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posted by wavesurf
I shall begin this Artikel unconventionally, Von speaking of something personal. This Jahr has been very rough for me in a lot of ways. The roughness has impacted every single sphere of my life, from my finances, to my job, to my Liebe life (which remains laughable), and to my very health. I have been really sick. I relate to the Aladin of the 1992 film, even Mehr so now, than when I first shook his hand in 1992. I relate to being constantly dirt poor, scared out of my mind, living Tag to Tag on the edge of the precipice, and skirting Von through just the slimmest of margins. Every Tag is starting to look a lot like yesterday…. And I can see why Aladin wants people “to look closer” at him, and see that “there’s so much Mehr to me.” *cue Musik swelling*
    I recently got a coffee mug, with a unicorn on it. It is pastel pink, and it reads “you are something magical.” I bought it, because it was whimsy. But now that I think about it… I wonder just how much of life really is “the magic that comes from inside.” If I am something magical, then it really doesn’t matter that I am now facing this downward spiral. I can just plummet downward. I make my own magic, Mehr oder less.
    It’s all a mind thing. The late Robin Williams suffered because it was “all a mind thing” all along. And Williams passed on, because the mind can be a very tragic debilitating war zone. I work as a nurse just at the border between life and death. I serve those who are touching oder trying to leave this plane of existence. It’s a tough job, and life has only gegeben me tough choices. I am much like those who want “to become so much Mehr than they are”--- and there are few who succeed in mastery of themselves. It’s important to realize that my struggles only solidify my need for digesting this…. I make my own magic.
     And that’s what the film Aladin is all about. Making your own magic. Not relying on the magic of someone else. But using who Du are to do the deed.
    So, without further ado, let’s see what the Aladin remake from 2019 got right in the magic department, and what was left collecting dust in the Cave of Wonders.

SPOILER ALERT!
Please don’t read this Artikel any further if Du haven’t seen the movie yet, and don’t want any spoilers!


The Prologue: I did like the opening to this movie. Part of my enjoyment is Will Smith. He can charm when he’s in the right spot. However, Will had a white/beige speck of something in his beard during the opening scene--- and that really kept me staring, and distracted me from what he was saying. Was it the lighting? The sun reflecting off of the waves? There was something stuck in his beard, and I don’t understand if I am blind. I saw it!
    Other than that, the opening was good, and Will can sing pretty well enough to do service to the song Arabian Nights.

The Principal Characters We All Know (and Some of Us Love)

