Edmonton Journal

MORAL OF THE STORY

Furor over Disney film the latest in a long history of ‘nutty’ attacks

- JAMIE PORTMAN

Was Bambi having it off with Flower the skunk?

And what’s with Pinocchio, with his desire to become a “real” boy? Were Disney animators actually sending out a coded message more than 70 years ago — giving us a closeted young gay yearning to come out?

And might Tinker Bell soon return to the screen — this time in a lesbian relationsh­ip with Snow White?

Or is it simply that the silly season is back upon us — especially when it comes to Hollywood and the U.S. right wing’s frenzied response to the revelation that Disney’s new live-action remake of Beauty and the Beast features a character who may actually — gasp — be gay.

If you Google the movie’s name, screen after screen will pop up with outraged protests from such diverse bodies as One Million Moms and the neo-Nazi website Storm Trooper. It’s all in response to director Bill Condon’s recent disclosure that this latest incarnatio­n of Beauty and the Beast features the Mouse House’s “first exclusivel­y gay moment.”

It’s provided by LeFou, fawning manservant to the swaggering Gaston.

This has been sufficient to rekindle the religious right’s paranoia about the secret liberal agenda it has long believed the film industry to be levelling at unsuspecti­ng children and their parents in the name of family entertainm­ent. And given the toxic conspiracy culture permeating the highest levels of the Trump administra­tion, should we really be surprised that it’s happening now?

Only days after Donald Trump’s newly appointed attorney general signed off on a curtailmen­t of LGBT rights, evangelist Franklin Graham was declaring war on Disney for seeking to “normalize” gay lives. Disney is “trying to push the LGBT agenda into the hearts and minds of your children,” he said.

Guardians of traditiona­l family values have long been vigilant, often to a nutty degree, when it comes to family entertainm­ent. We have seen Sesame Street’s Bert and Ernie under suspicion because they live together. Barney the dinosaur has been attacked as a gay tool of Satan. The late Jerry Falwell, an immensely influentia­l evangelist, claimed to have outed Tiny Winky of Teletubbie­s fame as gay.

But it’s Disney that has been most consistent­ly under attack. And the hostility has intensifie­d in more recent years, partly because its dominant position in family entertainm­ent automatica­lly makes it the primary target, partly because of its support of LGBT rights within its own organizati­on.

Three years ago, Disney’s animated hit Frozen came under fire because of the affection between snow queen Elsa and her feisty younger sister — gay incest, anyone? And did the character of Kristoff have a thing for his reindeer, Sven? A National Catholic Register critic seemed to think so, accusing Frozen of gay themes and tolerating indecent relations between man and beast.

Meanwhile, an article in the Guardian newspaper has Guy Lodge, British film critic for Variety, mischievou­sly suggesting that Disney animation has “a long history of LGBT coding, intended and otherwise” and that some audience members have been assigning gay identities to Disney characters for decades.

“Speculatin­g in this manner can be superficia­l, stereo typedepend­ent fun ,” says Lodge, as he proceeds to cite Pinocchio’s yearnings and the friendship between Bambi and Flower, as well as reminding us of Timon and Pumbaa in The Lion King, the single status of Baloo the Bear in The Jungle Book and the now-acknowledg­ed fact that the animated Sea Witch in The Little Mermaid was based on real life drag queen Divine.

But should any of this really matter in a year when Moonlight, a movie with patently gay themes, was named best picture at the Oscars? Well, it apparently does to Fox News columnist Todd Starnes, who considers America in peril from an LGBT agenda.

“When it comes to the entertainm­ent industry, nothing is sacred in its quest to indoctrina­te American children,” he said on March 1.

“So don’t be surprised if the next Disney animated classic documents Tinker Bell’s torrid lesbian affair with Snow White while a gender-questionin­g Peter Pan crushes on Pinocchio, who just got out of a gender-fluid relationsh­ip with one of the seven dwarfs.”

(Disney is) trying to push the LGBT agenda into the hearts and minds of your children.

 ?? DISNEY ?? Was Pinocchio’s effort to become a real boy Disney’s way of showing a young man yearning to “come out?” Apparently some think so.
DISNEY Was Pinocchio’s effort to become a real boy Disney’s way of showing a young man yearning to “come out?” Apparently some think so.

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