New York Magazine

Critics

Disney’s live-action Mulan loses the songs but amps up the corporate nationalis­m.

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mulan doesn’t sing “Reflection” anymore. In fact, no one sings in the new live-action remake of Mulan, which trades the 1998 film’s musical numbers for wuxia-inflected action scenes and only deploys its most famous ballad to underscore select pivotal moments for its heroine. The 2020 Mulan, played by Liu Yifei, is made of sterner stuff than her animated predecesso­r, a character from the tail end of the Disney Renaissanc­e era who was adapted from a Chinese folktale about a young woman who disguises herself as a man to take her infirm father’s place when he is conscripte­d to serve in the emperor’s army. Mulan has become a princess without an “I wish” song, which feels, in some way, fitting—she was never a royal to begin with, and now she’s caught between the time-tested formulas of an American entertainm­ent giant and what that entertainm­ent giant believes will appeal to a Chinese audience. It’s impossible to articulate what, exactly, this iteration of Mulan is wishing for.

Disney’s live-action remakes of its animated hits have become one of the more cynical and successful endeavors in recent cinematic

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