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Rebeca Lerena Repes José Díaz-Cuesta Galián Facultad de Letras y de la Educación Grado en Estudios Ingleses 2014-2015 Título Director/es Facultad Titulación Departamento TRABAJO FIN DE GRADO Curso Académico The figure of the stepmother in Snow White and the Huntsman Autor/es

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Page 1: The figure of the stepmother in Snow White and the Huntsman · protagonist of this film, the study of the stepmother would be a good way to revise a classical story in a different

Rebeca Lerena Repes

José Díaz-Cuesta Galián

Facultad de Letras y de la Educación

Grado en Estudios Ingleses

2014-2015

Título

Director/es

Facultad

Titulación

Departamento

TRABAJO FIN DE GRADO

Curso Académico

The figure of the stepmother in Snow White and the Huntsman

Autor/es

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© El autor© Universidad de La Rioja, Servicio de Publicaciones, 2016

publicaciones.unirioja.esE-mail: [email protected]

The figure of the stepmother in Snow White and the Huntsman, trabajo fin degrado

de Rebeca Lerena Repes, dirigido por José Díaz-Cuesta Galián (publicado por la Universidad de La Rioja), se difunde bajo una Licencia

Creative Commons Reconocimiento-NoComercial-SinObraDerivada 3.0 Unported. Permisos que vayan más allá de lo cubierto por esta licencia pueden solicitarse a los

titulares del copyright.

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Resumen:

Este trabajo pretende analizar una versión diferente de ―Blancanieves‖, el clásico de

Wilhelm y Jacob Grimm. A través de una mezcla de estudio comparativo y un estudio

basado en el análisis textual de la película, el ensayo examina la figura de la madrastra

de Blancanieves en la versión de Rupert Sanders, Snow White and the Huntsman

(2012), comparándola con otras madrastras presentes en cuentos de hadas y revisando

las secuencias principales en las que aparece la reina, con el fin de analizar el carácter,

la personalidad y los símbolos de dicho personaje. Esta versión es un giro moderno del

clásico cuento de hadas que podría incluso ser considerado como feminista, en el cual

Blancanieves no lleva vestidos, sino una armadura; y la madrastra, considerada como el

personaje más poderoso de la historia, no es derrotada por un príncipe sino por la

princesa.

Abstract:

The present dissertation intends to analyze a different version of a classical fairy tale,

Wilhelm and Jacob Grimm‘s, Snow White. Through a mixture of comparative and text-

based analysis of the film, this study examines the figure of Snow White‘s stepmother

in Rupert Sanders‘s Snow White and the Huntsman (2012), comparing it with other

stepmothers present in classical fairy tales and revising the main sequences in which the

evil queen appears in order to analyze this character‘s personality and symbols. This

version is a modern twist of the classical fairy tale which could be even considered as a

feministic one, in which Snow White does not wear a dress, but an armour; and the

stepmother, considered as the most powerful character in the story, is not defeated by a

man but by the princess.

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THE FIGURE OF THE STEPMOTHER IN SNOW WHITE AND THE HUNTSMAN

TABLE OF CONTENTS

1. Introduction……………………………………………………...…………………..7

1.1. Introduction and justification………………….…………………………….7 1.2. Origin of fairy tales and the role of women…………………………………7 1.3. The contemporary American fairy tale……………………………………...9

1.4. Objectives of the analysis.……………………….…………………………10 1.5. Methodology used in the analysis……………….…………………………11

2. Snow White………………………………………………………………………13

2.1. Grimm‘s story……………………………………………………………13 2.2. Snow White‘s Versions.………………………………………………….15 2.2.1. Walt Disney ……………………………………………………15 2.2.2. Mirror, Mirror…………………………………………………..17 2.2.3. Blancanieves……………………………………………………17

3. The stepmother……………………………………………………………………19

3.1. The figure of the stepmother……………………………………………..19

3.2. Other villains……………………………………………………………...21 3.2.1. Maleficient……………………………………………………..21 3.2.2. Lady Tremaine…………………………………………………23

3.3. Other ―evil queens‖ in Snow White stories……………………………….26 3.3.1. Disney‘s evil queen……………………………………………..27 3.3.2. Julia Roberts‘s evil queen……………………………………….29 3.3.3. Maribel Verdú‘s evil queen……………………………………..31

4. The figure of the stepmother in Snow White and the Huntsman……………….35

4.1. Charlize Theron……………………………………………………………35 4.2. Ravenna……………………………………………………………………37 4.2.1. Symbolism in the film……………………………………………41

4.2.2. Vanity…………………………………………………………….43

5. Conclusions…………………………………………………………………………45

References……………………………………………………………………………..47

Annex: Conclusiones………………………………………………………………….50

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1. Introduction

1.1. Introduction and justification

This dissertation examines the role of Snow White‘s stepmother, Ravenna, in Snow

White and the Huntsman (Sanders 2012), taking into account the role of women in

Anglo-American movies in general too.

When I chose this topic, I realized that nowadays, fairy tales are present

everywhere: bookshops, toys, clothes, advertisements; figures like Snow White or

Sleeping Beauty can even appear in porn films.

Why Snow White and the Huntsman? I had watched this movie before I chose it

and Ravenna got stuck in my mind. Her costumes, character, appearance, the halo of

mystery that surrounds her... I did not remember practicallty anything about Snow

White or the Huntsman, which is curious, the only thing I could recall was Charlize

Theron‘s character; like Rick Groen claims: ―Yes, there are many splendid reasons to

see Snow White and the Huntsman – enough, maybe, not to care that neither Snow

White nor the Huntsman rank high among them.‖ (2012) And in Elizabeth Weitzman

words, ―it‘s Theron who owns this film, imbuing her deliciously depraved Queen with

furious pain and deep-seated fear.‖ (2012) So I thought that, being Ravenna the real

protagonist of this film, the study of the stepmother would be a good way to revise a

classical story in a different way.

Lots of modern films are new versions of classical fairy tales, Snow White and the

Huntsman, Maleficient (Stromberg 2014), Hansel & Gretel: Witch Hunters (Wirkola

2013) or Red Riding Hood (Hardwicke 2011). In these films they twist the original story

in order to give a different dimension to the fairy tale gender; we are going to go

through several films of this kind and, the final point will study the figure of Ravenna in

Snow White and the Huntsman.

1.2. Origin of fairy tales and the role of women

Roger Sale in his book Fairy Tales and After (1978) claims that ―the term fairy tale is

only a convenience since few stories we call by that name contain fairies, elves,

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leprechauns or similar creatures.‖ (1978: 23) However, people agree on the kind of

stories that can be included in the category of fairy tales, such as myths, legends,

romances or folk fables. The stories we know nowadays were not written by Hans

Christian Andersen, Charles Perrault or Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm; they just compiled

them and they actually come from oral tradition.

For a correct understanding of the origin of fairy tales we must try to understand

how the literary fairy tale emerged in the France of the seventeenth century. According

to Jack Zipes (1994), fairy tales were not thought for children in the first place but for

well-educated adults and they were first developed in salons by aristocratic women as a

type of parlour game. By the end of the seventeenth century this practice became so

acceptable that women and men began to write down the stories and published them.

In 1700 there still were not literary fairy tales for children. Women used these

fairy tales as a way to evade reality; they imagined their lives improved, not following

the masculine standards. While this discourse was becoming accepted by women and

more slowly by man, it gradually became a way to moralize children.

Zipes claims that it was Madame D‘Aulnoy who changed this vision of the fairy

tales. She belonged to aristocracy and she dared to defy the patriarchal society; she

wanted women to be pictured from their own point of view with regard to topics such as

tender love, fidelity, courtship, honour and arranged marriages.

She played an important role defending women within her writings: women she

described were in control over their lives and destinies. Moreover, she exposed the

decadent practices and behaviour among the people of her class.

