Lisa's World
A blog about my World and loves.
Monday, 31 October 2016
These Tales Aren't as Innocent as You Think
Definitely not for children
Published
October 25, 2016
Disney likes to change classic fairy tales around so that they're suitable for a young audience. Most of the fairy tales we know and love came from a more sinister and dark place. Writers like
Charles Perrault
,
The Grimm Brothers
, and
Hans Christian Andersen
created tales that were meant to terrify people and encourage them to do be moral and good. While The Grimm Brothers and Charles Perrault wrote similar stories (Perrault had the idea, the Grimms finished it), there are unique details that render them all the more complex.
Here's a list of classic Disney stories we love with their sinister counterpart.
1)
Mulan
Story:
The Ballad of Mulan
based on the real life Hua Mulan
Image courtesy of http://bit.ly/2e7Om24 and http://bit.ly/2e7Oyy9
Disney got a lot right with this one, but there's no talking dragon and Mulan actually returns home to a broken family. She's forced to become a prostitute and commits suicide. Definitely would not make a good children's movie.
2)
Frozen
Story:
The Snow Queen
by Hans Christian Andersen
Image courtesy of http://bit.ly/2dGkIzD and http://bit.ly/2e7RPgM
In Andersen's version, the Snow Queen is more evil rather than misunderstood like Elsa. Kai and Gerda are best friends and Kai is the recipient of troll glass in his heart and eyes, paralyzing kisses, and brainwashing from the Snow Queen. It's more complicated, but Disney completely turned it around with princess sisters!
3)
Cinderella
Story:
Little Glass Slipper
by Charles Perrault &
Cinderella
by The Grimm Brothers
Image courtesy of http://bit.ly/2e7PP8F and http://bit.ly/2eOWDJk
The Grimm story is just that...Grimm. There's a magic tree that Cinderella calls to that shakes down her mother's dress for the ball. In the end, Cinderella's stepsisters can't fit their big feet into the glass slipper, so one cuts off a toe and the other shaves off her heel. The story ends with the stepsisters' eyes being plucked out by birds...courtesy of Cinderella. However, in Perrault's version, the sisters live with Cinderella in the castle and get married off to high-ranking gentlemen.
4)
Pocahontas
Based on the true story of Pocahontas and some journal entries from Captain John Smith
Image courtesy of http://bit.ly/2fcIzMI and http://bit.ly/2eDgHh6
Well, Disney decided to make imperialism a love story...twice.
Pocahontas
and
Pocahontas: Journey to a New World
are incredibly inaccurate. Pocahontas and John Smith barely knew each other, she just saved his life. She would have been way too young to be in love with Smith. Pocahontas marries John Rolfe in exchange for her freedom and her name was changed to Lady Rebecca Rolfe. She died in her 20s of unknown causes.
5)
The Little Mermaid
Story:
The Little Mermaid
by Hans Christian Andersen
Image courtesy of http://bit.ly/2e7S6R2 and http://bit.ly/2f560rZ
In this version, the Little Mermaid, after she loses her tail, is forced to dance (while in pain) for the Prince. Unlike the Disney adaptation, the Little Mermaid is supposed to convince the Prince to marry her without her voice OR kill the Prince. She doesn't do either, so she turns to sea foam.
6)
Sleeping Beauty
Story:
Sun, Moon, and Talia
by Giambattista Basile
Image courtesy of http://bit.ly/2eObVN6 and http:
/
/bit.ly/2eDq40t
The original story from the 17th century is Italian and in that story, the King cannot wake the princess because of a splinter in her finger and he ends up raping her. She ends up bearing twins who wake her up and suck the splinter from her finger. There's some murdering that happens in there and then the princess marries the King that raped her. NO. NO. NO.
There are two other versions:
La Belle au Bois Dormant
by Charles Perrault &
Little Briar Rose
by The Grimm Brothers, which is a bit closer to what Disney based its movie off of. In neither of these stories do fairies raise the princess in the woods. In the Grimm Brothers version, many princes die in the spiky hedge that surrounds the castle and in the Charles Perrault version, the princess isn't woken with a kiss and the prince has an ogress for a mother.
7)
Tangled
Story:
Rapunzel
by The Grimm Brothers
Image courtesy of http://bit.ly/2dTuwKa and http://bit.ly/2f55aeR
The Grimm Brothers' story isn't so pleasant and cheery. A couple longs for a child and the wife gets pregnant, but must eat the plant, Rapunzel, from the witch's garden, or she'll die. Basically, the husband steals the rapunzel and then the witch takes the child from them, named Rapunzel. She raises Rapunzel on her own and in the end, the prince falls from the tower into a bush and is blinded and eventually finds Rapunzel and their twins in the desert.
8)
Snow White
Story:
Little Snow White
by The Grimm Brothers
Image courtesy of http://bit.ly/2eO55Ho and http://bit.ly/2dGjTqI
Snow White actually invites her stepmother to her wedding and she and Prince Charming watch as the stepmother is forced to dance in hot iron shoes. She's not the innocent little girl that Disney portrays!
https://www.bookstr.com/article/these-fairy-tales-aren-t-as-innocent-as-you-think/2582?utm_campaign=565543_newsletter_161031&utm_medium=email&utm_source=The%20Reading%20Room&dm_i=2P56,C4DJ,4HGNLC,16TVK,1
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