Friday, November 27, 2020

Disney+'s "Godmothered" Trailer Suggests There's More Than One Way to Live a Fairy Tale Life

The new "magical holiday comedy" movie from Disney+ seems to be trying very hard to be a modern take on the Disney idea of "a fairy tale life" or what happily ever after can be. It certainly feels like it's inspired by one of Disney's most self-aware films, Enchanted, but we're yet to be convinced that Godmothered can top it.

Here's the description:

This holiday season, be careful who you wish for. Watch the new trailer for Disney’s #Godmothered, a magical holiday comedy starring Isla Fisher and Jillian Bell, streaming on #DisneyPlus Dec. 4.

Set at Christmas time, “Godmothered” is a comedy about Eleanor, a young, inexperienced fairy godmother-in-training (Jillian Bell) who upon hearing that her chosen profession is facing extinction, decides to show the world that people still need fairy godmothers. Finding a mislaid letter from a 10-year-old girl in distress, Eleanor tracks her down and discovers that the girl, Mackenzie, is now a 40-year-old single mom (Isla Fisher) working at a news station in Boston. Having lost her husband several years earlier, Mackenzie has all but given up on the idea of “Happily Ever After,” but Eleanor is bound and determined to give Mackenzie a happiness makeover, whether she likes it or not.

And the trailer:

The premise has a lot of potential, but what the trailer suggests about the movie doesn't show it exploring that a whole lot of that. Trailers are now more difficult than ever to get a true feel for what they're advertising, especially from big companies who are very set on marketing to a demographic, That demographic here is the princess culture following. While the trailer seems to want to show itself to be subverting Disney tropes as much as Enchanted did (and still does, despite being thirteen years old) we're not seeing a whole lot of evidence of Godmothered being any more relevant or socially aware than Enchanted was. 

While Godmothered begins with a nice diversity of fairy godmothers, despite the glitter-and-fantasy-troped surroundings, as soon as the Godmother of the title, named Eleanor, leaves the fairy world (a magical world called "The Motherland"??) and enters the real one, we're smack in the middle of a very white, comfortably upper-middle-class, Hallmark-feeling set of situations and scenes, including the bumbling not-so-smart fairy godmother who needs a dose of self-awareness in order to be able to bring HAE to her charge.

We're hoping we're wrong about this. 

One little glimmer of hope is that the Director is Sharon Maguire of Bridget Jones' Diary, a film which could easily have fallen into all the typical rom-com traps and been a nice-but-very-average movie, but instead rose above that to have a lot to say at the time. Unfortunately, unless Maguire had a strong and unique vision for this movie from the outset, we don't quite see this doing the same, as it's been fast-tracked from September 2019 at first mention to being released next week on December 4th - that's incredibly fast for a feature-length project, especially one that is aiming to break the mold. Perhaps we've just gotten a substandard trailer though, and there actually is some hidden magic here. We've known talented writers to put together works of insightful and delightful genius very quickly, so perhaps one of those scripts made it through the Exec-machine intact and was supported by a visionary producer. We shall see.

Why do we care? 

The world could really use a feel-good, insightful Enchanted-like movie to add to the holiday viewing line-up and folks are clearly searching for solid doses of uplifting and hopeful viewing. To have a solid movie that also gives people cause to reflect and rethink things, in a positive way, would be the tonic so many need right now.

On a deeper level, an exploration of "fairy godmothers no longer being needed" and one in training aiming to prove the world still needs them (and magic) speaks directly to the disillusionment currently at an all-time high. We've overdosed on "real" stories in the efforts to separate fact from fiction and to consolidate fractured narratives into something that makes sense. Attraction to the bizarre has not only started to feel understandable, but we're seeing more that people giving into nonsense feels cathartic. It lets the steam out before we pop. The problem with this is that it's very temporary and is a coping strategy at best, not a way forward. When a response doesn't allow for resolution, hope, or a sense of peace, but instead reinforces chaos, chaos is king. When chaos reigns and takes over our stories it becomes harder and harder to have a strong vision for a better future and for creating a way to get there. Escapist fantasy is useful because we know - we give it permission - to remove us from reality to tell us a story to explore ideas and possibilities. Without the pressure of our upsetting reality dominating the story, we can get a clearer idea of concepts, of ideas, of ideals, and of possibilities not usually visible from our regular point of view, and it is not a threatening thing to consider. It's a fantasy and isn't asking to replace reality like alternative narratives do, only to reflect on it. Stories of wonder and fantasy free us to see possible choices - and that's empowering.

