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History of Feminism
Related: About this forumThe Secret History of Maleficent
Carl Jung famously said that to study fairy tales is to study the anatomy of human beings. Fairy tales deserve our attention. They are our first, most powerful socializing narratives. They provide guideposts for appropriate behavior and success in life. Blockbusters reinventing or riffing off the fairy tale genre send pervasive messages to youth. Creators and reviewers of the most recent attempt to mine source material -- Disney's Maleficent -- have overlooked the most surprising and encouraging lessons that the prototypical fairy tale possesses. Dwelling in the darkness of the original "Sleeping Beauty," are more humanistic, constructive and complex messages than Maleficent's producers or commentators would lead us to believe.
Critics of the shadowy Sleeping Beauty adaptation eschew its modernization as tepid. Vixenish Maleficent gets a "justifiable" reason for her scorn. Aurora's imbued with pluck enough to make her palatable to today's audiences. Pundits argue the script circumscribes itself into the same old trope. As Rolling Stone's Peter Travers glibly put it: "Men--those rat bastards!" Critics summarily dismissed Maleficent's "eye-roll worthy" attempt at adapting fairy tale source material. This is ironic, since being dismissed was precisely what pissed Maleficent off so much.
This compels our attention.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/dale-elizabeth-meikle/the-secret-history-of-mal_b_5537522.html
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The Secret History of Maleficent (Original Post)
yuiyoshida
Jun 2014
OP
I like the ORIGINAL. The one with the Lovecraftian scene of dancing around green devil flames.
Spitfire of ATJ
Jun 2014
#2
hardcover
(255 posts)1. Foul!
Being dismissed was not what pissed Maleficent off, it was that he stole her wings.
Spitfire of ATJ
(32,723 posts)2. I like the ORIGINAL. The one with the Lovecraftian scene of dancing around green devil flames.
ismnotwasm
(42,482 posts)3. Nice
I've read a couple of perspectives on this, haven't seen the movie, but it's controversial enough that I think I will
yuiyoshida
(42,973 posts)4. I loved the movie
Squinch
(53,316 posts)5. Very interesting article, though it takes a little while to get to its point. I particularly like
this line: "Maleficent has everything that sweet, somnolent Aurora does not have -- namely, agency."
Bettelheim - though he has been discounted because of his heinous theories on the causes of autism (he coined the phrase "refrigerator mother" - had some very interesting ideas about fairy tales as being the places where we work out the darker aspects of all of our psyches, and where we come to accept that darkness that is in all of us.