Ragabul wrote:Because the subtext of the song on its face is that you are the center of the universe and anything that remotely constrains your hedonistic desire for experience is intolerable and should be resisted. I'd say "Let It Go" doesn't quite fit into the theme as much because of context reasons. Can't speak to this movie on context as it's not one I've seen or intend to see.
I'd say Frozen even subtly subverts the hedonism theme in places because it supplants the traditional "girl runs off to be with dude" Little Mermaid story line with one of commitment between sisters. Moana likewise mixes up the themes. Moana is all about "finding herself" but she is doing so by looking to the history of her own tribe which everybody else has forgotten and she's setting out on a quest to save her homeland. Maui's entire character arc is about committing to addressing things he has screwed up even though he's a god and has the power to ignore it.
Of course, if you want to go down a far-right rabbit hole with this, there is really 0 I can come up with to dispute an interpretation which is something like "subverting hedonism for the good of your family and home is great but only if you aren't white." I'm not an ethnonationalist as I've said before so I don't care what specific people are putting this theme forward. I also don't have a litmus test on movie themes. I just said in the other thread I love TNG though I find the politics derisible and naive a lot of the time.
See to me it more reads as not remaining in an oppressive constraint where you can not exercise any self control. Or any self expression.
If the images in the music video are some insight to the context I read it as "rich kid of wealthy family goes to show to audition, expecting shit to be put on a platter for her and get the lead. Doesn't but still participates. Day goes along the lines of 'no daughter of mine will self express (or some other bullshit)/next heir to family wealth got to groom you for the business because you're my legacy'. Daughter rebels, finds her voice, says fuck you to oppressive dad via song, either reconciliation happens or merely just acceptance."
I have seen the firs tone and there is a similar storyline with it but it's a young dude and criminal dad. Dad is stereotypical tough bloke. It's basically animal Billy Elliot, except it's singing and not ballet.
Honestly if "not following the path set out by parents because they don't like the thought of you not doing what they do" is hedonism then the world is honestly fucked because that's just a basic human right. Self determination.
Yeah if they're minors it's a little different but at some point it's either you keep pushing down your kid's interests and make them a hollow husk of an individual or you make sure they're as safe as they can be and learn to love the person they become.
Vol wrote:Did see the Moana song. It was presumably the beginning of the movie, where she's complaining how she's being groomed for leadership but wants to go sailing instead. I'll take a guess and say she probably gets to, but also becomes chieftain, in some capacity.
Yes she goes sailing.
No she doesn't become chief in the film.
Vol wrote:Ah, I did see Zootopia, actually. I liked it a lot, and I remember being surprised it emphasized those themes. Felt a little anachronistic almost. Judy was not fit to be a cop like the giant male animals, so she leveraged what she could do to an effective level, not become GI Jane. It both validated stereotypes as a real thing, but subverted them as not binding. I wouldn't call that progressive so much as being what we once were aiming for in America, which might seem progressive in the face of racial determinism.
Or the giant female ones.
Like the Elephant cop who's birthday it was.
Or the Polar Bear instructor that kept telling her she wasn't going to make it in trainign flashbacks.
Vol wrote:The way the rebellious individualism is portrayed, as well as the symbolic visuals. For example, if I asked you to draw an orc to be the bad guy in a RPG campaign, and gave you no specifics, whatever you come up with will impart on the story. Larger or smaller than a man? What color skin? Porcine or mutant features? Jewelry, piercings, scars? No armor, leather armor, mail, plate? Rusty or new? Weapons that require skill or brute force? On and on.
So if you drew a 5' tall, light green, nearly human-looking orc, with gold loops in his ears, a well kept beard, full, shining plate armor, a sword and spear, and some sort of crest on his chestpiece, I would use that to tell a story about a brilliant orc with a Napoleon complex. As opposed to a 7', dark green, hunched over, loincloth wearing savage, wielding a blackened hunk of wood with bits of bone sticking out, with elaborate scars carved into his hide. Every design choice conveys meaning for the people participating to soak in.
It's fair to assume that a very expensive animated movie has not a single second of footage that isn't designed and polished to look exactly as it does, with all the meaning that entails. If the message is to break with a bad family relationship and go pursue a dream, why is portrayed _this_ specific way of all possible ways?
The closest I could see the visual style being anything close to depraved is one was colourful and the other wasn't. And seeing as the father figure (the oppressive businessman who is most likely one of the villains in the entire film and not just in the story arc of this one character and her song) is probably the villain it's very "evil" coded.
I don't get what you're trying to see.
Is it the spandex based costume? The one we also saw the pig wearing? Because I've seen the first film and that pig character is a mum of, like, 10 kids and a loving husband. It looks in the video the part is originally meant for her so the coding is....if it wasn't the wolf then the pig-mum would be hedonistic?
Vol wrote:I skimmed a summary of the story. Girl wolf is a spoiled brat, wants to be in entertainment but sucks at acting, joins up with misfit singing group, changes her character, father wolf says no performing because it'd embarrass them publicly, she runs away to do it anyway, he gets arrested after finding out she's a good singer, girl wolf goes off to tour with misfits.
So basically dad is all about image for his own career and legacy, ignoring her wants and wishes and gets arrested, probably not for finding out she's a good singer because that's ridiculous, even for a kids film (oh I read it was for at best kidnapping and at worse attempted murder but I just glimpsed it so...yeah).
So...what it's better to do as daddy says and never follow a talent because it makes him look bad?
If that's the case then fuck that dad, fuck that mindset and fuck anyone who thinks that's a good idea.
Like, if your kid wants to do something and they're good at it, but it makes you looks bad, swallow your pride and help them live their passions instead of crushing it.
That's not hedonism, that's being a parent.
Vol wrote:The visuals are beautiful, very well done. You don't think as much when hypnotized by wonderful animation and a simple, catchy song. That's what makes a stupid message into a depraved one, because it's masked in razzle-dazzle prettiness.
Imagine if the song was reversed. And it was about the wolf girl standing by her father, singing about how family comes before selfish goals, how grateful she is to him despite his flaws, and how "she can't hear" her new friends for trying to tempt her with fame and fortune instead of doing her filial duty. And the visual symbolism implies she wants her dad to arrange a husband for her so she can start having cubs and become a housewife, so she can serve the family forever. That is not a bad choice to make, after all, and it's entirely relatable to real-world stories. And that people who resist this are evil and get punished. Would it be depraved to sell that message to kids under the same colorful, fun veneer?
Except given the context of the film she's basically complicit in a kidnapping if she does that in the context of this film.
"My dad's a criminal but family comes first so I'm gonna stay with him" is not really that good of a message to send to kids.
"Gee dad, I know I said I wanted to try this thing I am good at, but you know what I want to do? Whatever you tell me is right" sounds like a pretty shit moral on the face of it.
And honestly the main reason it's not done that way is because it's fucking
boring.
The "I want to settle down and become a tradwife" angle is just dull and honestly always has been. Tell me how you can make that exciting enough to make it entertaining for kids . Because honestly I don't think it's actually possible without it sounding like "get in the kitchen, make babies, stay at home, be a board for the man of the house to walk all over".
Because if we take it from the angle of the character doesn't want to join the singing group they'd not have auditioned in the first place and there would be no conflict to arise and the singing group would never have heard of her.
Also filial duty.
Ew.
Just, ew.
If any kid feels obligated to do the things their parents say with their passions and drive because of some weird thought of owing the parent then just...no. That just sounds horrible. Imagine the burden that places on a kid who just wants to live their dreams/passions, as we tell all kids at some point.