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Who is the main character of "Aladdin"?
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[quote="AmethystFae"]Here is the paper I wrote for my English class last semester: [quote]Disney Princesses – A Critical Analysis All my life, I have loved stories about princesses. Like most girls, I was introduced to the Disney Princesses at an early age. And while some girls lost interest, I am still, to this day, a Disney Princess fanatic. Recently, I’ve been thinking about each of the Disney Princesses and their movies more critically. For years, I have favored Princess Jasmine from “Aladdin,” Ariel from “The Little Mermaid,” and Belle from “Beauty and the Beast.” I always saw them as stronger and more independent than Snow White, Princess Aurora, or Cinderella. Then, recently, in the midst of a conversation I was having with a friend, it occurred to us that the time periods in which these movies were produced may have played an important part in the outcome. I have often described Snow White as a “cream puff” and “the weakest of the Disney Princesses.” Snow White was the first of the six princesses, and her movie was made in 1938. Although women had the vote by then, a “liberated” woman was still a new concept. Snow White was very submissive, and the only time she came close to arguing was when the Evil Queen came in disguise to give her the poisoned apple. Furthermore, Snow White knew very little about her prince when they were married at the end. The only time we saw him before he awakened her was when Snow White was singing by the wishing well. He had heard her song and fell in love with her the moment he laid eyes on her. However, his name was never given, nor do we know anything about him other than the fact that he’s Snow White’s Prince. I also noticed that Snow White is the only Princess with short hair. This is significant because short hairstyles for women were still a new thing. In fact, some have compared Snow White’s hair style to that of Shirley Temple, who was very popular during this time. Sleeping Beauty, the next movie to be made about a Disney Princess was made in the late 1940s. Princess Aurora’s character seemed stronger than that of Snow White’s. She was a well-behaved child, but not quite as submissive as Snow White. When talking with the animals of the forest, she expresses her feelings about how protective her guardians are. She says that she is treated like a child, and isn’t allowed to meet anybody. “But you know something? I’ve fooled them. I have met someone,” she tells her animal friends. Later, after returning from her outing, there is further proof that she has opinions of her own. She reminds the three Fairies that she is sixteen, implying that the fact that she had fallen in love shouldn’t be such a shock. Although we don’t see Princess Aurora and Prince Phillip getting to know each other onscreen, there is footage during “Once Upon A Dream” that suggests they spent some time together in the woods. Also, the two were betrothed to one-another from the day Princess Aurora was born. Furthermore, Disney’s Sleeping Beauty took place during the fourteenth century—a time when marriage was a business arrangement, rather than a thing of love. By the 1900s, it was more common to marry the one that you loved – a concept often played up in many films, especially the ones produced by Disney. The next princess to be given the “Disney Makeover” was Cinderella, who is often criticized for various aspects of the story. However, I have noticed that although she is servant to her step-family, fell in love after one night of dancing, and got married because the glass slipper fit, Disney did put some depth into her character. Although she does follow the orders of her stepmother and stepsisters, she doesn’t “kiss their feet.” When they call for her, she says things like, “Oh, now what do they want?” or “Alright! I’m coming!” before taking care of their needs. Throughout the movie, she seems to keep the house running smoothly while her stepmother and stepsisters do nothing. I know that’s the whole point of the story, but Disney does a good job of making it look as though the house would fall apart without her there. Cinderella does fall in love after one night of dancing, but if you watch the footage during “So This Is Love,” Cinderella and Prince Charming aren’t just dancing the entire time, but are walking together as well, implying that the two had time to talk about many things, with the exception of the exchange of their names. I also noticed that Cinderella and Princess Aurora both had blonde hair. According to the music and television of that time, which was post World War II, blonde hair was very fashionable in the United States. For the next thirty years, Disney didn’t produce any movies that centered around princesses. However, in the winter of 1989, The Little Mermaid came to theatres with a style only Disney could create. Not only did Disney change the story’s original tragic ending to one of happiness, but they also made Ariel a free, fun-loving type of girl with red hair to match. Ariel’s favorite pastime is to explore sunken ships and search for things used by humans. She never even implies that she wants to marry a “Prince Charming.” Instead, her dream is to dwell among the humans and see the world in which they live. She only dreams of a prince when she discovers Prince Eric. One might assume she fell in love with Eric when she first laid eyes on him, but Ariel also overheard the conversation that took place when Eric and his advisor, Sir Grimsby, were discussing marriage and finding the right girl. It can be just as easily assumed that she fell in love with his personality. In the movie, Ariel and Eric have three days to get to know each other. We see scenes of them driving through Eric’s Kingdom, dancing, and canoeing. Even though Ariel doesn’t have her voice in these three days, we can see that Eric is starting to become attracted to her. Ariel also shows backbone when Ursula tries to destroy Prince Eric. To keep her beloved from being killed, Ariel pushes the sea witch, directing the blast to the two eels, Flotsom