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Showing posts from March, 2021

Happily Ever After in "Frozen"

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  In "Frozen" (the first film), the main protagonist Anna seeks to save her city of Arendelle from a brutal winter by reconnecting with her sister Elsa, the one responsible for causing this winter. Anna and Elsa have had a fragmented relationship for most of their lives, and this led to their eventual separation. In the beginning of the film, their relationship is never classified as love, rather as familial relation that allows Anna access to the Elsa's prestigious life. The actual "true love", as we see, is between Anna and Hans, where the two get engaged very quickly after meeting.  Later on, Anna meets Kristoff, who helps Anna travel to the mountains to talk to her sister. After a clash between sisters, Elsa accidentally freezes Anna's heart, an injury which can only be cured by an act of true love. Anna, still believing that Hans truly loves her, requests a kiss from him to cure her, only to discover that Hans never loved her at all, rather used her as ...

A Good Lesson from "The Little Mermaid"

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  "The Little Mermaid" is a classic Disney princess film, in which a mermaid named Ariel falls in love with Prince Eric, and Eric falls in love with Ariel and her beautiful singing voice. In an attempt to become closer to Prince Eric and escape sea life, Ariel makes a deal with a witch named Ursula to become human for three days. Within those three days, Ariel must recieve a kiss from Eric or turn back into a mermaid and belong to Ursula forever. Lots of controversy has sparked from this movie, as it attends to very old-school and non-progressive views of gender roles and beauty standards. Many are offput by the general plot - a sixteen-year-old girl seeking a man's love, and then being put in a situation where she can only be saved by the man's kiss. Others are disturbed by the body image messages that the movie sends, particularly the huge difference in percieved attractiveness between the villains and the protagonists. While Prince Eric, Ariel, and the King are all...

Romantic Love vs. Friendship Love

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In class, we read "The Snow Queen", by Hans Christian Andersen, in which the main characters Kay and Gerda love each other, but as if they were brother and sister, or very close friends. This friendly love is shown throughout most of the story, however toward the end of the story that line begins to get blurred, as they engage in many displays of affection including hand-holding and kissing. I wanted to expand on the differences between romantic love and friendship love. In most forms of media (and consequently, in real life), the initial stages of romantic love can typically be characterized by physical attraction, based on the superficial features of one's body. We saw this in Bambi, when the two skunks appear to fall in love without even saying a single word to each other. On the other hand, friendship love is almost always characterized by emotional attraction, usually to one's personality traits or experiences. This is the kind of love we see in most PBS Kids sho...