UncleEd wrote:...but seriously, we don't know in what context these interviews were done or how they were edited. As a film maker I know how easy it is to do trickery with film and be a Michael Moore.
Well, the interviews were not broken up into clips. They were one shot, with one track of dialogue (obviously or it wouldn't match the video). The only thing they could have edited was something before or after what the girl's actually thought, like asking the question, "What would you do if Belle was your friend and the Beast was acting like he did before he saved her from the wolves?"
UncleEd wrote:He's either handsome or he's not. You can't intend to be handsome and not be. Otherwise there's a whole world full of ugly people who intended to be handsome...
What about the fact some people find Johnny Depp attractive and some do not? And you said you found plenty of women who said the beast as a prince is not attractive, meaning there must of been some who said he was. You and I both know the well-known saying, "Beauty is in the eye of the beholder." And I already mentioned the things about him that most people instinctively find attractive for a man: tall, buff, and hairless (except on the head). And it doesn't matter what women you meet have preferences for otherwise, you know that most male super-models have those characteristics.
UncleEd wrote:Disney Duster wrote:"Well, I didn't find any whiffs of it, you did, and pulled them out, which means that if Lazario wasn't intending that, you're the one who presented it. I admit, I assumed you had problems with same sex marriage but that came from very clear indications as you tried to equate person + person (of same sex) with person + animal, and even more so by saying "what if I do have a problem with same sex marriage?"
See, you read stuff in my post I did not intend so there.
But you proved that you intended that when you wrote:
UncleEd wrote:Homosexuality is immoral.
So I read that you had something against homosexuality and thought it was wrong, and there's the proof that you do. Oh, and by the way, "you can't inject your morality on others"!
I admit it's possible (meaning there's no official proof from Disney themselves but I'm choosing to believe you because there's good reason to) that Thomas Schumacher intended to put certain messages in films. I hope you know that "The Wild" actually did come out, and the animals of the film came out of a manhole in New York City...so if you said the project was shut down but it eventually surfaced (in a different form, of course), should I still believe you? Well, I will.
UncleEd wrote:They're the same thing.
Person + person does not = person + animal. They can both be wrong to you, but the fact is those are two entirely different things.
UncleEd wrote:And a male and a male and a femal and a female are not like a male and a female.
Correct. As my equation is also correct.
UncleEd wrote:Doesn't Belle chew the Beast out and he's not a jerk after that? I still don't see the Beast as being abusive.
Right, but in real life if you chew an abusive partner out they won't always stop being jerks.
UncleEd wrote:That whole thing is "You can't confine love to a flesh and blood body" is exactly the door that opens up. That isn't what the fairy tale is about but this is probably why he (and you) would rather it be changed this way.
But we never said love couldn't be confined to a flesh and blood body. In case you didn't notice, the beast's inhuman body is still flesh and blood. But he thinks and feels like a human, and can relate and connect to and talk to Belle like a human, making him able to love her like a human and her able to love him like a human. And I never said I wanted it changed so he stays a beast. I said I think a better thing to do would be to make him look less attractive and less like her. Thinking back on it, since the prince's selfishness partly came from him being so attractive in the first place (otherwise I doubt he'd turn away an ugly woman if he was ugly himself), perhaps that shouldn't be the case...and I should consider Lazario's suggestion...haha, and everyone else's too.
UncleEd wrote:Then what if someone tells you it's their opinion the Holochaust never happened? Opinions can and are wrong all the time.
Well it's not their opinion, it's what they believe is fact. Whether something's wrong or bad is opinion, but whether concentrations camps killed many people or not is fact. And besides, all you have to is show them the facts!
UncleEd wrote:Disney Duster wrote:" And I will have you know that I've seen Song of the South, I don't like it,"
Good for you! Why don't you like it?
I just didn't like it. It's had for me to pinpoint the whole thing, but I'd say I mostly found it annoying and boring.
UncleEd wrote:The Prince didn't save Cinderella. She saved herself. In the fairy tale she also forgave her family but the prince killed them.
That's a version of Cinderella I never heard. But anyway, the basic structure of the story is something like a girl is in a bad situation, she doesn't do anything about it for a while, an invitation to meet a prince comes, she meets the prince, runs away, the prince comes after her or sends his men after her, and he or those men take her away from her bad situation to live with him. The message of not doing anything to get out of a bad situation until an invitation or a prince comes into your life so he can save you from that situation will always be present in every reasonably faithful version of Cinderella.
UncleEd wrote:"I can find things that possibly refute the message upon further thinking by pointing out Cinderella does some things herself to help her out of the situation or the men can't really help her themselves, but the message was found."
You just deluded your own claim proving how it's not there. I can find anything I want to in any film I choose. That doesn't mean it's there.
No, Walt Disney's version of Cinderella gives Cinderella the chances to save herself. But that is only one version, and the basic structure of the story, she meets a prince and he takes her away from her abusive stepfamily through his men and the glass slipper search, is still there to be seen if one is able to.
UncleEd wrote:According to previous things you've said there can be no right or wrong messages so whose to say a man saving you is wrong?
I never said there weren't right or wrong messages, I said there could be
bad messages. And I never said a man saving you is wrong, though it's certainly not a good thing to depend on a person saving you, as in waiting until a person can save you.
UncleEd wrote:Disney Duster wrote:"No, Lazario never said that. He said the film could send a bad message that could cause battered women to put up with abusive men."
I want to see numbers that prove this is true. If it is then it has effected women and men. Show me the numbers!!!
All I'm saying is the message in the film is there and could affect the children watching the film. Only statistics based on asking if victims who stayed with their abusive spouses and hoped they would change watched Beauty and the Beast could get close, but I'm unable to conduct such a thing, and it would take to long to reply back to you. And when I used the word "could" twice, there isn't anything to prove is true. You have to try thinking and seeing other people's views for that.
UncleEd wrote:Sure they couldn't tell a bad score when they see one.
Right, so they couldn't tell Menken's score was a bad score when they saw it! Unless you didn't mean to write that, and I don't think you did. The score is well-made as Lazario said, that's why it won the award. But being well-made is different from it being simple or having other things wrong with it. So they couldn't see those things, or saw them, but gave the award because the other things weren't as important as the craft of the music to them.
UncleEd wrote:Bob brought this subject up in the FIRST PLACE. If it's so traumatic to him that he can't talk about it then he should have kept his mouth shut about it.
There is no Bob here, but Lazario brought up some bad things about Beauty and the Beast. Only one bad thing makes him not want to talk about it, because he finds it so bad, which he didn't bring up, I did.
UncleEd wrote:How do you know she didn't know? She obviously recognized the eyes in the painting, the Beast's eyes, and the Prince's eyss. I'm sure she knew something was up.
She didn't know because the Prnce said "Belle, it's me!" and she hesitated and had to look into his eyes to realize, "It is you!" So she didn't know it was him
at first.
UncleEd wrote:I'm sure she read enough fairy tales to know about loves first kiss and all that jazz.
Once again your assuming things. Love's first kiss wasn't even what was needed to break the spell. I'm going by what's actually in the film.
UncleEd wrote:I NEVER said I was better than you but since you feel that way, thanks! I'll accept that I am you radical kook you!
But Lazario's better than you.
UncleEd wrote:Lazario wrote:"If you don't agree, I think you're not looking at it the right way. If you don't like that, deal with it. I do not care."
Translation: I'm right! Look at me!!! You're all wrong! Me! Me! Me!
Oh, good, so you agree!