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family roles

We DO Talk About Bruno Reprise

February 4, 2022 · Discuss on the GT Forum

https://media.blubrry.com/happypod/media.transistor.fm/ff039185/6ae8d066.mp3

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#28: Ariel, Stef, and past host Josué team up for a second time to do a deeper dive into Disney’s Encanto. In this episode, themes of dysfunctional family roles, inner child archetypes, and how to inspire students and clients to discover their own inner talents.

Episode 26 is part one of this two-part Encanto deep dive, where we discuss our reaction to, and highlight themes from the movie.

Read the blog post for this episode for additional references and resources.

Resources for this episode:

  1. Kulture Karaoke
  2. One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel Garcia Marquez
  3. The Art of Disney’s Encanto by Juan Pablo Reyes Lancaster Jones
  4. How To Do The Work by Dr. Nicole LePera

Become a member of Geek Therapy on Patreon: http://www.patreon.com/geektherapy

Transcription

Stefanie Bautista 0:11
Hello, everyone, welcome to the Happiest Pod on Earth. I’m Stef.

Ariel Landrum 0:16
I’m Ariel.

Josué Cardona 0:17
And I’m Josué.

Stefanie Bautista 0:18
And I’m an educator who uses passions and fandoms to help my students grow and learn about themselves and the world around them.

Ariel Landrum 0:24
And I’m a therapist who uses a client’s passions and fandoms to help them grow and heal from trauma.

Josué Cardona 0:29
And I’m a former educator and former therapist who teaches other educators and therapists to use their passions and fandoms in their work.

Ariel Landrum 0:35
And Happiest Pod is a place where we dissect Disney mediums with a critical lens.

Stefanie Bautista 0:40
Why do we do that? Because just like we are more than just fans, we expect more from the mediums we consume.

Josué Cardona 0:46
So team, what is the experience are we discussing today?

Ariel Landrum 0:49
This is the We DO talk About Bruno Reprise. We’re bringing Encanto back.

Josué Cardona 0:54
A sequal?

Stefanie Bautista 0:55
Oh, dang!

Josué Cardona 0:55
Para te dos?

Stefanie Bautista 0:56
Before we even knew we were gonna get one.

Josué Cardona 0:59
What?

Stefanie Bautista 1:01
Lucky, lucky you all. You got your sequal before the sequal.

Josué Cardona 1:07
Encan-dos!

Ariel Landrum 1:07
Encan-dos!

Stefanie Bautista 1:08
I like it! I like it!

Josué Cardona 1:14
Don’t use. Cut it out.

Ariel Landrum 1:15
No I’m keeping it.

Stefanie Bautista 1:18
Too late. I don’t know about you all but it has been everywhere it has not left is in and around. I hear it every day at school. We don’t talk about Bru-No, no, no, every single day Monday through Friday. The kids love it. And I mean, I think it’s the gift that keeps on giving. Like we mentioned before.

Ariel Landrum 1:39
I was walking my dog with my roommate the other day and some kids were playing musical chairs with the we don’t talk about Bruno song. And literally I heard I would say six tiny little voices go “Isabela, your boyfriend is here!” All sounds even the music stopped and it was like, “A chair!”

Josué Cardona 2:02
I don’t think we talked about last time. I’m like that song was charting, right? Like it was it was on the chart on the Billboard charts like it was on the radio.

Stefanie Bautista 2:10
I have a fast fact about that.

Ariel Landrum 2:12
Yeah.

Stefanie Bautista 2:12
So currently, we don’t talk about Bruno has 100 million streams. And that’s Apple, Spotify. SoundCloud. What have you? Disney Radio! So 100 million. I’m pretty sure. That’s probably changed by right now as I’m talking, but…

Josué Cardona 2:32
I appreciate the shout out to Disney Radio. Yeah, it keeps on giving. I had a huge epiphany about it today. I had therapy earlier today, and I brought up the stuff and then I was listening to the soundtrack in preparation for this conversation. And I Oh, it was like, You gotta be kidding, there’s still stuff in like, I didn’t see or I didn’t realize before.

