personally I see the classics as masterpieces, artwork, great stories, life lessons, true beauty, wonderful musical scores, and find some of them not suitable for kids at all. I think people need to be a bit older and mentally better developed to understand the movies.
But, you can't blame them, Disney chooses to present them that way.
Like Walt says at the end of the "Making of Snowwhite" documentary;
Disney is NOT for kids.
Not just for adults either.
It's for anyone who understands life and anyone that hasn't lost that small unspoiled place deep inside.
Or something like that
I was watching scenes of some older classic the other day, and my mother came in and watched some scenes. She said; "I can't believe how mature everything looks, so detailed and some scenes or things that happen in the story are so haunting or romantic. I loved the movies years ago but I thought I must have liked them because I was younger then, and all you see today is the pink bracelets with Cinderella on it in stores.
I really need to adjust my view on Disney".
And I think that's EXACTLY what the world needs to do too.