This guest review by Whitney Mollenhauer first appeared at Not Another Wave in December 2010.
Last Friday, I saw Disney’s Tangled with my husband. I thought it was a pretty good feminist-y movie, especially considering that it was a Disney princess-type movie. Because I am lazy, I have written my review in bullet-point form:
- Rapunzel’s father (the king) cries on Rapunzel’s birthday as he remembers his kidnapped daughter. It seems like usually in these kind of movies, you see the mom crying and the dad consoling her; but here, it’s the other way around. Win! Men can express emotion, too!
- Rapunzel sews and bakes, but she also reads, does astronomy, and paints like no other.
- She is so awesome with her hair! She ties the male protagonist up, lets herself down from the tower, and climbs everywhere. Seriously, it’s very impressive. She can do just about anything with that hair–it’s not just for show.
- Rapunzel ends up with short hair! Okay, that’s just a little thing, but have you ever seen a Disney princess with a pixie cut before? Even Mulan had longer hair!
- So yeah, the mom is the bad guy because she’s vain/wants to be young forever, blah blah blah. But I don’t know how they could have had a male villain or some other way for the mom to be the villain without straying too far from the original. But at least she gets some jokes.
- The frying pan proves to be a superior weapon compared to the sword! This might be getting a little too psychoanalytic, but I saw the frying pan as symbolizing a kind of feminine/transgressive power, while the sword represents traditional masculine power. I just thought it was neat. You don’t have to be a swashbuckling dude to kick butt.
- Her story and her adventure starts not because the guy “whisks her away” or something; but rather, she plans and schemes: she catches him breaking into her tower, and strategically decides to use him to reach her goal of seeing the flying lanterns on her birthday.
- Spoiler alert: in the end, she’s not “saved” because of her compassion, but in spite of it–her compassion might actually have been her downfall. Unlike other movies/fairy tales where a woman’s only redeeming quality is self-sacrifice, this ending suggests that self-sacrifice isn’t always such a good thing–or at least that it’s not solely the domain of women. Men can be self-sacrificing too! (Didn’t want to reveal too much here. Go see the movie if you want to figure out what on earth I’m talking about.)
- I liked the ambivalent nature of how it shows her mom’s and her relationship when Rapunzel leaves the tower for the first time. She feels guilty, but MAN is she happy and excited and brave!
- She doesn’t get married at age 18!!!!
- In my opinion, the relationship was not even really a central feature of the story, but rather a sub-plot. The main plot was getting away from her mother, figuring out her actual identity, getting to the flying lanterns she wanted to see.
- I felt like it was good and feminist because it was a major improvement from how Disney usually is. Also, overt sexism did NOT distract me from what was otherwise a visually appealing, witty movie (as it usually does). And that is really saying something.
- Even the rich, hypermasculine stereotype is challenged–the male protagonist reveals his true name/identity, as an orphan, and she says she likes him better than the fictional (hypermasculine) character that he aspires to be like.
- In the end, I think it makes a good case for women’s “proper place” NOT being just in the home, but out in the world/public sphere! I’m not sure how you could get any other moral out of it. Even in Mulan, after she saves China, she ends up returning home, and (we suspect) marrying the army captain guy, instead of taking a job with the emperor. In Tangled, the movie’s premise is centered around the idea that it’s wrong and horrible to expect a woman to spend her whole life at home.
- When the male protagonist breaks into her tower, she kicks his butt; she stands up for herself in the bar; and she stands up to her mother in the end (about having been kidnapped).
- At the end of the movie, SHE dips HIM and kisses him. (I always hated it when guys would dip me. If I want to kiss you, I am going to kiss you, so just let me stay on my own two feet.)
- Body image stuff: Okay, so Disney’s not breaking down any boundaries here. Also, infantilization much? Rapunzel’s face is that of a two-year-old.
- So, I’m not very good at remembering specifics, but I DO remember not getting angry at seeing her needing rescuing again and again and again. It seemed like mostly she was able to save herself, and the guy didn’t save her a whole lot.
- In the bar, Rapunzel and the guy (Flynn) meet a whole bunch of rough guys. They sing a song about how everyone’s got a dream: the one tough guy says to Flynn, “Your dream stinks,” referring to his dream of getting rich. The other tough guys have dreams of becoming mimes, finding love, being a pianist, becoming a baker–and one made little tiny unicorns. Even tough guys have nuance and feminine qualities!
- Rapunzel’s animal companion is Pascal the chameleon. Pascal is super cute, and is possibly named after Blaise Pascal the mathematician (suggesting that Rapunzel is a math nerd like me, though that could just be me reading too much into it). Pascal can’t talk, and I felt like that was a good thing (feminist-wise), so he couldn’t show her up and become the hero (remember Mushu the dragon in Mulan?)
My points are random and some are not very significant. But still, small wins! And when it comes to Disney princess movies, any hint at feminist ideology is a HUGE win. And if nothing else, it at least passes the Bechdel Test:
Whitney Mollenhauer is a graduate student in California where she studies sociology. She has an awesome husband who doesn’t mind her running feminist commentary when they watch movies together. And, she loves cereal.
I only couldn’t put my finger on why Flynn gets bashed so much. He seems a slapstick relief in this one, both hero and comic relief I mean, which is ok, but I heard a few people in the theatre going ‘uff’ and ‘ouch’. I thought he was getting beat up waaay much. Some on the Disney FB fan page commented on how they used a lot of those bashing scenes in the trailers as an attraction and Disney, as far as I remember cut off further commenting on that page (or else I suspect it would have led to a ‘discussion’). I don’t know if this is feminist relevant, just noticed it. Plus, the guys in bar seem interested in traditionally feminine things only for comic relief, because haha, macho guys look so funny when they sew.
technically, it’s a triumph for white femininity only:
http://www.womanist-musings.com/2010/11/tangled-celebration-of-white-femininity.html#idc-container
I actually avoided this movie because it seemed way too misandric. That guy got hit too much in the previews, and trashed emotionally as well. That line, “Your dream stinks,” or whatever was just cold in the context of the preview.
I still like Mulan. What’s wrong with a girl wanting to return home?
My very first problem with the film was that Mother Gothel, for all her flaws, did not pluck the flower, but left it in its natural state, where as the Queen (Rapunzel’s real mum) had it cut down and distilled. Isn’t that selfish in itself? You can argue it’s to save her life, but let’s be honest, she wouldn’t have that privilege if she wasn’t a royal. Couldn’t they have just plucked one petal to be distilled and left the rest to grow?
I know this is seven months late, but keep in mind that only Gothel knew the song to make use of it without having to pluck it. She herself created the situation by hiding the flower instead of showing others how it could be used without picking it.
For all the guards and the rest of the kingdom knew, they had to use the whole flower, and not just a single petal.
Mulan married Shang but they both still work for the Emperor and the Chinese army. She didn’t just stay home and become a housewife.