Nevertheless, her female protagonists still follow a patriarchal code, in which

they are submissive; although she is very critical with certain aspects such as arranged

marriages. She was taken as a model by other fairy-tale writers of her time.

This model of fairy tales that try to be feministic but still present women that

follow patriarchal code has a lot to do with Snow White and the Huntsman (Sanders

2012). In the movie, the only women who does not follow patriarchal codes is Ravenna,

she is the queen and there is not a person more powerful than her; however she ends up

being killed. Snow White is an example of these feministic characters that still need

men in order to survive: she is the heroine in the movie, but without the Huntsman‘s

help she would have died on the woods.

Back to the subject matter, the origin of fairy tales for children has not a clear

date, but it is estimated that it arose during 1720s or 1730s approximately. Due to this

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change of receptors, the social function of fairy tales changed too: now they were meant

to educate and amuse at the same time. Children of the upper classes were the first

receptors of this new genre.

Zipes (1994: 33) claims that it was Madame Beaumont who institutionalized a

model of fairy tales for children: they have a didactic function, they must be short so

children can remember them, they must be restricted so they can be easily distributed,

they must address social problems as class or sex roles, they must be appropriate to use

them at school and finally they ―must reinforce a notion of power within the children of

the upper classes and suggest ways for them to maintain power.‖ (1994: 33)

1.3. The contemporary American fairy tale

In order to illustrate the evolution of fairy tales, we will use the theory of Friedmar

Apel, which states that the main fight of fairy tales is imagination against reality. Apel

claims that nowadays we do not believe the worlds that fairy tales present to ourselves

so the basis of fairy tale is not legitimate anymore:

This position is quite radical and must be qualified but if we take Walt Disney as

an example we observe that this industry has distributed sweetened versions of

traditional fairy tales. Nevertheless, we must take seriously amusement and distraction,

because the fact that we enjoy fairy tales does not mean that they do not have

ideological function. So, in spite of what Apel claims, the current fairy tale has

maintained its utopian vision and message.

One of the things that distinguish American fairy tale in the twentieth century is

that it has questioned gender roles and defied patriarchal society. However, as Zipes

observes:

just as feminisms and feminist movement have been culturally

exploited and compromised by the mass media and turned against

themselves, the fairy tale that seeks to maintain its utopian purpose

and social critique is always in danger of being defused and

transformed into mere entertainment. (1994: 141)

Several examples of this American fairy tale are TV series based on fairy tales as

Michael Ende‘s Neverending Story (1979) or Once Upon a Time (Horowitz and Kitsis

2011) which focus on the story of Snow White‘s daughter in the beginning but ends up

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dealing with every fairy tale/Disney movie that exists. All the characters of fairy tales

live in a village called Storybrook and they are unaware of their true identities because

they are under a magic spell. It can be found in this TV series, the feminist notion

previous mentioned: the heroin of the story is Snow White and Prince Charming‘s

daughter.

Nowadays fairy tales have evolved, and now they mask female submission and

male domination. The greatest example of this is Walt Disney movies. As Jack Zipes

claims, in Disney‘s version of Beauty and the Beast (Trouslade and Wise 1992), it

would seem that the story is completely different as Beauty is now a bookish woman

who is not afraid to speak her mind. It could even be seen as feministic. However, the

story is still the same: ―the young woman who sacrifices herself for her father and for

the improvement of a monster such as the Beast. […] In addition, there is the macho

Gaston, who represents the evil violent male side as counterpart to the Beast.‖ (1994:

46) In fact, this version is very similar to Disney‘s Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs

(Cottrell, Hand, Jackson, Morey, Pearce and Sharpsteen 1937): both Beauty and Snow

White wanted to change their lives and both of them are rescued by the same kind of

prince.

Rupert Sanders‘ version of Snow White; Snow White and the Huntsman is a clear

example of what has been discussed: in the story, Snow White is the real heroine and

the prince is not the one who rescues her, she is rescued by the Huntsman in the first

place but she is the one who kills the Queen. At first sight, this film could be interpreted

as feministic, but it is actually the Huntsman who makes Snow White survive, and the

only real powerful feminine character is Ravenna who ends up dead.

Snow White and the Huntsman (2012) is a modern version of Grimm‘s classical

story, which can have lots of interpretations, thus it is sometimes feministic but actually

follows patriarchal system. Its main aim is entertainment, yet it can be seen as

moralizing too.

1.4. Objectives of the analysis

The main objective in this dissertation is the study of Ravenna, Snow White‘s

stepmother in Snow White and the Huntsman (Sanders, 2012). Ravenna is one of the

most interesting characters in this new fashion of fairy tales twisted into modern

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versions, she is a powerful woman in a world made for men. In order to analyze

Ravenna we will study Ravenna‘s character, behaviour, dressing and in comparison

with other stepmothers and villains in fairy tales and also with other powerful women in

cinema in general in addition with the analysis of the most relevant sequences of the

film with regard to this topic. We will revise several films in order to understand how

the role of woman has evolved in cinema, if there are more feministic films than before

or if the patriarchal code is still imposed to women.

1.5. Methodology used in the analysis

In this analysis we will be using the comparative method and the text-based analysis

method, which examines the narrative and the iconic level (visual and sound codes) of

the film and the effect that these levels altogether produce in the spectator. In order to

follow this method we will study the images that characterise Ravenna in the film.

For the comparative part of the dissertation we will use Algirdas Julius Greimas‘s

theory which understands the characters as functions. Greimas thought of a narrative

model in which every subject tends to an object and this subject has helpers and

opponents and every story has an addressed and an addressee or recipient. In the general

structure (Table 1) of Snow White and the Huntsman (Sanders 2012): Snow White

would be the subject and Ravenna the opponent; the object would be the throne and the

dwarfs Snow White‘s helpers. In this film the huntsman would be at the same time

helper and opponent because he is first allied with the queen. The object would be the

throne, the sender would be Snow White, as she is the one who kills Ravenna and gets

the throne, and the recipients would be Snow White herself and the huntsman, because

he will marry Snow White once she has the throne. These character functions are very

important within this movie, as they will allow us to compare this film with others.

Sender: Snow White Object: Throne Recipient: Snow

White/Huntsman

Helper: Dwarfs/Huntsman Subject: Snow White Opponent:

Ravenna/Huntsman

Table 1

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As we are studying a movie we consider it important to use the text-based method

(complementing it with image and sound from the film) in order to provide the full

image of the character we are analyzing. However the original written version of Jacob

and Wilhelm Grimm must be taken into account to make this analysis exhaustive and

complete.

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2. Snow White

Snow White (1812) is the central work of the brothers Grimm and the starter of Walt

Disney‘s career in 1937 with his version Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.

According to Sheldon Cashdan, Snow White meets the perfect fairy tale cycle: ―a

threshold crossing, an encounter with a witch (the evil stepmother), the defeat of the

witch, and a happy ending.‖ (1999: 40).

In Snow White stories, the evil queen is a symbol of vanity and the young Snow

White fights the obsessive preoccupation with her appearance. The triumph of the good

is represented by the defeat of the queen and her death will be necessary in order to

make the victory of the good real.

The queen or the stepmother in Snow White is always presented to us as a

horrible person, it does not matter the version because the idea is always pretty much

the same. The fact that makes the queen such a hideous person is not just that she wants

Snow White dead, but that she wants to eat her guts. That provides the

readers/spectators the hate the writers are longing for, that gives them a reason to kill

her and they give us, as receptors, a reason to wish her death.

