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U.S.S. Snarfblat

@usssnarfblat

Dumping Ground for animation-related stuffs. Mostly Disney and Disney-like things, but a bit of anime and other stuff too.
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If you haven’t seen Wish yet and you love Disney, do not go see it. I am telling you now. It is ripping out the hearts of the Disney movies you love and then waving their corpses around as if celebrating those hearts.

I’ll explain why, again: the message of Wish? Awful. Anti-Disney.

But they've been doing this for a long time. Saying one thing with their movies, and saying another with their PR and Disney Parks Soundtracks.

I'll explain.

Main Idea of Disney's Wish (and the You Are the Magic theme park song and merch): "The power to make your wishes come true is in you."

Most Disney Movies' Idea on How to Have Wishes: "Do what's right, (trust a higher power) and something even more wonderful than what you wished will happen."

Don't try to argue with me about this. You have to look underneath the slogans and the sweater designs and the song titles to what the stories actually support to acknowledge this.

Because you can’t say “do what’s right” has power unless you answer the question “who gets to decide ‘what’s right?’” (Which, coincidentally, is a question Wish brings up and then doesn’t answer.)

Audiences of Disney used to accept that wishing on a star was much like prayer; there’s something you long for, and it’s out of your hands, but you wish for it and you do what you know is right in the meantime. And you’re not crushed, you’re not downhearted, because somewhere in your mind you trust that the combo of those two things—wishing on a higher power and diligence to do what’s good—will be what makes your wish come true.

Trust in a higher power—COMBINED WITH:

diligence to do what’s good.

The Blue Fairy (higher power) gave Geppetto his wish specifically because he had demonstrated commitment to do good, whether he got what he wanted or not. The Fairy Godmother (higher power) gave Cinderella her wish specifically because she kept on being kind and good to low creatures like mice and wicked stepsisters, whether she got what she wanted or not.

Do you know why that combo (higher power + diligence to do good) is impactful? Timeless? Important?

Because it’s selfless. You want something, but you’re not going to sacrifice doing the right thing to get it. You’re not going to focus so hard on making what you want a reality, on your own, that you miss out on things that could be more important than what you want. And, you’re not so self-focused as to believe that if you don’t do it, it won’t get done.

Jeez, that’s the whole point of The Princess and the Frog!

Tiana wishes to have her own restaurant, and she believes that only her own hard work will grant that wish. She misunderstands her dad’s advice before he dies. She isn’t willing to trust a higher power combined with her own diligence to do good—she only trusts her own ability.

It’s not until she realizes that Ray, the character of faith, was right all along that she learns—what she wished for was too self-focused. It wasn’t complete without love. Something bigger than herself. And getting that was never going to happen just based on her own hard work.

But you know what? It was never going to happen just by a “higher-power” flavored shortcut, either. Because Facilier offers her her wish if she’ll just trust him, no hard work needed. But what does she say?

Trust in a higher power + diligence to do what’s right = selflessness, and getting more than you could have ever wished for. And if your wish is selfish, doing those two things will change your wish into something selfless.

More examples? Get ‘em while they’re hot, in case Wish made you forget, just like the current #NotMyDisney executives have forgotten, what real Disney wishes are for.

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usssnarfblat

I'm no fan of "Wish," but Asha received the Star's help literally after singing and entire song about wanting something for everyone else. And her happy ending is becoming a Fairy Godmother.

Her motivation from the start was trying to get her grandfather's wish granted. And his wish was to inspire other people. Asha and her grandpa are selfless, and that's why their prayers were answered.

Her happy ending is becoming a fairy godmother. No handsome prince, no riches, no becoming royalty. The ability to help everyone else is Asha's ultimate reward and her dream come true.

The name of her annoying animal sidekick, Valentino, hammers home that the movie is about love for others.

If you're comparing the star-wishing to religion, then King Magnifico is basically the Medieval Church, in the days when most people couldn't read the Bible for themselves and had to take the wealthy leaders' word about what it supposedly said. Asha is then the Protestant Reformation, minus the antisemitism of course. Asha brings the stars directly to the people, shattering the monarchy's control standing between them.

I was extremely disappointed in "Wish," until I read your post, and had this realization. Now you've given me a new respect for the movie, despite it's lazy animation and flawed storytelling.

Also, Mr. Geppetto was voiced by a literal Nazi supporter. So the attempt "Wish" makes to associate that classic song with a new character (Asha's grandpa) is a very welcome choice in my book.

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