15 December 2024

The Good, The Bad, and The Confusing


Witch of the West from Wicked
The ‘Wicked’ Witch of the West

At first blush, the home life of Rebecca and Maddie, Hunter and Christina might sound make-believe. They live on an idyllic farm where they raise goats, chickens, and garden vegetables south of the big city of Indianapolis. Their father is a dual-degree family physician and their mother started life as a ballerina.

They’re real, I assure you, but they have a few rules. One of them is no television. Although mother and father have different reasons for forbidding TV, they reached the same agreement.

The family actually owns a television, a huge clunker, but it’s not hooked up to anything, not even stray signals that might beam far into the countryside. Instead, it’s use is restricted to videos deemed suitable by the parents. When I visited, I raided the town’s library and borrowed a number of classic comedies the kids hadn’t seen. They loved Marx Brothers and Buster Keaton, and liked It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World and Betty Boop. They didn’t care much for Laurel and Hardy– Stan and Ollie slapstick didn’t appeal to them.

Popcorn Capitalism

To a degree, their upbringing mirrored my experience, including no television. The only kids’ movie I recall as a child (not counting the devastating The Little Match Girl) was sponsored by Indianapolis merchants on a shopping Saturday. To give moms a break, parents could drop off their younglings at a theatre that provided popcorn, a drink, and Abbot & Costello on the silvery screen. Our visit happened only once. A voyage into the city was a 70 miles (112km) round trip, a little over an hour and a half of driving.

However, our nearby town hosted a free summer movie nights. They showed classic (and cheap) films on an outdoor screen attached to a wall of the Armory, Masonic Lodge, or other large building. Viewers would bring blankets and cushions, and snuggle as Chief Crazy Horse played on the screen. Like drive-ins of the era, the show often led with a cartoon followed by an adult drama.

Then a funny thing happened. The venue shifted to the school, where show operators hooked the large screen to the outer wall of the school gymnasium directly across a narrow street from my grandmother’s house. Had she chosen, granny could have enjoyed the movie from the comfort of her living room.

Instead, my mother had a brainstorm. She cooked popcorn and steeped iced tea. Within minutes of our arrival, movie-goers came sniffing and mom handed out cups of Kool-Ade, tea, and brown bags of popcorn. The fare disappeared within minutes. Next time, she iced a tub of Coke and Nehi soda, and again sold out. Throughout the summer, my family ran a de facto concession stand. Mom, bless her, figured out a way to make money from free movies.

Alice in Wonderland

Catchin’ Up with the Crowd

But, the time and distance of running a farm and a second job meant my parents couldn’t take off to visit a city for a movie night. Until I dated in high school, I had never seen a current kids’ film. I wasn’t unaware of current showings, but when Peter Pan, Alice in Wonderland, and Wizard of Oz cycled through movie houses, I read the stories but didn’t see the films.

Not until I was an adult. As previously mentioned, I consulted for Walt Disney World. I wasn’t an employee, a ‘cast member’ in Disney parlance, but they often extended privileges to me.

Follow me here: As you emerge from under the Magic Kingdom’s train station and face the park, to the immediate right is a theatre. Not the silent showing of Steamboat Willie under the marquee up the street, but a real theatre. On Fridays, Disney occasionally sponsored free family movie nights. For the first time, I saw Peter Pan, Alice in Wonderland, Fantasia, and other classic animated films.

Peter Pan

And I soaked them up. As a little kid, I loved Peter Pan. I read all versions– J.M. Barrie’s novel evolved over time from a short story of a wild boy who frequented Regent’s Park, to the novel we know and love. My Aunt Esther gave me a huge Peter Pan comic book, 25¢ instead of the usual dime. I spent hours reading and re-reading it. I would have gladly traded my brothers for one Tinkerbell and a sister like Wendy. Along the line, I fell in love with Indian Princess Tiger Lily.

But an odd thing happened when as an adult, I saw the films. I empathized with Captain Hook. He was intelligent, erudite, well-spoken, well-dressed, and very, very annoyed by a pestering brat who cost him his right hand and fed it to a crocodile. (Or left hand… it changed with stage showings and even between scenes.) Much as I admired Peter, I’d feel irritated too. I must not have been the only one to feel that way– Disney released Hook, which I saw in their Magic Kingdom theatre.

