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Sunday, May 3, 2020

Peter Pan (1953)

An American Disney animated musical fantasy directed by Clyde Geronimi, Wilfred Jackson and Hamilton Luske, starring Hans Conried.
A flying boy from a story brings a group of children to his island. The island is shared by Peter Pan's group of boys, mermaids, First Nations people and pirates.
I may type lots about subliminal messages, predictive programming and Illuminati symbolism in Disney animations, but that does not mean that I dislike them. In fact, it makes a "harmless children's cartoon" into something interesting. What I see in Peter Pan is repeated throughout the Disney catalog: blatant racism. "What Made the Red Man Red?" is a song whose mere title hints at the racist remarks within. Native Americans/First Nations people spoke a language different from that of colonial Europeans. We took their land and did not learn their language. They saved the colonists from starvation AND learned our language. Who are the stupid savages now? I'm sure that I should mention perpetual boyhood. Peter offers the boys a life free from cares, worries and adulthood, where they can fly. No boy would refuse. However, there is more to life than that, even an ideal one. Just for a modern comparison, mainstream rap is dominated by boy and dog wording, with prefixes like "lil": lil Bow Wow is a prime example. I have yet to fully analyze and decode what this means, but one result is less "men" to be leaders and more "boys" dependent upon others. A quick point I want to bring up is to question whether the absence of white European society and aurthority figures makes a place "other" or foreign, uncivilized? Captain Hook is the closest to Euro-man on the island and even he is a pirate, not part of "normal" society. He is, however, the only authority figure on the island who is obeyed because of employment, fear or responsibility. Pan may lead the boys, but they do not obey him to avoid consequences of not doing so. He is also one of them and tells them to do things that they would have wanted to do anyway. Smee doesn't seem eager to do the things ordered of him. After this academic analysis, I rate Peter Pan adequate. It gave me something to type about, but there are many better Disney films.

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