Let's all cross our fingers that the saccharine impression of the trailer (although it's clearly trying to avoid that very thing) isn't a true reflection of what the movie really is. 

Godmothered premieres on Disney+ on December 4, 2020.
________________________________
For those wanting more insight into what this film will be here are some excerpts from the Disney Live-Action Production Notes Media Kit (sections in bold are our emphasis)
WARNING: POSSIBLE SPOILERS AHEAD
Fantasy faces a hard reality in Disney’s "Godmothered" – a hilarious Christmas comedy that turns the traditional fairytale completely on its head. When an offbeat fairy godmother forces herself on a reluctant human protégé, they’ll both discover life isn’t as simple as “happily ever after. “ Eleanor is an apprentice fairy godmother, highly enthusiastic and eager to learn the tricks of the trade, but not quite there yet. All her life she has lived in The Motherland, the Gothic fantasy other-world where fairy godmothers come from and where they are raised and trained and have existed for a thousand years. There, she has been taught by her imperious headmistress Moira (Emmy winner Jane Curtin), who literally wrote the book on “godmothering,” all the very traditional fairy tale notions of what girls aspire to—going to balls in beautiful gowns, marrying Prince Charming and also things like turning pumpkins into carriages and mice into footmen. Mackenzie is a world-weary widow who lives in Boston with her daughters Jane (Jillian Shea Spaeder) and Mia (Willa Skye) and is exhausted from trying to juggle all the responsibilities of motherhood with a high pressure and mostly unrewarding job on the number four local news program... Eleanor’s and Mackenzie’s worlds collide one day when, due to a lack of demand for fairy godmothers, The Motherland is in great danger of shutting down, with everyone to be retrained as tooth fairies. Desperate to find something that will validate the need for fairy godmothers to continue to exist, Eleanor finds a letter from Mackenzie asking for help, unaware that she sent it decades ago. With the help of her roommate, Agnes (Oscar® nominee June Squibb), Eleanor is transported from The Motherland to 21st century Boston, in order to find Mackenzie and use what she has learned from Moira to bring happiness to her life... (Director) Maguire explains, ”There’s this conflict between Eleanor’s expectations and what she thinks being a fairy godmother is and what she thinks magic is like. But then when she’s confronted with the real world, all her expectations come crashing down in a very funny way.” The director continues, “There are all the tropes of the Disney legacy….magic, there’s wands, fairy godmothers and woodland creatures, but we also get to subvert that legacy for comedy. Eleanor is untrained in magic, so none of her spells go according to plan and Happily Ever After is delivered in a very different way than we’ve come to expect in previous Disney movies.” From her first encounter with the much-older-than-she-expected Mackenzie, it is evident that this assignment is not going to be easy for Eleanor. 
There’s poignancy and truth when Eleanor is forced to realize that all her old-school concepts about what will make Mackenzie happy are false, and presumptuous on her part. Maguire says, “When Eleanor finds out why Mackenzie doesn’t believe in ‘happily ever afters,’ she doesn’t know what to do with that and that’s great because it sends her back to zero in what she does with her magic and she has to learn what ‘happily ever after’ really is.” This is one of the film’s key messages: That in today’s world, unlike in traditional fairy tales, ‘happily ever after’ doesn’t mean marrying a prince and living in a castle. It’s completely subjective. Says Springer, “That notion of redefining what ‘happily ever’ after might mean in a way that’s more practical and real in our regular lives. That sometimes you have to take control of your own fate and become your own fairy godmother and find that happiness.” 

Thursday, November 26, 2020

Thanksgiving 2020: A Day of Remembrance

by Guinevere von Sneeden

This year's Thanksgiving in the US is not usual. This emotive illustration says it all: in memory of those who cannot be with us today - absent friends and family who are staying separate to keep their loved ones safe, and the too many we've lost this year that have left an empty chair at our tables.

May fond memories sustain us all over this season.

Forever in our hearts.

