Beauty and the Beast (2017)
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Burning Question: What's wrong with Belle's gown?
Burning Question: What's wrong with Belle's gown?
Ключевые слова: Дисней, live-action, Красавица и Чудовище, 2017, yellow dress, Эмма Уотсон
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I remember visiting this website once...
It was called Burning Question: What's wrong with Belle's gown?
Here's some stuff I remembered seeing:
Burning Question: What\'s wrong with Belle\'s gown?
Since the first promotional pictures of Disney\'s new Live-Action remake of Beauty and the Beast hit the internet, there has been a lot of discussion around Belle\'s iconic ball gown. And, even months after its release in cinemas, there still continues to be a lot of buzz around it. Why? Mainly, because a lot of people feel that it is just doesn\'t look that good.
The thing is, Belle\'s animated yellow ball gown is, at this point, an iconic staple of animated cinema. Everybody knows it and everybody loves it. And, as a result, everybody can see the new one and say "this is not the costume I know". Therefore, everyone can compare it down to the smallest detail and see that it just doesn\'t quite look right.
Today, our goal will be to try and dissect the design in order to answer the burning question everyone has been asking themselves: what\'s so wrong with the "new" dress? Or, to put it bluntly, why is it so incredibly underwhelming?
This might not seem such an important topic, but such a miscalculation in design deserves to be examined. Because, the truth is, that people are still talking about it. Twitter still is, months after the movie\'s release, filled with people trying to wrap their heads around it.
And once you\'ve read most of these complaints, you realize that most people know they don\'t like it, but they can\'t pinpoint why. Most people blame it on size ("it\'s not big enough"), a lack of ornamentation or on being too simple. And, whilst these are the most obvious "symptoms", the problem is much more complicated. So let\'s try to unravel this thing.
Beauty and the Beast is a classic of cinema and animation. It was the first animated movie to be nominated for Best Picture at the Academy Awards. It garnered a lot of critical and financial success, firmly establishing once more the Disney Princess brand that The little mermaid had revived barely three years earlier, and, to this day, is one of Disney\'s highest grossing properties. And, on top of that, millions of children grew up with this movie. So this is an instance where nostalgia, quality and success intertwine to create what could be called an "adaptation nightmare scenario".
What is that, you say? It is when the risk of messing up in the adaptation process becomes equal or exponentially bigger to the guarantee of financial success or critical praise that is guaranteed by brand recognition and the nostalgia factor towards the original property.
For instance, prior to 2007, the nostalgia towards the Transformers property guaranteed high financial success for any company that would attempt a remake. Because the fact that people were way more nostalgic about the toys than about the original show lowered the risk of messing up almost to non-existent levels.
Teenage Ninja Turtles, being mainly focussed on the show and the 90\'s movies, could not override the risk of messing up the remake. Still, they took the risk and lost the gamble.
And, Beauty and the Beast, faced a similar challenge. People weren\'t nostalgic about the toys or the merchandise. The nostalgia centered around the movie itself: the story, the characters, the look, the music... And the fact that all those elements were genuinely good. This meant that people would inevitably compare whatever remake was made to its predecessor, which, in turn, meant that any change in the material became high risk.
How did Disney overcame that? By basically doing the same darn movie. Scene by scene. Honestly, 2017\'s Beauty and the Beast is not a new movie. It\'s the same movie with more live-action, and way less charm and singing talent. But the gamble worked for them. The movie was a box-office success and people flocked to see it.
But, despite that, a lot of people did not like it. From the story, to the songs... it felt like a pale shadow of a much better movie. And, no matter how close they stuck to the source material (precisely because they stuck so close to it) people immediately noticed any change made, no matter how small. And, the change that caught everyone\'s eye was Belle\'s Ball Gown.
The first and most obvious reason behind the disappointment with Belle\'s Ball Gown is found within the audience\'s expectations of what they understand as a "Disney Princess Dress". Because, for better or worse, Disney Princesses are part of a very well defined brand. A highly problematic brand, but certainly well defined (here\'s our very detailed article on the topic).
And, to put it simply, Belle\'s dress doesn\'t manage to follow the visual pattern of that very distinguishable brand. As so many people have pointed out: "it\'s not big enough" or "it\'s not magic enough", etc.
