Why ariel is the best princess
When Walt Disney died suddenly in , his company was left aimless. Disney in his resignation letter from Walt Disney Productions though he retained his seat on the board. Movies were the lifeblood of Disney, and the company was suffering. By , stock prices sagged, wages were cut, layoffs ensued, and corporate raiders circled. Disney traditionalists were aghast, but the plan seemed to work. The cash flow returned, and the company became financially viable again.
It was time for a Hail Mary pass. Fresh off the success of their smash hit Little Shop of Horrors with its satirical songs and gruesome humor , Ashman and Menken were skeptical about working for Disney, which to many young artists was a conservative old company stuck in the s, symbolic of an intolerant past rather than an expansive future. Nevertheless, the duo agreed to sign on as long as they had complete artistic control and the freedom to explore taboo topics.
In the original story, the mermaid does not get the prince. Instead, she faces a variety of antagonists and ends up committing suicide. Ashman got right to work, transforming the depressing 19th-century yarn into a dynamic Broadway spectacle. She sings in the choir with her sisters and Eric first falls in love with her voice when he hears her sing. She never really lies during the song when she tells Ariel about the deals she makes, or the consequences: she just highlights the reward over the risk, much like a crafty saleswoman.
Or that we want something more out of life? Story of pretty much every parent-child relationship. We all clash with our parents, and Ariel and Triton happen to clash over their opinions on the world above their own. Both of them make a mess of things.
Listen here. But ultimately, the two of them make things right in the end. Triton even gives Ariel his blessing and restores her legs so that she can live on land. Eric is an amazing Disney Prince. Eric is kind, funny, sweet, charming… and most importantly, he loves all of Ariel. He initially falls in love with her voice when she saves him, and spends a lot of the movie wondering about the girl who saved him, but when Ariel turns up on land sans her voice, he starts slowly falling for her all over again.
He never asks Ariel to give up her place in the sea, and he never asks her to change; more reasons I love him. Ariel saves Eric. The Little Mermaid is the very first Disney movie to feature a princess doing the rescuing. Yet, she saves Eric. She pulls him out of the water and brings him to safety.
At the end of the film, Eric jabs his ship into Ursula, creating a balance between them. There is a give and take in their relationship. Having that equilibrium is healthy and important! He also gives some hilarious dating advice. These two have true friendship. Her and her sisters even sing together! And do you know what else is awesome about The Little Mermaid? Eric is the exact opposite of that. He loves her, with or without her voice, with legs or fins, in a dress or a conch shell bra.
So does Ariel follow her advice? Not a chance. Ariel is resilient. Her father destroys all of her relics and tells her to never go to the surface? Ursula messes with the people she loves? Ariel fights back to make things right. She can live on land with Eric and still keep close ties with her family. The Little Mermaid is all about worlds uniting, and how Ariel can still hold onto her home and family while embracing her place on land with Eric.
Ariel is not afraid to cry, but then she can get right back up and fix her problems. After Triton destroyed the grotto, she was emotional, but then she took a visit to Ursula and found a way to get what she wanted. Crying is natural and it makes you stronger if you can let your emotions out. Ariel is our first non-human princess, or at least, she starts out that way.
So what exactly did she do to get herself banished? But she learns from her mistakes and matures greatly by the end of the movie without losing her sense of self or her sense of fun and adventure.
What do you think? Can you think of anymore reasons The Little Mermaid is an awesome feminist film? Leave them and your opinions below in the comments! She took risks and seemed to have little concern over whether it would hurt her father. She deliberately disobeyed him on different occasions and kept doing whatever she wanted regardless of King Triton's opinion. Ariel's rebelliousness, however, did help her get what she wanted: true love and life as a human.
She was sixteen, but she was never actually punished for breaking the rules. Though, nearly losing her father and Eric and facing Ursula's wrath was undoubtedly punishment enough. Ariel happily adapted to human life, willing to use forks, wear dresses, and travel by horse and carriage. She was all for trying new things with enthusiasm and eagerness. She happily took the reigns from Eric when they were on a carriage ride, she learned that a fork was actually for eating, and she was awed and fascinated by everything around her, exhibiting a childlike wonder that Eric seemed to find attractive.
Ariel embraced a world completely different from her own with no doubts or hesitation, only too excited to discover and experience it for herself. Ariel didn't always think things through; she tended to live in the moment. Most notably, she was impulsive in signing Ursula's contract.
She lost her voice and gained legs, but had to ensure she got Eric to kiss her within three days to remain human, or else she'd become a mermaid again and forever belong to Ursula. Ariel didn't fully weigh out the consequences, only listening to her desire to be human and be with Eric, even though she didn't really know him and couldn't foresee how things would turn out. She nearly lost everything and put humans and merfolk alike in danger with Ursula threatening to take over; if not for Eric taking out Ursula once and for all, Ariel would've had a very different fate.
Ariel loves to sing and generally has a happy, cheerful demeanor. She sees the best in everything, especially in humans. She doesn't always make the best decisions, but she does try to make the best out of less than ideal situations. Ariel has a healthy dose of hope and faith which no doubt contributes to her cheerfulness, and she spreads that cheerfulness to her friends and family.
Her positive outlook is admirable, and her smile is certainly infectious. Ariel so badly wanted to be with Eric, and to be human, that she didn't consider the fallout. She disappeared, leaving her family to worry about her and wonder what had happened to her.
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