shadowkat: (Default)
[personal profile] shadowkat
The animated Disney film Moana is a well-executed and inspiring tale about our relationship with the earth and sea, and how we...or rather men, can damage it by hunting for praise from others.


In the story, a young Herculean hero or Demi-God, steals the heart of the land and all creation to win the praise of the humans who had rejected him. Except when he does so...he turns the land into an angry lava goddess, burning and destroying all in her wake. A monster. With no heart, she is empty, craving and furious. And throws him and his magical hook into the sea. He's separated from the hook and stranded on an island for thousands of years.

One day, a young girl is called by the ocean. Her grandmother who bears the tattoo of the sting-ray, tells her the tale of Maori, the Demigod who stold Tahani's heart, the heart of the land, and how she must journey beyond the reef to find Maori and have him return Tahani's heart. The Ocean gives the young girl the heart -- which is a bright green stone.

Her father however forbids her from leaving the island, because it is dangerous beyond the reefs. He should know he lost someone there, and fears it. Fears losing her. But when he grandmother dies, she goes...

That's the set up.

The metaphors are beautiful, and the songs jazzy, many written by Lin-Manuel Miranda. I'm not sure any of the songs are memorable, but some fit...and there's one that I think metaphorically relates well to how we or men see the earth and why what is happening is well happening...the song is "You're Welcome" and in it the Demi-God, Herculean hero, Maori takes credit for all the things that have been given to us by the land, the ocean, the sun, and the source of us all.

What's interesting about this lovely film -- is how it subverts the entire genre, the hero here is not Maori, the Demi-God, if anything he is the villain of the piece, but you don't quite realize it until the very end. And he's not a deliberate villain, he's not evil, he was just careless and hungry for love...he made a mistake. He wanted to be a hero for all the wrong reasons -- for the applause, for validation, to obtain acceptance. But much like the heroes of other myths before him, he never does...no matter what he does, it's not enough.

The true hero is Moana, who has no need to be a hero. She merely wants to give the land back its heart and by not wishing to be hero and not seeing things in black and white or good and evil, she's able to discover that Maori's villain, the monster he feared, was in truth the land struggling to regain her heart.

It's a story about seeing past fear and ego...this ever-present need to feel important, to fit in, to be great, to be worthy, and as a result, not being who you are. She tells Maori that his magical hook isn't who he is, he is who he is. And she tells the lava monster, this is not who you are...without your heart...it is in your heart that you know.


I think I enjoyed this more than FROZEN, in part, because it subverts so many of the tropes... and unlike FROZEN it wasn't based on a fairy tale that I adored, as it had previously been told. I think this story goes further in throwing those old tropes out the window, while honoring new ones. And,
it is a tale told through characters, the characters and story are at the center. We don't spend a lot of time being "told", so much as being "shown". In other words, it's not preachy.

Date: 2017-05-07 05:23 am (UTC)
dlgood: (Default)
From: [personal profile] dlgood
My five year old nephew loved it.

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