Wednesday, April 24, 2013

DMCP #65 - Brave

Ta-Dah!!! I did it! All 65 Disney/Pixar Thatrical releases. I will be writing more about the project as a whole, but let's finish by talking about Brave first.

I really like Brave. I know some people were down on it, but we got a couple of things you don't see often. First, we have a movie where both parents of our main Character are alive and well. Second, the movie is about a mother/daughter relationship, and neither of them are evil. You can tell that co-director Brenda Chapman was drawing from very personal experience. I also watched it with my own mother who happens to have a daughter known to be stubborn from time to time, and judging from the amount of crying going on, I'm assuming it resonated with mothers and daughters everywhere. It's a great tale of two people who love each other, but can't seem to stop hurting each other. We get to see through the course of the film that part of the reason they can't get along is that they are so similar. Queen Eleanor knows what it takes to run a kingdom and carries the burdens of her responsibilities while Merida sees this and is trying to run away from responsibilities that will soon be hers. It's like Merida actively doesn't want to grow up to be her mother. Can you believe that kids don't always want to be their parents when they grow up?! The movie handles this very well, and it takes a lot of poor decisions before they can mend their bond. It's really very heartfelt and sweet.

Amid this very personal tale, we get to have a lot of fun with the male characters. The leaders of the Scotish clans are brash, loud, and ridiculous. They are voiced by Billy Connolity, Craig Ferguson, Hagrid, and Dr. Owen Hunt from Grey's Anatomy. I thought it was an interesting turn where the most realistic characters were female and the men got to be walking stereotypes for a change. The men are big, dumb, and love eating and fighting and showing their butts to people. (side note, this movie has more naked man butt than Magic Mike did. Naked, pale, Scottish old Man-butt.) I like that the men are drawn overly broad because it pays off in a big way during one of Merida's big character moments. While the clans have decided to shout and threaten war with each other, Merida needs to find a way to get them to work together. She speaks about how they are a new country, whose stories are not yet legend, but whose aliances were born of friendship and fighting together to drive out their common foe. Sound familiar? It's a call to reject the partisan ideas that have driven people apart and to mend the bonds that made us great. I like that she deliver's this to broadly drawn characters because every one of them is being a ridiculous man-baby. It reminds us that no matter what side of the political spectrum we fall on, when we only focus on what divides us and refuse to seek common ground, no one is in the right and everyone is being stupid.

On a final note, this movie contains some of the most breathtaking animation I've ever seen. Pixar continues to raise the bar for what is possible with computer animation. Merida's hair alone makes the movie a must see, but we also get gorgeous Scotish countryside and thrilling action set pieces...and man-butt.

8/10

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