Tuesday, May 1, 2012

DAC 50: Tangled

Tangled - 8.7/10

I've seen this before, of course. I saw it in theaters when it first came out (I was really excited about it), and I've seen it a few times since. I am quite fond of it for several reasons.

If Tiana was the most admirable of the Disney princesses, then Rapunzel is the most badass. I mean seriously, she saves the day more than anyone else in this film: swinging on her hair like a rope, getting an entire bad guy bar to burst into song, stopping a rampaging horse on a mission...it's awesome. And really, everyone in this film is badass in their own way. The male lead fights off a whole band of palace guards with a frying pan, and then proceeds to sword fight the horse with it (which is hilarious). And the horse - my god, the horse. He is perhaps the most badass of them all. It was a pretty badass movie for a fairy tale, that's all I'm sayin'.

And what an interesting take. Besides the whole stolen at birth, locked in a tower, long hair thing, most of this story was pretty much original on Disney's part. I like that; it sets it apart from their other classic fairy tale movies which were, let's face it, kind of similar. The computer animation was on a whole new level as well and while part of me will always prefer the hand-drawn style, I gotta admit it was some of the most impressive I've ever seen in Western animation. The hair alone was simply spectacular.

Despite my gushing, there were a few aspects of the film that were in the "good, not great" territory and thus caused it to fall just a *bit* short of other modern fairy tale pictures like Beauty and the Beast and The Princess and the Frog. The songs were good and I liked them all, but nothing spectacular like "Almost There" or "Be Our Guest". Certainly nowhere near "Under the Sea". Also, while Mandy Moore has a great singing voice, I'm not sure Zach Levi can quite measure up to her. Again, he wasn't bad by any means, but when paired with a former pop star the contrast in their ability is kind of noticeable. Finally, there weren't any anachronisms or anything, but there were one or two instances of modern-style speech. But at this point I'm really just nit-picking.

One more thing I'd like to touch on: the villain. She is very similar to Lady Tremaine in that her villainy mostly involves taking complete control over another person's life, but unlike the former she chooses to do it with prolonged emotional manipulation. She warns Rapunzel about the selfishness and cruelty of the world, while we the viewers know (and Rapunzel eventually learns) that she herself exemplifies these traits far more than anyone else in the film. What's more, while it is made quite clear that what she cares about most is Rapunzel's magic hair, it is left ambiguous if any of the affection she shows towards Rapunzel is genuine or all just an act. I really like that - especially because if it is real, that makes her actions so much more heinous since she is essentially putting herself before someone she loves rather than just manipulating a naive girl for her own benefit. Kind of like if Long John Silver in Treasure Planet had gone the other way.

In short then, the story was great, the characters were great, the animation was great, and everything else was pretty darn good. Disney magic, plain and simple.



P.S. After watching all 50, I watched this, which was awesome.


3 comments:

  1. I'd add that the real voice in this is Donna Murphy (the villain), who is a Broadway vet. And boy does it show. Every note clear and true. She is almost as far above Mandy as Mandy is above Zach (who I love as Chuck).

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