Edita Gruberova, Die Zauberflöte.
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Edita Gruberova, Die Zauberflöte.

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Shout out to the autistic who’s abilities have regressed as they’ve gotten older.
“You didn’t used to be like this when you were a kid.” I know please don’t remind me
"This never bothered you when you were a kid."
Yes it did. I just let it slide because I was taught that I'm "too sensitive" anytime something bothered me. But now I'm finally standing up for myself.
"You never struggled with this when you were a kid."
Yes I did. I just burned myself out in order to do it so I wouldn't be punished. But now I'm accepting myself enough to not force myself to do what I was never meant to do.
"You didn't have these problems when you were younger."
Yes, I did. I just spent my child/teen years with structured institutions like school while not having to worry about whether I had a roof over my head or food to eat and spent my early adult years using up every bit of adrenaline I will ever have to ignore the fact that I've been chronically burnt out my whole life.
Shout out to autistics who genuinely did regress.
Like why I stopped going to movie theatres as soon as I turned 13, when I had always loved going to movies in my childhood.
As soon as I hit puberty, it seemed like the noises got sharper, the experience more overwhelming, and my RSD got worse, so when I saw fictional characters reject and abandon each other, as they so often do, it reinforced every time that the same thing could happen to me.
An underrated aspect that I've never seen people mention when talking about Hunchback is it delivers it's themes from the start. Both Quasimodo and Frollos opening scene rely on them tending a baby of sorts, but while Frollo attempts to drown baby Quasi, Quasi instead helps gently the little bird to fly. It's a small scene but it works wonderfully. What makes a monster and what makes a man indeed
This is so true and so beautiful. (Not what Frollo does, of course, but Quasi's care for the baby bird and its instant contrast with what we just saw of Frollo.)
Is it a hot take to think the ending of Hunchback is less ableist in the Disney version than in the older movies. Because Disney plays with Quasimodo and Frollos connection and the "what makes a monster and what makes a man" theme. The older movies Frollos and Quasi relationship is less delevoped, and Esmeralda goes with the heroic male lead just to tack on a happy ending.
I agree. I'm working on a post about Disney's version as disability representation, which hopefully I'll finish in the near future.
One of the points I wanted to make is that in Disney's version, Esmeralda ending up with Phoebus isn't just to give the movie a conventional happy ending, and more importantly, Quasimodo's unrequited love isn't just to make us pity him. Instead it serves to give him a choice about how he's going to react, and the enormous difference between his choices and Frollo's give us the answer to the question "Who is the monster and who is the man?"
Coming to you again as Tumblr's resident Cinderella Expert: One thing that stood out to me about the Faerie Tale Theatre version of the story is that the Prince actually meets the Fairy Godmother and had the "Magical transformations that ended at midnight" thing explained to him. My impression is that this doesn't usually happen, but can you think of any other versions where it does?
That is a very rare touch! It's one aspect of the Faerie Tale Theatre version that I especially like.
There are just a few other versions that do something similar.
In the 1914 silent movie with Mary Pickford, Cinderella and the Prince are strolling in the palace garden after their reunion, when the clock strikes midnight again, and Cinderella starts to run away because she thinks her gown will change back into rags again. But then the Fairy Godmother appears in front of both the young lovers and gives them her blessing.
In the 1947 Russian movie, after Cinderella's father brings her back to the palace and reveals her identity to the court, at first they don't know where to find the Prince, because he ran off into the forest in despair thinking he would never see Cinderella again. But then the Fairy Godmother's little boy apprentice magically appears, bringing the Prince with him, and then the Fairy Godmother herself appears and changes Cinderella's rags back into a gown.
In neither of those versions does Cinderella introduce the Prince to her Fairy Godmother, though.
The 2013 Broadway version of the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical also has a joke at the end that involves the characters figuring out that it was the chime of midnight that forced Cinderella to run away. At the royal wedding (an oddly late-night wedding), just as the Prince and Cinderella are about to kiss after being pronounced husband and wife, the clock strikes midnight, and everyone halts and turns to stare at Cinderella, anxious that she'll run away again. But she assures them "I'm good!" and proceeds with the kiss.

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Once again, it's time to take inspiration from @theevilanonblog's post about Frankenstein and look at different possible interpretations of another work of fiction.
In this case, it's the Toy Story series.
The Toy Story films are about parenthood, with the toys as parental figures to the children who own them. In the first film, Woody is like a father dealing with the fact that his son, who used to idolize him, now has another, "cooler" male role model (e.g. a teacher, a coach, a celebrity hero, or even a stepfather), but ultimately realizing that this doesn't diminish his son's love or need for him. Then the second film is about accepting that someday your child will grow up and leave the nest, so you should treasure every moment with them while you still can. The third film is about realizing your child is all grown up and letting them go, while the fourth film is about coping with "empty nest syndrome" and finding a new purpose outside of being a parent, and the fifth film is about feeling irrelevant in your old age, but ultimately realizing that you still matter and that your impact on your children will last for the rest of their lives.