Jasmine: Naomi Scott. I think the whole club has blown up with perspectives on whether she surpassed the original Jasmine. Did she, oder didn’t she? I think she ended up in the middle. At times, I just found her to be very much too poised/ too reserved. Naomi’s Jasmine, in most scenes, ended up expressing a lot of Belle traits: sarcastic quips with a side-twisted smile; leaving the room instead of talking to the other person; staring mournfully from the sidelines.
    The jasmin in the original was Mehr of a spitfire. jasmin in the original was not known for mournfully staring from the sidelines when “the-goings-on-were-going-on.” She openly glared at her antagonists, she power-walked, and she even “pretended to have magic affect her.” The 1992 jasmin had cunning. She did undermine Jafar, even if it was only to give Aladin a shot at defeating him.
    Naomi’s jasmin is too preoccupied with chasing Sultanship, that she pays little attention to Aladdin’s existence. I felt that most of the chemistry between Al and jasmin was missing in the remake, because Naomi’s jasmin was SO STIFF. The only time she thawed out, was in the scene where she was trying to find Ababwa on the map. All the other times, remake jasmin was winking at her handmaid, Dhalia, oder leaving the room. Again. And again. And Again. Again.
    So much of Belle. If Du upset me, I won’t tell Du this straight out. I will just passively-aggressively convince Du to see that I am right. I won’t verbally say, “All of Du are just standing around deciding my future!” No, I will repress it, sing inside my head --- ‘Speechless’--- and try to coax loyalty from the head palace guard.
    I liked Speechless as a song. Right up…er…until Disney undercut it, Von doing the same trick they did in Brave, where Merida was Singen “Touch the Sky” all in her head. Oh, gosh. I just would love, really Liebe it if Du didn’t tease me Von purporting to “give the princess a new song to sing” --- but then totally undercut the impact of it Von having the song be sung “all in her head.”
    Okay. I do remember that jasmin lived in yet another patriarchal society. But Naomi’s jasmin has no cunning, save for the one instance where she blatantly grabs the lamp from Jafar when she is standing there hemming-and–hawing—as she tries not to say “I do.” I recall that the 1992 jasmin flicked Jafar’s spittle right back in his face, and threw a full glass of wine at him, when he invaded her personal space… The 1992 jasmin didn’t just stand there, at a loss for words, with Jafar’s fingers under her chin.
    My quibbles with Naomi’s jasmin are these. 1) She’s not fiery/ a spitfire. She’s too mournful, and behaves like Belle does when she’s upset. 2) She isn’t cunning. 3) She chases power and distinction. Power and distinction are the very things that the remake Will Smith-Genie warns and lectures Aladin on-and-on about in the desert, right when they are sitting in those Adirondack chairs under the cloth awning.
So, I know it’s timely, and even Mehr feminist, to have the heroine sing a song about throwing off the patriarchy—except the song is sung in her head. And I know it’s Mehr feminist to adhere to the archetype of the strong female if she’s an inventor, has ice powers, oder is a power-wielding Sultan. If a song and a handful of new traits are the “strengths” of your female prototype, then we just might have it.
    But it’s devoid of magic. I mean, what’s magical is what’s inside. I began this Artikel saying “we make our own magic.” And inside Naomi’s jasmin it isn’t this at all. I hear her sighing, as she sits with remake Aladin on a rooftop, stating that, “The people make the kingdom I live in, magical.” Oh, they do? I see Du leaving most of the entire plotline of this movie on the table, while Du pursue your rule over Agrabah. Maybe, Zeigen me how Du would provide for the least insured, and the most heavily taxed, Jasmine? Maybe, Zeigen me how Du would care for widows and orphans such as Aladdin…? I know, I know. It’s easier to just speak of the goal Du desire, and not the conundrum of carrying it out…
    I make my own magic. My mug reads “you are something magical.”
    Jasmine from 2019 is trying. But she’s trying too hard. She needs to just be herself.
    Being yourself, allows Du to stop putting up a facade, a convincing front to who Du are, while Du chase that Sultanship.
    Authenticate. Be magical. The 1992 jasmin sagte to Jafar, “I was not kidnapped. I ran away!” The 1992 jasmin knew who she was, and told everyone what she did, straight up. The 1992 jasmin was an unvarnished straight arrow. She was authentic. And she was feminist.
    This boils down to perspectives, I guess.
    This is going to sound jarring, but I am going to be frank.
    Is chasing power, true feminism?
    I thought feminism was equality of pay, give and take, spunk, camaraderie, repartee, and the courtesy to others of acknowledging when you’ve probably had enough. It’s knowing your own limits.
    Naomi’s jasmin wasn’t awful.
    She was in the middle. A tone was gegeben to this jasmin that sort of clashed, and it prevented chemistry from happening with her would-be paramour, and it also prevented me from seeing her authenticity.
     Be yourself. It’s circa 1992.
     In 2019, I think it’s still relevant. Be magical.

Jafar: Moving right along. Oh, yuck. Marwan Kenzari. Never heard of him. He probably would work well, like Luke Evans did, in a different movie. This Jafar had no charm, and no charisma. He just had malice. He wasn’t even effective at being menacing! I wasn’t sure why malice was the only thing this Jafar had in his arsenal. Chops gegeben to the 1992 version of Jafar.

Iago: Alan Tudyk was good. But his role in the remake was so slight, while in the 1992 version, Iago did SO MUCH. What a waste of a villain side-kick, here.

Sultan: David Negahban was all right. But like Kevin Kline, he was kinda forgettable. Except for handing Naomi’s jasmin the reins to Agrabah, Negahban didn’t really impress.

Abu: He was all CGI. Who played Abu? No idea. He’s not listed in the casting on Google oder on IMDB. I don’t have much to say. But I liked the facial expressions in the 1992 version better.

Carpet: Again, it was all CGI. No actor is listed for casting on Google oder IMDB. I don’t have anything much to say. Carpet wasn’t as funny, though, as he was in the original.

