Disney Princesses Challenge, aka I Hate Disney Part 1: Jasmine

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How to cite: Wong M. Disney Princesses Challenge, aka I Hate Disney Part 1: Jasmine. Lab Muffin Beauty Science. March 16, 2013. Accessed March 28, 2024. https://labmuffin.com/disney-princesses-challenge-aka-i-hate-disney-part-1-jasmine/

I’ve never really been a fan of the Disney Princess franchise, not even as a kid. I loved the catchy songs, and the bold and cheerful animation, but the films never sat well with me, and as a child, I didn’t really have the analytical skills nor the vocabulary to explain why. So when a few girls from Aussie Nails decided to embark on a Disney Princesses Nail Art Challenge, I decided to join in and moan about my gripes with the undisputed king franchise of childhood entertainment. (There are nails at the end of this post, I promise!)

In all the animated Disney Princess films, there’s an overwhelming theme of light = good and dark = bad, which is a convenient motif when your target audience is under 8, but pretty depressing when you’re one of two Asian kids in your grade. Added to that, all these princesses have some sort of weird fetish with animals. They sing and woodland creatures stop eating each other and run at them, they get dressed by birds.

Birds divebomb me, and wild furry animals STINK. I have terribly hay fever, and I am mosquito all-you-can-eat. Nature and I just don’t get along. And according to Disney, that makes me… not a person. Even the bad guys are awesome with nature.

“Hey Michelle! DIE.”

These aren’t the root of my problems with Disney, they just add to the general unease I have with the whole shebang. The most irritating aspect for me are the bizarre storylines. Disney massages the usually traditional tales into what they perceive to be “good” and simple enough to understand for kids, but the lessons they teach – I can only interpret them as effed up, and it bewilders me how half of them make it through that many adult executives without raising a billion red flags.

Sadly, this week’s theme is Aladdin‘s Jasmine, and the storyline is actually not that bad, possibly because it’s a relatively recent one (1992). Aladdin came right when Disney suddenly realised that they could pillage cultures belonging to other skin colours for their films, huzzah! (Naturally, this came after they exhausted their animal canon. Because it’s harder for kids to empathise with other cultures than other species.)

Jasmine is a surprisingly well-developed character – less shallow than Aladdin, smart and sensible, if naive. She owns a tiger, which automatically makes her a pretty damn cool cat lady spinster.

The tiger even throws its panties at her. Day-um!

I don’t really have any objections to the storyline – unlike a lot of other Disney movies, it’s not Jasmine’s Quest to Land a Man and Go on a Honeymoon of Scrolling Credits as Scenery. They fall in love at first sight, yes, but teenagers. There’s a gentle message of being loved for being true to yourself, which is fine by me.

Happily ever after is apparently a lot like purgatory.

What’s less fine, is that the “good” characters are lighter-skinned, have Europeanised features (Aladdin is a tan Tom Cruise) and speak with inexplicable American accents, next to the background cast of bearded, sword bearing, funny-voiced, funny-eyed darkies. Apparently that’s to help young audiences work out who’s good and who’s bad. Kids, remember – accents are EVIL. Dark skin is evil. Ugly people – super evil.

The message didn’t translate so well in New Jersey.

I’ve also seen complaints about the barbaric depiction of the Middle East (chopping off a hand for stealing etc.), but I’m not too bothered about that – it was the Middle Ages, no one looked good then (except every part of China, according to my charmingly dotty racist-old-person grandmother).

Also, every woman in the film is a sexy belly dancer, all day err day. Especially Princess Jasmine – her tiny tiny belleh needs to breathe! Because it’s hot, you know. But not too hot for men to wear All The Things (if they can afford it).

I wear your exotic eyeliner of Evil!

After all that: here’s my manicure inspired by Jasmine. I love the green of her stripperiffic everyday Princess outfit (maybe they’re breakaway pants?), so I based it on that:

The accent nail is the beautiful Loki’s Lacquer Good News Everyone. The other nails are ulta3 Pacific Fever (an oldie but a goodie), with OPI Pirouette My Whistle on top.

Come back in the next few weeks for further installments of ranty-flavoured Michelle and Disney-inspired nails! Also check out the other ladies doing this challenge (with more nails, less moaning):


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20 thoughts on “Disney Princesses Challenge, aka I Hate Disney Part 1: Jasmine”

  1. The only Disney things I ever aligned myself with, was the Mickey/Minnie thing and Sleeping Beauty. I think I just like her name. Oh, and now with the whole Once Upon A Time franchise, I’m into Beauty and the Beast.

    ANYWAY. Gorgeous nail art. I wish I was talented… lol x

    Reply
    • I think I watched all the Disney movies when I was a kid, but never felt the urge to rewatch them – on the other hand, I rewatched Totoro about 70 times!

      It’s honestly just practice and patience 🙂

      Reply
  2. Similar to many people, I’m quite the Disney fan, but I loved reading your rant 😛 Also, love love loveeee your manicure! The blue polishes are stunning and I really need to pick up a bottle of Pacific Fever.

    Reply
    • Haha, I know I’m definitely in the minority with my Disney hate, but I’m glad I can be entertaining with it! Pacific Fever is definitely one of my favourite ulta3s – the glass fleck finish is lovely.

      Reply
  3. I always sympathised with Cinderella when I was young. I had two sisters and they could be REALLY UGLY when they wanted to be.

    I so wanted a Fairy Godmother!!

    I love Pirouette My Whistle, I wear it alot :o)

    Jac x0x

    matillysthisnthat.blogspot.com.au

    Reply
    • I wanted one too! But it probably wasn’t the ost realistic dream 🙁

      I’ve only got a mini of Pirouette My Whistle! I definitely need to invest in a bigger bottle…

      Reply
  4. I liked reading about your opinion on Disney things haha. I actually like a few Disney movies but I agree with how they depict anything “different” to be bad a bit too often. I never understood those girls who are obsessed and claim Disneyland to be the most amazing place in the world. I mean it’s fun the first few times or when they add new stuff…but not really. Lol. I really love the colors you used! I’ve been looking for a turquoise vibrant like that!

    Reply
    • The waiting time for the rides are ridiculous! I’m a bit biased too because I drank Californian water the time I went to Disneyland, and ended up vomiting all over Tomorrowland 😛

      Reply
  5. You make some excellent points about Disney, especially their attitude to any characters that aren’t “white as snow”. It’s probably not a huge shock that Walt himself was a big supporter of the Nazi party, and was so obsessed with homogeny that to this day no Disneyland employee is allowed to have a moustache, on his long ago orders.
    I still love Aladdin, and The Little Mermaid, and The Lion King, and I’m going to stop listing them before I out myself. I think there is a part of me that appreciates the moral simplicity of these films, and enjoys it specifically because I know the world isn’t like that. Sometimes I think I just need to imagine that everything could turn out okay, because it always does in Disney

    Reply
    • The Disney/Nazi link is a myth (apparently perpetuated significantly by Family Guy), but it would’ve explained a lot if it were true! Unfortunately I think it’s just well-meaning, subconsciously xenophobic executives. My major gripe is actually the moral messages some of the films convey – I have a special kind of hate for The Little Mermaid, but that will have to wait til Week 8…

      Reply

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