Leyendo, analizando y criticando "De la narrativa oral a la literatura para niños" de Catalejo. Muy europeo pero muy interesante y potencialmente muy útil, el primero de varios en mi lista. #books #disneyanalysis #fairytales
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Leyendo, analizando y criticando "De la narrativa oral a la literatura para niños" de Catalejo. Muy europeo pero muy interesante y potencialmente muy útil, el primero de varios en mi lista. #books #disneyanalysis #fairytales
Zootopia 2 EXPOSED: Burning Man Symbolism & Sympathy For The Devil Twist
Disney’s Zootopia 2 just dropped, and this sequel is not subtle at all.
In this video, I break down the serpent-sympathy narrative, the elite cover-ups, the Genesis 3 inversion, and the blatant Gnostic symbolism Disney smuggles into a kids’ film. From Gary the Snake and the “real founder of Zootopia,” to the elite Lynxley family covering up murder for a century, the entire movie flips the biblical worldview upside down. The serpent isn’t the deceiver — he’s the victim. The founders aren’t heroes — they’re the villains. Judy and Nick literally become Adam and Eve believing the snake… and the film calls it justice.
I dig into:
🐍 The serpent-as-savior arc
📜 Historical revisionism dressed up as social justice
🏛️ Elite family corruption & coverups
🔥 Burning Man symbolism in a kids’ movie
🐉 Gnostic inversion & the “serpent = hero” narrative
📖 How this parallels modern cultural deconstruction of Western civilization
🙏 Why this matters from a biblical worldview Disney even includes a reptile named Jesus — a basilisk — helping the heroes.
It’s open mockery, and the symbolism couldn’t be more intentional. If you want to understand how Disney, Hollywood, and modern entertainment use occult symbolism, propaganda, and myth inversion to shape culture, this breakdown will show you exactly how the messaging works and why it targets children.
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Do you prefer the musicals?
Disney music and Disney songs are such a big part of the magic of these films that I sometimes wonder if opting out of making a film a musical harms it. Of course, I love some of the music-less films, like Lilo and Stitch and Bolt, but then I adore the musical ones like The Hunchback of Notre Dame and Princess and the Frog. Do you prefer one type over the other? Do you think the song-less Disney movies would lose quality if songs were added?
When Phoebus was locked in that cage, what do you think went through his mind as he witnessed Esmeralda being burned at the stake for “witchcraft”?
With the movie being based so much in religion and faith, I actually do think that he was probably desperately hoping or praying for some sort of savior!
What do you think?
Hi, I am writing an analysis for my English class on how Mulan was the first genuine story of feminism produced Walt Disney pictures and I wanted to cite your post "Things people don’t appreciate enough about Disney Villain Shan Yu". However I would need your real name and the date it was published in order to do so. If you could give me that information, I would appreciate it so much.
I am so sorry, I was on an unofficial hiatus for such a long time. I hope you were still able to use the post. And thank you for considering it worthy of class!
Hi! Im a huge Disney nerd, and I saw your post here about "The Swing" in both "Tangled" and "Frozen". I was just wondering if you had noticed/had any thoughts on the swing scene in the new Cinderella movie, because when I saw that I freaked out and immediately thought of Fraggonard's much referenced painting from the other two movies. I also started to think about the reference in conjunction to the way the palace in the movie resembles Versailles. Just wanted to get someone else's thoughts!
I didn’t notice it in the Cinderella live-action film, but that definitely makes it seem like it is being done purposefully. I wonder if it has something to do with the animators having art history training or general art appreciation, or if they have purposefully picked out this painting because it represents something that aligns with Rapunzel, Anna, and Cinderella. I wonder if the swinging and joy is a symbol of playfulness and hope amongst the animators, since those are the characteristics that the three heroines share.
I can understand what motivated Quasimodo to befriend Esmeralda because she was the FIRST person to show kindness and compassion to him (unlike Frollo and the townspeople), but what motivated Esmeralda to befriend Quasimodo?
Looking at Esmeralda as a person, I think that she befriended Quasimodo because she could relate to his suffering and wanted to bring him either safety or a sense of companionship that either she wanted for herself or that she wanted for her people. It seems to be in Esmeralda's nature (or due to her environmental circumstances) to help or at least provide empathy to others.
Looking at Esmeralda as a written character, I think she is used as a symbol of acceptance as a virtue being taught to viewers. Esmeralda is lusted after by Frollo and Phoebus for her beauty and rebellion, but Quasimodo makes note of her kindness and I think that one of the points of her character is to relay the message that the kind and accepting person is the role model.
DisneyAnalysis Watches Saludos Amigos: Post #1
I do like this movie, if only because of its cultural and historical aspects, but I do get bogged down by thoughts of just how outdated (and sometimes innappropriate or am I reading into things?) it is. Also, imagine if Disney Animation Studios made another major informative film like this?