Wednesday, November 25, 2020

#FolktaleWeek2020 - Day 3 Picks: Courtship (+ some late entries from earlier prompts)

Promotional pic to re-post/share to spread awareness of #FolktaleWeek2020 by Julia C. Illustration
Today's prompt was COURTSHIP.
Click HERE to find out more about #FolktaleWeek2020 - happening all this week.
Day 1: BIRTH (click for our picks post)
Day 2: RITUAL (click for our picks post)
by Scott Keenan Illustration
“The jolt jostled the piece of poisoned apple loose from Snow White’s throat. Not long after, she opened her eyes, lifter the coffin lid, and sat up, alive again”
by 
@creativesojung
The Weaver Girl(Vega) fell in love with the Cowherd(Altair) & god,
her grandfather, permitted them to marry. But when the newlyweds spent all the time
together without doing any work, god separated them with the Milky Way
in between. On the lunar seventh of July, the only day of the year they were permitted
to meet, the two of them ran to the shore of the celestial river but there was no way to
cross over. The crows and magpies took pity of them as the couple weeped,
and formed a bridge over the Milky Way.
by Diana_Renjina
Eglė the Queen of Serpents - “A young maiden named Eglė discovers a grass snake in the sleeve of her blouse after bathing with her two sisters. Speaking in a human voice, the grass snake repeatedly agrees to go away only after Eglė pledges herself to him in exchange for him leaving her clothes. <...> Instead of seeing a serpent or a grass snake on the seashore, Eglė meets her bridegroom Žilvinas, who appears to be a handsome man - the Grass Snake Prince.”
by 

Day3 ☆Courtship☆
Courtship doesn't require words, just a look
by @dianamayoillo
“The True Bride” for #Courtship - Following my journey for #folktaleweek2020 by revisiting old #Grimms tales I used to enjoy, I remembered this story about a man who ‘forgot’ the woman he said he loved! So many of these tales sit very uncomfortably in the present, like this one where the woman waited and waited for her ‘true love’, whilst he planned to marry another. But, by disguising herself in increasingly beautiful gowns of moons, suns and stars, the other bride is discarded and the prince recognises his #TrueBride. Shocking! However, when I was little, all that counted were the magical dresses she wore...
by @kathwaxman
Day Three Prompt: Courtship, Petruccio and Kate, Taming of the Shrew - Familiarize yourself with the Renaissance courtship traditions in Shakespeare’s The Taming of the Shrew via this artistic rendering of Francis Bacon, the protagonist’s foil in The Mostly True Manuscripts of Wee Will Shaxbard. Considered within its historical context, this work does extol some common stereotypes. However, Shrew also provides an opportunity to challenge common folklore regarding “appropriate” behavior within the confines of marriage. Controversial yet educational.
by @marjolaneroller
Bluebeard (Marjolaine Roller is retelling the tale of Bluebeard and has mixed up the prompts to better serve the story sequence. Courtship was the first prompt of the series.)
by @ruthburrowsillustration
I am looking to Lincolnshire Folklore to inspire my work this week and in the book Lincolnshire Folk Tales by Maureen James there appears a gruesome tale - “The Lass That Saw Her Own Grave Dug” - Bessie, invited out to walk by Mr. Fox has a strange dream the night before and says to herself, “I hadn’t that there dream for nowt. I’ll be in Galley-dales before he gets there, I reckon; then I shall get to know what he’s up to.” - She climbs into a tree and witnesses Mr. Fox digging a grave. Eventually, he tires of waiting for her to arrive, fills in the hole and leaves. Bessie runs home and tells her Father who captures Mr. Fox the next day when he comes a courting!
by Eleonora Asparuhova @elleasparuhova
There was once a man in love with a Samodiva... - Day 3 from #folktaleweek2020 ‘Courtship’ is based on the Bulgarian folktale about the beautiful mythical forest creature Samodiva...


by ayukotanaka
Day 3. Courtship - Knights and princes visited the castle to rescue the princess who keeps on sleeping inside the castle...

by shelleyaldrichminimuseum
THE STAR LOVERS - Once there was a young maiden on the edge of the Milky Way who wove lovely white clothes for the gods. She never stopped weaving because of the warning she heard, “Sorrow, age-long sorrow, shall come upon the Weaving Maiden when she leaves her loom” - At her father’s request she takes a break and falls in love with a Herd Boy. In their happiness, they forget their duties and anger the gods. Because of their carelessness, the gods create a delicate bridge of magpies for the Herd Boy to cross. Once the boy is on the far side of the bright river, the magpies fly away, thus splitting the lovers. - The maiden then returns to her loom in sorrow, weaving cloth in greys and color now that she has experienced love and loss. On the 7th day of the 7th moon, the magpies return, allowing the lovers a single day together. In Japan, Tanabata or the Star Festival, celebrates the lovers reunion on July 7th.

