So does Cinderella have to be a fool in a blue dress and a dumb American accent with a whole set of American values and aesthetics? (When I say "American", that's "American", it's not Los Angeles or New York, she's a fucking idiot with American hillbilly taste.) In
addition, in order to take care of children of all colors, the prince's base friend must also be Black people, although wearing weird leggings, feel like they can rap dirty at a party in the next second. Princesses of all skin colors, China's grid is also indiscriminate. In order to achieve equality for everyone, black buddies take turns in the village to find women's shoes to try on, regardless of whether they are rich or poor.
I understand that the story of Cinderella promotes the socialist tendency of equality for all (you see, the prince is in love with the aristocratic aristocracy, everyone has to have a share in a party, and there is no distinction between the high and the low when trying on a shoe), But... a group of people dressed in classical clothes (let's call it classical for now) and acting in modern dramas, I'm always unacceptable.
(But aside from the topic, in Disneyland a few days ago, the administrator who entered the venue said with a serious face to the little girl who rushed in, "What are you going to play today, my princess?", I still suddenly felt it. The kindness of the world...Little girls wear cinderella dresses, glasses, freckles, little braids, not princesses at all. But, in the Disney world, anyone can be a princess, no matter what skin color, appearance, or even gender .)
2. Putting aside the stupid Disney style, the stupid white sweet Cinderella in this story really doesn't make me like it. In the second half, the stepmother discovers her secret, and then has a tea party, saying something like "a long time ago, a beautiful girl married the man she loved and had two children, and then the man died, and she remarried for the sake of the children. , and then her husband died. She hoped to find a good home for her two daughters, but when the prince held a ball, the prince was robbed by the oil bottle left by her husband. "
I was stunned for a moment, karma, even happiness will have retribution. The innocent little girl in front of her was just her stepmother n years ago, and she will repay her debts for her purity and innocence for a long time to come, just like her stepmother.
Destiny is fair to everyone, and what is borrowed must be repaid, including innocence and kindness. Therefore, everyone is guilty, the so-called sin, original sin.
There's really no need for that silly white sweet girl to say "I forgive you" at the end of the film. Oh, her stepmother doesn't need her to forgive, because she's not the first, nor will she be the last.
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