The Toy Story films are about growing up, with the toys as symbolic children and the children as their parental figures. In the first film, Woody's jealousy of Buzz is like a child's jealousy of a new baby sibling, with whom he ultimately bonds and learns to share his parent's love. The second film reflects the childhood realization that someday you'll grow up and have to leave your parents' care, then the third film is about finally reaching adulthood and leaving the nest, and the fourth film is about finding your purpose as an adult, with the message that you shouldn't be tied down by "obligations" to your family or by a sense of what your life "should" be like. I'm not sure if the fifth film still reflects this theme, though.
The Toy Story films are about friendship. The series' theme song is "You've Got a Friend in Me," after all. In the first film, Woody's jealousy of Buzz mirrors the jealousy that a child often feels when their best friend finds a new friend, followed by realizing that it doesn't need to be a competition, but that all three of them can be friends. Then the second film's theme is that friendship is worthwhile even though it means risking hurt and loss, while the third film is about saying goodbye to a friend and opening your heart to new friends. Some fans argue that the fourth film loses this theme by having Woody leave his friends for romantic love in the end. But others argue that it does maintain the theme, showing that some attempted friendships just don't work out (Woody and Bonnie) and that sometimes the best thing to do for a friend is to wish them well and let them go (as Buzz and the others do for Woody). Last but not least, the fifth film is a reminder of the importance of real, human connections in a world increasingly connected by technology.
The Toy Story films are about relationships. All types of relationships: friendship, romance, parent-child, etc., all embodied in the toys' relationship with their child owners and with each other. Everything covered in the "toys as parents," "toys as children," and "toys and their owners as friends" analyses can be covered in one interpretation this way: it's about all forms of love.
The Toy Story films are about accepting change. The world of toys is even more subject to constant change than the human world: children adding new toys to their collections, losing interest in some toys in favor of others, and eventually outgrowing their toys, which go on to new owners, or else become ownerless. So a film series about toys is the perfect vehicle to explore this subject. Each film has the toys facing changes they don't want, but which they ultimately make peace with. And each film ends with a permanent change to the status quo: in the first film, Woody and Buzz living happily side by side, in the second, the addition of Jessie and Bullseye to Andy's toys (and the quiet understanding that someday Andy will outgrow them all, but not just yet), in the third, the toys being passed down from Andy to Bonnie, in the fourth, Woody leaving to start a new life with Bo Peep, and in the fifth, the inclusion of Lilypad in the toys' family and Bonnie's new friendship with Blaze.
The Toy Story films are about fulfilling your life’s purpose. The toys have a clear sense of what their purpose is: to make a child happy. But each film raises different questions about that purpose. Can you still fulfill it when your owner loses interest in you? Do new toys or other things that make them happy make you obsolete? What about when they grow up and don't need you anymore? Is your purpose to make one specific child happy, or can you move on to another child? Can you have a purpose other than making children happy? Can you gain a new purpose other than the one you were built for? Or can you find ways to make children happy without being played with? Meanwhile, Buzz's journey in the first film of accepting that he's a toy also deals with this theme: he thought he was a space ranger whose purpose was to fight evil, and he feels lost and broken when he loses that identity, but in the end he finds new purpose in making Andy happy along with the other toys.
The Toy Story films are just about what it would be like if toys were secretly alive and cared about their child owners. They don't need to be an allegory for anything else.
Sometimes it seems as if fans of Disney's Hunchback of Notre Dame forget that Quasimodo is the protagonist.
When they talk about Esmeralda and her three "suitors" (Quasi, Frollo, and Phoebus), they talk as if Esmeralda were the movie's protagonist and the point were for her make the “good choice,” Phoebus, instead of either of the two “bad choices,” Quasi and Frollo. When really Quasi is the protagonist, and the main point is his contrast with Frollo in how they respond to their unrequited longing for Esmeralda. The fact that Phoebus is the one she connects with romantically doesn’t need to be justified so hard by pointing out Quasi’s “flaws” – Phoebus is just the one for her, simple as that. What matters is that she doesn’t choose Quasi or Frollo, and that in their different responses to not being chosen, we see “what makes a monster and what makes a man.”
If Quasi's feelings for Esmeralda were really as toxic, dehumanizing, selfish, "Nice Guy"-ish, etc. as some people claim, then you’d think he would have a character arc of realizing he’s been doing her wrong and changing his ways. But he doesn't. He learns to selflessly help her with no hope of a romantic reward, and to give her love for Phoebus his blessing and be happy to have them both as friends, but that's different from saying "I've been loving you toxically, you belong with him because I'm bad for you." If that were what he had to realize, I think it would be a different movie!