Ariel Landrum 2:56
Like what? Share!

Josué Cardona 2:57
You know, what we talked about all the different abilities and, and, you know, I’m, I’m sticking to my version, that each of them are used to to uphold this illusion, right? That Abuela that I what I wants to protect everybody by any means. So every every ability to make that more possible. And one that I really didn’t think about was Julieta’s power. Like, and I kind of like I feel like we just like talked over it. But then it’s in the first song in the Family Madrigal, where Maribel just says real quick, like, “Oh, like she makes everything better with food.” I was like oh, that’s it, you avoid talking about stuff, right? You just you just you just cook something up, you just make a meal, you just sit down. And we don’t talk about it at the Eat this and you’re and you know, forget about it. What? And then so this morning, when I was meeting with my therapist, I was talking about basically I developed a eating disorder that I was diagnosed with. And I attribute it I’ve always attributed it to the fact that when I was a kid and my parents were getting divorced, I was six years old and my mom my grandmother just would feed me just constantly just to make me feel better. And like I gained so much weight and like I still have stretch marks from when I was that that small. And and it’s been something that I’ve struggled with always and but it’s that it’s, Oh, I’ll make it better. Don’t worry, I’ll cook you something. Let me make you something right we don’t need to talk about it. I’m not gonna tell you the truth. We’re not gonna fix it. We’re not gonna address it. But eat this.” I was like, “Damnit. It was right there!” Like I didn’t think about how obvious that version of who you know what, who yet does roll there is but it’s still it’s it’s another version of we don’t talk about anything.

Stefanie Bautista 4:51
We tamp it down.

Josué Cardona 4:52
And the version in the in the movie is is so is so harmful because it literally fixes things.

Ariel Landrum 5:00
Yes. Yeah. Yes.

Josué Cardona 5:01
Right. But superficial and physical things, you know?

Stefanie Bautista 5:04
It causesyou to not confront it. Yeah. Yeah. I mean.

Josué Cardona 5:08
“How did you get hurt? Don’t worry about it, eat this. It’s fixed.”

Ariel Landrum 5:10
The best way to shut up piehole is to put a pie in.

Stefanie Bautista 5:15
I feel like that’s a running joke in Filipino culture where, if you, if you argue or you get in trouble with any of your elders, they don’t apologize to you, they just their way of apologizing is, have you eaten yet? And that’s all you’re gonna get. Because they’re choosing to keep you alive by feeding you. That’s all the sorry, you’re gonna get for whatever conflict there is, especially if it’s, you know, the fault it lies on the adults, they’ll they won’t admit that. They’ll just say, “Have you eaten yet?” Pop in and you don’t have to say yes. But most likely you will end up eventually going out because you’ll get hungry. So you don’t talk about it. You don’t resolve the conflict, you just eat the food in silence and go about your day.

Ariel Landrum 6:00
Well, it’s interesting because when it came time for the big confrontation with Mirabel and Abuela Alma essentially the person who attempts to protect Mirabel is her dad not her mom. He’s the one who essentially steps up and starts looking for her he and and even when they found the prophecy, he’s the one who’s trying to make sure that she’s okay. He’s out looking for her and making an looking out for her where as Julieta is out, this essentially looking out for the family, even when it was when she cut herself. It was because Alma gave her that look of like, “You better to handle this. You better take care of this. You take her away from the party in the group. And you you essentially settle her down.

Stefanie Bautista 6:52
Hmm.

Josué Cardona 6:53
Yeah, this movie.

Ariel Landrum 7:01
So in doing this reprise, I think first something that we didn’t talk too much about, we focused on last time really like one specific song. And I think that I’d found some information about some of the other songs that was really interesting. Sort of like Easter eggs, or like, I don’t know, cameos, shout outs. I don’t. So the first one is that in the Family Madrigal, when Abuela, almost sings her verse, it’s in the same melody as Dos Oruguitas.

Josué Cardona 7:33
It’s true. Hmmhmm.

