(body image, dysfunctional family, race)
Yeah, everybody loves Shrek. I always thought that Shrek had a problem, but whatever he had, donkey managed to solve it, for he said "that's what friends do. THEY FORGIVE EACHOTHER!" His "race" (being a fat and horrifing ogre), was a major issue throughout the movie. And we felt pitty for him because he was so lonely. Actually, he liked it. He used the same old excuse that everybody hates him without knowing him. He lacks self esteem and trust. Even when donkey arrived... Shrek tried to scare him away. So, where's the "nobody gets me" idea here? Nevermind on that...
When Fiona comes in his life, we focus more on her. Why? Because she is a minority too, a fat and ugly princess who was locked away in a tower by her father, only to be "protected" from the world. "Protected" meaning "not seen", a normal princess shouldn't look like that. Worse things can happen, Shrek's father wanted to eat him...
But it's interesting that both Shrek and Fiona always wanted to get away from their looks and be "normal", and in the end, when they had THAT chance, she says "you are the ogre I fell in love with!" So, of course, it doesn't matter the looks, but the quality of the man. A "be you" kind of thing.
In the second movie, we find out that her family doesn't like Shrek at all because he is an ogre, a brute, while their daughter only "looks" like one, but doesn't act like one (even though she burps at the table). Her father keeps criticizing Shrek, while he knows better that he used to be a frog. The prejudice against different types of creatures is very clear here. He wants prince charming for her daughter because "that's how things suppose to be." After he realizes that he's done a mistake, he makes it right, but it's too late.
From body image, isolation, difference, race, dysfunctional families to friendship, trust, caring and true love it's only one tiny step...
Last edited by achim_diana on 05 Feb 2013 22:26, edited 1 time in total.
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