LATE ENTRIES FOR PREVIOUS PROMPTS WE HAD TO SHARE!

PROMPT 1: BIRTH

Artist unknown! (We found the pic then clicked to see the name of the artist but the post disappeared as the app reloaded! Instagram is not searchable via hashtags at present, Facebook doesn't show all results or in order and Twitter is used less for posting under this hashtag. Apologies to the artist whom we've spent multiple hours trying to track down without success. Any info on this artist would be greatly appreciated so we can correctly credit them.)
by Freyahartas
Tatterhood - Once upon a time there was a Queen who desperately wanted children of her own. She met an old hag who told her to plant a seed and eat the beautiful flower that grew from it, but she must not eat the weed at the base of the flower as this would bring her great misfortune. When the flower eventually bloomed the queen plucked it from the stem and ate it, the flower tasted so sweet that she couldn't help herself and ate the ugly weed that grew underneath. Later the queen gave birth to twin daughters, one as beautiful as the sun, the other an ugly little girl who clutched a wooden spoon and rode on the back of a goat! This child was named Tatterhood because she was always so ugly and ragged and wore a hood which hung about her ears in tatters.
by @victoria_fomina_art
"Birth"
by @apolin.art
by @dressenmcqueen
“BIRTH #folktaleweek2020 - From the Woman with Three Hundred and Sixty-Six Children. - A countess is cursed by a beggar woman when she refuses her any scrap of assistance then forcefully throws her from her garden - and scolds her for having two children when she, the countess, has none. The curse is for her to have as many children as days of the year. The woman intended only three babies, since she delivered these words on January 3rd. It came to be, though, a baby for each and every day of the year plus it was a leap year....here we see the progression of babies on every tray and bowl from the house on their way to be christened.

by Anne-Marie Farrell (@farrell_annemarie)
Maleficent’s FOMO is in full force as she gate-crashes Aurora’s Christening.

PROMPT 2: RITUAL

by Critterwings
from an Italian folk tale, the “Colony of Cats” a gentle variation on story of the Gatto Mammone or the Mammon Cat. There was a nice girl who was always being treated poorly by her mother and older sister. Finally, she couldn’t take it anymore. Nearby was a large, villa owned entirely by cats, who always needed a human servant to help out with chores and paid well, but no one ever wanted to stay with so many cats for too long. She was desperate though, so she went to ask them for the job. She cooked and cleaned and helped take care of the kittens and older cats, and was happy enough for awhile. She was so kind and gentle and generous that the cats were always happy too, and when they noticed that she was lonely they took her to their leader, Father Gatto, aka the Mammon Cat. 

#FolktaleWeek2020 Day 2 Picks: Ritual

by @marliesabramowski 
(We wonder if it isn't a ritual for every artist doing illustration to create their version of Red Riding Hood! We're not complaining. It remains astonishing how many millions of ways this story can be shown in an image and remain recognizable!)

 Today's prompt is RITUAL.

(To learn more about #FolktaleWeek2020, click HERE to read our first post on it this week. Please follow the host group on Instagram for the latest updates. They are: @jennifermpotter@sofiamoore_studio@deborah.j.stein@nicallanart@laure_illustrations@rachaelschaferdesigns@debrastyer@louve.draws@matejalukezic@thebrotherskent@chelslarss, and @tanja_stephani "Folktale Week 2020 was developed by a group of talented artists from all around the world. Be sure to check out their profiles for inspiration:")