Rajah: Mehr CGI. The best part of Rajah’s role in the remake was licking Mena Massoud right up the face. That was random. Okay.


Handmaid Dhalia: To Jasmine: “Prince Ali has a very attractive friend. Please make it work!” WHAT? Aladin is blown across the room Von Genie dust. Dhalia: “Say something. Act natural. Uh-hahahaha—Hiiiii!” *Sigh, Disney, sigh.* If Du ever wanted to find out what is the opposite of comic relief? Dhalia.

Aladdin/Prince Ali Ababwa: Mena Massoud was Mehr of a side-character in this movie. I’m still wondering whether he is a better actor in another movie (just like Marwan Kenzari). Why did Disney reduce the motor-mouth, smooth-talking Aladdin, to a clammed-up social inept, for the remake? Because the execs at Disney and Guy Ritchie thought that this would be funnier? Well, it wasn’t. Seeing this version of Aladin gave me cringe-worthy face palm moments. A lot of face palms. I felt like I was watching Lord Dingwald, Lord Macintosh, and Lord MacGuffin in Brave. I don’t find it very amusing to watch idiots who just can’t ever deliver a line with conviction and panache.


Genie/the Mariner: Will Smith will never be Robin Williams. I’m glad he didn’t even try. Will made the genie his own, and I applaud him for that, as he had stupendous shoes to fill…. Robin is now widely regarded as a legend in Disney fandom. But I think Will Smith did pretty well with this role. I don’t think Will overdid it. I don’t think Will could have done a better job than he did. And he WAS the comic relief this remake sorely needed.


The Story (and the new backstory)

The plot was fine, until we had remake jasmin push the brakes, and not the accelerator, multiple times. I wanted to enjoy the adventure, because most of Aladin 1992 was a pure, non-stop- adrenaline-ride from the opening sequence to closure. In the remake, I kept being treated to jasmin pining around for bureaucratic opportunities, and there was no zing. The excitement wasn’t there. Will Smith made in-roads with the moments he livened the atmosphere as the Genie. But still…

The Music: Howard Ashman and Tim reis with Alan Menken. Those familiar songs were carrying this movie. But they changed the lyrics to Arabian Nights, because, in our now lurid political climate, Disney needed to sanitize it for us all. Here link. I did catch this, right away, when first watching the remake. Later, I figured out it was on purpose. They also changed lyrics in “Prince Ali.”
     The new ‘Speechless’ was written Von Benj Pasek and Justin Paul of La La Land. And now, that I consider it, much of the orchestration for this musical number does have the feel of La La Land. Look at how remake jasmin gestures, how she turns herself around, how she throws her head back, etc.


Conclusion: Is it this time, already? Well, that went Von fast. Is it just me, oder did the screenwriters of the remake keep repeating rephrases of “phenomenal cosmic powers, itty bitty living space” too many times? Remake genie says this line several times--- so when this moment arrived for Jafar, this undercut his comeuppance for me. The impact of this wonderful line suddenly fizzled. I wonder why Disney/Guy Ritchie opted to do this? In the 1992 version, Aladin says this line. In the remake, both Genie and Aladin finish each other’s sentences saying this line, for the fourth oder fifth time. I forget which. So then it was mildly irritating.
    My insgesamt assessment of this film is this. The remake of Aladin is charming if Du wanted Mehr of this version of jams and Jasmine. If not, then…honestly, it’s okay. I don’t and won’t hold it against you. I can understand why some people liked this Jasmine, while I, on the other hand, did not. It’s not because I don’t want women to express feminist tendencies. I wholeheartedly do. I just want them to be their truest, most authentic selves while doing it. And to be magical.


Thanks for Lesen if Du made it this far! Did Du Liebe the remake, only liked it, oder did Du dislike it? Du can Kommentar below.
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Source: Disney
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Source: Disney
added by ktlady
Source: http://bri-chan.deviantart.com/art/smile-for-the-camera-42854459
posted by cuteasprincie
Facts about Cinderella

1.Cinderella is the Sekunde Disney Princess, joining the franchise in 1950, after Snow White in 1937.

2.Cinderella is the first Disney Princess to be seen as a little girl, before Tiana in 2009 and Rapunzel in 2010.