What do you think the toys in Toy Story represent? I liked the idea of them being parents but sometimes the analysis doesn't add up. Maybe pets?
I was just about to make a post on this subject. I've seen it looked at from a few different perspectives.
Beauty and the Beast artwork by Kinuko Y. CraftÂ
how do you think the story would change if linton was a girl and cathy a boy - would heathcliff's social experiment stay the same?
Well, it would obviously be different because male-Cathy would be heir to Thrushcross Grange. Heathcliff would lose any claim to it. And while he would get a foothold in by marrying his daughter to male-Cathy, that would come to an end after female-Linton died, because male-Cathy would still inherit. In the novel, Heathcliff is extremely lucky that he has a son while Edgar has only a daughter, because Thrushcross Grange is effectively entailed (although it’s implied that it’s not an actual entailment, but just the way Mr. Linton made out his will out of personal preference) so that if Edgar should die without a son, his property will go to Isabella’s son instead of Edgar’s daughter - and then Heathcliff manipulates his dying son into bequeathing it all to himself. If Edgar had a son and Heathcliff had a daughter instead, Heathcliff’s plan to acquire the Grange would have to be much more complicated.
I have always thought the biggest coincidence in Wuthering Heights was the genders of the second generation children being perfect for Heathcliff’s vengeful schemes.
I agree. But I don’t let myself nitpick about the unrealistic coincidences in 19th century Romantic literature: they were just a plot convention that many great authors used at that time.

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A few days ago, I came across a post in the Toy Story 5 tag complaining about a change between the first three Toy Story movies (a.k.a. the "Andy Trilogy") and the most recent two (a.k.a. the "Bonnie" films, which might become a "Bonnie Trilogy" if they make a Toy Story 6).
That difference is the toys' role in the kids' lives. In the "Andy Trilogy," toys are for playing: they exist to be played with and they love to be played with. That's what it's all about. But in the Bonnie movies, there's much more emphasis on the toys finding ways to secretly help kids outside of play: e.g. Woody helping Bonnie create Forky at school, his ultimate new life with Bo Peep of helping kids and ownerless toys find each other, and the efforts in Toy Story 5 to help Bonnie make friends.
The post complained that the series has seemingly switched from "toys as toys" to "toys as good fairies who secretly help you."
Now, personally, I don't see that change as something worth complaining about. But I do see it as interesting. I had never noticed it before, but now I see that it's true.
Now, maybe this change in focus relates to the changes behind the scenes, since unlike the Andy Trilogy, the fourth and fifth movies were made without John Lasseter. (A change I'm fully in favor of because of the #MeToo issues that led to his departure, but it could have caused some creative inconsistency.) But still, Lasseter did work on the fourth movie's story before he resigned. And more importantly, Andrew Stanten has been a head writer of all five films' screenplays, and has now directed Toy Story 5, after having been one of the main story-builders of the first film back in the '90s. You'd think he would take care to preserve a consistent tone!
Maybe it could also be the influence of Inside Out, which of course came along between Toy Story 3 and Toy Story 4. Fans have always noticed the parallels between the toys of Toy Story and the emotions of Inside Out: a group of beings who love and devote their lives to a child without their knowing about it. And the plot of the first Inside Out film has obvious parallels with the original Toy Story (with Joy corresponding to Woody, Sadness to Buzz, and Riley to Andy), while Toy Story 5 parallels Inside Out 2 (Bonnie corresponding to Riley, Jessie to Joy, and Lilypad to Anxiety). Since the emotions in the Inside Out films obviously exist to help their person, maybe subconsciously those movies influenced the Pixar creative team to reimagine the Toy Story toys as helpers rather than only existing for play.
But maybe the difference is better explained by Watsonian reasons (in-universe) than Doylist reasons (behind the scenes).
In the fourth film, Woody's focus on secretly helping Bonnie, and ultimately on helping other kids find abandoned toys, is precisely because Bonnie doesn't play with him anymore. It's all about finding a new purpose as a toy who isn't played with.
As for why the theme of "toys secretly helping Bonnie" continues in the fifth film, I think it reflects the fact that Bonnie has a different personality from Andy and different needs.
Andy was an average, outgoing, popular boy. We see this in the number of friends who come to his birthday party in the original film, and the fact that in the second film he goes off to sleep-away camp without a hint of nervousness. Bonnie, on the other hand, is a shy, "weird" girl, who is scared to start school in the fourth film and then has trouble fitting in with other kids in the fifth. Between this and her wild imagination and creativity, it's easy to headcanon her as being on the autism spectrum. But whether you do or not, it makes sense that she needs a little more support than Andy did, which the toys give her.
If they do make a Toy Story 6, I'll be interested to see whether it continues the theme of "toys as secret helpers" or goes back to "toys exist to be played with." We'll see.