Stefanie Bautista 7:34
Yup. Yeah.

Ariel Landrum 7:36
So a little bit of foreshadowing there.

Josué Cardona 7:39
No only foreshadowing, because I just listened to the sound track like four times and for recording. While looking at the lyrics as they were playing through. And she, she very clearly outlined in that, in that in the the melody of Dos Oruguitas in that first song, but how we have to work hard to maintain this miracle. Right it’s like, “Things things are rough. We can’t We can’t do that again. Oh, yeah. Thanks.” That’s right. In the in the opening scene, you, you told this was going on.

Stefanie Bautista 8:13
Yup.

Ariel Landrum 8:14
And what her belief system was in regards to the families role. And then in the Waiting on a Miracle, you hear, Mirabel say “I would move the mountains. Make new trees and flowers grow. I would heal what’s broken show this family something new.” And, you know, we saw the river that nobody had ever seen before. Where Abuelo Pedro had passed away. We she definitely moved the mountain she broke it apart. And by you know, having a connection stronger with her sister Isabela, she actually grew trees which until that point, we didn’t really see Isabela grow anything but flowers. And even when you go into her room, it’s all like the topiary essentially flowers.

Stefanie Bautista 9:02
I can even see her talking about I would move mountains how she moved her strongest sister. How she was able to break through that because she was such a, like a steady rock for the entire family. And how she moved her when no one else could she couldn’t even do it herself, Luisa. So she might have foreshadowed that as well.

Josué Cardona 9:23
Yeah, metaphorically. Yeah, I think I think that even if you take it literally as if, because we talked about last time, how everybody’s using their powers in an unhealthy way. So she’s like, “If, if I if I could, I would move the mountains that are blocking everything. If I had the ability to make plants grow, I’d make new trees and new stuff like that,” right? It’s like, literally, “I can see what everybody’s powers are. And I would use them differently. If I if I could heal with food or whatever. I would heal what’s broken.” Right? Like “We don’t we don’t talk about what’s broken. We don’t actually address anything that’s broken. I would actually heal what is broken. If I if I could and show this family, maybe something new.” But like, I think it’s a completely different perspective. Like we said last time, it’s like you can see the things happening. But the way that people are talking about is is, is the warped version is like, no, we don’t actually, there’s, it’s not the truth.

Ariel Landrum 10:24
Yeah, yeah. All right, I get in with again, in the Family Madrigal, she says, “This is my family, a perfect constellation. So many stars, and everybody gets to shine.” But at the end, when we’re at All of You, she says, “Look at this family, a glowing constellation. So full of stars, and everybody wants to shine. But the stars don’t shine, they burn and the constellations shift. I think it’s time you learn, you’re more than just your gifts.” So we definitely see this idea of perfection in the first song and like everybody being allowed to be individuals. And in reality, we don’t get to see them be individuals. They are only their gifts, and it’s only the way that Al, Abuela Alma interprets them.

Stefanie Bautista 11:13
Yeah.

Josué Cardona 11:14
Yeah.

Stefanie Bautista 11:14
Yeah.

Ariel Landrum 11:15
nother little interesting thing about that specific part when she says burn, she sings it at the exact same melody and tone as in Hamilton in the song Burn.

Stefanie Bautista 11:26
A Lin Manuel Miranda thing. There’s lots of those I hear.

Ariel Landrum 11:29
Yes. A little little call out a little shout out. And then also in Hamilton in the song Yorktown Hamilton says, “Seize the moment and stay in it.” And in All of You Dolores sings, “I’m seizing the moment. So would you wake up and notice me?”

Stefanie Bautista 11:46
Oh, I see what you did there.

Ariel Landrum 11:51
Another also interesting song thing which Stef you got it right you were right my fam Lin Manuel said the Family Madrigal was inspired by Belle from Beauty and the Beast. You..

Josué Cardona 12:01
You did it.

Ariel Landrum 12:02
You clocked that my friend.

Josué Cardona 12:04
It was all you.

Stefanie Bautista 12:04
Thank you. Thank you.

