The Gospel According to Disney by Mark I Pinsky

Sheahen, Laura

WHAT WOULD NICKEY DO? Laura Sheahen Bhink back. In the Disney movie The Lion King, when a baboon anoints the cub Simba and lifts him to the heavens, did you think "infant baptism"? Probably not....

...Disney movies, says VeggieTales's Phil Vischer, are "virtuous but self-absorbed...
...Pinsky acknowledges that Disney, like most media companies, has tried to steer clear of overt religious themes to avoid controversy...
...In The Gospel According to the Simpsons, Pinsky-a religion writer for the Orlando Sentinel-investigated the beliefs of Springfielders like Homer, Marge, and Reverend Lovejoy...
...But Mark I. Pinsky, reconciler extraordinaire of pop culture and religion, did...
...When he concentrates on religion proper, however, Pinsky often can't do much more than make vague, strained generalizations about archetypes or spiritual symbols...
...Pinsky cleverly weaves historical events and pop psychology trends into his analyses...
...But even lacking that, he has a point...
...Laura Sheahen is senior religion editor for Beliefnet.com...
...The book's playful asides are more successful because they don't make sweeping claims: In Peter Pan, Pinsky writes, the Darlings "operate on what I like to call the 'Southern Baptist model'...the wife pretends to submit to her husband's authority while effectively subverting it...
...As the closing credits roll, there is no stern tomato summing up the moral and telling kids to be nice on the playground...
...Pinsky's books are a treat for religion-and-pop-culture geeks (perhaps we should call ourselves "connoisseurs"), but even if you're a more secular fan of the Mouse, you'll probably find something in this latest work to make you think...
...It might be nice if Pinsky backed up this anecdotal claim with data about, say, approval ratings for gun control...
...The book goes on to tackle Greek mythology in Hercules, animism in Poc-ahontas, and shamanism in Brother Bear...
...But, as Pinsky demonstrates, these films-unintentionally or otherwise- have affected people's morals and behavior, if not their specific religious beliefs...
...One need only remember Jiminy Cricket singing "If you keep on believing, the dream that you wish will come true" to buy this...
...Ariel 'converts...
...He chronicles the uproar that certain lyrics and scenes caused among Muslim rights groups, especially those dealing with Sharia- Islamic law, which, in some interpretations, can be very harsh to thieves...
...When the movie's heroes are threatened with having their hands cut off for stealing food, Pinsky rightly wonders "whether this is the one example of Muslim jurisprudence that should be highlighted for young viewers in the West...
...the movies may invoke the human spirit, but they simply aren't that religious...
...Pinsky's experience reporting on Islam in America serves him well as he dissects Aladdin, which stars Disney's most overtly Muslim heroes...
...Phrases like "Disney stands in opposition to Darwin" may be a stretch, but when Pinsky avoids far-fetched interpretations of these classic films and stays grounded, there's a hint of magic in The Gospel According to Disney...
...Pinsky gives a nod to the movie's straight-to-video sequel, in which Ariel's daughter discovers her hidden mermaid heritage and pursues it, with some success...
...And he can hardly avoid discussing the Peter Pan Syndrome-the 1980s label applied to "men who never grew up"-or its newer counterpart, the Cinderella Syndrome, in which otherwise proactive women wait passively for Prince Charming to arrive...
...For example, Pinsky sees The Little Mermaid as a story of intermarriage, and in an inspired move, asks a rabbi to compare Jewish-Christian marriages with the film's mermaid-human one...
...But he points out that many Disney movies have a secular "belief" component (to succeed, the hero or heroine must believe in self and the power of love) that resembles religious faith...
...He notes that Jungle Book appeared at the height of the civil-rights movement, and sparked angry debate about possible racial stereotypes in the portrayals of the bear Baloo and the monkey monarch King Louie...
...He discusses the "deathlike sleep" and resurrections of Snow White and Princess Aurora...
...Its "faith, trust, and pixie dust" subtitle notwithstanding, the best chapters of The Gospel According to Disney focus not on religion but on sociology...
...That may be true to some extent...
...Since Prince Eric cannot 'convert' to mermaidism," says L.A...
...Consider this claim for Bantbi as catalyst in the antihunting movement: "From the 1960s on, it has been difficult to have a lengthy discussion about the Second Amendment without someone-often a woman of a certain age-bringing up Bambi...
...One may not agree with all Pinsky's conclusions, but the questions themselves are intriguing...
...Disney movies are, after all, meant to be escapist...
...rabbi David Wolpe...
...Will the book appeal to people who don't look for religion in every new fall TV lineup or cineplex offering...
...He makes much of cross symbolism in Sleeping Beauty...
...The problem, the creator of the Christian cartoon series VeggieTales tells Pinsky, is that the Disney faith is all too easy...
...Now he takes on the religious dimensions of America's favorite cartoon movies in The Gospel According to Disney...
...He makes similarly provocative cases for 101 Dalmatians as PR tool for PETA, Beauty and the Beast as feminist parable, and Robin Hood as "social gospel in action" (and lef s not forget scenes from the class struggle that is Lady and the Tramp...
...There are, though, certain chapters where the religious approach works...
...And while his take on The Lion King may not ring true to everyone, many of his interpretations-call him the Talmudic scholar of the Mouse House-are amusing and thought-provoking...
...He quotes a scholar who says that because of her shimmering blue-and-white raiment, the Blue Fairy in Pinocchio could refer to the Virgin Mary as she appeared at Fatima-not exactly convincing...
...No matter how hard Pinsky tries, he can't persuade us that hidden underneath Disney's dancing mice and magical pumpkins are faith-specific beliefs...
...they cater to viewers "who want to believe in something that doesn't require anything of them...
...In short chapters (about five pages per movie) Pinsky painstakingly analyzes every animated Disney film made since the 1937 Snow White, searching for spiritual themes...
...But it's "not always possible to split the difference," notes Pinsky, who intermarried...
...Pinsky also deals with the Disney company's history and status as cultural bellwether, chronicling the charges of anti-Semitism leveled against Walt Disney himself, and the Southern Baptist boycott of the Disney corporation for granting benefits to gay employees and sponsoring "Gay Days" at its theme parks...

Vol. 131 • November 2004 • No. 19


 
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