Also, it lacks that "wow" factor that Sandy Powell\'s design for the
Cinderella remake captured so well. According to the established brand, any Disney Princess Dress should be larger than life. Disney Princess Dresses should match the imagination of young girls. These shouldn\'t be your regular nice dress, they should manage to be every audience\'s member dream dress. And belle\'s dress simply falls short of those expectations.
If Cinderella\'s new dress is the dress you\'d like to wear at your wedding, Belle\'s new dress is the dress you\'d force your bridesmaids to wear so they would not outshine you.
In the end, it\'s just that simple, the expectations were very clear and very high, and the dress didn\'t manage to fulfill them.
But, even if you look at the dress and the movie outside the branding trappings of the Disney Princess Line, as an isolated creation, there are other, more complex, problems with the design that make it come off as flat and unimpressive.
This might seem like a no brainer, but 2D animation can avoid being 100% realistic when depicting "reality". And a lot of times, it actually benefits from that deviation from a realistic depiction.
A lot of elements need to be simplified in animation. And, one of the most noticeable elements that need that simplification is clothing. When you animate a character wearing jeans, you do not insert realistic jean texture in your animation. You just paint the pants blue. It\'s our brain that fills in the gap.
Because of that, in 2D animation, yellow is often a visual shorthand to represent gold, the same way that gray is a visual shorthand to represent metal. That, in part, is why so many people scratched their heads when they saw Belle\'s Live Action Ball Gown was going to be simply yellow. Because, for years, your brain had filled the gap and interpreted the animated version as some kind of magic golden dress.
Look at the reflexions in the animated dress: this is not yellow, it\'s some sort of golden/magic material. Which makes sense, considering that she was dressed by a magic wardrobe.
But, even if you thought the original dress was yellow, there is another element that doesn\'t translate well from animation to live action. Spot the difference? Belle\'s animated dress consists of varying shades of "yellow" so that it doesn\'t feel as monochromatic. Instead, Belle\'s live action dress is 100% yellow. Every single piece of the dress is made in the exact same shade of yellow. What this does is to flatten the image. To make it look two dimensional. Each layer of fabric pile on top of the other to create a yellow mass that, no matter how it moves, ends up being just yellow, which means that the dress loses the viewer\'s interest pretty quickly. It barely takes one single glance to fully see it.
Compare it, instead, to the Cinderella new dress. Every layer of fabric in that dress is dyed a different shade of color: purple, green, blue, white... The final result is a dress which is overall blue, but it has different shades in it. Not only making it look more three dimensional, but also meaning that its way more engaging. Because every time I look at it, I have something different to look at.
True that, in real life, we wear monochromatic outfits. But we\'re neither in a movie, nor living in a magic castle, and, most importantly, we do not need to captivate the audience\'s imagination.
The third element that falls flat in the translation from 2D to Live Action is the texture. 2D animation, generally, is texture-less. As mentioned earlier, our brains fill the gap. Because of this, the most important task a designer faces when translating to Live Action is to create textures for the costumes. This process, actually is very well done with Belle\'s blue dress.
By using different fabrics and different hues of blue, the designer manages to create a costume that our brain registers as "real".
Instead, the effect of exclusively using yellow silk organza for the Ball Gown, creates the feeling that dress is flat or "not-real", because it doesn\'t have any recognizable textures. To be fair, it\'s not like silk doesn\'t have any texture, but it\'s lighted and shot in a way that looks like it doesn\'t have any texture (I also have my suspicions that it was digitally retouched).
Also, there is a staggering low amount of detailing on the dress. The only decor is the tiny gold threat pattern on the skirt hem. And, whilst it\'s a nice touch, it feels like too little, too late, as gold on yellow barely creates anything but a tiny shimmer when she moves, and, by the time we\'ve noticed, we\'re already bored with the dress.
In the end, all these elements hinder the design from really shining, and, when mixed with all the other failures it faces... it sinks it.
Design wise, simplicity is a really hard thing to make work. Most of the great costumes in movie history only look simple, but are actually intricate pieces of design with a lot of cool ideas that work with the character and the visuals.
The problem with Belle\'s dress is that it mistakes simplicity for lack of structure. The dress feels like it has too much weight. Like it\'s going to stick to your body instead of moving around. It feels limp because it lacks structure.
These types of dresses (big, theatrical ball gowns), base themselves, design-wise, around highly artificial shapes. That means that they need a structure underneath to shape them. From 17th and 18th century panniers to 19th century bustles. There is a need to create a specific shape and silhouette that can only be fulfilled by using understructures.
