Wednesday, November 12, 2014

Becoming Maleficent: Intro

Becoming Maleficent


Did anyone ever ask for Maleficent's side of the story? Are we to assume she is an evil witch just for the hell of it? How did Maleficent BECOME Maleficent? In becoming ourselves we must learn to become authentic. Sometimes that means being a little naughty or crossing the lines, and sometimes people might assume we are something we are not. Like Jessica Rabbit said, "I'm not naughty, I'm just drawn that way". So go out and do what you need to do to be who you are meant to be. Play by the rules. Or don't. Whatever you do, don't let soldiers, thorny bushes, broken hearts, or sleeping spells put you under or keep you down. Become yourself, be a bit of a badass, write your own fairytale, and make your own happy ending. This is what Maleficent has taught me.

Saturday, November 8, 2014

Becoming Maleficent: Art


Art



Solley, Cat. Wing. 2014. Acrylic, Mixed Media. N.p.

This piece of art, Wing, represents the heroine's journey that Maleficent travels. In the background of the painting are the original lyrics from the song presented in this blog, The Pretender by the Foo Fighters. The lyrics "not like the others" is a testament to Maleficent having the desire to stand out and stand up for herself. She is not like the other fairies in the Moors, nor is she like other girls who may have fallen apart under similar circumstances. The shimmery gray color throughout the artwork gives off the mood of the painting, clouded yet hopeful. The circular shape lends itself to the path along the heroine's journey, not unlike Dorothy's yellow brick road from Wizard of Oz. The jewels underneath the feathers represent the glimmer of hope momentarily shrouded underneath the feathered wing. The white feathers represent Maleficent's innocence and purity. The twisted metal into a single red feather signifies the agonizing pain from the removal of Maleficent's precious wings. The black tar feathers represent the darkness that encompasses Maleficent's heart when she seeks vengeance. The green swirls demonstrate her magic, as seen in the movie, that work both for evil when she casts the sleeping spell, and for good as she uses the magic to protect the child as she is growing up. The various fairytale elements tell more of her story, the clocks signify Aurora's impending death sleep on her sixteenth birthday, the sword represents the battles Maleficent faces, a symbol of true loves kiss from mother to child is placed along the journey, as well as hearts that are symbols of love. The sparkling white jewels are the path to redemption, which lead to the book with the silver wings, and the final stage of Maleficent's journey, where she is resurrected and is able to write her own story.

Wednesday, November 5, 2014

Becoming Maleficent: Song

Song


Foo Fighters Greatest Hits. Roswell Records, 2009. MP3.

The song, "The Pretender", by the Foo Fighters captures the essence of the fight against oppression. It is a call to overcome that which holds us back and, therefore, become what we are intended to be. This song captures the mood and temperature of Maleficent's struggle to push through and endure hardships, all while continuing to maintain her personal integrity. The use of the police force in the video represents the soldiers of the kingdom who come after Maleficent in the Moors. The forceful tone of the lyrics strike chords of resilience and empowerment, and are reminicent of Maleficent's desire to stand up against her enemies. The shattering of the glass and the spilling of the red water in the video is representational of Maleficent's spread of wrath and bloodshed. The chorus of the song embodies individuality and gives it a fiery independence. Maleficent may have said these very words to her oppressors, "What if I say I'm not like the others? What if I say I'm not just another one of your plays? You're the pretender. What if I say I will never surrender?"





Becoming Maleficent: Psychosocial Relevance

Psychosocial Relevance


Coelho, Paulo. The Alchemist. San Francisco: HarperSanFrancisco, 1993. Print.


In today's world, so many people are lost and are seeking an external source of happiness. The answer lies within us if we only stop to empower ourselves and investigate what it is we seek. In the movie Maleficent, Maleficent dreams of true love, and although the dream is seemingly spoiled by her oppressors, through various trials, she is finally able to realize the dream, find her true love, and she did it just by being herself. Paulo Coelho's novel, The Alchemist, is a story of a shepherd boy who travels along the hero's journey only to find, at the end, that the hero he was seeking was within himself all along. Maleficent's story begins not unlike most people's story, with her being a self assured young child. Due to the cutting of her wings, Maleficent developed prejudice and fear, as well as the realization that the man she loved was the one who had betrayed her. She then goes on to sacrifice the love and affections of all the creatures in the Moors, abandons her dreams, envelops hate, and dispenses fear. In the end, with the the mother and child love she experiences with Aurora, she finds herself worthy of true love and understands her purpose. Sometimes bad things happen to good people and sometimes life takes people on journey's they never expected. The Alchemist teaches readers to do as Maleficent did, who ended up writing her own fairytale and made her own happy ending.



