Not too many people will care to hear so much about one subject of one film, but what the hey, I want to.
I wanted to touch on the beauty issue in this film. In many fairy tales, especially the first three by Walt Disney, beauty is a part of the tale. It has also unfortunately lead to people wondering if the girls are loved and succeed because of their beauty. In Snow White, the issue of beauty is at the forefront, being the reason the heroine is in peril, and the question is asked who is the most beautiful of all.
Well, Snow White is actually not very attractive. She's cute, and lovely, but she definately doesn't look like the fairest one of all! In some places, she does look beautiful, but in other places, she can look almost ugly to me! Of course, even Cinderella, who's prettier, sometimes bothered me, and it could be the way the Disney artists would sometimes drew noses. They actually drew them in a realistic way, but also kind of weird way. They would often be round with slanting nostrels. But anyway...
We know Snow White was made to older standards of beauty, and maybe the reason she doesn't seem so hot is because she doesn't match ideas of beauty today, but it was clear that they were aiming for a very natural, what The Encyclopedia of Disney Characters called "girl next store" beauty than "out and out beauty", and I think it meant Walt Disney was aiming for a relatively average looking girl, even if still attractive. If you need some evidence, look at the lovelier or sexier designs considered for her that you've seen in DVD's or books or online. The Goddess of Spring was more attractive than Snow White. And then, Cinderella, made after her, was more attractive, and then Aurora was even more attractive (Marc Davis even said they designed Aurora prettier than Cinderella)!
Now, it is possible that the reason Snow White is less attractive is because she's younger. She is 14 or 15, while Cinderella is 18 and Aurora is 16 (and gifted with beauty from a magical fairy!) Thus, Cinderella and Aurora are also sexier, while Snow White...barely even has a chest, though she is curvy. And that is another part of it. Back in the older days, even the days that these fairy tales began, girls were preferred to have full figures. It could have been part of the idea that the healthier and upper class were able to obtain more food and be well fed. But actually, a fuller body (not overweight) also looks healthier, as well as indicates better for bearing children. It is Cinderella's time which had the fashionable French making corsets for tight waists (and in the film you see Cinderella's waist get skinner when she transforms into the ballgown!).
So this girl who's attractive, but not very much so, being the fairest one of all, can send the message that beauty is in the eye of the beholder and anyone can be the fairest. Snow White, being a child herself, will look like most children, actually. We all looked very cute and similar in facial features when we were young children. And though Snow White is 14, she looks especially child-like, which matches her inisde as well, her mind and her heart. Of course all the Disney heroines have pretty simple, child-like faces. Hey, we think children are cute, and good and innocent, and Disney has always been connected to children and the child in all of us. I just realized even Snow White's brown eyes are the more common color most people have, though blue eyes and blonde hair are common in children (we lose the colors as we age), and are associated with innocence, good, and angels, which is why so many heroines have those features to look good and innocent, in addition to the primitive tendency for us to like the colors because they look young like children and we find them more beautiful, perhaps because they are so bright. And that only goes for most people, everyone has different likes and beauty is in the eye of the beholder.
Now, I have wondered for a while if Disney truly did make Snow White the fairest one of all not because of her looks but because of her inner beauty. She is not the most attractive Disney heroine, but she is the kindest, sweetest, most good and innocent one. It is very, very clear from the start that Snow White is extremely good and kind, not just beautiful.
And so, when the Prince falls for her, he's falling in love with a girl who even we, the audience, have started falling for. We know he's loving someone good, and someone good for him. The Prince is kind, too, singing a song for her, and he is also gentle as Snow White, to have a dove rest on his finger like hers.
The idea is that these two are meant for each other, and merely by hearing her voice and seeing her does the Prince know she is the one destined for him, and he loves her right away, knowing all she is (that he needs to know to have deep love). It is an ideal used for fairy tales.
For those who don't understand such a thing and need the Prince to see more of Snow White's inside, perhaps it would've been nice if the Prince saw Snow White being kind to a dove (like the Hunter saw her being kind to a bird), as well as talking to it about what she likes and wants. Then, to go further, she could be kind to the Prince himself and talk to him a bit, perhaps by giving him water from the well (this was used in one of the filmed versions of Rogers and Hammerstein's Cinderella!). Then why would she run away? Oh, perhaps if he started to compliment her and make her feel embarassed.
But the fairy tale of loving someone deeply and instantly when you first hear and see them...well, it's magical.
Now, what about Snow White compared to the other girls in the story? Could people accuse Snow White of nabbing the prince because she's more beautiful than other girls (like people could accuse Cinderella of nabbing the Prince by being more beautiful than her ugly stepsisters, even though there were plenty of other lovely young ladies at the ball, too...)? No, because in this tale we have another beautiful woman, who was once fairest of them all, but inside she is evil. And when she becomes old and ugly, it is an impossible vulture-like ugly no person could ever look naturally. Aw, fairy tales.
In fact, in addition to a character that is beautiful on the outside but ugly on the inside, Snow White is very, very kind to a woman who is ugly and scary on the outside! Some people seem to think Beauty and the Beast is so deep for the idea that your true beauty and who you are is on the inside, but Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs showed such deepness way before! Even including a beautiful heroine who looks past looks (and she actually showed fear at the witch's appearence in moments, like Belle did with the Beast!) Of course I accept Beauty and the Beast went deeper with the subject, and could be deeper in other ways. Oh, just remembered Belle even had brown eyes like Snow White.
But even the poisoned apple represents the idea that looks do not match insides. The apple is beautiful and tempting, red like Snow White's lips and cheeks. But inside is something no one wants.
Well...thought I'd give the first and fairest of them all a good discussion like it deserves!
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