Monday, June 21, 2021

A Smile to Cover the Pain


After I got a stuffed Pumbaa on clearance from Build-A-Bear last year, I went and looked up his theme song from The Lion King (both versions):  "Hakuna Matada."  In both instances it's mostly an upbeat song about not sweating the small (or big) stuff.  But then there's a section of the song focusing on Pumbaa's background:

Why, when he was a young warthog
When I was a young wart-hoooog!
Very nice!
Thanks!
He found his aroma lacked a certain appeal
He could clear the Savannah after every meal
I'm a sensitive soul, though I seem thick-skinned
And it hurt that my friends never stood downwind
And oh, the shame
(He was ashamed!)
Thought of changin' my name
(Oh, what's in a name?)
And I got downhearted
(How did you feel?)
Every time that I-
Pumbaa! Not in front of the kids!
Oh... sorry

It's kind of a funny story, right?  His farts were so smelly that other animals didn't want to hang around with him.  In the live action version, baby Pumbaa's farts scare away a herd of zebra from a watering hole.  

And yet under that joke is a note of tragedy.  I mean, think about it:  Pumbaa was basically abandoned by everyone, which would probably include his mother and any siblings.  That or he'd already been separated from them.  Like Rudolph in the old Christmas special he was forced to grow up on his own for a biological problem he couldn't control.

It's pretty sad if you think about it.  But who does think about that?  Not many people.  And even Pumbaa is over it by the time he meets Simba.  After the song it's never brought up again.

To add to the tragedy of Pumbaa, do you know what his name means in Swahili?  According to Google:  “to be absentminded, careless, foolish, ignorant, lazy, stupid and negligent.”  Ouch.  That was probably some Disney writer's idea of a joke, but if you think of it in context of the character, it'd be like your mom naming you Loser or Shithead or Donald J Trump.  Poor, poor Pumbaa.

But I think there is a tendency by viewers or readers to overlook darker, more horrific things if something appears to be happy.  In the "Rebuttals" entry at the end of last month I talked about how a reviewer who frequently lamented "crappy endings" of other Eric Filler stories loved the end of Pool Hustle Swap even though it didn't entirely end Happily Ever After.  The main character found someone to love and was having a baby, but she'd lost her talent for pool in the process.  Similarly in The Comeback by Eric Filler (or the re-edited version The Last Encore, by me) the main character finds love and happiness but at the cost of losing her fame and fortune.  So they're not truly happy endings, but no one whines about a "crappy ending."

Mostly I think it's that if the affected character seems fine with it then the reader or viewer is fine with it.  If Pumbaa is fine with being abandoned, then we're fine with it too.  In those stories if the main character is content, then we're content.  But should we be?  

4 comments:

Christopher Dilloway said...

poor Pumbaa. he's got farts and he can't help himself. :(

for a minute I was thinking of that Beast Wars episode where Rhinox got farts lol.

overlooking darker things when something appears happy makes me think of Daenerys on Game of Thrones. People thought she was a "good guy" type, even naming their babies after her, and then when she completes her heel turn, they were upset and crying and whining but the signs that it would happen was in the show from episode one...people just overlooked it because in their eyes she was doing "good" things.

A.L. Sirois said...

Well, those of us with reasonably well-integrated personalities can rise above past (perceived or real) injustices. I mean, most people have embarrassing episodes in their pasts. Yet we rise above these... and in some if not many cases we are better people as a result. I once made a very obnoxious remark (well, I've done it many times) in someone's hearing; I realized then (I was maybe 6 years old) what I'd said, and it probably changed my life for the better -- because it made me aware at a young age how words could wound.

Don't ask me why I became a writer. Maybe because words can do more than wound?

Cindy said...

Disney tends to have dark things in it. Usually the killing of at least one parent. Most likely with Pumbaa a lot of was to give kids some comedy relief. Pumbaa to some extent over came his problem by learning to live with it. So I guess it's not all bad. To this day, I haven't been much of a Lion King fan. It always seemed over rated, and the plot is simple. My kids really liked it though.

Maurice Mitchell said...

Never thought about that. Deep thoughts

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