And the thing is, that this design heavily centers around a silhouette that needs a support structure beneath. Once again, I will refer you to the Cinderella Costume. It looks that good because she\'s wearing a corset and a cage to achieve the specific shape, even though that use of a corset led to a big mediatic controversy.
It was highly publicized, on the months leading up to the release of the movie, that Emma Watson had been categorically about refusing to wear a corset or, as she put it, "she definitely, adamantly would not be wearing a corset".
The idea was to modernize Belle, so that she would be even more of an emancipated woman. And while that is something I can get behind, they focussed their attention on achieving that through avoiding having her wear a corset, because, as the theory went, she was someone that would refuse to wear a garment that would make movement impossible.
Unfortunately, that notion of the corset might be more derived from watching too much
Pirates of the Caribbean and not from actual research. 18th century corsets served the same purpose as a bra does now a day. All it does is place your boobs where they should be in order to make the dress fit.
Oh, and it also served another essential purpose: to help the dress look like it was intended. Going back to the bra comparison; wearing one of these dresses without a corset is the equivalent of wearing a strapless dress without a Wonderbra. It just doesn\'t look that good.
And, whilst I do not doubt the well-meaning intentions that she might have had, she ends up harming the final result more than anything.
I actually think that, if she really wanted to really make Belle a feminist statement, she should have pressured the studio into risking deviating more heavily from the original script. The whole dance scene and its context should have been changed to match her idea of Belle. Instead, what they ended up with, was the same scene with the same whimsical tone, both of which the tone of the new dress constantly disrupts. In the end, you end up not enjoying the scene nor the dress. Changes needed to be made beyond refusing to wear a corset.
Also, I found an article at the awesome FrockFlicks site that got me thinking. So I\'ll just leave you with their very interesting thoughts on the topic.
My question is, “What’s really setting the unreasonable body standards, here? The corset, which artificially creates a slimming effect without punishing dieting and exercise? Or the other thing … The actress … Who has to keep a punishing dieting and exercise routine in order to land parts?” -- FrockFlicks on Top Five Ways Movies Screw Up Corsets --
And also.... isn\'t it sort of not right to imply that real emancipated and modern women (feminist) don\'t like big dresses...? It\'s hard enough to be a woman in this world, wouldn\'t we be better off if we stopped telling each other what is the right feminist thing to do?
I know this is a tricky subject, and I\'m 100% sure she did it with the best intention at heart, so I\'m not going to insist any more. Because, in the end, it still is only another misguided step in this mess of a dress.
In Costume Design, a design doesn\'t exist in a void that separates it from the rest of the movie, it exists as part of a whole. Because of that, it needs to rely on contrast to create the ensemble of costumes that will populate the movie. Most design ideas are transmitted through contrast with the designs of the rest of the characters rather than individual elements.
For instance, in HBO\'s Game of Thrones, we understand that Arya is different not because she\'s wearing pants, but because no other woman around her is. Or, in Crimson Peak, Edith\'s yellow dress works to signal her as unique because everyone around her is dressed in ominous dark clothes.
The list of examples goes on and on... But that\'s because the trick works. And thus, designers create ideas through their costumes by setting a default and implying the difference only through the absence of the established default.
It works with types of clothing, color.... and size. That\'s why, in the fairy tale prototypical narratives, the designers go to great length to ensure that the "magic princess dress" is the biggest you see in the movie.
Beauty and the Beast completely throws down the gutter. Not only are there bigger dresses than her Yellow Ball Gown, there are a ton of bigger and more spectacular dresses throughout the movie.
This makes it very hard for us to feel wowed by Belle\'s dress. Our brain has already set the bar for "spectacular dresses" and it expects that the "big dress" for the center set piece will actually surpass that bar. Anything that falls below it, immediately registers as a disappointment.
And yes, the creators said that the this was done on purpose, in order to show that she\'s not like everyone else. That she\'s different. But that has already been established repeatedly throughout the movie. And there are other, more creative, ways they could have shown that whilst keeping up with the rest of big dresses in the movie.
It\'s that which actually leads us to our final yet rather essential point.
The one original aspect of the Costume Design of this Live Action remake is the idea of making the costumes much more rooted in period than any previous animated Disney movie had done up to this point. The designs take heavy inspiration on 18th century fashion and tweak it to make it feel more fantasy-like. And, for most of the movie, it works.