In this point we are going to analyze several versions of Snow White in order to

compare them with Rupert Sanders‘s Snow White and the Huntsman (2012). We need to

know what makes them special and what remains from the original version in order to

understand how the role of women has evolved throughout history

2.1. Grimm’s story

As it has been stated before, in this study we are going to deal with Sander‘s version of

Snow White, Snow White and the Huntsman and we are also going to compare it with

Grimm‘s Snow White which is actually the source for all the current versions of Snow

White. In Why Fairy Tales Stick (2006) Zipes recalls the beginning of this version:

The tale begins with a queen, who desires to have a child on whom

she wants to bestow particular traits that will enable her offspring to

survive – ―a child as white as snow, as red as blood and as black as the

wood of the window frame.‖ She dies, and her child will be set in

competition with another female, ―a beautiful lady, but proud and

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arrogant and could not bear being second to anyone in beauty.‖ (2006:

135)

The first two paragraphs suggest that the background of the story is going to deal

with competition, selection, ambition and vanity.

The story plot is very similar to the most famous one, Walt Disney‘s although

Rupert Sander‘s version is closer to Grimm‘s but still very different. The beginning of

Grimm‘s story is the same as Sander‘s; the mother is alive and three drops of blood fall

into the snow, reflecting the bond between a mother (blood) and her child (snow).

Disney‘s version starts with the mother already dead, but the storyline is the same as

Grimm‘s until the moment Snow White meets the dwarfs. Once she is living with them

the story changes: Snow White is not only tempted once, but three times: first with

laces, second with a comb and third with the famous apple.

Sanders omitted the first two temptations that appeared in Grimm‘s story because

he did not want her strong and man-like heroine to be portrayed as weak.

The apple and the glass coffin are the greatest symbols of vanity of this story. The

apple embodies the vanity dilemma: what is more important, the surface (the perfect red

skin of the apple) or what is inside (poison)? With this, we try to teach children that

beauty lies inside but they are saturated with the vanity industry. We tell tales to avoid

such things, so stories like Snow White teach kids that we should not give too much

relevance to appearance.

The glass coffin is another symbol of vanity, even though Snow White is dead,

she is still beautiful and she cannot be buried because she must be admired.

In the first two occasions the dwarfs rescue her but the third time they find her

dead and they decide not to bury her because of her beauty so they put her in a glass

coffin instead. When the prince appears he falls in love with Snow White‘s appearance

so he wants to take her to his palace. When his servants are taking her, one of them

stumbles and the poisoned apple flies from Snow White‘s throat, wakening her. After

that, Snow White and the Prince celebrate their wedding and the Evil Queen, who

thinks Snow White is dead, is invited too. When she arrives she is forced to dance with

red-iron hot shoes to death:

When she entered the hall, she recognized Snow White. The evil

queen was so petrified with fright that she could not budge. Iron

slippers had already been heated over a fire, and they were brought

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over to her with tongs. Finally, she had to put on the red-hot slippers

and dance until she fell down dead. (Zipes, 1992: 2041)

As the beginning stated, the queen considers Snow White a competitor for her

beauty and she wants to erase her. The moral of the story is punishment: the queen must

be punished because she must not kill her stepdaughter.

2.2. Snow White’s Versions

In this point, we are going to introduce three versions of Snow White that are very

relevant to our study: Walt Disney‘s Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, Mirror, Mirror

and Blancanieves. The first one must be analyzed because it is through Disney movies

that we first get in touch with fairy tales, while the others are kind of similar to

Sanders‘s: they are modern versions of a classical fairy tale that introduce twists in the

plot that tells us a lot about our society.

2.2.1. Walt Disney

Walt Disney managed to turn the German story of Snow White into a purely American

film, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (Cottrell, Hand, Jackson, Morey, Pearce and

Sharpsteen 1937). According to Zipes (2006: 203, 204) he induced several changes in

the film that made it an American story:

1. In Grimm‘s version, we witness the death of both parents while in Disney‘s

Snow White is already an orphan at the beginning.

2. The prince appears at the beginning and he is devoted to Snow White.

3. The Queen is jealous of Snow White‘s beauty and of the love of the prince.

4. Animals that help Snow White.

5. Dwarfs seen as hardworking and representing, through their names, human

characteristics.

6. The Queen is killed by accident while in Grimm‘s story she is punished to death.

7. Snow White is returned to life by her prince.

1 From: Zipes, J. ed. 1992 (1987). The Complete Fairy Tales of the Brothers Grimm. USA: Bantam.

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However, we observe that the changes made by Disney did not change the

essentials; women are portrayed as weak characters that need men‘s approval and help

to live their lives. The representation of male domination in this movie would be the

mirror, because he is the one that approves the beauty or ugliness of the queen and

Snow White and they, especially the queen, are ruled by it.

As Zipes points out, this story is, in fact, framed by the prince: he appears at the

beginning announcing his love to Snow White and does not reappear until Snow

White‘s dead, when he saves her and they live happily ever after. While the prince is

seen as powerful and the saviour, Snow White is pictured a ―helpless ornament in need

of protection.‖ (2006: 205) This makes the biggest difference between this film and

Sanders‘s; here the prince is the hero but in Sanders‘s Snow White is at the same time

the princess and the heroine. In Ed Gonzalez words, ―Though the film intriguingly

thumbs its nose at the Prince Charming fantasy, hinting that the huntsman, not the royal

William (Sam Claflin), is her true beloved, the story remains curiously reticent about

romance and what Snow White wants both as a woman and a warrior.‖ (2012) The

feminist version of Snow White does not care about conventions the same way as

Disney‘s did, but it still does.

The dwarfs represent the lower social class of workers that go work singing ‗Hi

Ho, it‘s off to work we go‘, but Disney pictured them not just as hard workers but as

miniature clowns too. In Grimm‘s story, the dwarfs took care of Snow White but in

Disney‘s Snow White looks after them. Moreover, they represent the patriarchal code

and the greatest example of this is when Snow White wakes up and meets the dwarfs;

they let her stay with them because she is going to take care of the home duties.

If we analyze this film in terms of Greimas‘s characters functions (Table 2):

Sender: Mirror Object: Beauty Recipient: Snow White

Helper: Dwarfs Subject: Snow White Opponent:

Stepmother/Huntsman

Table 2

As can be observed the subject, the helper, the recipient and the opponent remain the

same, while the sender and the object change. The object is not the throne anymore but

beauty: it is not a question of power but of vanity. The sender is now the mirror, as he is

the one who names the fairest of them all; like we said before it represents male

domination.

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2.2.2. Mirror, Mirror

Mirror, Mirror (Singh 2012) pictures women as silly, vain and dependent on men. One

of the main differences between this story and others is that the evil queen is the one

who tells the story with a cynical tone, and therefore it is her point of view we know, as

she states at the beginning of the film: ―this is my story, not hers.‖

The storyline of Mirror, Mirror follows the same structure as Grimm‘s: Snow

White‘s mother dies in childbirth and her father marries again and disappears. Snow

White is once again abandoned by her parents to a hideous woman. In this version we

have no huntsman, but a queen‘s servant who is commanded to kill her. He spares her

life and she is rescued by the dwarfs, who are no longer honest workers but thieves.

The way the stepmother is defeated is similar to Sander‘s, Snow White defeats her

by breaking the curse the evil queen had put on his father.

This story focuses on the prince and Snow White‘s love story which has to

overcome difficulties like the queen‘s magic and the fight with the monster in the dark

woods, but in the end they marry and live happily ever after.

The fact that the queen and Snow White are not competing for the land but for the

love of a man, perpetuates the patriarchal code and makes Greimas character function

(Table 3) completely different;

Sender: Mirror Object: Marriage Recipient: Snow White

Helper: Dwarfs/King Subject: Snow White Opponent: Stepmother

Table 3

Marriage is the object they pursue now, and this contributes to perpetuate the

patriarchal code: women cannot live without a man in their lives, not even the powerful

queen. The sender is again the mirror, as it reflects now the thoughts of the queen. It is

not a magic image that respond the queen‘s questions, but her own reflection talking to

her. It is a kind of double personality that could remind us to Robert Louis Stevenson‘s

The Strange case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1886).

