Millie Bobby Brown as Princess Elodie in Juan Carlos Fresnadillo's Damsel |
What is it with filmmakers chopping off Millie Bobby Brown’s hair? The haircuts are explicitly gendered, too, or anyway counter-gendered. In her first featured role, Intruders, she gave herself a weirdly genderless half-bob to emphasize the show’s supernatural themes. Stranger Things obviously involved her learning how to be a girl. Now, in Damsel, another self-inflicted haircut signposts her transition from “princess” to “warrior queen.”
Any analysis of Damsel necessarily involves admitting
this is a movie for mainly young audiences. Grown-ups will almost obsessively
notice the prior media products this movie pinches from. This includes obvious
borrowings from LotR and Game of Thrones, and less widely viewed
fare, like 2019’s Ready or Not and your nephew’s latest Dungeons &
Dragons campaign. There’s even a helpful map carved into a wall, guiding player
characters to safety.
Younger viewers, unburdened by prior experience, will
probably enjoy this movie, simply for MBB’s character. Princess Elodie spends
nearly half the movie onscreen alone, sometimes accompanied by a CGI dragon.
She’s dressed inappropriately for the environment, still wearing her wedding
dress, and has no tools, weapons, or food. She extemporizes survival gear from
whatever comes to hand. Princess Elodie is, admittedly, gripping to watch.
Queen Isabelle tempts Elodie from her icy, impoverished
homeland by promising her son, Prince Henry, as a groom. Elodie, though a
princess, is reasonably self-reliant, and chops wood herself to provide for her
subjects during an unusually bitter winter. But Prince Henry and the Kingdom of
Aurea offer Elodie the opportunity to see a larger world and live without
constant fear. Despite her youth, Elodie acquiesces to this arranged marriage.
Unfortunately, the movie’s trailer already spoiled the twist
that caps Act One: the marriage is a lie. Isabelle and Henry need Elodie as a
sacrifice for a nameless dragon whose mountain overshadows the kingdom. Cast
headlong into the dragon’s lair, Elodie must struggle not only to escape, but
to uncover the long-simmering ancestral lie that makes her sacrifice necessary.
Because her survival doesn’t matter if Queen Isabelle sacrifices Elodie’s
sister.
Robin Wright, who kick-started her career playing a
similarly betrothed ingenue in The Princess Bride, portrays Queen
Isabelle with the same oily deceit she probably learned from her co-star, Chris
Sarandon. (Yet another cinematic borrowing.) Meanwhile the dragon, voiced by
Iranian-American actor Shoreh
Agdashloo, seems transplanted from Shrek—yes, seriously. Because
Elodie’s and Shrek’s dragons share character motivations entirely female in
nature.
Yes, that’s a stereotype, but a useful one.
Robin Wright as Queen Isabelle in Damsel |
Elodie’s character arc isn’t new, or even particularly recent. The “Princess Rescues Herself” trope certainly predates my awareness of fantasy literature: almost from the moment Tolkien solidified the genre’s standards, fans began rewriting Arwen-type characters into greater self-reliance. But MBB invests this road-tested story arc with the gravitas she brings to characters like Eleven. Elodie is strong, not because it’s a genre boilerplate, but because she has no other choice.
Brown conveys her internal transformation externally. She’s
thrown into the dragon’s pit still wearing her satin wedding dress, without
tools or weapons. The more determined Elodie becomes to survive, the more
pieces of her elegant gown tear off. She fashions bandages from her skirts, a glowworm
lantern from her sleeves, a climbing piton from her corset stays. Piece by
piece, the emblems of luxury transform into the tools of survival.
This results in an outcome that may give some parents pause:
the more resilient and self-assured Elodie becomes, the more naked she becomes.
That’s also where the hair-chopping comes in, as her long, elegant tresses
become an impediment to survival. Elodie emerges victorious and muscular, but
also showing plenty of skin. She saunters into her triumphant scene reduced to torn,
scorched undergarments, looking like a Frank Frazetta splash panel.
Given the movie’s primarily young target audience, this
nakedness, coupled with some Game of Thrones-ish violence, will give
some parents pause. It doesn’t rely on explicit sex or coarse language, and
anyway, most middle-grade viewers have probably seen content more graphic online
anymore, so tweens and early teens will undoubtedly enjoy it. If your kids are
grade-school-aged, though, maybe consider watching beside them, just in case.
Some prior critics lambasted this movie for unrealistic standards. Eldie outruns fire, survives catastrophic injury, and handles a sword correctly the first time she grabs one. Apparently some people find this implausible in a movie with an immortal fire-breathing dragon. Picky, picky, picky. The movie’s intended audience will have no such qualms; they’ll simply enjoy watching Elodie survive. And parents will enjoy watching their kids enjoy it.
This review continues in Everyone Loves a Dragon Queen, Part 2
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