LAST SUMMER, WHEN Disney bestowed The Lion King upon
the world, I was aghast at the film's seeming political subtext.
It was okay for the lions to regularly slaughter the antelopes,
because "when we die our bodies become the grass and the
antelope eat the grass, and so we are all connected in the Great
Circle of Life," said Mufasa, sounding like a Republican
defending trickle-down economics. And the hyenas, dark, dumb and
speaking with exaggerated ethnic accents, seemed utterly racist
creations. Some might say the idea of looking for adult metaphors
in a children's cartoon is ridiculous, but the fact remains that
a significant number of conservatives gleefully interpreted the
ousting of Scar as a statement about what should be done with
Bill Clinton. No foolin'.
So it is a pleasant surprise to discover in Pocahontas
an opposite, and very liberal, political subtext. Is this all
by accident, or is Disney up to something? Who knows. But if you
look at The Lion King and Pocahontas side by side,
the two films possess an undeniable symmetry. Each film's central
character is a searcher who ultimately decides to choose an honorable
path and settle a dispute. Each film contains mythic images of
characters standing atop jutting stone outcroppings. And when
Pocahontas sings, "We're all connected to each other in a
circle--in a hoop that never ends," you can't help but remember
Mufasa's words.
But this time we're looking at the other side of the circle;
Pocahontas is the Yin to The Lion King's Yang. This one's a girl's
movie, for sure, and during a packed Sunday-afternoon screening
few boys were visible in attendance (probably turned off by the
prospect of seeing icky kissing). It's also a piously P.C. story,
with themes of racial equality, environmental preservation and
pacifism. Very liberal stuff. Pocahontas is presented as a non-conformist
who, but for her lack of armpit hair, is almost hippieish. She
talks to trees. She communes with animals. She goes "wherever
the the wind takes her" (did someone say "Hakuna Matata?").
And when Pocahontas is offered a hand in marriage by the toughest
soldier in her tribe, she turns him down because "he looks
so serious" (i.e. conservative). What a terrific gal! (It
doesn't hurt that, as noted by The New York Times, "Pocahontas
is a babe.")
The picture is a rather bold effort for Disney, which hasn't
exactly been on the cutting edge of social enlightenment in most
of its animated features. And there's even a bit of comic self-referential
subtext to the character of Governor Ratcliffe, the snotty-voiced
leader of the British explorers. There's an interesting analogy
here: Having failed to find his fortune in Europe, the general
attempts to dig for gold in Virginia ("Dig up Virginia, boys!"
he sings) and is turned away. How Disney of him. He might well
become the mascot for the company's theme-park expansion team.
Politically speaking, there are still a few areas worthy of criticism.
Why does the drama of female characters in animated Disney films
always hinge on their relationships to men? Why do so many recent
Disney villains seem homosexual? And then there's the issue of
the film's historical inaccuracy, which in Disney movies has become
such a foregone conclusion as to be irrelevant. (Of course
they're not going to portray Pocahontas as the 12-year-old she
really was. That would be sick.)
Yeah, yeah, you may be thinking, but is the picture any good?
Well, if your idea of "good" can be satisfied by a slick
combination of Romeo and Juliet and Dances with Wolves,
peppered with occasional doses of zany raccoon and hummingbird
antics (to keep the kids awake), and heavily salted with Jungian
archetypes, then yes, it's good. (Some viewers will give the movie
bonus points because Mel Gibson, performing the voice of John
Smith, does his own singing.) Personally, I think the sequence
where Pocahontas runs through the forest crooning the song "Colors
of the Wind" is worth the whole movie. The scene contains
the film's most spectacular animation, neatly sums up the themes
of appreciating nature and keeping an open mind to other cultures,
and was widely aired as the film's trailer. After seeing those
two minutes of perfection, what else do you need?
The rest of the picture, though of a consistently high quality,
didn't do much for this viewer. To me, Disney movies always feel
less like movies than commercials for themselves, where even the
most heartfelt story sentiment seems empty compared to the enthusiasm
of the marketing campaign. Do the sanctimonious messages in Disney
movies really make a difference in children's moral makeups? That's
a question worth pondering while shelling out $25 for Pocahontas
sleeping bags, $8 for Pocahontas board games, $7 for plastic Pocahontas
necklaces and cloth slippers, and similarly high amounts for puppets,
action figures, and even--in an odd coupling of toy and metaphor--hula
hoops.
Disney has paid a lot of lip service to "the circle of life,"
and it's easy to see why: They're getting stinking rich off of
this "circle of marketing." I appreciate what they've
tried to do this time with Pocahontas, but isn't it about
time for more animated films that have fun just playing with the
concept of animation? Luckily, there's relief coming 'round the
corner in the form of a zippy looking computer-generated flick
called Toy Story, which is simply about a bunch of toys
that come to life. Sure, Toy Story is probably going to
be as ferociously merchandised as any Disney effort, but at least
its narrative cuts to the chase.
--Zachary Woodruff
Capsule Reviews
Pocahontas 
Film Vault Suggested Links
Anastasia 
Beauty and the Beast 
Quest for Camelot 
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