2.2.3. Blancanieves

Blancanieves (Berger 2012) is a Spanish version of Snow White. It is a silent, black and

white movie set in Spain in the 1920s in which Snow White‘s father is a bullfighter. At

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the beginning of the film, the mother is alive but she dies during labour. The father was

almost killed by a bull called Lucifer, he is tetraplegic and he marries a nurse of the

hospital called Encarna. He is devastated and rejects his child, Carmencita.

Although Blancanieves has some specific details, especially the stepmother,

which can relate it to the original story, it is a free version. For instance, Carmencita

lives with her grandmother at the beginning of the film and it is when she dies that she

lives with her father and stepmother and, as they are living together, we are able to

witness the relationship between Carmencita and her father until the moment he dies.

Once the father is gone, the stepmother commands Carmencita‘s death and,

differently from other versions, the stepmother‘s servant does not spare Carmencita‘s

life, but he thinks she is dead when he leaves her. It is then when the dwarfs find her.

She becomes a bullfighter and the dwarfs, as she does not remember anything of her life

before meeting them, call her Blancanieves.

There is not a love story in this film, one of the dwarfs falls for Snow White but it

is not central to the plot.

The most relevant difference between this story and any other is that Snow White

does not wake up from her dream, so this story is much more hopeless the others. She

does not have anyone to save her so she remains asleep forever.

In this version, Greimas character function (Table 4) would be as follows:

Sender: Dwarfs Object: Family Recipient: Carmencita

Helper: Huntsman Subject: Carmencita Opponent:

Encarna/Grumpy

Table 4

As we said, this is a free version, so the object is neither beauty nor power but to

have a family. Although at the beginning Carmencita has a family, everyone she loves

ends up passing away and when she meets the dwarfs they become Carmencita‘s

family. One of the main differences here is that one of the dwarfs, we could say he

represents Grumpy, is jealous of Carmencita and tries to kill her instead of helper and

therefore he serves the function of an opponent along with Encarna.

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3. The stepmother

Good Bones and Simple Murders (Atwood 2006) includes There Was Once which is a

satirical short story/poem that deals with the stereotypes and conventions in fairy tales.

Atwood manages to criticize fairy tales conventions with a short dialogue in which a

girl is trying to tell a story and the listener attacks fairy tales:

"There was once a girl of indeterminate descent, as average-looking as

she was good, who lived with her wicked-"

"Another thing. Good and wicked. Don't you think you should

transcend those puritanical judgmental moralistic epithets? I mean, so

much of that is conditioning, isn't it?"

"There was once a girl, as average-looking as she was well-adjusted,

who lived with her stepmother, who was not a very open and loving

person because she herself had been abused in childhood."

"Better. But I am so tired of negative female images! And

stepmothers-they always get it in the neck! Change it to stepfather,

why don't you?" (2006: 23)

With this poem Margaret Atwood wanted to prove that language is a very

powerful tool that can suggest a lot of meanings. This piece of the poem criticizes the

negative connotations women are conveyed in fairy tales. The use of ―wicked‖ to refer

to a stepmother or the fact that women are always the wicked ones has to do with the

analysis of the figure of the stepmother.

3.1. The figure of the stepmother

Before beginning with this point a point that concerns the study of women in

cinema must be discussed. There is a dichotomy called the Mother/Whore in which

women are either seen as good or evil creatures:

Women are frequently represented in movies as being either good,

dutiful mothers and wives or independent and sexual beings. This

polarization of women is often referred to as the mother/whore

dichotomy, which implies that if women are not traditional mother

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figures, safely under the protection of a man, they are whores in spirit,

if not profession. The sexual woman is usually represented as

dangerous to herself and/or men. (Lehman and Lhur, 2003: 266)

If we take into account this dichotomy, in Grimm‘s Snow White we have both

figures: Snow White would be the mother as she ―mothers‖ the dwarfs by taking home

duties and the stepmother would be the whore, because she is the evil queen and she is

dangerous to everyone including herself.

A clear example of this dichotomy is the movie Fatal Attraction (Lyne 1987) in

which the wife represents the mother, as she is a dutiful wife; while his lover is the

whore, as she is the powerful woman that has an affair with other woman‘s husband.

All these films have a clear message of warning towards these kind of ―whore‖

women; ―They warn both men and women of the dangers of independent sexual women

and either place such women under the safe control of a powerful man or punish them

with death‖ (Lehman and Lhur, 2003: 267). In Snow White and the Huntsman, the King

could not control Ravenna, so she killed him and Snow White ends up killing Ravenna.

The term ―stepmother‖ is defined by the Oxford Dictionary of English as ―a

woman who is married to one‘s father after the divorce of one‘s parents or the death of

one‘s mother.‖ This is the technical definition and it is, of course, correct. But this

definition does not mention the negative connotations that the term stepmother conveys;

as Cashdan puts it ―The witchlike nature of the stepmother is compounded by her use of

magic to perform her evil deeds. […] Modern critics claim that negative portrayal of the

stepmother is part of a misogynistic streak in fairy tales.‖ (1999: 17, 18) Grimm‘s fairy

tales are a great example of this notion; stories like Cinderella or Snow White represent

accurately the evil stepmother that forces her husband‘s child to be her servant and

treats her miserably.

The constant presence of a stepmother in fairy tales has actually a historical

explanation: a lot of mothers died during labour thus it was common that the father

would marry again to replace their former wives in order to have someone looking after

house duties and children. The reasons were more practical than romantic.

The fact that fairy tales always begin with the death of the mother or with the

mother already dead is a way to protect the mother from the witch. In Cashdan words:

―Though her [mother‘s] absence makes the child highly vulnerable, her peaceful

departure is preferable to a scenario in which she dies a violent death.‖ (1999: 42) Once

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the mother is out of the story the children have to face the world by themselves, in our

case, Snow White has to face Ravenna by herself because she has no parents.

As we have stated before, stepmothers are always pictured as evil creatures. We

must revise now the death of the which, which should be seen as something not only

necessary but compulsory.

The death of the villain at the end of the tale can be condemned when you think

about children, however it is something necessary: to close the story, the witch must die.

The witch, the stepmother in this case, represents the sin that both she and the heroine,

Snow White, share: vanity. In order to end with Snow White‘s vanity impulses the

stepmother, who embodies the temptation with the lace, the comb and the apple, needs

to die. In Grimm‘s Snow White, the witch is forced to dance with red-iron shoes to

death, in Disney‘s she is killed by accident in order to soften the impact of the original

story. Sander‘s version is quite different; Snow White is the one who ends Ravenna‘s

life in order to consolidate her power as a woman and the legitimate queen.

3.2. Other villains

In this point we are going to analyze two fairy tales villains that are relevant to our

study: Maleficient, from the film Maleficient (Stromberg 2014) and Lady Tremaine

from Disney‘s Cinderella (Geromini, Jackson, Luske 1950); as they have several

characteristics that are very useful to prove our points: the first one is a modern version

of fairy tales and the second one, in fact, has the same storyline as Snow White.

3.2.1. Maleficient

The Disney film Maleficient is a version of Disney‘s Sleeping Beauty (Geromini, 1959)

in which the story of the princess Aurora is told by the villain of the story: Maleficient.

Maleficient is a powerful woman and she proves her power from the very beginning of

the film; as we can see in this extremely long shot she can fly (F01) or heal broken

things, like this sequence shows (F02). Moreover, when she grows old she rules the

army against the king.

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F01

F02 However, she is defeated by love; she trusted a man, Stefan, and he betrayed her,

he cut her wings to become king. She decided to take revenge by cursing Aurora, the

king‘s child, in her christening. In this medium shot, Maleficient seems more powerful

than ever (F03). As love has betrayed her, Maleficient does not believe in it and that is

why she says that Aurora can only be saved by true love, she wants to condemn her

forever: the true love kiss is a symbol of the power fairy tales attributed to men.

