Talk:Frozen/@comment-9204379-20140929071544/@comment-1672596-20141024185908

What do you mean? Anna still falls for a guy. And besides, other than Snow White and Aurora (and even then they actually had a pretty good reason for needing to be saved by someone as they were put in a coma), most of the DPs actually were pretty proactive anyways. For starters:


 * Cinderella actually did make an effort to actually get to the ball, and if we count the sequels, she actually took a level in badass in A Twist in Time.
 * Ariel's first scene actually had her exploring a sunken ship and also actually confronting a shark, not to mention actually having a dream to be among humanity BEFORE meeting her love interest, saved said love interest twice (three times if we count the incident with Vanessa), heck, even attempted to stand up to the villain, and that's not even counting her defending Atlantica in the TV series, comics, and her family in the sequel. Heck, technically, she was the first DP to actually be shown reading, predating Belle.
 * Belle most certainly wasn't merely a pretty face, and heck, she even saved Christmas going by Enchanted Christmas, not to mention broke the curse, heck, saved her father. Heck, she actually tried to get out of a marriage.
 * Jasmine in the first film managed to actually confront Jafar, also refuse arranged marriages a few times, even escape the castle. That's also not even counting her actions in the sequels and the TV series.
 * Pocahontas basically saved her love interest, and actually brought peace between the tribe and the settlers.
 * Mulan... you've got to be kidding me. She pretty much single-handedly saved China, TWICE, and was actually a good soldier. She's a sexist stereotype? That's like calling The Boss from Metal Gear Solid 3 or Olga Gurlukovich from Metal Gear Solid 2 sexist stereotypes just because they became mothers.
 * Tiana actually attempted to be a self-made woman, and actually saved her love interest more than a few times. How many "sexist stereotypes" do that?
 * Rapunzel actually intended to see the floating lights before Flynn came along, and was even able to stop some criminals at a badguy bar.

Maybe the DP franchise itself doesn't exactly show them in that positive of a light and focus more on their glamor, but I will tell you that in their individual films, they weren't "sexist stereotypes" at all outside of marrying people, and even that isn't even sexist at all. What WOULD be sexist is if they decided to fall in love with the same sex because they hated men.