Ariel Landrum 12:06
This is your time.

Stefanie Bautista 12:07
This is my. You’re welcome.

Ariel Landrum 12:12
Another sort of songs. Shout out Luisa’s song Surface Pressure she says “Was Hercules ever like ‘Yo, I don’t want to fight Cerberus,'” as a shout out to obviously Hercules.

Josué Cardona 12:24
I don’t remember who said it. But I remember seeing a video or something it said “Like you know, ‘Was Hercules ever like yo, I don’t want to fight Cerberus,’ is the most Lin Manuel Miranda thing.” If you didn’t know he wrote the music to the movie at that point you’re like, “Oh, this must be Lin Manuel Miranda!”

Ariel Landrum 12:41
“I know who wrote this!”

Stefanie Bautista 12:43
“I know who wrote this! Who would even think of that?”

Josué Cardona 12:47
And that specific song Lin Manuel wrote as an apology and Love Letter for his older sister who he saw had to bear the burdens of the family.

Stefanie Bautista 12:57
Hmmm.

Josué Cardona 12:57
Yeah.

Speaking of apologies, when Bruno sings his apology to Pepa at the end, he says “Let it snow, let it go.” And the opening notes of Let It Go from Frozen or actually heard in the background.

Stefanie Bautista 13:09
Do you notice he also throws like white confetti? Making it act like as if it’s snowing? And he does even like Elsa’s pose. It’s really funny.

Josué Cardona 13:19
Okay, how many times have you watched the movies since the last episode?

Stefanie Bautista 13:23
You know, that’s, that’s a good question for everybody has it? Have you all watched it again? I actually haven’t. But I’ve seen so many clips online, that I feel like I’ve watched it in, like 30 second increments.

Josué Cardona 13:36
I just I just listen to the soundtrack again, about multiple times. I only listen to Dos Oruguitas before on repeat forever. But now I was like, “Oh, I could watch the whole movie or let me do let me just listen to the soundtrack.” And I mean, it’s kind of like watching the movie.

Stefanie Bautista 13:51
Yeah it is.

Josué Cardona 13:53
The beats are all there.

Ariel Landrum 13:54
I watched it two more times. Then of course everything on TikTok has me watched clips. I think that actually counts. But it was two more times. One to just do a refresher before we came in did our reprise and another time because I needed noise in the background for like doing stuff.

Stefanie Bautista 14:13
Funnily enough, it’s made its way into the karaoke cue. Me and my friends are on a trip with our families. And we play this card game called culture karaoke where it gives you like a category and then you have to like sing a song from a girl group from the 90s like, and then you would pick like I’m gonna pick Spice Girls or I’m gonna pick TLC or whatever. And then, unannounced unprompted, my husband puts on The Family Madrigal because they’re using YouTube, and I S you not we all just started singing it and we all like took parts and we I mean, we love the movie so much. I was just like, let’s do all the other songs. Now. Forget this game.

Josué Cardona 14:58
That’s gotta be the hardest song right? The Family Madrigal?

Stefanie Bautista 15:00
It is.

Josué Cardona 15:00
Yeah.

Stefanie Bautista 15:01
Yeah. But I think there’s a couple edits on YouTube where it like follows along with the lyrics and like who’s singing it? So it was like color coded, and they put a picture of the character. So we were definitely winded after that song. But we still sang We Don’t Talk About Bruno afterwards.

Ariel Landrum 15:21
Yeah, I think that’s interesting, because you are talking about like, everybody taking on a part. And obviously in We Don’t Talk About Bruno, everybody gets to sing a part. And the part where they are overlapping in the song at the dinner table, like setting, setting the table together, that actual composition style is actually called a madrigal,.

Stefanie Bautista 15:47
Ohh.

Ariel Landrum 15:48
Which is a poly phonetic module girl has a number of voices that vary between two and eight, usually features, maybe one prominent voice and the musical composition they interweave and overlap. And so it’s interesting that when we do actually have them all singing as a family, like that is how they’re doing it. They’re actually doing the madrigal con, vocal composition.