F03

Maleficient has become a mean person because of Stefan but Aurora makes her

good again. When Aurora gets older, Maleficient tries to remove the curse but she

cannot. When her kiss saves Aurora, Maleficient understands that true love does exist,

but she had not met it yet. The transition from good to bad and then to good again is

clearly reflected in Maleficient‘s dressing. At the beginning, she wears ochre and golden

colours and her hair is loose (F04), however when Stefan cuts her wings she starts

wearing black costumes and tying her hair (F05). This change in the hair is reflected in

Ravenna too, when she is acting good at the beginning her hair is loose like

Maleficient‘s but when she reveals her real self she ties her hair. At the end, when

Aurora brings the good Maleficient back, she dresses as she did in the beginning (F06).

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F04

F05

F06 If we compare her to Ravenna we can spot several similarities but the one that

highlights the most is the importance of the figure of the raven; Maleficient chooses an

animal to be her servant and it is a raven, not only a raven but a raven that is trapped in

a net and cannot use its wings, just like her. Ravens symbolize the darkness in

someone‘s heart and soul and that is why they are so important for Maleficient and

Ravenna (as we will see later on, raven is a key symbol in Ravenna).

However at the end Maleficient, unlike Ravenna, regrets what she has done and at

the end it is she who saves Aurora with a kiss of true love.

Maleficient is at the same time hero and villain: at the beginning the only thing

she wanted was revenge but in the end she gets trapped in her own curse, as she loves

Aurora more than anyone in this world.

3.2.2. Lady Tremaine

Lady Tremaine is Cinderella‘s stepmother in Walt Disney‘s Cinderella (Geromini,

Jackson, Luske 1950). This is a key character if we want to study the role of

stepmothers, because the storyline of Snow White and Cinderella is actually very

similar: a little girl whose mother died during bird and her father remarried with a

hideous woman that, once the father is gone, mistreats the child.

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In Disney‘s version, Lady Tremaine is a powerful woman who abuses Cinderella

and uses her as a servant when she is, in fact, the owner of the house.

The first appearance of the stepmother in the film shows us that we must fear her;

the room is slightly dark and the only thing we can see are Lucifer‘s, her cat, eyes (F07).

The fact that her cat‘s name is Lucifer, like the devil, is also a warning towards the

stepmother, as he appears in the film before she does.

F07 When she speaks she is very cynical, her tone is nice, but her intentions are mean.

When Cinderella asks her to go to the royal palace she says she could go if she finishes

her duties. She does everything in her hand to avoid Cinderella‘s happiness. But

fortunately, just as Snow White had the dwarfs Cinderella has her mice and they make

her a beautiful dress to make sure she will be ready in time. However, when Cinderella

is ready her stepsisters shred her dress because their mother lures them into (F08).

F08 This film, like most of Disney‘s, has clear sexist discrimination reflected in the

mice, specially when they are making the dress and one of the male mice says he wants

to use the needle and a female mouse answers that sewing is for women (F09).

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F09 As an opposite of Lady Tremaine we have the fairy godmother (F10), who makes

it possible for Cinderella to go to the palace in time. It is the maternal figure that is

missing in Snow White‘s stories.

F10 As we have said, Lady Tremaine would do anything to avoid Cinderella‘s joy.

She wants her children to marry the prince, but once she knows that is impossible, she

prefers breaking the glass shoe on purpose (F11) rather than Cinderella having a happy

ending. Fortunately Cinderella had kept the other shoe and she finally married the

prince and lived happily ever after.

F11

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These two first shots of the stepmother shows that not only does she not regret

what she has done, but she is pleased when she thinks Cinderella has nothing to do

(F12) and is horrified when she finds out that Cinderella was actually the woman who

danced with the prince (F13).

F12

F13 Lady Tremaine‘s last appearance in the movie is the previous image. In this movie

we do not know anything else about Cinderella‘s stepfamily after her happiness.

However, in Grimm‘s version they go to Cinderella‘s wedding and birds picked out her

stepsister‘s eyes and they were condemned to be blind for the rest of their lives.

3.3. Other “evil queens” in Snow White stories

Now that we have analyzed two villains that play such an important role representing

women in cinema, we must go into detail in the versions of Snow White‘s stepmother in

three different films that we have already studied in point 2.2. Snow White’s Versions

which are Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, Mirror, Mirror and Blancanieves.

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3.3.1. Disney’s evil queen

Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (Cottrell, Hand, Jackson, Morey, Pearce and

Sharpsteen 1937) is the most famous version of this story because Disney movies are

what introduced many people to fairy tales. In this version Snow White‘s stepmother is

nameless, she is just the queen.

The movie starts with an image of the castle and then it zooms the window in

which the mirror is. The first time we see the queen we do not actually see her face, but

her reflection (F14), which marks the plot: vanity and appearance are the frame to this

story. The queen asks the mirror the question: Mirror, mirror on the wall, who is the

fairest one of all? And the mirror answers that although she is beautiful, Snow White is

the fairest and that rages the queen.

F14 As it was stated before, Lady Tremaine is very similar to this queen; they both are

cruel and dominant and married to a man that had a child, only to mistreat her once he is

gone. However, there is a huge difference, Snow White‘s stepmother is a witch and she

dominates dark magic.

F15

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We also see her becoming an ugly old lady (F15) that actually looks like a witch

(she even has a wart in her nose), and making the poison for the apple (F16).

F16 It is important that in the moment just before she drinks the potion we see her face

reflected in the glass (F17), the last time we will see her face will be just like the first, a

mere reflection of herself.

F17 The figure of the raven also accompanies this evil queen (F18) and here it appears

with a skull, which symbolizes death.

F18 When she makes the apple, we see the symbol of death in it but she makes it as

appealing as possible so Snow White will not reject it (F19), again a symbol of vanity:

Snow White would not have eaten the apple if it did not look delicious.

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F19 The fact that the witch renounces to her appearance, the thing that she most values

in the world, to kill the only person more beautiful than her tells us how much she

wished to be the fairest one of all.

Once the witch has the apple and her new ugly appearance she persuades Snow

White to eat the apple. When she is escaping from the dwarfs she tries to kill them but

she is the one who gets killed, by accident (F20).

F20 In the end this witch gets what she deserves, she dies ugly and nobody misses her

while Snow White is saved by her prince and she stays beauty and happiest than ever.

3.3.2. Julia Roberts’s evil queen

Julia Roberts interprets the, again nameless, evil queen in Mirror, Mirror (Singh 2012),

the sweetest version of Snow White in which the queen and Snow White do not

compete for power neither for beauty, but for the love of a man.

This queen is not as evil as the others, she is more cynical and her colour is not

black, but white, red and golden. The queen appears after Snow White and when she

does we see a full shot of herself in which we can appreciate how vain and preposterous

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she is; she is sitting in the throne with a ridiculously big dress that matches the colour of

her throne, golden (F21).

F21 She has beauty rituals like Ravenna; in order to stay pretty she covers herself with

disgusting and hurting things like bugs, shit, bees or scorpions (F22).

F22

As an opposite of Ravenna, who is an independent and strong woman, this queen

is reliant on men; she is seeking for a man to take care of her and her kingdom. Ravenna

wants to kill Snow White because she wants all her power back but this queen only

wants the prince, she is jealous.

In the end, Snow White defeats the queen, she is destroyed by her own vanity and

she melts in Snow White‘s wedding (F23).

F23

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3.3.3. Maribel Verdú’s evil queen

To finish with this point of other evil queens we want to study one more character:

Encarna from Blancanieves (Berger, 2012). Encarna, along with Ravenna, is the only

evil queen that has a name and like the other stepmothers she marries Carmencita‘s

(Snow White‘s) father and once she is dead she mistreats her.

