Disney's Descendants Makes Even Less Sense Thanks to The Rise of Red!
I have never been a fan of the Descendants franchise, which was originally created by Disney to take down Mattel's semi-successful Ever After High line of dolls, books, and webisodes. It succeeded in this endeavor thanks to Disney brand recognition despite being an inferior product. Coming out nearly a decade after the original, we have a fourth Descendants movie entitled The Rise of Red. This movie introduces a new generation of fairy tale offspring with countless changes to the classic stories, most of which are for the worse. Its only redeeming factor was a heartfelt tribute to Cameron Boyce, who played the son of Cruella de Vil in the original films. The Descendants franchise had very little working in its favor from the start, but it at least had a leg up over The School for Good and Evil by basing the backstories of the Disney characters on their films instead of superimposing an artificial school setting where they learned to be heroes and villains. This film retcons those efforts through the use of time travel and establishes that all the Disney characters went to Auradon Prep in their youth when it used to have a different name.
The Rise of Red follows a paper-thin plot in which
The plot inconsistencies make even less sense when it comes to the fan service casting of Brandy and Paolo Montalban as Cinderella and Prince Charming. These two talented actors portrayed these characters in the 1997 made-for-TV adaptation of Rodgers and Hammerstein's Cinderella. However, it was revealed through flashbacks that they were not playing the same versions of these characters. In The Rise of Red, Ella was a student at Merlin Academy who was an outcast due to her commoner background. If Merlin Academy used to be a school just for royals, it poses the question of why she was able to attend at all. It leads to some interesting revelations when Chloe learns the truth about her mother's past with the song Ella sang to her future daughter about being willing to get her hands dirty being one of the best in the film. However, changing her backstory so much makes little sense in terms of how she came to be Cinderella. To make things even more confusing, Brandy performs a duet with Paolo of "So This is Love" from the animated 1950 version of the film, which also contained a modified version of the events in their film. Disney is throwing everything from the past out the window with their multiverse trend.
Descendants incorporates a particular aesthetic of teenybopper pop stars who dance around in brightly colored wigs and punk leather fashion. Red and Chloe give off fire and ice vibes in this film with their head-to-toe red and blue looks. Although these color schemes provide a striking contrast to watch onscreen, their modern girl-boss personalities are not enough to justify such stark visual symbolism. Moving further along on the note of modern sensibilities, I groaned when Ella told her future daughter that her "princess is showing" in her sequence, a clear reference to the modern colloquialism "Your privilege is showing." Adding fuel to the fire is the horrific music that accompanies the films in this franchise. Heavily synthesized pop music with the autotune turned up to 11 is only the tip of the iceberg when it comes to this film's ear-wrenching soundtrack. There were many times when two characters would be having a conversation and suddenly begin rapping their dialogue for no apparent reason. Not only was it distracting from the plot, but it sounded awful in general.
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Also, I can't believe that the same movie doesn't give reasons why the Red Queen turned evil. The book Heartless by Marisa Meyer makes an entire plot of the teenage Red Queen precisely to show the reason for her change.
And now according to your review, did Cinderella do anything questionable when she was young to get to where she is? That totally undermines her character, Disney now wants to teach girls that it's okay to do whatever it takes to win? How is that a good message?
It doesn't have much relation to the post but I just found this cute short on YouTube!
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=31DdmH9tDt8
I think the animator is the same one from another short called "Spring" which, although beautiful, ends in a sad way.