and Jetsom. Ariel is the first Disney Princess to stand up to the villain in that way. Next, Disney released Beauty and the Beast. In this movie, Belle (French for “beautiful”) is considered, by the people of her town, to be an odd sort of creature because she spends most of her time reading. When Gaston takes the book from her and wonders how she can read without pictures, she tells him, “Some people use their imagination.” At first, Belle and the Beast can’t stand each other. The Beast makes a remark about how difficult Belle is, and Belle tells the Armoir that she doesn’t want anything to do with the Beast. It isn’t until an argument ending with Belle telling the Beast that he should learn to control his temper, that the two begin a relationship that blossoms from being friends to falling in love. Disney gave Belle the look that most intelligent beauties are given. Belle was beautiful, but her features were more subtle than the other Disney Princesses. Her hair was brown, and usually worn in a ponytail. This is often how people described as smart and pretty are most often portrayed in movies and TV. Finally, Aladdin, the last of the Disney Princess movies, was introduced in 1993. In it, we first see Princess Jasmine after she has rejected another prince. We learn that Jasmine is fed up with the typical prince of that time period. The law says she must be married to a prince by her next birthday, but Jasmine is interested in marrying for love. One interesting thing I have noted has to do with the conversation between Jasmine and the Sultan. In the movie, the Sultan says, “The law says you must be married to a prince by your next birthday.” However, in an early script of the movie, the Sultan says, “The law says you must be married to a prince by your sixteenth birthday.” In Sleeping Beauty, Aurora was sixteen when she married Prince Phillip. It is likely that by 1993, Disney didn’t want their young audience to think they should get married at sixteen years of age. Additionally, Princess Jasmine is the first Disney Princess to reveal her midriff, which was a controversial issue back during the production of Aladdin. Another issue was the ethnicity. I think had Aladdin been produced fifty years prior, we might have seen an all-white cast or we’d never have movies like Pocahontas or Mulan. Both movies came after Aladdin, so it might be said that Princess Jasmine paved the way for heroines of different ethnicities to have their own movies. No matter what Disney Princess we’re describing, all of them can be respected, given the time period in which each was created. When you compare Snow White to Princess Jasmine, you are literally comparing two different time periods. The standards set up for girls during each time period varied, even in the five years the last three Princesses were created. [/quote][/quote]
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APK
Posted: Thu Sep 28, 2006 1:44 pm
Post subject:
Quote:
They play it as an experience that jars her...probably changes and teaches her a lot. The movie doesn't focus on Jasmine's guilt trip, but we see that she HAS one.
I'm so glad someone you mentioned that
A friend of mine thought Jasmine was rather mopey in the movie, but failed to see the reason why. She wasn't very mopey at the beginning of the movie - she even had a cheerful, teasing attitude about Achmed. She became mopey after finding out that the nice boy that not only understood her but saved her life was beheaded because of her. The audience knows that Jafar is lying about beheading Aladdin but Jasmine doesn't know this. She thought that it was her fault. He saved her life but she couldn't do the same for him.
She had tried to save him when she took a risk to expose her disguise and reveal she was the princess. She couldn't even manage to save him even with her high status and royal power. Jafar, being a man, has more power than she does as the Sultan's daughter. She told both Jafar and the Sultan about how she felt and they both brushed her off. Even the Sultan told her to forget about the whole thing and brought up the topic of suitors again. (an insensitive thing to do after your daughter has just told you she failed to save a boy's life after failing to run away effectively)
She acted rashly and ran away. I sympathised and sided with her because there was nothing much else she could do. Running away from a forced marriage (her birthday was coming soon) is better than sitting around and doing nothing.
Ariellen
Posted: Thu Sep 28, 2006 11:40 am
Post subject:
Janette Morgan wrote:
But she could have
tried
.
I always got the impression that she had tried, many times, and given up quite a while before the movie begins. It sounds like a conversation that they've had variations of many a time before.
And...remember, she's YOUNG. They scrapped the 16th birthday line from the movie, but the intent was there...wish I knew at what stage of production they changed the birthday line and if the character was adjusted to be made slightly older, etc. But we have 15-going-on-16 as at least a ballpark figure. Yes, 16 was much more 'adult' centuries ago than it is now, people didn't live as long and so they had to assume more responsibilities younger, etc., but this was a fairy tale and though it was meant to be a 'timeless' telling of a story, this movie especially was not afraid to at the same time be very contemporary, so Jasmine was intended to be a teenager of the 1990s, struggling and clashing with a parent and having a hard time coming into the role she has the responsibility to fill, and dealing with her frustrations in a way that maybe isn't the most rational, maybe isn't the 'best,' but is what she feels in her gut.
I still argue that any discussion over what she SHOULD have done and how she should have handled the situation is interesting, but a little irrelevant at the end of the day; she ran away because...the plot called for it. The story was structured so she'd meet Aladdin, in disguise, and do so in HIS world, not hers. They play it as an experience that jars her...probably changes and teaches her a lot. The movie doesn't focus on Jasmine's guilt trip, but we see that she HAS one.