However, this stepmother is the cruellest of them all: she settles Carmencita in a

stable, cuts her hair (taking her beauty away from her) and feeds her with her pet, a cock

named Pepe (F24).

F24 The raven is also a symbol to this stepmother, we can see her wearing a hat with a

raven in this shot (F25).

F25

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She mistreats Antonio (Carmencita‘s father) too: she does not take proper care of

him and cheats on him. Moreover, she is not only responsible of two attempts of

murderer against Snow White, she is also guilty of Antonio‘s death (F26).

F26 After Antonio‘s death, Encarna dresses him as a bullfighter and hires a

photographer to take pictures of him with people attending to his funeral (F27).

F27 After killing her father, Encarna tries to kill Carmencita but she is left alive by

mistake. Encarna finds out that she is alive when Carmencita‘s picture as a bullfighter is

the cover of the magazine Lecturas and not herself as she expected (F28, F29).

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F28

F29 In order to check if Blancanieves is actually Carmencita, Encarna goes to a

bullfight. At the end, after Encarna realizes it is actually Carmencita, she offers

Blancanieves a poisoned apple (F30) and she bites it twice and dismays.

F302

After that the dwarfs, that know it was Encarna who poisoned Carmencita, try to

kill her but instead she is killed by a bull when she is trying to escape (F31).

2 Notice that this resource of a skull to show that the apple is poisoned is the same as Disney‘s Snow

White and the Seven Dwarfs that was shown above in F19.

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F31 Although this is a free version of Snow White, Encarna is more similar to

Ravenna than any other queen, she seeks power and beauty and she does not regret

anything she has done and at the end she ends up dead, just like Ravenna.

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4. The figure of the stepmother in Snow White and the Huntsman

Now we are going to analyze the figure of the stepmother, starting with Charlize

Theron, the actress that interprets Ravenna, and then studying Ravenna herself.

4.1. Charlize Theron

When it comes to talk about actors we must differentiate between actors and stars. As

Peter Lehman and William Lhur point out in Thinking about movies (2003), we often

talk about stars‘ personality, private life, habits or talent, that is to say, things that go

beyond the role of an actor in a particular movie; in Lehman and Lhur words ―Few

people speak of these things with reference to the actor who played the President of the

United States in Clear and Present Danger (1994), and yet many people bring such

issues when talking about Harrison Ford.‖ (2003: 145)

Stars are an essential part of the filmmaking process, but we sometimes wonder

why they are so important, why they earn so much money; ―Harrison Ford earned $20

million for playing the President of the United States in Air Force One (1997), which is

a hundred times the salary of the real president of the United States!‖ (Lehman and

Lhur, 2003: 146). The answer is actually quite simple, it is because they are the visual

part of the film and people pay to see them. There are people who watch every film their

favourite actor or actress play, even if they do not like the genre or the argument.

Charlize Theron is one of the members of Snow White and the Huntsman‘s cast,

which is, according to Michael O‘Sullivan, ―Overlong, overcrowded, overstimulating

and with an over-the-top performance by Charlize Theron as the evil queen Ravenna,

the movie is a virtual orchard of toxic excess, starting with the unnecessarily sprawling

cast of characters.‖ (2012) She, along with Kristen Stewart and Chris Hemsworth are

the stars in this production of a different version of the Snow White‘s story. We must

revise Charlize Theron‘s star persona3, in order to relate it with Ravenna.

Charlize Theron was born in Benoni, South Africa in 1975. Theron‘s father was

an alcoholic and when Theron was 15 her mother had to kill the girl‘s father because he

had attacked them. In 1995 she started her successful career in acting and she is now

considered a great film star.

3 The meanings that are attached to a famous person, not because of their personal life but because of the

things they are known for. A star persona combines its own personality with the marketing they are given.

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Moreover, she is also a philanthropist and social activist. In 2008 she became the

United Nation‘s tenth messenger of peace. In addition to all this she is an advocate for

The Global Fund, an institution that fights AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria.

Charlize Theron may be the most versatile actress of this film, as she is not type-

casted as her colleagues; Kristen Stewart as Bella in The Twilight Saga (Twilight

(Hardwicke 2008), New Moon (Weitz 2009), Eclipse (Slade 2010), Breaking Dawn –

Part 1 (Condon 2011) and Breaking Dawn – Part 2 (Condon 2012)) and Chris

Hemsworth as Thor (Thor (Brannagh 2011), The Avengers (Whedon 2012), Thor: The

Dark World (Taylor 2013) and Avengers: Age of Ultron (Whedon 2015)).

Like Elizabeth Weitzman claims ―such a strong heroine [Snow White] requires a

confident, muscular portrayal. And Stewart‘s characteristic hesitancy — so fitting for

the ―Twilight‖ franchise — undercuts her character‘s impact. Though designed as a

regal Joan of Arc, Snow too often comes across as an overwhelmed Bella Swan.‖

(2012) Stewart has embraced Bella Swan so deep inside, that sometimes while watching

the film you expect Robert Pattinson to come to save her instead of Hemsworth.

Theron is best known for her roles as Candy Kendall in The Cider House Rules

(Hallström 1999), Sara Deever, a very special girl who wants to change others‘ life, in

Sweet November (O‘Connor 2001), the safecracker Stella Bridger in The Italian Job

(Gary Gray 2003), the serial killer Aileen in Monster (Jenkins 2003), Mary, a superhero,

in Hancock (Berg 2008) or Mavis Gery, a recently divorced fiction writer who goes

back home in Minnesota in order to get her former boyfriend back, in Young Adult

(Reitman 2011).

Even though we are not going to expand on Ravenna until the next point we must

compare her with other characters. Her roles in films such as Sweet November or The

Cider House Rules are opposite to Ravenna; in both of them Theron interprets a sweet

girl that does not want people to suffer, that sacrifices her happiness by the sake of the

others; in The Cider House Rules Candy loves Homer, but she stays with Wally because

he is not self sufficient anymore. On the other hand, Ravenna is selfish and the only

thing she cares is her own beauty. Aileen (Monster, Jenkins 2003) was Theron‘s

interpretation worth an Oscar. The curious thing about this character is that she has

burns all over her face and she is disfigured, a woman as beautiful as Charlize Theron

has only one Academy Award and it was Aileen who got it. The character of Mavis

Gery in Young Adult would be more similar to Ravenna than any other, Mavis wants her

ex-boyfriend back but he is happily married and has just had a baby girl; Mavis is

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selfish and conceited and she does all kind of things in order to fulfil her goals. This is

very similar to what Ravenna does; she is capable to sacrifice everything, even her own

brother, to stay beautiful.

4.2. Ravenna

Now we are going to go into detail in the figure of Ravenna studying the symbolism in

the film and vanity, the two key elements within this film.

Before starting with Ravenna‘s analysis we are going to introduce her as a

character.

Ravenna came to Tabor as a prisoner, and the king, whose wife had passed away,

bewitched by Ravenna‘s beauty decided to marry her, making her queen. In the

beginning, she has an angelical appearance, we could say that she looks like a child, and

she wears bright colours like for example white (F32).

F32 In this point of the film she is very nice with Snow White, she tells her that she

cannot replace her mother and acts like a comprehensive stepmother.

In her wedding the dress she wears is covered with a kind of armour that can

remind us of a bird skeleton (F33), symbol that is used all along the film as we will see.

F33

But she was not actually a prisoner, it was a trick, all of this kindness was a mask

to become queen; she explains the king that she hates men because the only thing they

want is to use women to their benefit and when women are ruined men get rid of them.

