The greatest Disney couple ever
is Aladdin and Jasmine. Period. And it’s really not even close.
As far as exploration of a romance
is concerned among Disney movies, the best is easily Beauty and the Beast. Second
is Aladdin. But what allowed Aladdin and Jasmine to reign
above Belle and the Beast, as well as the rest of Disney couples, is the advantage
of having their story continued in two direct-to-video sequels and an animated
series. Sure, other Disney animated
movies have those, too, but the Aladdin
trilogy is definitely Disney’s best “classic film with (often) sufficiently fun
but not-as-good-as-the-original (sometimes even plain bad) direct-to-video
sequels” animated film series.
But what significantly fleshed Aladdin
and Jasmine out as individual characters and as a couple – or the entire Aladdin universe and characters, for that
matter (seriously, Aladdin and friends are one heck of an action, adventuring
squad) – is the Aladdin animated
series – one of my favorite TV cartoons, and objectively Disney’s best TV
series based on a hit movie.
One of my most favorite episodes of the show is “Eye of the Beholder” (incidentally, one of my favorite Twilight Zone episodes is also titled as such). When I watched it for the first time as a
kid, it really struck me. It was one of the
greatest moments of Aladdin and Jasmine’s love story.
In it, Mirage (one of the show’s
recurring antagonists; who looks like the goddess Bastet of Egyptian
mythology) is rebuked by Fasir (a recurring character; a cyclops seer that
often aids Aladdin and friends) about her habit of constantly tormenting humans. Fasir argues that her nefarious
plots will always be trumped, for good always triumph over evil since good is powered
by love. Mirage scoffs at the idea,
since she believes that love is weak. Fasir
then uses Aladdin and Jasmine’s love as a prime example, pointing out that
their love will never be broken no matter what she does. Challenged, Mirage sets off to prove Fasir
wrong.
Mirage disguises herself and
manipulates Jasmine into using a special lotion that will supposedly make her more
desirable to Aladdin. To Jasmine’s
horror, she discovers that the lotion is slowly transforming her into a snake. Aladdin
asks Genie’s help, and he reveals that he knows a cure: eating a fruit from the
Tree of Renewal.
To make a long story short, the body of the
episode sees Aladdin and the gang travelling towards the location of the Tree,
racing against time and facing off a series of obstacles, while Mirage observes
them from her home. Once Aladdin and the
gang reach their destination, Mirage becomes furious but becomes collected once
again by telling herself that Aladdin is only loving Jasmine all this time
because he has hope that she can be returned back to normal. Believing this, she curses the Tree of
Renewal, making it and its fruits rot before Jasmine can take a bite. She reveals herself to them, and mockingly asks
Aladdin if he still loves Jasmine though she’ll never become a human again. Aladdin tells Jasmine to not listen to her,
consoling her that he’ll never leave her.
But the heartbroken Jasmine, now fully a snake creature, tells Aladdin that Mirage is
right, that she can never be with him with her condition. She asks Aladdin and the others to go back to
Agrabah and leave her. Aladdin refuses to
leave and reaches out for her, but Jasmine hisses at him, and then sadly
slithers away.
Genie comfortingly tells Aladdin
that he’ll bring her back to Agrabah. But in a development
that I didn’t see coming when I saw it for the first time, Aladdin tells him that that
won’t be necessary. He tells the gang to
go back to Agrabah without him; he’s staying with Jasmine. And to everybody’s shock (including mine), he
applies the lotion to himself, also turning himself into a snake creature. He moves towards Jasmine, and she asks why he
did it. He explains that if they can’t
be together as humans, then they’ll be together as snakes – affirming his
genuine love for her.
That exact moment is when I
realized that Aladdin and Jasmine are the best Disney couple ever. Was there any other Disney couple that
triumphed over such adversity in their love?
Jasmine is ready to let Aladdin
go, willing to sacrifice herself and spend the rest of her life in such isolated,
miserable state so that Aladdin can move on, unburdened by her, with his life. But Aladdin would have none of it. He wants to be with her forever, no matter
what. It’s a rendition of the clichéd “I’d
rather have bad times with you” sentiment. But it never felt cheesy in its
delivery. It was legitimately emotionally
affecting. It was beautiful.
Of course, the episode can’t end
in a tragedy: Mirage tries to take
consolation that though she has failed to break them apart, they will at least
have to suffer as snake creatures for the rest of their lives. But
Farsi has enough. Pointing out that she
has lost, it’s unnecessary to make them suffer further and he restores the Tree
of Renewal to life, much to Mirage’s anger.
To this date, though I now recognize
as an adult the lacks and pitfalls of its storytelling, I still find “Eye of the Beholder”
as moving as I did when I first saw it. It might be clichéd. But what
Aladdin and Jasmine demonstrated in this simply-told episode has always been a fine
reminder – a glimpse – of a profound feature of love: “It always protects,
always trusts, always hopes, always perseveres.
Love never fails.”
2 comments:
Stumbled upon this article today during a nostalgia kick, and YES! I cried my eyes out the first time I saw this episode. My young self was so moved by it, and I agree with you now... revisiting it as an adult, even with its faults, there's something beautiful about a depiction of self-sacrificing, selfless love in a program meant for kids. Aladdin and Jasmine are indeed the greatest Disney couple, and it's not close.
I love that episode too. It has a better story than most real-life fairytales! Whoever came up with it is a genius!
Post a Comment