Janette Morgan
Posted: Thu Sep 28, 2006 9:49 am
Post subject:
So instead of trying to resolve her situation, she just ran from it. Y'know, she could have talked to the Sultan instead of just grousing to every other character in the room.
Course, I'm not sure that the Sultan would have understood... he was a bit airheaded. But she could have
tried
.
APK
Posted: Tue Sep 26, 2006 8:35 pm
Post subject:
Quote:
"People who tell you where to go and how to dress... you're never free to make your own choices!"
"Oh, that stupid law! This isn't fair!"
"The law is wrong!"
"Stuck-up, self-absorbed, overdressed..."
"I can't stand around and let other people live my life for me."
"If I do marry, I want it to be for love."
Those didn't sound like complaints, especially the last one. Her wanting to marry for love is right and proper. She didn't want to be stuck in a loveless relationship for the rest of her life. She's thinking outside the box and she's thinking intelligently
It isn't any more whiny than someone standing up against an unfair law today.
Quote:
The scene where she chews out Jafar for having Aladdin arrested.
You mean beheaded
Quote:
"How dare you! Standing around deciding my future?"
"Father, what's wrong with you?"
He was acting like a hypnotised puppet. And he told her to marry Jafar.
What did you expect her to do?
Quote:
She's always complaining about SOMETHING, except when she's busy drooling over Aladdin.
In much the same way Aladdin kept talking about being a streetrat except when he was with Jasmine. I didn't consider Aladdin to be complaining though, he only wanted to prove himself and have a better life. He didn't sit around dissatisfied with his condition either. He did something about it, the way Jasmine did something about her situation by running away.
Janette Morgan
Posted: Tue Sep 26, 2006 7:30 pm
Post subject:
I wasn't saying she didn't have a reason; it's just that she complained a
lot
during the movie.
AladdinsGenie
Posted: Tue Sep 26, 2006 6:29 pm
Post subject:
And if you notice, all those quotes have to do about her life. Your life is being lived through someone else's rules that you have no power over and you're basically a robot doing what everyone else tells you to do....wouldn't you complain? Shoot, I'd take it a step further and bitch every day
. I guess I equate speaking out against something and complain as two different things in my head.
LaGenie
Posted: Tue Sep 26, 2006 6:03 pm
Post subject:
She is a little bit of a complainer. But if you think about we all are a little bit whiny sometimes. Like why do we have so much homework or this is unfair. They made her realistic but a little bit too much.
Janette Morgan
Posted: Tue Sep 26, 2006 5:25 pm
Post subject:
Billy Joe wrote:
Ghee, I really don't remember her complaining all that much
A few random quotes:
"People who tell you where to go and how to dress... you're never free to make your own choices!"
"Oh, that stupid law! This isn't fair!"
"The law is wrong!"
"Stuck-up, self-absorbed, overdressed..."
"If I do marry, I want it to be for love."
"I can't stand around and let other people live my life for me."
-- The scene where she chews out Jafar for having Aladdin arrested.
"How dare you! Standing around deciding my future?"
"Father, what's wrong with you?"
She's always complaining about SOMETHING, except when she's busy drooling over Aladdin.
AladdinFan92
Posted: Tue Sep 26, 2006 2:41 pm
Post subject: Re: My Disney Princess Paper That I Wrote
Great essay,Hikaru! Call me crazy,but it reminds me of that post I made awhile back entitled "The Role of Disney Princesses in Films" or something like that. I agreed with pretty much every argument you used. Very well written,and on one of my favorite topics! I can't tell you how many times I've said he exact same thing to my friends who insist on making fun of the Disney Princesses.
Ariellen
Posted: Mon Sep 25, 2006 12:53 pm
Post subject:
"Father, if I do marry...I want it to be to have someone to b**** to! Maybe if I run away, I'll find the freedom...er...doormat that I've ALWAYS dreamed of!"
AladdinsGenie
Posted: Mon Sep 25, 2006 9:48 am
Post subject:
Syera wrote:
Oh, pshaw. She only ran away so she could go complain to Aladdin.
Yeah, because she called him up before hand and planned out that whole marketplace scene before she ran away. Then, if she escaped with her life, she could complain about it
Iago
Posted: Sun Sep 24, 2006 10:31 pm
Post subject:
Ghee, I really don't remember her complaining all that much
Syera
Posted: Sun Sep 24, 2006 8:26 pm
Post subject:
Oh, pshaw. She only ran away so she could go complain to Aladdin.
Ariellen
Posted: Sun Sep 24, 2006 7:54 pm
Post subject:
I think that running away is more than complaining...at least it was doing something about the things she was complaining about. Not in the most responsible of ways, but she had to meet Aladdin somehow.
:
Syera
Posted: Sat Sep 23, 2006 10:44 pm
Post subject:
Gee... now that you mention it, Jasmine really didn't do much other than complain.
Ah, well... she got Awesome in the series, so I hear.
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