The co-creator of the character weighed in and she was pretty mad. Chapman fumed. "When little girls say they like it because it's more sparkly, that's all fine and good but, subconsciously, they are soaking in the sexy 'come hither' look and the skinny aspect of the new version. It's horrible! Merida was created to break that mold — to give young girls a better, stronger role model, a more attainable role model, something of substance, not just a pretty face that waits around for romance."
This is a big issue because it blatantly disregards the entire impulse behind the character. People who are sensitive to the messages their daughter's embraced the character because it offered some contrast to the sexy princess images their daughters are surrounded by. You feel like you are fighting this uphill battle and you just lost a big ally in the fight...I understand why they are mad and sympathize.
However, they didn't change the film, they changed the look of the character for bedsheets and water bottles and whatever else they want to sell, hundreds of millions of dollars worth of soon-to-be landfilled plastic garbage. I imagine they had good solid market research that told them they needed to tart her up to make her sell. Put the character on a shelf at Wal-Mart next to the other princesses and it probably screams for a little more sparkle and a little more exaggerated proportions.
If you are the kind of person who wants to seriously control what kind of messages your kid consumes, it's just an uphill battle in this climate. We have friends who are stridently no-TV, no mass culture characters, no gender stereotypes in toys, no sexism, no guns....and their daughter is still the most princessey girl you'll ever meet. She doesn't need Disney to tell her to be that. And some boys without guns will still make fingers and shoot at you when they reach a certain age. What can you do?
My son went through Star Wars real heavy last year, we tried to hold it off but his friends at school had seen it and then Dad had toys in the basement...we stuck with the original trilogy as long as we could, so innocent, so fun. But sooner or later they hear about what you are denying them and they want to know who Annakin Skywalker is and what's the deal with General Grievous. So I'm reading books and skipping the part where he mass-murders the Jedi babies and whatever horrible thing happens trying to forestall the inevitable.
It makes you realize how much these huge media corporations have a place in your life whether you want it or not. Thanks to Disney we are going to be force fed Star Wars and Marvel Superheroes until we puke. I'm not even a fan of Pixar anymore. When I heard they sold 8 BILLION dollars worth of Cars merchandise I just wanted to get off that ride. They have a right to do what they want and people clearly love it, but...yuck.
So changing the Brave girl may not seem like a big deal, but to some people it was clearly one small victory for non-conformist thinking that's been sucked up by the machine to be used against you.
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