Sotiris wrote:
JeanGreyForever wrote:
Once more, this is a fairy tale world.
But it's not a traditional fairy tale world. It's a modern, revisionist take on the fairy tale so a character with an evil-sounding name not being evil makes sense and falls in line with the filmmakers' approach and intent whether we like that or not.
JeanGreyForever wrote:
And while Maleficent is a popular character, have you heard of anyone in today's day and age who has named their daughter, or son, Maleficent?
That's because it's a made-up name created specifically for the villain in a Disney film. People are familiar with it because of its popularity. But they have no problem naming their children Darcy (=the dark one) or Lola (=sorrowful) or Persephone (=bringing death) etc. because unlike the name Maleficent people are unaware of their initial meanings.
JeanGreyForever wrote:
Mary especially shouldn't have a negative association considering who the most famous Mary is in all the world.
One of the meanings of Mary in Hebrew is bitter. Rebecca means trap, Emily means rival, Claudia means lame. There's lots of names whose original meanings were something negative that people don't know about (or don't care because the association is no longer culturally relevant).
JeanGreyForever wrote:
Cruella is another obvious one and I think people would be as up in arms about a Cruella film where we find out that a woman literally named after being cruel and the devil is in fact a good woman who only ever wanted to help puppies and was framed by the money-grabbing Roger and Anita. Yet, they went that route with Maleficent and it clearly left audiences divided.
I get that people may not like turning a popular villain into the hero but that wasn't the argument here. The argument was that a character that has a name with an "evil" or otherwise negative meaning can't be a good person which I find preposterous.
You're right. As someone who didn't care for Maleficent, I was ignoring this part and looking more at the original Sleeping Beauty world created by Walt Disney.
As you pointed out, names like Darcy, Lola, Mary, Rebecca, Emily, Claudia and Persephone (does anyone really name their child Persephone though?) don't have the stigma that a name like Maleficent has. These names are now part of our cultural consciousness and have grown past what their original meanings may have been. However, Maleficent is way too similar to a word that is still well known today which is "malevolent." You can't look at Maleficent and not think of that other word which has a negative connotation. This is something those other names do not have. Cruella is the other example because you can't have Cruella without the word "cruel." A name like Maleficent wouldn't work except as you pointed out, in a modern day fairy tale revisionist film, which seemingly was always meant to invert the "villainous" characters like Maleficent and Diablo/Diaval (another example of an evil name) to become good while good characters like the King and the Fairies would become the characters with malicious intent. Personally, I don't buy it, but I never liked the approach to the movie anyway. At least Wicked does have Elphaba turn evil (the book moreso than the musical) unlike what Maleficent does here.
But you're right that this becomes more of a discussion of the film than the character's name. Personally however, I would judge someone I met in real life named Maleficent, Diablo, Cruella, Lucifer, Gingema, Voldemort, etc. If they have a name like that, then something is seriously off.