She covers her skin with poison and in her wedding night she kills the king (F34). She

claims ―When a woman stays young and beautiful forever, the world is hers.‖

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F34 After that, her look changes, she starts wearing dark clothes, combing her hair,

and looking more powerful in general. The angelical expression on her face disappears,

leading to a face to fear. You can even appreciate the change in her voice. Ravenna is

now a powerful, selfish, merciless, vain and dark woman. Moreover, she is to be feared

because she dominates dark magic. As Rebecca Cussey states ―Charlize Theron

becomes the real star of the show with her fantastic, single-minded performance. Her

costumes are almost a character in themselves, so well do they reflect the heart within:

cloyingly innocent as she lures the king into marriage, all sharp edges and death after

she cements her queenship.‖ (2012)

In order to stay young and beautiful Ravenna has a ritual in which she baths into a

white liquid (F35).

F35 A similar ritual appears in Jupiter Ascending (Wachowski, 2015) a film that has

been said to have many similarities with Snow White and the Huntsman. Both Ravenna

and the queen of Jupiter Ascending bathe in a youth serum in order to stay young and in

Jupiter Ascending this serum comes from harvesting organisms such as humans. This is

very similar to one of Ravenna‘s practices in order to stay young, which is sucking life

out of young girls, as we will see later on.

Apart from this youth serum, the general plot of the movie is quite alike

Sanders‘s, a young girl that scrubs toilets for a living who is not aware of the fact that,

in Claude Brodesser-Akner words, ―she actually possesses the same perfect genetic

makeup as the Queen of the Universe and is therefore a threat to her otherwise immortal

rule.‖ (2012) So, one of the heirs sends a bounty hunter who instead of killing her ends

up falling for her. In this film the queen bathed into a special liquid and she emerged

younger (F36).

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F36 However, as stated above, the most fearful thing Ravenna does in order to stay

beautiful is sucking the youth out of young women (F37). When she is done with the

girl, she looks much more younger and the girl looks like an old lady (F38).

F37

F38 People fear Ravenna so much that women make themselves hideous scars (F039)

when they are young in order to prevent her to catch them, because what the queen

needs are beautiful ladies.

F39 As stated above, the queen is merciless and the highest proof of that is that when

the huntsman kills her brother, Ravenna feels it (F40), and feels him imploring help, but

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she decides that that would weaken her too much, so she mutters ―Forgive me, brother‖

and lets him die.

F40 As it can be seen, when he dies she looks older than usual and her brother also

gets older in the moment he dies (F41).

F41 In her attempt to kill Snow White she disguises as William, Snow White‘s

childhood love, and she proves once again that men‘s love is what ruins women.

She tells Snow White that she was the only one that could break the spell and

destroy her, the only one that could save her, but before killing her, William and the

Huntsman appear and she disappears, becoming a flock of ravens (F42).

F42 In the final fight, Ravenna and Snow White are finally face to face and they are

going to confront each other. Ravenna uses magic in order to assure her revenge; she

wants this to be between Snow White and herself. In the end, she is defeated by Snow

White and dies as an old woman (F43).

F43

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4.2.1. Symbolism in the film

The first thing to take into account when analyzing this character is the symbolism of

her name. It must be highlighted that in other versions of Snow White, except for the

Spanish version, the queen nameless, so her name here is neither random nor irrelevant.

Ravenna, coming from ―raven‖, conveys that the queen has a dark mind and soul

because everything in her, even her name, is dark.

As explained before, Ravenna‘s character is reflected in the way she dresses: in

the beginning she wears white dresses but after killing the king her dressing symbolizes

a raven in many occasions (F44, F45, F46). In image F45 it can be appreciated that not

only her dress makes her seem as a raven, but it also has raven skulls sewn and what

falls over her forehead in the crown are tiny bones, which seem those of a raven too.

F44

F45

F46 Sometimes, she does not even need dresses in order to symbolize a raven, in this

shot her back looks like a bird and its wings (F47).

F47

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The figure of the raven has been used a lot regarding symbolism of a bad heart

and soul. In Edgar Allan Poe‘s The Raven (1845) we find this resource of darkness

being symbolized by a raven, in which a man who has lost a woman named Lenore, is

alone in the night and hears something tapping his window. He first thinks it is Lenore,

but when he opens the door he sees a raven, which says ―Nevermore‖, reflecting the

despair in the narrator‘s soul. This raven symbolizes death, it is a sign that he will meet

with Lenore sooner or later.

Once again, the figure of the raven symbolizes death, and this narrator, like

Ravenna or the other stepmothers in Snow White‘s stories will face death and no one,

not even Ravenna can avoid it.

In addition to the figure of raven, we cannot forget the symbolism of the relation

between Ravenna and Snow White that is present in the movie.

As explained before, the figure of the stepmother was something normal in fairy

tales because it was normal in real life too. Ravenna tells Snow White in the beginning

that she does not mean to replace her mother but in some way she actually does. In the

beginning of the film Snow White‘s mother appears and three drops of blood fall into

the snow, symbolizing the birth of the princess (F48). In the same way, at the end of the

film when Snow White kills Ravenna, three drops of blood fall into Snow White‘s

armour (F049), reflecting her triumph.

F48

F49 In the same way that her mother‘s blood announced her birth, her stepmother‘s

shows her victory, and in some way that she has been reborn.

There is also a clear parallelism between these two characters reflected in the

woods: the dark wood, which symbolizes death, it is a reflection of Ravenna; while the

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fairy wood represents Snow White. In the dark Snow White almost dies, but when they

are with the dwarfs and the fairies she feels like home.

4.2.2. Vanity

Snow White‘s story is about the desire of a woman to be the ―fairest of them all‖. As

Roger Sale puts it ―The term ‗narcissism‘ seems altogether too slippery to be the only

one we want here.‖ (1987: 41) The feeling that surrounds the whole story is envy, the

Queen realizes that both Snow White and she are getting older, but she is the one that is

going to lose her beauty to Snow White‘s. In Zipes‘s words: ―For the aging stepmother,

the young girl‘s maturation signals her own waning sexual attractiveness and control.‖

(1986: 212)

The vanity topic is the key to this fairy tale, it affects every action of the queen;

for instance, she spends hours just standing in front of the mirror, and vanity is the

reason why she orders the huntsman to kill Snow White.

However, in the original story the Queen is not the only conceited character, if we

think about it we will realize that Snow White is also vain. Nevertheless, there is an

explanation to Snow White‘s vanity; the child needs to identify the sin not only with the

evil character, but also with the good one, because if the sin is only placed in the evil

character, children would not identify it as a sin, but as an isolated situation of a mean

person.

Ravenna does not have a mirror, but a kind of oracle; when she pronounces the

famous sentence: ―Mirror, mirror on the wall, who is the fairest one of all?‖ a golden

figure appears in front of her and she talks to her (F50). She is the only one that can see

it and it is not specified in the film if the others cannot see it because it is magical or if it

is because Ravenna is delusional and she imagines it.

F50 In Snow White and the Huntsman we do not find vanity impulses in Snow White.

She is portrayed as a victim that does not care about her beauty, the only thing she

wants is to avenge her father and to get her kingdom back. Sanders transforms the

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princess into a heroin and leaves the love story aside, Snow White does not wear

dresses but an armour, she is not saved by the prince but by the huntsman and finally

she is the one who kills Ravenna and restores the peace in the land. This Snow White is

less feminine than the one we all have in our minds, and therefore she does not

accomplish the feminine standards as, for example, caring about her looks.

However, Ravenna does care about Snow White‘s beauty, as she is beauty in the

outside but also in the inside. The moment Ravenna is about to kill Snow White she

claims that she is very lucky because she will not know what one feels when one gets

older.

Although vanity symbols appear in Sander‘s film Snow White and the Huntsman

(2012) Snow White is not driven by vanity impulses. In this film the only conceited

character is Ravenna, her beauty is the most important thing and she sacrifices

everything to keep it.