But that has a rather monumental side effect, as it causes the more "modern" costumes (the one that stick closer to the original animation) to stick out like a sore thumb. And the dress that suffers the most from that is the Yellow Ball Gown.
It is so incredibly removed from any historical basis that it starts to feel like it doesn\'t even belong in the movie at all.
Originally, designer Jacqueline Durran tried to make the dress work with a more distinguishable 18th century silhouette, but the studio and director preferred to stick to their guns and make a "reinterpretation" of the original. They never gave any reason for that, but one must assume they were convinced that a more modern version would help sell more costumes at the Disney Store.
But, sticking closer to period, would not have only avoided the final design from looking like an overpriced Prom Dress, it would also have allowed that scene and Belle\'s character to feel more unique and original, instead of being an over-glorified copy of something else.
And this, to me, was the worst mistake in this whole mess. Because not only makes the dress objectively "uglier", but also harms the coherence of the whole movie\'s internal logic and robs Belle of her own unique feel and look.
It\'s the exact equivalence of accidentally shooting your toes off.
In short, everything. It\'s an array of poor design choices that come together to create the most baffling and underwhelming design I\'ve seen in a major Hollywood movie Blockbuster in a very long time.
At every turn, they opted for the worst possible option. From the choice of color, to texture, to ornamentation, to understructure and layering, to avoiding historical elements and sticking with the original... every single choice was the wrong choice. And it all amounts to a huge pile of tiny miss-concepts that create a big mess of a dress.
And it would be easy to blame it on the designer, but in these types of blockbusters, we all know that the designer does what the studio mandates. So, in my eyes, the fault lies solely with the Disney Company.
They ruined their most iconic image all because they were afraid that people wouldn\'t accept some originality in their profoundly unoriginal remake... But, thankfully, what this will do, will be to highlight the genius of the original. And that makes us happy.
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1991 2017 aesthetics Beauty and the Beast Belle Bill Condon Costume Design Disney Disney Princess Jacqueline Durran Princess Brand
Labels: 1991 2017 aesthetics Beauty and the Beast Belle Bill Condon Costume Design Disney Disney Princess Jacqueline Durran Princess Brand
Great article. It's like with the color or Cinderella's dress that the new dress seems to be looking the flat promotional images of the dresses for the colors so they are blue/yellow instead of silvery white/gold and yellow as they should.
It's also dissapointing that Emma seems to have not researched corsets (dispite apparently studying feminism, I guess her studies did not touch clothes or she did just again about the myths like so many do). I think she and the director might really be to be blamed here for trying to make a modern statement and not Disney Company you seem to be sure is to be blamed. The other Disney dresses have not been micromanaged to look marketable as far as I am aware. But who knows.
In these types of movie, the producers have to green light everything. So, if they have an actor that wants to go x direction with the costumes, they are the one with the final say. That's what we meant. So, in the end, they had the final responsability to say "NO, this is not going to work". And, my guess, is that they didn't because they though that Watson's star power would be enough to pull people to see the movie.
The whole anti-corset attitude is really sad, and I was so pleased you included that. As you mentioned, they really weren't that different from modern undergarments in terms of purpose, and authentic versions don't have to be uncomfortable. They can actually feel great, though muscles may tire from wearing it long, since nowadays we aren't used to having the sort of upright posture a corset demands. (And they absolutely have to be seasoned, so a person and their corset can get used to each other...something many people skip.)
Thank you!!! Absolutely, and what shocks me the most is that whilst there's a lot of people who are "anti-corset", they generally do not complain about stiletto heels being a tool of the patriarchy... and they are torture to wear.
I make 18thC based corseted wedding gowns & refuse to make them tight, just fitted, as they're worn all day. I've seen clients spend the whole day in them quite happily. High heels are far more challenging. I design them to have a supportive shelf for boobs & a held, supportive feeling around the torso & alot of clients actually like the fact that it encourages good posture & supports your back. Tight lacing is quite different.
Absolutely, people can't seem to differenciate between tight lacing and a regular corset. And they are quite different both in purpose and confort level.
