At one point in Disney's new fantastic movie musical Moana, the title character, a strong-willed, 16-year-old princess seeking the help of a demigod to save her Polynesian island and its people from starvation, is belittled when she balks at the idea of even being called a princess. "You wear a dress and you have a cute animal sidekick. I'm sorry, you're a princess," says Maui, the very demigod who Moana sought out for salvation, yet who greets her with patronizing comments and male chauvinism.
It's the line that will launch a thousand thinkpieces because that's just what we do every time Disney releases another one of its dreaded/beloved princess movies. From Snow White to Tangled, Disney has offered the world repeated tales of impossibly pretty women (look at those hips!) being defined by men, twisting feminists into knots in the process. It just so happens that many of these movies are stone cold classics which put forth various innovations in animation, leaving some to rail against the ugly message behind Beauty and the Beast (i.e., "staying with an abusive boyfriend is okay because you will change him") and others to rhapsodize about the utter beauty of the film, an early triumph of computer-augmented hand-drawn animation. Yet the debate rages on as to whether or not these movies (and now TV shows, based upon The Disney Channels' recent programming) are good for kids, giving generation after generation of parents pause as they watch their children inevitably sucked into the Disney princess machine.
Disney has chipped away at the many counter-arguments and lingering unease over the princesses through incremental progress. Over the decades, the initially passive princesses have given way to ones who are a little more proactive, and the lily-white worlds they occupied have diversified, extending the representation flag to colonial era Native Americans ( Pocahontas), the ancient Middle East ( Aladdin), Southern and Northern Dynasty China ( Mulan) and the modern day African Americans of New Orleans' iconic French Quarter ( Princess and the Frog). But to some the "progress" in these movies looked more like cultural appropriation, and while the princesses have indeed become more proactive they're still stuck inside familiar narratives with obligatory love interests. Even Frozen, so frequently and rightfully praised for its focus on the love between sisters Anna and Elsa, has a couple of male love interests around (one of whom turns out to be the villain) as well as a spare animal sidekick or two.
So, while Disney has certainly been evolving its princesses it has not been doing so with the speed and deftness required to completely please cultural critics, even as the less discerning masses continue to prop up the whole enterprise with their continued patronage.
Surely the computer animation neophytes got something wrong, and surely the 8 credited writers (Jed Bush as the sole screenwriter, 7 credited for the story) as well as 3 song writers (Lin-Manuel Miranda, Opetaia Foa'i, and Mark Mancina) offended the natives by Disney-ifying their legends. Surely Moana is somehow an imperfect messenger for little girls to latch onto. At the very least, surely there are a couple of obvious filler songs that stop this from being a masterpiece.
Actually, no. Moana is, honestly, about as perfect a Disney princess movie as we have ever seen. The animation is absolutely breathtaking, transplanting the stunning photorealism of The Good Dinosaur into a completely different environment (sandy beaches and open ocean water instead of twisty mountains and open pastures) as well as into a story more deserving of the visuals and hard work of the artists behind the visuals. Newcomer Auli'I Cravalho impressively holds her own as Moana opposite Dwayne Johnson, and the story is about as respectful to indigenous legends as any Disney movie could be. There is one song you could probably cut without losing much to the story, but you'd be missing out on Jermaine Clements singing Lin Manuel-Miranda's lyrics, a far too enticing combination to pass up. The rest of the songs, from the toe-tapping sounds of Maui's "You're Welcome" to the rousing anthem "We Know the Way," are instant classics of the genre.
And make no mistake about it - this is in many ways a classical Disney princess musical, featuring the standard "Under the Sea"-esque ode to staying where you are as well as the aspirational "I want to leave here and explore the world" song for the princess and jaunty tunes for the sidekicks and villain(s). Borrowing a page from the entire Disney handbook, not just the princess movies, a close family member even has to die before the hero can go on their journey. However, there's also no love interest to speak of, a crucial point of departure which makes a world of difference. As Ron Clements told Collider:
I think there's an aspect of Moana that separates her from the other Disney heroines, certainly the ones that we've done, but also all of them, in that there is no romance in the story. That was always the intention, once the story of this 16-year-old girl emerged from our research. She is the hero of the story, in an action hero mode. She goes on a journey and quest, and her mission is to save her people, while she faces obstacle after obstacle. She has qualities of relentlessness and great empathy, and she becomes the person that she's meant to be. All of those things make her a little different, I think.
Moana is so effectively built up as a character through the course of the story that when she yields the fight to Maui, telling him to go save the world - oh, btw, their quest culminates in a battle with a fire demon - it feels wrong. It's actually jarring to see Moana suddenly taking a backseat in her own story, the little girl relying on the male god to save her, momentarily turning her into a glorified cheerleader. Give it a couple of minutes, though, and Moana will be back in charge of the story, plunging into danger to save the world herself, realizing you can't simply wait around for the guy to do it for you. While this transition takes but a mere couple of minutes in Moana it's been literally decades in the making for the Disney princess movie. That's not to say some of the more recent Disney movies, including the live-action re-affirmation parody Enchanted, haven't presented princesses who were ultimately the heroes of their own story, but none have quite realized it the way Moana does.
THE BOTTOM LINEGorgeous to look out, enchanting to listen to, hilarious to laugh along with and positively inspiring to watch, Moana just might be the best Disney princess movie ever made, or at least the perfect Disney princess movie for 2016.
ROTTENTOMATOES CONSENSUS