Stefanie Bautista 16:13
Is that similar to around? Is it like also known as around? Or is there a difference between the two?

Ariel Landrum 16:18
There’s a difference around is almost like on canon where the next person goes, the next person goes, they already had their individual song overlap with each other. And, and is if you put on if you turn it up really loud, or you put on the subtitles, the scene where they’re sort of dancing around in Mirabel’s head and she’s like looking at the… Not the fortune. She’s looking at the…

Stefanie Bautista 16:45
The prophecy?

Ariel Landrum 16:45
Yes, she’s got the fortune.

Stefanie Bautista 16:48
She’s looking at the fortune cookie! Haha!

Ariel Landrum 16:50
She’s like the prophecy. They’re all singing around her. And you can hear Isabela say, “I’m fine, I’m fine. I’m fine.” That’s what she sings. And it’s the same note that and key that she hear her introduction, the song where she says that “he told me that the life of my dreams is going to be mine.” And a lot of people have noted that she has to put on the persona of perfection. But in reality, there’s a good chance that her dreams weren’t dreams. They were nightmares. Because everybody had these like bad prophecies and she’s just presenting it as not a bad one?

Josué Cardona 17:30
I love that song The Bruno’s on because every time they everything, I still think that all his prophecies were positive. And like, in her case, again, her and Dolores case, like they were absolutely true. Like, oh, that song, “The life that you want is gonna be yours. It’s just like, but it’s a prophecy. So like, it’s gonna be in the future.” It did happen eventually. And the person that Dolores wanted, it’s like, oh, he only told you to the point where like, “Oh, yeah, your guy he’s, he’s gonna be with somebody else but like, but he’s your guy like eventually.”

Stefanie Bautista 18:00
Yeah.

Josué Cardona 18:00
It’s incomplete.

Yeah.

Stefanie Bautista 18:03
I mean, even the smaller ones there’s things that were gonna happen eventually like that fish wasn’t gonna live forever. Sorry.

Josué Cardona 18:09
Exactly.

Ariel Landrum 18:10
The director even said like you don’t hear it in the movie but the name of the woman is Spanish in Spanish translate to Ms. Dead Fish. Like that’s her name. Like “I knew your fish was gonna die girl it was written in your name!”

Josué Cardona 18:28
In the creds, does it appear in the credits like, Ms. Dead Fish?

Stefanie Bautista 18:31
Like you have no other identity but your Ms. Dead Fish? Like Mr. Green….

Josué Cardona 18:35
Villager one Villager two Ms. Dead Fish…

Stefanie Bautista 18:38
Fish..

Josué Cardona 18:38
Villager three.

Stefanie Bautista 18:39
Mr. Green Thumb is down there too.

Ariel Landrum 18:44
It says, while her name was never mentioned the film director Jared Bush revealed that the name of the woman whose goldfish dies is Señora Pez Muerto?

Josué Cardona 18:56
Pez Muerto!

Stefanie Bautista 18:56
It is!

Ariel Landrum 18:56
Meaning Ms. Dead Fish.

Josué Cardona 18:56
Yup. Yup.

Stefanie Bautista 19:00
It’s like that’s her occupation kind of like blacksmith.

Josué Cardona 19:03
That’s my new favorite Encanto trivia.

Stefanie Bautista 19:06
I know. It’s pretty good.

Ariel Landrum 19:08
“Who you cosplaying as?” “Ms. Dead Fish!”

Stefanie Bautista 19:10
Just go around with a fish bowl.

Ariel Landrum 19:13
And just tilt your head, “Dead.”

Stefanie Bautista 19:16
That’s actually a good cosplay. If you had like two of your friends are the three like villagers whose prophecies were read and a guy with a gut bald guy, Ms. Dead Fish.

Josué Cardona 19:26
One guy just like taking his hair off, right? Taking a wig off. But it’s it’s gonna happen because Encanto is everywhere and there’s gonna be at least one.

