
Villains get all the best songs in Disney movies. Who’d bother with Beauty and the Beast without bad guy Gaston’s glorious hymn to strength and brilliance? What would be the point of The Little Mermaid without the sea witch Ursula pummelling her way through “Poor Unfortunate Souls”? “Go ahead! Make your choice!” she growls at tragic, bobble-headed, lovesick Ariel — who cannot help but choose the thing that moves the story on. You know you’re supposed to be the good girl, but wouldn’t you rather be the bad one? It’s villains who make stuff happen. Villains have charisma.
Now, they don’t just get individual songs; they get whole films to themselves. Cruella, out today, follows 2014’s Maleficent in offering a live-action retelling of a classic story from the villain’s point of view: the wicked fairy godmother we first met in Sleeping Beauty isn’t wilfully bad, she’s driven to it by a faithless human love. In Cruella, Emma Stone stars as the puppy-rustling avatar of evil from One Hundred and One Dalmatians, who turns out to have a backstory that makes skinning dogs for coats — well, not exactly sympathetic, but definitely understandable.
After all, what would you do if your mother was knocked to her death from a clifftop by a pack of trained attack Dalmatians, at the behest of a vicious fashion designer (played by Emma Thompson)? Even if “scheme to kidnap every Dalmatian in England and turn them into stylish outerwear” isn’t your first thought, you’ve got to admit you’d consider it. “It’s her mum, innit, you’ve gotta cut her some slack,” as one of Cruella’s henchmen ruefully comments. To paraphrase Jessica Rabbit: the cartoon Cruella wasn’t bad, she was just drawn that way.
The boring business-y reason for the rise of the “dark princess” story is that, given a set of intellectual properties as valuable as Disney’s, capitalism compels you to find new ways to use them: the animation, then the live action version, then the alternate perspective version, with extensive merchandising for each instalment. But that doesn’t explain their appeal, and it doesn’t explain why arguably the first of Disney’s antagonist-as-hero films was a completely new and standalone cartoon.
In the original conception of Frozen (based loosely on Hans Christan Andersen’s story “The Snow Queen”), Elsa was a straight-up baddie, unleashing snowy doom over the kingdom of Arendelle. Songwriters Kristen Anderson-Lopez and Robert Lopez changed that. They saw Elsa as a girl frightened by her own powers and terrified of what she might become, rather than a character revelling in evil and spite; “Let It Go” is the moment she embraces who she is, and it’s so glorious that the film was reworked around it.
And the audience loved it. “Let It Go” started as a villain’s song, but after Frozen’s release in 2013, it was adopted as the soundtrack for becoming the hero of your own life — “an LGBT anthem… and a feminist call for freedom,” according to an article from the time by Dorian Lynskey. Elsa was the first baddie you could legitimately have on your lunchbox. A female character who acted out, and who you weren’t supposed to hate in the end.
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