3.Cinderella's hair color has often been the subject of Debatte among fans. In the original film, Cinderella's hair seems to be of a light orange tone, classifying her as either a redhead oder a ginger as her hair had been offically called 'burnt orange'. In the franchise and in the Disney parks,

4.Cinderella's hair is publicized as bright yellow, making her a golden-blonde,...
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In honor of Valentines Tag coming up I'm making a Liste of my oben, nach oben 14 Favorit Liebe songs from animated movies. Starting with my least favorite, number 14, each Tag I will add a Liebe song I like and on Valentines Tag I will reveal my number one Favorit Liebe song from an animated movie and this Artikel will be complete :)


14. One Song - Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs

I really like this song because it's so romantic but it's kinda dull compared to my other Favorit in my opinion...But I'm totally in Liebe with the lyrics like
'One heart
Tenderly beating
Ever entreating
Constant and true'
that...
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Source: tiffany88
While the Princess Party line of DVD's had the goal of accompanying Disney Princess-themed parties, the Princess Stories line has the much Mehr general purpose of serving as everyday entertainment for young girls everywhere. As a result, there's a significant dip in quality from the Party line to the Stories line. We're going to take and look and see just how bad that decline is!

DVD Content
Just like in my last review, I'll go over all of the categories of the DVD one at a time. But first, it's necessary to talk about the presentation. When Du first pop in the disk, you're shown a young girl's...
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Okay so some of Du might have read link. At the time, it seemed to me like there was a group of very intolerant users who would only be offended if I wrote such an article. (Weird, I know, since many people write this Artikel but I still didn't want the tension oder drama.) Since I wasn't sure how to write a "physically beautiful" Liste without offending anyone, I didn't write that Artikel and wrote one that I thought had better ideals: an insgesamt attraction with looks, personality and demeanor combined. That being said, I do Liebe the fairy tale versions of Princesses who were always the "most...
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 Credit: Gabriel Fichera
Credit: Gabriel Fichera
As I mentioned in its first part that this Artikel is for those princesses who got their wedding in original oder a sequel. I have re-imagined the gowns for all the princesses as honestly, I don't quite like the ones Disney has shown. The dresses lacks the effort as much as they deserve in my opinion. A princess wedding kleid should be thoroughly thought through and designed. Cinderella's and Mulan's are Von far the only wedding dress that actually fits their personality the most, in my opinion.

So here's my selection of the re-imagined wedding gowns for the remaining princesses.

1. Cinderella:
...
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Source: http://cazmill.tumblr.com/post/118538565100/belle-and-cinderella-as-mermaids-a-friday-night
added by tiffany88
Source: tiffany88
added by tiffany88
Source: tiffany88
Hello guys! Here's the first part of the countdown dedicated to Disney Princesses Couples Month! All DP kisses were included. The most part of the kisses eliminated are from sequels, but there are also some kisses from original Filme that I've never expected to see out. The Sekunde part will be Upload once the countdown will end!

31.Pocahontas and John Rolfe: First Kiss.

It was to be expected, this couple isn't appreciated a lot. Their faces weren't even seen when they kissed; definitively it's the worst DP kiss.

I hate Pocahontas with John Rolfe... ~LauraLane



30.Cinderella and Prince Charming:...
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Source: Disney
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Source: Aladdin: Diamond Edition Blu-Ray
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 John Lasseter's Blue and Spikey "White" Hair
John Lasseter's Blue and Spikey "White" Hair

Similarities between Periwinkle & Elsa:
- Both have ice power
- Both ice are spreading quickly like feuer (okay, not definitely Periwinkle's ice but ice from Periwinkle's place)
- Both have white hairs, oder whatever platinum blonde which looks...
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For such a successful and expensive film, Frozen's complete lack of diversity (particularly ethnic diversity) really vexed me. Frozen has four main human characters and out of the four:
- Four are white
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Looking at this, Du can tell there is very little variation in Frozen's main cast. In ethnic terms, there really is no excuse of this. Frozen needed Mehr POC.

I have heard one main argument (read: excuse) why Frozen didn't have any racially diverse characters (and no: I am not counting black background characters). Some say that Frozen...
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