Saturday, November 1, 2014

Becoming Maleficent: Poetry

Poetry

"Maleficent." IMDb. IMDb.com, n.d. Web. 08 Nov. 2014.










Solley, Cat. Becoming Maleficent. 2014. Poem. N.p.



Becoming Maleficent

I am benevolence and light,
virtuous heart, wings that shine 
unbroken, love, and flight.

I am expectation, hope filled
quickened heart, first love's kiss
trusting, ardent, and willing.

I am innocence and stain
shattered heart ripped, torn, scarred--
darkness, fear and shame.

I am torment and betrayal
ravaged heart, bloodlust, fury--
boiling revenge and hate.

I am rejection and scorn
blackened heart, magic gift
of vengeance, death and thorn.

I am evil and release
Lucifers' heart, spinning wheel--
curse, murder, and sleep.

I am malevolence and briar
sharpened heart, venom tongue-- 
exile, wrath, and fire.

I am patience and plotting
avenging heart dealing, pushing pain
needles, poison and rotting.

I am a puzzle unglued
bewildered heart, muddled
perceptions now skewed.

I am healing and waiting
uncoiled heart, open cage
unveiling the beast that is taming.

I am forgiven, alive!
resurrected heart, true love’s kiss--
together mother and child.








Sunday, October 26, 2014

Becoming Maleficent: Film

Film


"Maleficent." IMDb. IMDb.com, n.d. Web. 26 Oct. 2014.

The 2014 film, Maleficent, is a classic tale of a woman scorned that twists and turns the viewer along the heroine's journey all the way through to redemption and resurrection of the wounded heart. Angelina Jolie plays the part of the protagonist and tells a very different side of the story than that of Sleeping Beauty. Maleficent is an innocent young child living in a utopian world. She flies over all of the creatures in the land with massive wings that are a huge part of her identity that are later stolen from her. Maleficent comes across a boy who has entered into her land with whom she falls in love, only to find that he is to deceive her and cut her wings from her in order to become king. In her fury, she seeks vengeance by placing a sleeping curse on the king's newborn daughter, Aurora. As Maleficent watches Aurora grow up to the age when the curse is to take place, she finds that her heart is softening toward the child. Once Maleficent realizes that Aurora is like a daughter to her and that she is the symbol of peace in both the land and in her heart, she breaks the curse by giving her "true love's kiss".

Other movies in history have taken the acclaim as "best revenge movie" and tell a vengeance story of a woman scorned that the audience is all dying to hear. The 1991drama, Thelma and Louise, and the 2003 action movie, Kill Bill, are just two examples of the many women in film history who have travelled along their own heroine's journey, took their fate into their own hands, and found themselves to be some pretty badass women.



"Thelma & Louise." IMDb. IMDb.com, n.d. Web. 05 Nov. 2014.




"Kill Bill: Vol. 1." IMDb. IMDb.com, n.d. Web. 05 Nov. 2014.

Saturday, October 25, 2014

Becoming Maleficent: The Origin

The Origin


"SurLaLune Fairy Tales: The Fairy Tales of Charles Perrault." SurLaLune Fairy Tales: The Fairy Tales of Charles Perrault. N.p., n.d. Web. 25 Oct. 2014.

There have been many interpretations of the fairy tale Sleeping Beauty, with the original stemming from a french romance printed in 1528, Perceforest. In 1697 Charles Perrault wrote his version entitled Sleeping Beauty in the Wood. In Perrault's story, Maleficent was an unnamed old fairy that felt cast out from the christening of the princess and would present a "mischievous gift" to the child. Later, the Grimm Brothers wrote Little Brier Rose which became the most popular version of the story until Disney produced Sleeping Beauty. It was in the 1959 animated movie that the evil fairy, Maleficent, was portrayed as both a wicked sorceress and a fire breathing dragon. The most recent 2014 Disney version, Maleficent, tells the back story of Maleficent and how she came to be the evil mistress.

The following YouTube video, "Sleeping Beauty Uncensored", shows a modern day satire of the original Sleeping Beauty story by Giambattista Basile titled, Sun, Moon, and Talia.



The most well known version of Sleeping Beauty is Disney's 1959 version. In Disney's interpretation Maleficent was only viewed as the villain.