Disney's Black Princess

j41181

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Nov 23, 2008
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This is about hand-drawn animations, not 3-D CGI stuffs.

This was bound to happen sooner than later. So where do I start...the trend first began with Pocahontas (1995), continued with Mulan (1998), and now this...Princess and the Frog (2009).

http://movies.yahoo.com/feature/buzz-log-disney-black-princess.html

Hercules (1997), Tarzan (1999), and Enchanted (2007) briefly stemmed the tide. But now... the moment "everyone's" been waiting for...a BLACK PRINCESS. Her love interest in the new Disney movie is a white guy (interesting!).
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Honestly, I've outgrown all this Disney stuff. But I did enjoy watching the following growing up:

Sleeping Beauty (1959)
Cinderella (1950)
Little Mermaid (1989)
Beauty & the Beast (1991)
Aladdin (1992)
Tarzan (1999)

Hercules (1998), and Enchanted (2007) were not quite enjoyable (to me). I'll not be surprised at all if this becomes a box-office smash, given how things are in the USA today. To date, a fully hand-drawn animation movie hasn't made a box-office splash since...Tarzan (1999).Edited by: j41181
 
There are actually some black women that possess femininity and present themselves as nothing less than ladies.

None of my CF brothers need to warn me about being "hoodwinked" because I DON'T date black women anyways. In competitive dancing (ballroom), it's not uncommon to see a black lady (fit, slender and elegant) dancing with a White man. Some black women try to be ladies and some don't. This is true of mestizas, Asians and even White women.
 
I saw the advertisements for this movie. I am not sure that disney openly is portraying the prince as a "white guy". I think if they wanted to portray a white guy as the prince he would have been lighter skinned and would not have had black hair. I think they gave him darker skin and black hair purposely, so the viewer would see the prince as either a white guy or black guy depending on their own interpetation.
 
j41181 said:
To date, a fully hand-drawn animation movie hasn't made a box-office splash since...Tarzan (1999).

Uhh, did you forget The Simpsons Movie (2007)??? It grossed over $500 million. I'd say that's a splash, lol.
 
Electric Slide said:
j41181 said:
To date, a fully hand-drawn animation movie hasn't made a box-office splash since...Tarzan (1999).

Uhh, did you forget The Simpsons Movie (2007)??? It grossed over $500 million. I'd say that's a splash, lol.
Thank you for correcting me, ES! I really need to stop posting while sleepy!
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Let's mention Lilo and Stitch (2002) also. What I really should mean is, fewer and fewer hand-drawn animation movies are making an impact at the box office in recent times, and seem to be on the decline. IMO, I find hand-drawn animations more enjoyable, and if by chance, I might want to check this one out. I actually watched Lilo and Stitch, and The Simpsons Movie, funny how that slipped off my head. I'm only 28, and I seem to be getting senile!
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Edited by: j41181
 
I'm suprised they didn't trot out this propaganda a decade ago. Again we see Zionist infested Hollyweird pushing miscegnegation & lionizing blacks.
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I saw the trailer for this movie a couple of weeks ago.

From certain angles, the main love interest of the clearly black princess seems to be a mixed race male, or just a really tanned white guy.

The setting seems to be in New Orleans during the 1800s or some sh-- like that, and I don't see the reason for the whole "princess" and royal family angle (apparently, Disney is ignoring the little spat we had with Britain in 1776) or for the classical, Cinderella-esque 17th or 18th century wardrobe everyone in the movie wears.

Setting: America. Style: Pre-Napoleonic Europe.

A lame excuse for blacks to co-opt European culture so that their future single moms can worship a Disney princess who isn't white.

I guess we deserve it, though.

For the whole Evlis and Eminem stealing black music thing.

At least whites are good at acting black, if that makes any sense.

When it comes to blacks acting white, it only means the standards were lowered.
 
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