It's a really good movie, and it's got Disney's own take on fairy tales.
The evil stepmother said I threw her into a world where true love is impossible forever, and then the heroine was thrown into 21 actual New York.
Different from the beautiful, lovely and kind people who are everywhere in the fairy tale world, the real world is full of evil on earth. The roadside beggars stole Giselle's crown. People including the male protagonist think Giselle is mentally ill.
Giselle sang in the apartment, but it was flies, mice, and cockroaches that called.
Love in fairy tales is always love at first sight. Snow White, Cinderella, Sleeping Beauty, they all fell in love with the prince only once, then got married and finally fell in love forever.
But the reality is that Robert told Giselle that what is a date, and the two parties still have to get along to know if they are suitable.
Robert, like most people in reality, has long disbelieved in fairy tales and innocence, but in the end he was moved by Giselle to fall in love with this eccentric woman.
The hero of the film, Robert, is a person who believes that love should be done step by step. He also has the same idea as all straight men nowadays. I love her, and I don't need to say such things.
But no, if you love her, you have to tell her, otherwise how would she know.
I remember reading an article before saying that Disney's animation is a process of feminism.
From the very beginning, she only needs to do laundry and cook when she talks and sings with animals in the style of Snow White, to Belle who is independent and independent and loves to read in Beauty and the Beast, and then takes on the burden of her father in Mulan.
In this movie, too, Giselle has her own ideas and thoughts from a simple and ignorant girl who doesn't know what to do but just wants to marry a prince.
The kiss of true love that finally rescued Gisele and woke her up was not the prince, but Robert, and Giselle also took off her high heels, took the sword and climbed to the top of the building to save the hero.
It turns out that Disney played with this kind of setting long before Frozen and Maleficent.
In the end, the chipmunk in the movie is really a highlight, supporting a part of the movie, and the part of the poison apple at the dinner table is really cute.
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