Strollerderby

Please, Pixar, No Princesses

Posted by Amy Kuras

 So Pixar’s latest, “Up” seems to be a big hit, earning rave reviews and scoring big at the box office.

But it prompted Linda Holmes, blogger for NPR’s pop culture blog Monkey See, to write a heartfelt open letter to Pixar.

“This is not an angry letter. It is especially not an angry letter about Up, which I adored,” she begins. “I could have sat in the theater and watched it two more times in a row….
So I'm not complaining; I'm asking. I'm asking because I think so highly of you.

Please make a movie about a girl who is not a princess.”

She points out that Pixar is making some of the best movies around right now, and that while they have very strong female characters, none of them are in the fact the protagonist, the person whose story it is. I didn’t realize this until I read her lovely and sweet blog, but wow, she’s right.

Holmes calls on Pixar to remember those “little girls with Band-Aids on their knees” who don’t see themselves on screen all that much. She want girls to have a great movie like “Up” that features someone they can dress up had for Halloween.

I agree. I have one of those little girls with Band Aids on her knees (and pretty much everywhere else a kid can fall over) and while she’s newly in love with the Disney Princesses and everything pink, purple or sparkly, she’s also a fearless little adventurer.

Holmes ends her piece with: “I'm just saying, keep them in mind, those girls in Band-Aids, because they want to see themselves on screen doing death-defying stunts, too.”

I hope sometime soon, the phenomenally talented people at Pixar take her up on it. Not just for my girl, but for my son, too.


+ DIGG + STUMBLE

Comments

 

Neel said:

   I had a sister who died half a decade ago.  She raised three sons who seemed to think she was a princess.  But I remember her as a fearless young girl who could whip the town bully, or me if she felt inclined, or she might have saved the world if the world had asked for her help.

    In those days such girls were known as Tomboys, but I only think of her as someone who should have raised a daughter.  She would have been a true protaganist in your writer's real world.

June 2, 2009 2:43 PM
 

Shelley said:

Hee hee, ashersmom.  Maybe you wanna try that one again?

June 2, 2009 2:44 PM
 

Manjari said:

Neel, that's such a nice way to remember and describe your sister!

June 2, 2009 3:56 PM
 

elohveeee12 said:

that would be great. My daughter is not yet two, but she is also not very girly, she can be into princess things at times, and she doesnt mind dressing up (i dont think she knows the difference though). But her absolute favorite show is Handy Manny. Which I also happen to love (at least more than most little kid shows), so its a win win. but at the same time Handy Manny is very boy oriented. the show is great, they dont imply that only boys can use tools. but the merchandise is all boy. And that upsets me. what is wrong with a girl wanting to use tools? she has quite a few of the toys, because at this point she can play with those and its ok. I just worry about when she gets older and all the other girls are playing with fairy princess things, and she is wearing Manny's tool belt (which she has).

I also hope they take her letter to heart and make a movie that my daughter will be able to love... otherwise she we will have alot of correcting to do when she dresses up as Manny for halloween.

June 2, 2009 4:08 PM
 

Alice said:

That is why we love the Miyazaki movies.  Everyone has a girl as the hero.  A tough girl who is resrouceful.  "Spritited Away", "My Neighborn Totoro" and "KiKi's Delivery Service" are three of my daughters' favorites.  

June 2, 2009 4:45 PM
 

BlackOrchid said:

Coraline was pretty spunky! A little dark but my 5 year old loved it.

She also LOVES Jessie from Toy Story 2 - hope she gets a nice big role in TS3!

June 2, 2009 4:59 PM
 

Amy PT said:

Yes, please.

For my three year old daughter and 7 month old son.  But also for me: the 8 year old Amy who is still catching grasshoppers, the 14 year old who is just discovering "girl power", the 21 year old doing academic study of gender representation inequality, and the 34 year old mom who watches these movies with her darlin's.

June 2, 2009 5:07 PM
 

Treespeed said:

What about Boo from Monsters Inc?

June 2, 2009 6:45 PM
 

Treespeed said:

Also, was Eve not kick butt enough for everyone in Wall E?

June 2, 2009 6:46 PM
 

YES said:

Yes, please!!! GREAT point! It'd be cool to see little boys become fans of such a heroine like my daughter idolizes Lightning McQueen, too!

June 2, 2009 7:00 PM
 

ashersmom said:

Wow! I'm away all day and came back to see what had been written.  Dirty, dirty me!

What I meant to write was I want my son to watch movies with girls with bandaids on their knees...could the moderator please remove my typo?

June 2, 2009 7:17 PM
 

Dana said:

I agree about the need for a greater range of female role models. A small step in the right direction is Darby of the Disney Channel's My Friends Tigger and Pooh, about which more here:

www.mombian.com/.../the-tomboyest-character-on-childrens-television

June 2, 2009 9:46 PM
 

Amy Kuras said:

Hee hee, ashersmom, done! I have to say I did a double take when I saw your comment, since it's about 100 times creepier than we'd expect from you! Glad to know it's just a typo.

June 2, 2009 10:12 PM
 

MomofBeans said:

This post and Neel's comment brought tears to my eyes. My daughter is only (almost) two, but she is fearless, funny, and fabulous. I would love to see a movie about those little girls who get "dirt in their skirts," as my grandpa used to put it. Now that I think about it, I'm usually not this weepy...oh crap, am I pregnant?? LOL!

June 3, 2009 8:28 AM
 

Twintown said:

@MomofBeans, I'm right there with you!  I actually cried at Neel's post.  What a tribute:)

And I love "dirt in their skirts".  That's my new way to describe my dd who is six, fearless, funny and fabulous.  She's at an age now where girls really start to break off into their groups and I see her vacillate between sparkly stuff and mud on a daily basis.  We need to do everything we can to make that not such a hard, cut-and-dried decision for them.  Sniffle, sniffle...oh crap, am I pregnant???

June 3, 2009 10:01 AM
 

Em said:

I've heard rumors that Pixar is making a movie called "The Bear and the Bow" features a female main character. I think she might be a princess, but she also looks like she gets to kick her fair share of butt in the movie.

June 3, 2009 1:58 PM
 

Mary said:

I actually wrote a letter to Pete Docter about this very topic after Wall-E.  He responded personally (!) and told me that they're working on a film called "The Bear and the Bow," directed by Brenda Chapman.  This is their first female protagonist and their first female director.  I'm looking forward to it.

June 3, 2009 6:35 PM
 

Dad said:

Keep in mind, Pixar movies are in the pipeline for 4 years, so if there isn't already a movie like this in progress, you'll be waiting...

June 4, 2009 4:03 PM
 

Cindy said:

I'm going to second the recommendation of a previous poster for the Miyazaki movies:

My Neighbor Totoro

Spirited Away

Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind

Princess Mononoke

Kiki's Delivery Service

All of these feature strong, beautiful, female protagonists, and the stories are fanciful but also moral about being loyal to friends, protecting the environment, loving family, etc. The animation is lovely, and the movies do not come across (like Disney's often do) as long commercials for toys and lunchboxes and stuff.

June 7, 2009 7:28 AM

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