I'm honestly kind of against modern undergarments, so I can totally understand being anti-corset lolol
You have a new fan!!! I can even begin to explain how genius this article is. You covered everything from the importance of catering to the nostalgic fans, the difference between the mediums and why Emma watson should've stayed in her lane with the development of the dress (sorry Emma. I love you). My boyfriend, who has no interest in costume design whatsoever, not only enjoyed the article but agreed and understood why I and so many others were upset with Belles iconic dress. Bless you you wonderful writer.
P. S. If you ever cover fashion week please make it a YouTube commentary or a series because I would live to hear your critiques on fashion as well as costume.
Thank you!!! You are making me blush :D I'm so glad you enjoyed the article, it was very thoroughly written and took quite a lot of time. About youtube... we have been thinking about making the jump to youtube, but work is keeping us too busy, and its hard enough to publish regularly on this site, let alone adding youtube to the mix. But if we ever manage to do it, we'll let everyone know!
There are still ways to do pretty well defining understructure without a true corset, though, and I think it could have been managed. The color and fabric choice are the bigger concern, and I wonder how much Disney branding was an issue here.
In the parks Belle wears this precise yellow, as well in all the products. So I suspect that part of the issue was from the upper level management wanting to keep the look consistent.
A great part of the issue was exactly there. They wanted to keep the look consistent when it came to marketing the movie and creating the merchandizing. But it hurt the final product more than anything....
As somebody whose researched some of the 'face characters' outfits, they may be the same shade of yellow...but they are different contrasting fabrics and textures giving more visual interest. Which is another wall banger with this gown...it's been done in 3D on real people for YEARS in the park characters and on the Broadway Show...not to mention all the various cosplay versions. There was no reason to get it THIS wrong.
Firstly.... really great article, very thorough & spot on in your analasis. I am a couture bridal designer & have several period based gold gowns in my collection, different to the animated Belle dress but 100% more 'Belle' than the live action dress.
A group of us did a styled wedding shoot with one of my loosley, 18thC based designs https://instagram.com/p/BPtbTpxA2QU/
before the film came out & I don't think it occured to any of us that in a live action film that dress wouldnt be gold & so magical it outshown that baroque ballroom. The real dress was such a sad little dress. Not even youthful in an adorable way. Tbh i wanted a bit more from Cinderella's too. I wanted a touch of CGI sparkle & butterflies that took off & landed & sprinkles of glitter in the air as she moved. It was 95% there for me but actually is was the stepmother's costumes that stole the show for me. Zac Posens Costume Gala dress for Claire Danes demonstrated the next level of magic I needed to see from Cinderella.
I'm in love with the costumes in your instagram account. They are sooo pretty :DD !!!!!! And yes, they are absolutely 100% more Belle like
Thankyou x I march to the beat of my own drum & create what I imagine xxxx
Quite. If you google the video for Devon Mayson, you only love me when youre drunk, it demonstrates exactly what you can do in a non tight lacing corset :)
Hmmm... I feel like this article missed many major points and failed to consider the impracticality of including an undershaping of the dress while she was dancing with Dan Stevens who was on STILTS. Also, you still failed to really put a nail on what the problem with the dress was even though that was supposedly the main point of this jargon filled article and you never recognized what is probably the biggest problem of all which is the sleeves. If the dress had sleeves that were more open shouldered like the original and a better dumping of glitter, it'd probably be what the people were waiting for. Tis all.
We didn't consider the impracticality, because that's, in all honesty, the last thing considered in filmmaking. Yes, it would be impractical, but in the end, you need to
Also, we are sorry you feel we didn't succeed in putting a nail on the problem. But we still abide by our analysis. And I would like to adress the solution you propose.
I do not understand why would you consider that the biggest problem are the sleeves. Particularly because the original dress did not have sleeves, it had gloves, and most of Disney's princesses do not wear sleeves (except Aurora). It's actually quite out of brand. I do prefer sleeves, on a personal level, but I do not believe that would fixed the overall problem.
Also, the "big dumping of glitter" might have succeed in fulfilling the expectations of some Disney fans, but the dress would still feel dull, limp and way too simple. Let's say that, in our opinion, the failings of the design go beyond letting down the fans. If it was a good design that somehow managed to let down hardcore fans, we wouldn't be talking quite so much about it. The unfulfilled expectations generated by the fan base are only a problem that is put on top of everything else. The dress still feels like it doesn't belong in the rest of the movie.
