Now you can really see how dated the animation is.
Looking at the Robin Hood "Riverdance" moment, I thought the CGI animation was dated even back THEN.
(Not to mention, the gag was outdated back then, too.)
The real heart of that movie is the relationship between Fiona and Shrek, plus Donkey and Shrek. (Even the Fiona/Donkey bond was sweet.). But boy, I do have to admit, 95% of the references (not jokes) are SO dated! I mean the Macarena, SmashMouth, the Matrix: how late 90s/early 21st century can you get?? (I do still love SmashMouth though! Lol )
*Also, how come we never saw Fiona use her Matrix skills again? Ha.
You can’t just have your characters announce how they feel! That makes me feel angry!
*Also, how come we never saw Fiona use her Matrix skills again? Ha.
Because John Lasseter came back to Disney, so all of a sudden Disney princesses were "okay" again, and Katzenberg's feminist-kissup anti-princess jokes to throw at Michael Eisner turned stale overnight?
That's probably why we never saw any of the other "Princess-Fu" scenes after #2.
Oh, thank you. I KNEW Jeff wouldn't give up on his chick-kissups so easily, since he knew they were singlehandedly supporting the studio after women were the only ones to laugh at Fiona's jokes in the first movie.
That's how we got most of Monsters vs. Aliens, after all.
FWIW, I actually always felt the “kick-a** princesses” thing in the Shrek films was really tired, even, to some degree, in the original Shrek. And ESPECIALLY in 3. (Also having Julie Andrews/the Queen be one of them just didn’t feel right for some reason! )
You can’t just have your characters announce how they feel! That makes me feel angry!
Weirdly enough, in Shrek 2, Fiona's headbutt of Prince Charming which gets a big laugh was changed to a karate chop in the UK. I guess the headbutt was deemed too "violent", but it's definitely funnier.
Also weirdly enough, regarding Shrek the Third, Snow White unleashing Hell on a bunch of fairy tale villains via woodland creatures is a highlight of that movie for me, along with the "Gingey's life flashing before his eyes" gag.
"Yesterday is history, tomorrow is a mystery, but today is a gift--that is why it's called the present."