Good Witch Glinda and Dorothy

Wicked Thoughts

The same phenomenon happened with the Wicked Witches of the East and West in The Wizard of Oz. Why did sister witches hate each other so much? Was it simply because of a skin condition surprisingly similar to that which affected the Grinch, the Hulk, and perhaps Mr. Spock, all known for ill temper and lack of patience? Couldn’t one of the beautiful witch sisters lend green ones their extensive supply of Neutrogena or Aveeno?

When East Witch was unceremoniously crunched under Dorothy’s house, why couldn’t someone show sympathy to her Western sister? While thinking about it, did some witchery party give the house a little nudge to alter its landing?

Didn’t Witches North and South lie to Dorothy about how to get home?

Consider the following contrasts:

Good Witches, North and SouthWicked Witches, East and West
• are blest with great beauty• are afflicted with green skin
• celebrate death of fellow witch• squashed sister is mocked and derided
• lie to Dorothy knowing shoes can return her to Kansas• mother’s valuable shoes stolen by Glinda given to Dorothy
• set Dorothy on path to kill rivals• East Witch killed by Dorothy
• seize power after Wizard departs• West Witch killed by Dorothy

Who exactly is the bad guy? Could it be the so-called‘good witches’? Or even Dorothy? Sure, she slummed around with Straw Man, Metal Man, and the Frightened Feline, but toward what end?

Gregory Maguire may agree with me, the author who wrote Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West. I confess I haven’t read the novel, enjoyed the award-winning stage play, or seen the movie (Part 1), as I’d hoped this weekend. But hey, the showing isn’t over yet.

In what movies or stories did you find heroes to be less than honorable?

10 comments:

  1. I never interpreted it as her lying to Dorothy. Dorothy always has the ability to go home - when she learned what she was supposed to learn.

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    1. Hi Ryan. I might concede the witches didn't outright lie, but as you kind of hint, if they informed her she could return any time, we wouldn't have a story. And I wouldn't have anything to write about.

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  2. Actually, "To Kill a Mockingbird" - because while, yes, Mayella Ewell lied about being raped, Atticus tore her to shreds in every way possible on the stand (I know, he was only trying to save his client). But Mayella (who everyone called and treated as white trash) was beaten by her father and probably raped by him as well. She ends up in even worse shape than before, with a worse fate than before, because no "good" man will ever marry her, and perhaps no man at all - she'll be stuck with her father forever.

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    1. I hadn't explored that, Eve. My picture of Gregory Peck clouds my perception. With luck, Mayella might long outlive her old man.

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    2. I know. But the last time I saw it, and watched Mayella come unglued on the witness stand, I pulled out the book and reread the whole scene - and it's obvious (using Southernese innuendo) that her father was a violent sex abuser of her, and she was looking (yes, in the wrong way) for someone (yes, the wrong person) to be who would be loving with her. And she got caught by Daddy. But no one cared about her. She vanishes in the book and in the movie, back to hell.

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  3. Leigh, I am smiling! Yes, I've thought similar things. The one thing that has always bugged me about Disney is that they equate woman who are beautiful with goodness, and women who aren't so good-looking with evil, or at least with less virtue and fewer admirable qualities. Did you know that 55% of women in the US dye their hair blonde? I can't help but think there is a link. Your Witch comparison above is so on the mark. I have more to say on this in an upcoming post.
    (By the way, I was similar annoyed with Peter Pan, and never liked that story. I always thought he was annoyingly self-centred.)

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    Replies
    1. Melodie, the 1990s saw an intriguing turning point in Disney characterization. Little Mermaid was released in 1989 and garnered an unexpected 600% profit. Female good guy and female bad guy.

      The following year, Disney released Beauty and The Beast and reaped a staggering $1800% profit. Female good guy and callow, shallow antagonist. You don’t see Disney Princes for a reason. The company discovered little girls fancied princesses, not princes. Girls good, boys bad… especially for the holy bottom line. Frozen spelled it out– true love was sisterhood, not that shady boy-girl nonsense. As Michael Eisner put it, little girl feminist fantasies made for excellent margins.

      And Peter Pan… he was absolutely self-centered. Perhaps it’s a good thing he didn’t grow up– he might have become a sociopath.

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  4. Melodie, Peter Pan is a "Pure Young Man", and as such a danger to all who meet him. See my old post: https://www.sleuthsayers.org/search?q=pure+young+man

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