Ariel Landrum 19:39
Hey, if they have that Star Wars run with the guy who’s holding the ice cream maker. Definitely gonna have Ms. Dead Fish.

Stefanie Bautista 19:49
or even your your dad’s cosplay of the guy in Jurassic Park that everybody really like?

Ariel Landrum 19:54
Oh, yeah!

Stefanie Bautista 19:56
Everyone loved that cosplay.

Ariel Landrum 19:58
Yeah, my dad was a Jimmy Buffett. If you watched Jurassic World he has a cameo where he has two margaritas and he’s running away from pterodactyls so I was a pterodactyl and my dad was Jimmy Buffett with the two margaritas and that was…

Stefanie Bautista 20:10
Everyone at Comic Con was loving it. They were like, “Oh it’s Jimmy Buffett!”

Ariel Landrum 20:16
“It’s Jimmy Buffett! It’s the margarita guy! They’re like “Do the pose! Do the pose!”

Stefanie Bautista 20:22
Yup. it’s gonna be like that, for sure.

Ariel Landrum 20:25
Okay, okay, um, other other Easter Eggs. Hidden Mickey’s there too, as there should be. Well, the first one is actually in, What Else Can I Do? Isabella makes a cactus and that cactus is a Mickey shape. And then the second one, you actually would have to freeze frame like each second of the song. But Mirabel in the song waiting on a miracle when she dances around her parents in the foreground, there’s magical glitter that’s in the shape of Mickey’s head.

Stefanie Bautista 20:58
Hmm.

Ariel Landrum 20:58
Going with a theme of butterflies because that was something that we talked about…

Yes.

The new door that gets built at the end, there’s a butterfly for each family member except one and that one is you find it on Mirabel’s chest. So right above like the whole, like an archway butterfly for each family member. The other thing is that there’s a book called 100 Years of Solitude, and it’s written by a Colombian novelist named Gabriel Garcia Marquez. And in the book throughout, there are yellow butterflies that appear. And it’s actually the story of a multi generational family whose patriarch finds a town.

Stefanie Bautista 21:33
Much like Abuela. Hehe.

Josué Cardona 21:36
So Disney’s getting sued.

Ariel Landrum 21:39
I’m just saying like this no way there wasn’t some inspiration.

Josué Cardona 21:44
What was the what’s the movie? The white lion? Isn’t Simba, the white lion or?

Ariel Landrum 21:50
Oh, Kim Kim?

Josué Cardona 21:51
Kimba!

Stefanie Bautista 21:52
Kimba. Yeah, the anime movie?

Josué Cardona 21:54
Yeah. That’s nothing like it…

Stefanie Bautista 21:57
No.

Josué Cardona 21:58
No.

Stefanie Bautista 21:58
They would have to wait a couple, what is it like it was made in the 70s and then it and then Lion King came out in the 90s. So you have to wait until that production houses defunct in order to steal their things and not feel the ramifications.

Ariel Landrum 22:16
Okay, okay. Umm in Bruno’s room and his room by the kitchen. You can see a boot with a plant in the background and that’s actually a shout out to Walle it’s the plant that like they find an Eva takes and stores.

Josué Cardona 22:29
I don’t know how I feel about Disney movies referencing Pixar movies. I don’t like that.

Stefanie Bautista 22:35
Yeah, I was gonna mention that. I’m like, hold up. Hold up. Hold up here.

Josué Cardona 22:39
Yeah. We need boundaries. Okay. Stay in your lane.

Stefanie Bautista 22:46
We have not moved that mountain yet. They have to build another Disney CGI mountain.

Ariel Landrum 22:53
But that isn’t the first time they’ve done that though. Right?

Josué Cardona 22:57
Actually was was was Marida in, in the video game movie?

Stefanie Bautista 23:05
Oh, Wreck It Ralph?

Josué Cardona 23:06
Wreck It Ralph Marida’s in it right?

Ariel Landrum 23:08
Yeah, that’s the one I’m referring to in record while she was in there. And they make a snide rude comment, which does not sound like my Disney princesses, but they were like, “Oh, she was made from the other production company.”