Another tale of vanity is Oscar Wilde‘s The Picture of Dorian Gray (1890) in

which a young Dorian is obsessed with his beauty and makes a portrait that will grew

old while he stays beauty. This highly relates with Ravenna‘s way of making her beauty

remain; she literally sucks youth and beauty from young girls. Both Ravenna‘s and

Dorian‘s personality bitter and their character deteriorates and when Ravenna stays for a

while without absorbing anyone‘s beauty and youth shows her real self, just like

Dorian‘s portrait shows his.

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5. Conclusions

This dissertation has intended to examine the role of Snow White‘s stepmother in

Rupert Sanders‘s Snow White and the Huntsman (2012), along with the role of other

stepmothers in classical fairy tales. Ravenna is interpreted by Charlize Theron, and

according to many critics, she is the reason why it is worth watching this movie. She is

the most powerful of them all, her dressing characterizes her as much as her personality;

even her name tells us all we need to know about her, that she is as dark as a raven.

Starting with the origin of fairy tales, we have revised Snow White‘s story from

its beginning, from Grimm‘s to Sanders‘s. The study of this film has been done through

the comparative method and the text-based analysis method. In the comparative part of

the essay we have analyzed Ravenna and her film in contrast with other villains and

stepmothers and other films. The analysis of other stepmothers, such as Cinderella‘s

Lady Tremaine, shows that regardless the story, the role of the stepmother is always to

mistreat her stepchildren. The analysis of Snow White‘s stepmothers has proved that the

moral of fairy tales was true, if you obsess with your appearance, it will finish you off.

On the other hand, using the text-based analysis method has provided us a wide

amount of information about the figure of the stepmother in general, as we have revised

the main sequences of each film in each villain and stepmother. The study of Ravenna

has been more exhaustive than the others, she is the central character of this dissertation,

and the most remarkable character in the film. We have studied the symbolism

concerning Ravenna in the film, the most interesting part of her characterisation is the

raven, which is important in the other stepmothers as well; and the vanity topic, which

is central in Ravenna.

Appearance is what matters to Ravenna, every action she makes has something to

do with her beauty. The only thing she wants is to stay young and beautiful, as beauty is

what has given her power. The only person she loved was her brother, Finn, but she

preferred beauty over his life. The only true menace to her beauty is Snow White,

therefore she must be destroyed. As stated above, vanity is the key to this story,

Ravenna is vain and Snow White is not, and that is exactly what ruins Ravenna.

Sanders has managed to make the villain in his movie the most interesting and

memorable character. Moreover, he has given a feminist twist to it making two females

the strongest characters in the film and leaving aside the love story.

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Ravenna and Snow White are two powerful women, it is constantly stated that this

fight is between them and male figures, such as William or the huntsman, can be left

over. The sentence that marks Ravenna‘s death is the clearest example of their fight, it

is uttered before by Ravenna when she almost kills Snow White ―By fairest blood it was

done and only by fairest blood can it be undone,‖ they fight over power, and beauty

makes you powerful.

The highest mistake committed by Ravenna is that she does not repent, but that

makes her what she is; she is dark and mean and she does not have a place for love in

her heart. With her attitude she makes her death something compulsory, if she is alive

there will not be peace and thus, she must die.

Theron‘s interpretation is what leads Ravenna to her highness, and the election of

her for the role of Ravenna does not meet with Stewart‘s for Snow White. Theron

makes Ravenna shine, even in her worst moments. Although Ravenna is the most

beautiful of them all, Snow White is the fairest; her inside is as fair as her appearance.

The figure of the stepmother in Sanders‘s Snow White and the Huntsman is

actually not really different from the figure of other stepmothers, but still exceptional.

Ravenna is a unique character and she along with Theron‘s performance make the

perfect recipe to the most frightening villain Snow White ever had to face.

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Annex: Conclusiones

En resumen, la intención de este trabajo ha sido examinar el papel de la madrastra de

Blancanieves en la película de Rupert Sanders, Snow White and the Huntsman (2012),

en conjunto con el papel de otras madrastras en cuentos de hadas. Ravenna es

interpretada por Charlize Theron y, de acuerdo con la opinión de muchos críticos, ella

es la razón por la que ver esta película merece la pena. Ella es la más poderosa del reino,

su vestuario la caracteriza tanto como su carácter e incluso su nombre nos dice todo lo

que necesitamos saber de ella, que es tan oscura como un cuervo4.

Comenzando por el origen de los cuentos de hadas, hemos revisado la historia de

Blancanieves desde el principio, comenzando por los hermanos Grimm hasta llegar a

Sanders. El estudio de esta película ha sido realizado a través del método comparativo y

el método basado en el análisis textual de la película. La parte comparativa del ensayo

analiza a Ravenna y su película en contraste con otras villanas y madrastras en otras

películas. El análisis de otras madrastras, como la de Cenicienta, Lady Tremaine, nos

enseñan que sin importarla historia, el papel de la madrastra siempre es el de maltratar a

sus hijastros. El análisis de las otras madrastras de Blancanieves prueba que la moraleja

de los cuentos de hadas es cierta, si te obsesionas con tu apariencia, acabará contigo.

Por otro lado, el uso del método basado en el análisis textual de la película nos ha

proporcionado una amplia información sobre la figura de la madrastra en general,

habiendo revisado las principales secuencias de cada película en cada villana y

madrastra. El estudio de Ravenna es el más exhaustivo, ella es el personaje principal de

este trabajo y el más relevante de la película. Hemos estudiado el simbolismo que

concierne a Ravenna en la película, la parte más interesante de su caracterización es el

cuervo, que es importante también en las otras madrastras; y el tema de la vanidad, que

es central en Ravenna.

Lo único que le importa a Ravenna son las apariencias, cada acción que hace tiene

que ver con su belleza. Lo único que quiere es mantenerse joven y guapa, porque la

belleza es lo que le ha proporcionado su poder. La única persona a la que ha querido es

su hermano, Finn, pero prefirió la belleza por encima de su vida. La única amenaza

verdadera a su hermosura es Blancanieves, por tanto debe ser destruida. Como se ha

4 Ravenna viene del sustantivo ―raven‖, que significa ―cuervo‖ en español.

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dicho anteriormente, la vanidad es la clave de esta historia, Ravenna es vanidosa y

Blancanieves no, y esto es lo que la arruina

Sanders consigue hacer del villano el personaje más interesante y memorable de

su película. Además, le da un giro feminista a la misma, haciendo de dos mujeres los

personajes más fuertes y dejando de lado la historia de amor.

Ravenna y Blancanieves son dos mujeres poderosas que mantienen una lucha

constante la una con la otra, lo que hace que las figuras masculinas como William o el

cazador pasen a un segundo plano. La frase que marca la muerte de Ravenna es el más

claro ejemplo de su lucha, había sido pronunciada antes por ella misma cuando casi

mata a Blancanieves: ―Con la sangre más hermosa se hace y solo con la más hermosa se

deshace.‖, luchan por el poder, y la belleza te hace poderosa.

El mayor error cometido por Ravenna es que no se arrepiente, pero es lo que la

hace a ella ser quien es, oscura y malvada, una mujer que no tiene sitio para el amor en

su corazón. Con su actitud hace de su muerte algo obligatorio, si ella vive nunca

conseguirán la paz y por tanto, debe morir.

La interpretación de Theron lleva a Ravenna a lo más alto, y su elección para el

papel de Ravenna no concuerda con la de Stewart para el de Blancanieves. Theron hace

brillar a Ravenna incluso en sus peores momentos. Aunque Ravenna es la más bella del

reino, Blancanieves lo es tanto por dentro como por fuera.

La figura de la madrastra en la película de Sanders Snow White and the

Huntsman en realidad no es tan diferente de la de otras madrastras, pero aun así

excepcional. Ravenna es un personaje único y esto, en conjunto con la interpretación de

Theron forman la receta perfecta para la villana más terrorífica a la que Blancanieves ha

tenido que enfrentarse.