This review by Lia Gallitano previously appeared at Bitch Flicks as part of our series on Animated Children's Films.
This movie is about a princess
and a “street rat” who fall in love and must overcome the evil Jafar to
get married. This movie is also about generalizing non-Western cultures
(mainly Middle Eastern cultures) and perpetuating cartoonish stereotypes
of Arabic peoples. As an added bonus, this movie masquerades as a girl
power film when in fact, it enforces the traditional gender role of men
as active/women as passive.
The first time I saw this
children’s movie was over this past summer, when I was the assistant
director of a summer production of the musical Disney’s Aladdin. I was the only person involved in the production that had not seen Aladdin
when I was a child. Every single one of the children (almost entirely
girls, ages 9-12 with one 7 year old) came in with ideas of what the
show would look like, because they had all seen the movie and they knew
every single song. Because they knew the music, we had more time to work
on choreography. For a marketplace scene, I asked the kids to strike a
pose to freeze in during dialogue. I was looking for marketplace-y
poses: two people talking, maybe gesturing to another person, walking
poses, etc. They immediately put their arms up with their palms together
so that their arms framed their face and their necks were moved to one
side (a pose associated with “Arabia” in pop-culture). They all wanted
to do their hair in the “I Dream of Jeannie” hairdo, because it was “so
Arabian”. I wondered, where did they get such a stereotypical view of
the Middle East? And then I saw the movie and all of those questions
were answered.
My director thought that this
was a girl power movie. Look! At the end, the Sultan declares that
Jasmine can marry whomever she chooses, when she chooses! And she
rejects all of those suitors because she’s “not a prize to be won”! Girl
power yeah! No. This movie is producing yet another hetero-romantic
story where women sit there and men pursue them. She was naïve before
Aladdin shows her a “whole new world”—she is the passive learner while
he is the active teacher. How does she help with the defeat of Jafar?
She kisses him—using her body to be attractive to men—the rest of the
time she just kind of stands there while Aladdin fights Jafar. Again,
she stands there lookin’ sexy and being passive, he fights actively.
Even their body stance around each other assumes a dominant/submissive
look—Aladdin’s body is tall and upright, Jasmine is leaning into him or
sitting behind him or being held in his arms. He is also physically
larger, aside from her hair (her ponytail is thicker than her waist),
she is extremely thin and takes up very little space when compared to
Aladdin’s broad shoulders and muscular body. And of course, what other
characters in this movie are women? Oh that’s right, they are all men.
Because women can only be in stories to be the object of men’s
affections, not to fill other roles. There are some background women in
the dance scenes, but those are the “harem girls” and other sexualized
women (because foreign=exotic and sexy!)
Essentially, all of the women
are defined by their attractiveness to men. “Ugly” women, then, are used
as comic relief. In one of the first scenes, when a woman opens the
door and says of Aladdin, “Still I think he’s rather tasty!”, everybody
in the audience is supposed to laugh. Aladdin looks at the woman (who is
quite large) and jumps in surprise and disgust. Oh, silly fat woman,
you can’t have feelings because you’re ugly! We’re supposed to laugh at
how ridiculous her thinking Aladdin is “tasty” is—because fat women and
ugly women are not supposed to have sexual desires. Only when the sexy
women do this is it okay—nobody is laughing at Jasmine’s proclamations
of love for Aladdin, because it doesn’t seem ridiculous now. Aladdin is
attractive, she is attractive, so they can be in love.
So doing this story where every
single role had to be filled by a girl made this an interesting
production. Some girls told us they didn’t want to be a male character.
Some girls who were cast into men’s roles started acting like men—they
lowered their voices and changed their body language to reflect a
stereotypical man. Some girls who were cast into men’s roles adopted
them to be women’s roles—the girl playing Jafar, for example, had no
issue with being a female Jafar. The girl who played Aladdin, the title
character, made it clear that she was acting like a man—I, personally,
thought that it would have been fine for her to be a female Aladdin (but
the lesbian love story was not an idea that they particularly were
comfortable with, which is interesting given how comfortable they were
with heterosexual love stories).
In fact, I think it would have
made the movie better if Aladdin was a girl (and if all the racism was
taken out). Suddenly, “A Whole New World” takes on a whole new
meaning—but these movies with antiquated gender roles would not have
been as widely accepted into culture if the relationship it portrayed
was queer.
When watching this movie, it’s
hard to not get depressed about the fact that this is what little girls
are told to aspire to. Watch something else instead.
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Lia Gallitano is a First-Year at Wellesley College who doesn’t know what
to major in yet. When she’s not studying, she enjoys watching movies,
reading feminist blogs, and singing.



1 comment:
Pretty much agreed with all of the above, but....but...
I actually really liked Jafar. He was one of my favorite characters ever when I was a kid.
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