Honestly? Inside Out. I think it gave kids (and adults) remarkable emotional language with which to understand themselves. https://twitter.com/leighlahav/status/1015851447886348288 …
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I get that. But it overshadows the depression that Riley is experiencing, where she can’t put to words what’s wrong with her. It’s two narrative trajectories (Joy/Sadness and Riley) that independently would work beautifully but together creates something problematic for me
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Riley is a human. Joy and Sadness are personified and therefore are also “humans.” The only difference is Joy and Sadness’ actions determine what Riley does. To me, that downgrades Riley’s narrative from emotional confusion of missing home to “consequences made by protagonist”
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