Miss Manday wrote:Guys... that's not a new personality for Cinderella. At all.
She is in fact sarcastic in various parts of all three of her movies. ("Old killjoy, I hear you, get up you say!" "There must be SOMETHING good about him", "Perhaps we should interrupt the 'music lesson'") If anything, the brainless 'princess personality' is the fake one that Disney has slapped onto her. *is very passionate about this*
Cinderella got mad at the clock and Lucifer, I don't think she meant to be sarcastic when she said there must be something good about Lucifer, she stated it like she really thought there must be, no smile, but you are right about the "music lesson" line. But in the picture above, she looks full of attitude, like she's smirking, like she's tough, almost like she's mean, with one eyebrow down in like a mean way.
Scarred4life wrote:Disney Duster wrote:...And many more. Maybe the dolls heads in the most recent line are slightly larger than how these princesses are portrayed in the films, but it's not a big stretch. And like I said, regardless of animation, this makes the line better suited for current markets.
You have presented good evidence, but when I look at the dolls in comparison to the shots, the dolls look more out of proportion. Also, you presented characters they didn't have dolls of. And the most old one, Ariel, doesn't nearly have the same proportions as Elsa and Rapunzel.
Disney shouldn't change the princesses to fit into the new way toys are. They should be true to the films. I doubt Disney really would struggle selling toys that look like they come from the films the children who ask for these toys love. Not to mention toys that just look
good because they come from well-designed characters and not Bratz and Monster/Ever After High less good designs.