Of course, you are entitled to your opinion, and we respect that. Not only, we appreciate the debate, So thank you for commenting and we hope we can see you again on a topic that we both agree on. Cheers!
It's gratifying that the 1991 toon was so well liked and such a hard act to follow. Honestly, we weren't trying to consciously craft a "masterpiece"...we only wanted to make a movie that people would enjoy and would stand with the great Disney classics of the past without being embarrassed. I have to cut the live action crew some slack...I think they did a damn fine job. if it were me doing the 2017 version, I might have made some different choices, but I think they did good.
Your Beauty & the Beast is my favourite animated Disney movie - you really did create a masterpiece Gary & it really has stood the test of time.
Something else to consider that hit me as I was trying to figure out why this dress seemed so 'wrong' and then I learned that Emma had a hand in designing it....
Look carefully, the yellow dress has many elements as the Yule Ball Dress Emma wore in Harry Potter. Seriously remove the cap sleeves and enlarge the skirt a bit and make it one shade of yellow...and you have a remarkably similar dress! The problem is they didn't take as many elements as they should have. The Yule gown was mostly pink...but had multiple shades of pink, and IIRC differing fabrics giving an incredible amount of contrast to the outfit.
Another problem is Emma's hair in the scene, while in the original movie it's a simple hair style but still very elegant and formal compared to her normal ponytail look. In live action? It looks like she spent a few minutes doing her hair...the goal was "She's not appearance obsessed! SEE!" but not realizing that if you are a woman being invited to a Formal Ball, by an ACTUAL Prince, even those who are NOT appearance obsessed will at least try to put on the best appearance they can muster.
Absolutely!! Hadn't even made de connection, but it's true!
Two things. One "The only decor is the tiny gold threat pattern on the skirt hem. " I think was meant to be thread? And second, it wasn't even embroidery at all! Close up shots of the dress on display showed the detailing to be cheap glitter fabric paint. That likely added to the overall underwhelming effect as there's a reason costume designers looking for real sparkle go for cut crystals like Swarovski instead of glitter paint.
Actual Gold Thread embroidery would have been a MASSIVE improvement. The uber expensive version of the doll wearing this dress has heavy textured lace on the bodice and ACTUAL EMBRODIERY on the three tiers of the overskirt. You could see this detailing on a 16 inch doll across the store! Why the flippin heck couldn't they have done it on the actual gown?!
Absolutely right, an actual gold thread would have been such an improvement. It would help it not to feel so cheap.
I think Emma's refusal to wear the corset probably comes from the previous live action rendition princess -- Cinderella. Lily James's waist was impossibly tiny and she's said in interviews that it was so tight she literally couldn't digest food properly while wearing it and had to be on a strictly liquid diet.
Would Emma's need to be as extreme? No, and she probably could have worn one and still kept her foot down about it not being insanely tight... But that is her predecessor's look in the same Disney family. I can see why she took the stance she did.
And You can even "Fake" a corseted look without wearing a corset! I've done it! With a Belle gown (the Christmas one...not the gold one) even! It's called flat lining the bodice with heavy twill and inserting just enough boning to give the bodice the smooth look of a corset.
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PROP (noun) (IN FILM/THEATRE)
An object used by the actors performing in a play or film:
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But why are we speaking about the prop when this is a Costume Design focused blog? It is true that the prop can be something as far removed from costume as a chair or a plate. But it also can be something that easily and naturally intersects with the Costume Design: a piece of jewelry, a shield or a handbag.
It's in those cases when a great prop design can bring a lot of narrative meaning in a similar fashion as Costume Design itself. And it's those cases that we are going to be looking at in here. We are going to dedicate this series to spread the virtues of the prop and to analyze through specific cases how a good prop can complement the meaning behind the story and even come to stan…
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Every girl, at some point in life, has wanted to be a princess. It has become undeniable that the concept of the "princess" is, for better or worst, inseparable from girlhood. We live in a "princesses" obsessed era, and we have for a long time now. And a lot has been said about it, with loud people yelling over the internet about the positive and negative aspects of it. So it was about time for us to join the yelling contest, I guess. If we're going to talk about princesses, the logical place to go is to the Global Mogul Conglomerate that has led the trend and, in many ways, defined it: Disney. They have, undeniably, redefined the fairytale and have turned the term "princess" into a best selling Licensed Entertainment Character Merchandise.
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Burning Question: What's wrong with Belle's gown?
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