* as far as SW movies go, ds has been watching them since he was little, like 3. We did NOT allow him to watch the Revenge of the Sith until just recently like the last year and a half, because the scene where Anakin is getting burned up is just awful. BUT he does know the difference between real life and movies/tv and does not get scared or scarred by watching them. IMVHO, of course.
How old is your son? Hubby has put his foot down about Sith (I haven't even watched it, actually), but more for the Anakin vs padewan scene. I'm fine with that. But DS has gotten so into Indy just b/c of Legos (and his uncle bought the
Lego Indy videogame as a treat for DS when we visit him, we don't own a videogame system at all) and people keep wondering what the difference is between Indy and, for instance, POTC...all I can say is "having a living human's face melting off is different than cursed pirates", but the older he gets the more quizzical people are becoming about that LOL.
OP, I don't think that's really an *attack*. I mean...the princesses DO tend to marry men to become happy...and the princesses DO wear gowns that come down a bit low on the chestal region. And they don't even have the ice skating outfit flesh-colored stuff like is holding up Katy's dress. Though, of course, they are cartoons (the movies of course)...
And yeah, the princess movies are, to me, a bit odd... It's a reason I liked Enchanted so much, apart from where S Sarandon has to elaborate and state clearly how different it is that Giselle is saving the man (why why did they have to do it, it was obvious on its own ugh), because while she is man-focused, she also finds her own heart's desire at the same time she's finding a more appropriate man...
But saying all that isn't an *attack*, it's just gleaned by watching the movies... DS himself (who loves the princess movies b/c he loves princesses) wonders what the role of the men in those movies is...the princesses sit in towers or sleep while the men are slaying dragons and finding the women...quite a bit of effort on the man's part! Different perspective, seeing it through a boy's eyes.