Once upon a time there was a Prince (Dan Stevens) who had everything he ever wanted, which meant riches and his pick of the women in the kingdom who would attend the palace to partake in dances, each of them twirling with him across the ballroom. But this made him arrogant and cruel, and a passing Enchantress (Hattie Morahan) decided to teach him a lesson, along with everyone who was within his orbit, by transforming them into objects and him into a Beast which was cursed to stay that way, the petals on a rose indicating for how much longer, until he found someone he could love and would love him in return. Some years went by, and in the nearby village they forgot about the palace: Belle (Emma Watson) never even knew of it before...
Just as in the late nineties and early two-thousands Disney would add cheap sequels to their classic animated hits to make a fast buck and annoy their diehard fans, they opted, come the twenty-tens, to start remaking those cartoons in live action, or as much live action as a film packed with computer graphics could lay claim to. However, these turned out not to be a cheap option to keep the kettle boiling, but genuine blockbusters, and when Beauty and the Beast arrived, heavily inspired by the 1991 Disney renaissance favourite, it was the most successful of them to that date. This indicated we were in for many more, since if there was one thing the House of Mouse was keen to do it was milk a cash cow.
However, those Disney diehards were not unanimous in their praise: it was all very well recreating The Jungle Book for many of the newer generations had never seen the original on the big screen, but Beauty and the Beast was one of the most beloved works in the company's canon, and the feeling they had got it just right the first time was difficult to shake for many of the target audience who would have grown up with the '91 incarnation. There were grumblings that though they loved Watson as Hermione, she was miscast as Belle, and it was true to say she was more handsome than beautiful, carrying the air of someone more comfortable in tweeds as a gentlewoman farmer than a typical Disney Princess.
That said, Belle was carefully indicated to be an oddball in her community thanks to her love of reading, so maybe she wasn't such outlandish casting after all as Watson could certainly play intellectual. Then there were the complaints about the gender politics of what after all was a tale, of not as old as time, then at least going back a few centuries as Belle takes the place of her widowed father (Kevin Kline) in the Beast's castle where he must woo her to break the spell on himself and the other victims without her knowledge that is what his task is. Wasn't this endorsing Stockholm Syndrome? Would this have been made with the roles reversed, and Belle was the Beast? A furries version of the yarn really would have been different (er, wouldn't it?), but there was some elegant updating going on, so that the theme was far less "woman falls in love with kidnapper" and more "women love a challenge".
I'd argue neither Disney's original animated classic nor any earlier version was ever really about Stockholm Syndrome. Throughout her captivity Belle remains a strong-willed woman without kow-towing to the demands of the Beast. If anything he's the one that changes which is pretty much the opposite of Stockholm Syndrome.
Also is it me or are people growing paranoid about 'harmful messages' in beloved movies that were never really there? I've heard it all now: "Gremlins is about white society's fear of a black invasion", "Raiders of the Lost Ark is pro-nuke", "Every Harrison Ford movie endorses sexual assault. Yeesh!
Posted by:
Graeme Clark
Date:
19 Jul 2017
We might have reached the stage where "hot takes" have to outdo each other in their po-faced absurdity. This film promotes gender equality, it just means the characters have to learn and grow before reaching their happy ending, you know, like most other movies (apart from the ones with unhappy endings, and even they teach a lesson). It simply means pointing out poor judgement when writers and observers get carried away with their pet theories in the face of logic or evidence - I think most people are tempted to do a Liz Lemon epic eye roll when they read the sillier examples.
Posted by:
Andrew Pragasam
Date:
20 Jul 2017
True, but then movie vloggers like Nostalgia Critic and Red Letter Media have amassed millions of followers from snarky critiques like those I mentioned.