Encanto

Encanto is a 2021 Disney film, the sixtieth work in the Disney Animated Canon. It features music created by Lin-Manuel Miranda and stars Stephanie Beatriz as the protagonist Mirabel.

A family in Colombia has magical gifts, that a miracle candle bestowed upon them after their patriarch pulled a Heroic Sacrifice to rescue his wife and children from bandits. Their house represents the magic and their family bond. Each has a door that revealed their powers on a special birthday. Abuela Alma, a widow and the current matriarch, has the family Madrigal use their gifts to benefit the village. She is dismissive and condescending towards Mirabel, her granddaughter whose door vanished when she was a child.

Mirabel tries not to care about her lack of gifts, hoping to find her place in the world as an ordinary girl. The day of the latest gift ceremony, she notices cracks in the wall. They vanish when she tries to show the family, but she overhears Abuela worrying about them. The magic may be fading, and Mirabel has to figure out why.


 * Abusive Mom: Abuela is not that nice to her children or grandchildren that refuse to fit the mold of perfection. Bruno became an outcast because people didn't like his predictions, and the Madrigals treat Mirabel as an outsider under Abuela's influence, with Isabel treating her little sister as a Doom Magnet and blaming her for every little problem gone wrong. Mirabel hits her Rage Breaking Point and calls out Abuela for this in the climax, how nothing is good enough for her.
 * Adult Fear:
 * Watching your husband die in front of you, as he futilely tries to protect you and your infant kids. More so that despite Abuela telling it as a take of great heroism,.
 * Among the many fears that Luisa sings about in "Surface Pressure," she's terrified that losing her gifts will mean not just losing her worth, but also the ability to protect people in her family. She sings about how she needs to protect Mirabel from everything.
 * The climax features
 * Big Sister Instinct: Deconstructed with Luisa in "Surface Pressure". She lies to Mirabel, her little sister, that she's feeling fine and not worried about the magic, while her eye twitches. Mirabel gives her space to vent about the pressure to always perform, and how she has to literally hold up the family's weight.
 * Bitch in Sheep's Clothing: Dolores has a few moments of this, being catty and outing to the neighborhood kids that Mirabel has no gifts. She tells Mirabel that she heard nothing wrong and that she's crazy for talking about cracks in the wall, and smirks when telling Isabel that the man courting her wants five children, hinting that it's a lie..
 * Bittersweet Ending: Thanks to Abuela refusing to see that she's a toxic grandparent,
 * Don't You Dare Pity Me!: While Mirabel doesn't say this outright, she has an annoyed expression whenever an outsider expresses sympathy or tries to make her feel better about having powers. Granted, the neighborhood kids are Innocently Insensitive about the fact that she has no gifts, and a local florist gives her a basket on the house called "The Not Special Special" in an attempt to make Mirabel feel better about her failed ceremony.
 * Generational Trauma: Encanto puts this on full display for most of the movie. Abuela Alma witnessed bandits murdering her husband who attempted to protect her and their triplets, along with a group of refugees. When the miracle happened-- an ever-burning candle caused the mountains to rise and dispel the bandits while creating a safe haven for the survivors, and giving magic to Abuela's children-- Abuela became convinced that the best way to respect the miracle was to make her children useful. Unknowingly, her demand for perfectionism and rigidity causes her to alienate her powerless granddaughter Mirabel who tearfully pinpoints at her Rage Breaking Point that she will never be good enough for Abuela. That's not even going into how she inadvertently turned her son Bruno into the town's pariah, has driven her other granddaughter Luisa to a near-breakdown with how Luisa feels she needs to literally carry the house's burdens on her back, and treats Isabela as the golden child who must never get her hands dirty despite an affinity for plants. It takes.
 * Go Mad From the Isolation: Poor is still.
 * Good Parents: Julieta and Agustín Madrigal try to mitigate the favoritism that Abuela lavishes on Isabel while isolating Mirabel, with Julieta always having words of advice and healing food for Mirabel. At a crucial moment, Agustín has a completely protective and reasonable response to finding out that.
 * Happily Married: All the married couples from the Madrigal family.
 * No Antagonist: This is an unusual Disney movie in that there is no outright evil villain. Abuela is certainly an antagonist, but Obliviously Evil who mends her ways . While Bruno is a figure shrouded in mystery whose prophecies spelled doom and gloom,.
 * Only Sane Man:
 * Agustín due to being married into the family out of love and not out of politics proves to be this, despite being accident-prone. At a crucial moment, he shows that he is not afraid of Abuela when calling her out for how she treats Maribel and expects him to throw his daughter to the wolves because.
 * Julieta is the only Madrigal with a gift not weighed down by it with mood swings or expectations. Granted, healing people with good food and the fact that she loves cooking helps a lot.