Thread:Alex2424121/@comment-1087258-20141001133343

Sir, I am not going to get into an Edit War with you about this. I am a writer, and one of the first things we learn is that the role of the protagonist is the person who leads the story or of whom we see the primary point of view from. They do not always have to be the central of the movie or book, such as in Moby Dick where even though we are told the story from the perspective of Ishmael, the true protagonist is Ahab. But the difference is that Ahab and Ishmael are still leading the story in different ways from what is featured in this movie.

In this movie, we have the three good fairies, who are our viewpoint characters and we have Aurora, who I am going to say again, has little screen time, little dialogue and in the last act she is out for the count. And this has been pointed out plenty of times in audio commentaries and production notes that it's actually the three good fairies driving the story along, not Aurora or Philip, who fit the traditional Disney hero roles. But it is still the story of the three good fairies, of which Aurora is a major part of. 