by Majalin
In the old days there was a ritual to put out a bowl of porridge to the gnome on Christmasnight. The gnome worked hard on the farm but if you weren’t nice to him he could become angry and things could get ugly. If he got a butter on the top, he would work extra hard.
by Maureen Bales Art
“She had a magic mirror, and every morning she used to stand in front of it and gaze at her reflection and say: Mirror, mirror on the wall, who in this land is the fairest of all?” (Philip Pullman’s Fairytales from the Brothers Grimm).
by Laura Chamberlain Illustration
 Ritual for the new spring for #folktaleweek2020
As the first plants poke though the snow, the residents of this little town gather to build giant effigies to welcome back the animals of mountain from their winter slumber. As they work they sing to encourage life to return to their mountains.
Each animal that comes to inspect these offerings are celebrated and donned with their own wreath in the hopes that they will return with the rest of their family for a more bountiful year. Of course, it’s easier to give a wreath to a sheep than a goose, but that doesn’t stop them from trying! 
by Fantafumino - Silvia Vanni Art
During the eve of San Giovanni night (23/24 june ) various herbs and flowers were gathered, then at sunset they where set in a bowl of water and left outside all night long. By doing that, the magical dew of the night would have impregnated them. This ritual was used to prepare San Giovanni water, a magical water it was said to have the power to chase away diseases and evil eye. - Day two: Ritual
by Lena Zolotareva
@jess_harkey
by Denise Burden art
by Otuscops
It’s an ancient ritual of getting arcane knowledge and skills.
Adolescents were sent for indoctrination into the forest or even further away, where they learned the secret skills of turning into animals or understanding the language of birds. And the important part of their learning was the symbolical, or not quite, burning themselves in the fire or in the boiling water.
by Laure_Illustrations
The little girl grows up with her mother, a seamstress. She is perfectly happy playing with buttons and making daisy chains. Her mother makes the most beautiful little dresses for her. Every night before bed, she shows her, her latest creation. It’s their own little bedtime ritual. It’s a good life. But something is about to go terribly wrong...
by Bandaminta
Have you heard about julbocken, or Joulupukki: The Christmas Goat of the North? Although in many places a white bearded certain someone overtook his place, there are still many tales and traditions surrounding this creature of the Nordic winters. To some he brings gifts, in other traditions he goes door-to-door asking for food and drink. 
by @daryamorozz
Ritual. The rite of tying ribbons and scraps of fabric to trees existed in the archaic past of all Turkic-Mongol peoples of Central Asia and South Siberia. Now it still exists in Altai and is called dyalama or kyira. There are several interpretations of this ritual: firstly, peoples made a wish in places of power, secondly, this is how they made offerings to spirits, and thirdly, different knots on the ribbons existed as a way of communication between nomads.
by Elena Yampolsky (Yelensky Illustration)
Ritual - Bayun the Cat in Russian fables can lull the human to sleep and he can eat them. He also can cure illness. Here is a young Shaman girl who come to the forest for her initiation ritual. She has to meet up giant Cat , learn his wisdom and stay alive.

by @kathwaman
Day Two Prompt: Ritual - Illustration depicts the Ritual of Twelfth Night - Teach your children about the unique rituals and rich customs associated with the Twelfth Night Festival and the Epiphany. Examine the importance of Twelfth Night traditions like: A cake, a bean, and a King. See how Shakespeare’s version tackles fundamental and often universal themes like love as a cause of suffering, the uncertainty of gender and the folly of ambition.

by Polina Bakalina (@apolin.art)
Remembering the scene from Meterlink’s play “the blue bird”

Monday, November 23, 2020

#FolktaleWeek2020 - Day 1 Picks: Birth

This beautiful illustration, created to share and spread the word, is by one of the organizers, Jennifer M. Potter @jennifermpotter (IG)

It's that time of year again: #FolktaleWeek! 
It’s that time of year, time to celebrate the changing season by getting cozy with some great stories. That’s right, @folktaleweek is just around the corner! Are you excited? I know we are! Let us know you’re joining by reposting this image or making your own! (Promo by one of the organizers, Jennifer M. Potter)

What is #FolktaleWeek? (Or #FolktaleWeek2020?)

