Actually running away from her problems and asking someone else to fix it made all her problems worse. So I don't think that's really the message.My bigger problem with the movie is how it comes across as being about a young girl's ability to change her destiny by standing up for herself and eventually being accepted for who she is. Instead it looks to me like the lesson here is running away from your problems and asking someone else to make things go the way you want is fine if you're a girl. I think I'll pass on this one.
Yes, better than Cars 2, I'd put it in the upper half of the Pixar oeuvre (though I'm not a fan of the Toy Story films). It didn't seem as fresh a take on fairy tales as some of their other, more loved, original films.
I know, pretty slick thread.This was dazzling, beautiful, and impressive in every way.
Same. Well, a little older than Andy, but still close enough in age that it all got to me. The third one choked me up in so many scenes. When I watched it in theatres with my friends we were all tearing up. One of my friends didn't get a chance to see it until later though. I got it on DVD and had already watched it twice, but he hadn't seen it yet, so we put it on. My other roommate came in like 2minutes into the movie and was like "Oh, we're doing this? Alright." And sat down.I don't see how anyone could not like Toy Story.
On the other hand, I was of that group that was Andy's age when every movie came out, so I might hold it closer than others. I cried my eyes out during the third one.
In the movie I'm pretty sure that the princess was playing up her uncomfort and over tightening of the corset because she is a child being forced to wear something that she doesn't like and the mother tied it snug but not overly tightPoint 1: This is a teenaged girl who is rebelling. Her mother has to force her to wear proper support for decency, really. I wanted to wear skirts well above my knee to school when I 16...my father forced me to dress decently. I resented him for it but looking back on it I understand it.
Point 2: I assume the mother wears a corset as well, so she should know how to tie it comfortably. Instead she ties it up as tight as possible and declares it "perfect". It would have been perfect a if it was a few notches looser as well and any woman that has worn a corset can you that!
It's lazy writing. They just didn't have a better way to say "Look! Oppression!"
Added at: 19:50
Edit: I want to make it clear this my only problem thus far. I'm not a hardcore feminist and i haven't seen the entire movie. I just had to roll my eyes at this scene. It was pulled off better in Pirates of the Caribbean. At least in that movie the garment was unfamiliar to Elizabeth Swann and her servants.
That's not a wig, is it? Tell me that's not a wig. I don't care if it's $50 worth of hair dye and 3 hours with a curling iron every morning, if it's not a wig..... homina.
SOON.JPGThat is not a wig.