So we know the way Disney depicts villains, in quite the black and white way. They defer from their source material often, but I noticed some of the new ones I wouldn't call evil per ce. The most complex villain Disney did was Frollo, and compared with the book he is a pie. Still...
Disney was always a force in the culture, so I was wondering about the stereotypes of evil in their movies and is there impact on our (the fans) reasoning in thinking something/someone is evil?
I sure think evil is misintepretated as a concept, but that is other issue. I just find a link between it and this: not showing how some "villain" was raised, what life she/he had, what were their wishes of the heart, what was that that made them the way they are now etc, so not really knowing someone and just etiquetting them as such. In this way books are 100% better than any movie! I'll always prefer them as a medium, but I'll always enjoy the plastic depiction of villainism in the movies, not taking it too seriously.
Do you think that is good for children to believe in something as 100%good or bad? Do you think mabe this helps to judge more and be empathic less?
Disney was always a force in the culture, so I was wondering about the stereotypes of evil in their movies and is there impact on our (the fans) reasoning in thinking something/someone is evil?
I sure think evil is misintepretated as a concept, but that is other issue. I just find a link between it and this: not showing how some "villain" was raised, what life she/he had, what were their wishes of the heart, what was that that made them the way they are now etc, so not really knowing someone and just etiquetting them as such. In this way books are 100% better than any movie! I'll always prefer them as a medium, but I'll always enjoy the plastic depiction of villainism in the movies, not taking it too seriously.
Do you think that is good for children to believe in something as 100%good or bad? Do you think mabe this helps to judge more and be empathic less?