I realized I’m not enamored by Austen. I read her novels and I was confused by people who call them the most romantic stories ever. The couple barely interacts in many of them and they seem to be more about the practicality of marriage rather than love.
While I won’t go so far as to claim Austen is totally unromantic, I think I do agree with the people who say that her novels aren’t romance. They’re novels of manners (or comedies or manners, though I don’t feel comfortable calling them all comedies), which take a satirical look at average upper class people navigating society and social conventions, and which always center on the personal journey and growth of a heroine (or two heroines, as in Sense and Sensibility), which includes finding love and ends with marriage, but isn’t necessarily about romance.
I think it’s clear that Austen was a very practical-minded person, and while she didn’t approve of loveless, mercenary marriages (at least not for her heroines), she seems to have approved even less of marriages based only on passion. She made it very clear in her novels that marriage needs to balance love with practical considerations: first and foremost whether your suitor is an objectively good and respect-worthy person, then whether the two of you are well-suited to each other, and after that, the issue of money.
As a person of the late 18th and early 19th century, Austen was essentially in-between the Age of Enlightenment and the Romantic era, and while she leaned more toward Romanticism in her later books than she had in the earlier ones, she was definitely more Enlightenment. People do misrepresent her books when they label them “romances” just because they all include romantic love stories and end with marriage.
how do you think the story would change if linton was a girl and cathy a boy - would heathcliff's social experiment stay the same?
Well, it would obviously be different because male-Cathy would be heir to Thrushcross Grange. Heathcliff would lose any claim to it. And while he would get a foothold in by marrying his daughter to male-Cathy, that would come to an end after female-Linton died, because male-Cathy would still inherit. In the novel, Heathcliff is extremely lucky that he has a son while Edgar has only a daughter, because Thrushcross Grange is effectively entailed (although it’s implied that it’s not an actual entailment, but just the way Mr. Linton made out his will out of personal preference) so that if Edgar should die without a son, his property will go to Isabella’s son instead of Edgar’s daughter - and then Heathcliff manipulates his dying son into bequeathing it all to himself. If Edgar had a son and Heathcliff had a daughter instead, Heathcliff’s plan to acquire the Grange would have to be much more complicated.
Autism Representation written by an allistic: My name is John Autism and I like the designated autistic interests
unintentionally autistic character written by the creator who hasn't really thought about whether or not theyre autistic: I wish I could be human like the way everyone else is but I know they can tell I'm not. And I know they're right
In "Pride and Prejudice," is Elizabeth insensitive to other women and girls who are less lucky than she is?
Yes
No
Elizabeth Bennet definitely has her flaws, most of which she eventually realizes and makes an effort to overcome. But this is one flaw I've lately seen her accused of, which Austen doesn't overtly acknowledge. It's that Elizabeth is privileged in many ways – she's young, pretty, witty, charming, sociable, generally well-liked, her father's favorite, would have had the safety net of a devoted and wealthy uncle if she had been unmarried at her father's death, and ultimately finds an outstandingly good, loving, handsome, and rich husband – and that she fails to understand or empathize with the other female characters around her who lack the same privileges.
I've seen her accused of judging Charlotte's choice to marry Mr. Collins too harshly, because she doesn't appreciate that Charlotte is older, plainer, and more desperate for the security of marriage than herself. Then there's The Other Bennet Sister, where apparently Elizabeth has to learn to understand her sister Mary and realize how much harder Mary's life has been than her own – and even apart from The Other Bennet Sister, we see people claim that the fanon version of Mary's character (the genuinely smart, unappreciated bookworm) may be the truth of who she is, while the canon version of her (the comically pretentious fake intellectual) is just the ignorant and mean-spirited way Elizabeth percieves her. Likewise, defenders of Mrs. Bennet sometimes suggest that Elizabeth doesn't appreciate her mother's powerlessness and genuine suffering – although she does eventually admit that her father has treated her mother badly, she never gains more respect or sympathy for her as a person. And of course there's her disgust with Lydia for having nearly disgraced the family without the slightest remorse afterwards, for which some readers accuse her of failing to appreciate that Lydia is just a teenager who's had no guidance and was manipulated by a terrible older man.
So is this a genuine fault she has in the novel? Or is it something that modern readers project onto her, because they want to sympathize with Charlotte, Lydia, Mary, and/or Mrs. Bennet more than Elizabeth does or even than Austen did?

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Beauty and the Beast by Kelsey Hamersley
It doesn't help that really, Hunchback can't be observed in a vacuum. It's a movie made by a company that often featured love stories between impossibly attractive characters, and Hollywood has a long historical tendency of portraying disabled characters as too childish to fall in love. Add all that, and there's a kernel of truth.
That's unfortunately true. But in and of itself, the love triangle in the movie is more complex than that.