#FolktaleWeek is a week of creation and expression for artists and creatives of all kinds, inspired by a set of prompts for a whole week that everyone uses (released at the end of October so folks can prepare if they'd like). Everyone is encouraged to create something based on that prompt, with folktales and fairy tale in mind, and post it on social media (Instagram is the main one but also Twitter and Facebook) with the hashtags #FolktaleWeek and #FolktaleWeek2020 so folks can find them via a simple search. 

The prompts are written in the window below (illustration also by Jennifer M. Potter):
While this started as a challenge for professional children's book illustrators from around the globe to join together and focus on something many of them loved, rather than deadlines and briefs (because, if you didn't already know, fairy tales and folktales are very much loved thing among this group of creatives!), it has grown to be a worldwide community event for artists of all types, all ages, all styles, and all experiences. Everyone is super encouraging and the delight shared by everyone discovering other artists, tales they haven't heard of before, and new takes and twists on old tales, is such a magical boost. 
It's a wonderfully uplifting and positive place to be on the internet this week!

It's not just about painting and drawing; every medium is welcome, including writing, poetry, photography, cosplay, baking, papercraft, needle felting, graphic design, cartoons, collage, sculpture, linocut prints and so much more (these examples are just some of the media used to date over the past couple of years and new folktale expressions and creations appear all the time!).
Most folks do something different for each prompt but there are a growing group of folks who are taking the challenge to the next level (like the artist below) and finding a way to link all of the challenges into a story through the week. It's all quite amazing.
@martadorado
Ideally, we would just take the week off and scroll all social media hunting for lovely art and tales, and discovering new and emerging artists, but reality is unlikely to let us do that. (Last year there were tens of thousands of entries for the hashtags (!!) - which was awesome but impossible to keep up with.) HOWEVER, we had to at least prompt you at the beginning of the week, to go hunting yourself and revel in the lovely fairy tale and folklore creations appearing this week as we count down to a very bizarre zoom-based Thanksgiving. (And if we get to post some more pics on another day, we will be thrilled!)

Today's prompt is BIRTH. 
(Click to enlarge - any info re the tale included by artists is also below their name)



 @hlebojarka - GIRL WITHOUT HANDS
Emily Ursä
@emilyursa_ - MOMOTARO/PEACH BOY
In a fun tall tale about Paul Bunyan, S.E. Schlosser writes: “His first bed was a lumber wagon pulled by a team of horses. His father had to drive the wagon up to the top of Maine and back whenever he wanted to rock the baby to sleep.”
The traditional Scottish midwife was known as a Howdie (handy woman), and part of the midwife's duty was to open the windows & doors to let the soul of the baby into the room (and also later putting whiskey into baby's mouth after birth)
Imogen Joy Illustration
I have written my own folktale, “CORVELLO & THE BIRD QUEEN” for folktale week. Please bear with me as this is my first attempt at one! It takes reference from two folktales I love, Hans Hedgehog, and the Seven Ravens both from German folklore. But actually the inspiration for this tale first came from a line from Seamus Heaney’s poem Sweetpea: “Stuck a feather in the ground and thought it would grow a hen”
Shawna J. C. Tenney Illustration
This is a scene from The Snow Maiden, a Russian Fairy Tale. An old couple who have never been able to have children, make a snow maiden that comes to life. In the original fairy tale, she is a young woman. But I grew up with a book called “The Snow Child,” by Freya Littledale and illustrated by Barbara Lavalee- an adaptation of the original tale, where she is a child. I always loved this version, and incorporated it into my version!
Sabine Waldmann-Brun
The Tale of Zabiba and Phoenix
Once upon a time in a deep forest, where she had fled from the rebels, a young woman gave birth to her baby and died. So the animals and plants cared for the little girl.
Cathy Rowe Arts
There are so many great folktales about a child being gifted to a sweet couple by some miracle of nature. Like finding a thumb sized baby in a flower.
Moving Doodles
Story of Amalbiso. Which was a story generated orally in ancient Sri Lanka. (story is here)
Laura Irrgang Artist - original story
Amy June Bates
Lucia Spinoiu
All artist's names are below the work and are linked to their page or post as we could manage. Note: the images included are the ones that caught our Newsroom's eyes for multiple reasons but we have not been able to see everything posted so can guarantee we're missing some gems (in other words, go look for yourself to find even more!)

Another illustration made to promote #FolktaleWeek2020 by Renske Karremans @rfgka (IG)