Josué Cardona 23:21
Right? Right. Right. So that’s acceptable. Right? It’s like that’s that. That’s how they should act.

Ariel Landrum 23:28
You shouldn’t be snarky to each other? Frenemies?

Stefanie Bautista 23:33
Make a face.

Josué Cardona 23:34
Yeah. Yeah.

Stefanie Bautista 23:38
“They’re from the other magical town not this one.”

Ariel Landrum 23:44
“They make movies about feelings that feel okay?” Yeah, so yeah, so there’s some some Easter eggs.

Stefanie Bautista 23:54
I mean, would another Easter egg be that the Disney Pixar Disney CGI, that’s a dysfunctional family in itself, because it was like they had this partnership or family. And now they’re like all over the place animators here at I don’t know, but it could be a bigger metaphor for the messiness that is Disney CGI. Former Pixar.

Ariel Landrum 24:16
And this new generation is trying to break that generational curse?

Stefanie Bautista 24:21
I don’t know that’s going too far. But it’s a stretch.

Ariel Landrum 24:25
Stef. What have you been doing within condo in the classroom? Or have you seen teachers doing?

Stefanie Bautista 24:31
I’ve seen I mean, in, aside from playing the songs during you know, free time and like connecting with kids, because you got to kind of be hip to what the kids are listening to nowadays, right? Even though those kids are like five, just turned six. You got to know what’s cool. So I mean, everybody is you know, in and around Encanto whether it’s the clothes like what they’re, what they’re wearing, who they relate to who You know, you would find yourself like, “If you had to choose a power, what would you choose?” That’s such a popular writing prompt. Especially when you know superheroes came, you know, in the forefront of everything. It was always like, “You know, if you were a superhero, what would you be?” A couple educators, they actually twisted that a little bit to fit in Encanto when using that in the classroom. And some teachers have been using it to help kids discover their special talents. There’s this one teaching website where it says, because in the beginning of the movie Mirabele lavishes preys on her family and their unique gifts, such as healing through food, endless physical strength, even though she doesn’t have any, she figures, you know, she’s gonna contribute in big ways, like we saw. So what the teacher could do is you could ask the students to complete a writing activity where they come up with their own list of things that their family members excel, I’m not them, per se. But I, you could say, “You know, my mom’s really good at, you know, making this certain dish, or my mom’s really good at cleaning, you know, the house, or she’s really good at maybe even putting on her makeup. And you know, my dad’s really good at, you know, so and so my cousin’s good at this and this.” And then after that, “You could say, how would you transfer that into magical gifts?” So…

Ariel Landrum 26:18
Oh…

Stefanie Bautista 26:18
Let’s say for instance, if your mom is really good at doing her makeup, what if she just flick of the wrist did a whole piece of makeup? Or, you know, did it for like, even for a dog or, you know, get really silly and crazy with it? You could kind of take it to wherever. Or you could say, you know, “How would that gift? How could they? Would they be able to reflect on what their talent might be? Would you inherit that talent? Or would you take that talent further? Like, if you could change the way something looked? Would you do that? Is it a bad thing? Or a good thing? Who would it benefit? Who would it not benefit? And you know, would you do that for other people.” So there’s many different avenues that you could take a special gift.

Ariel Landrum 27:01
I like that.

Stefanie Bautista 27:02
It doesn’t have to be magical. It could just be you know, something really simple such as, you know, “I can kick a ball really, really far. Well, would you want to play a professional sport? Or would you use those talents to, you know, help other people? How would kicking a ball help someone? Oh, you know, maybe my strength could, you know, move things for people who can’t like the elderly, things like that.” So it’s kind of like taking services, to you know, your community, like a step further by making it magical. But you know, they can also scale it down by making it very accessible to students, which is really cool. But you can make it as magical or not magical as you want. The younger kids are really fun, because they can totally make it magical. And then they run wild with it.

Ariel Landrum 27:51
Yes.

Stefanie Bautista 27:52
So I implore you to ask a child what they would do with you know, Luisa’s gift or Mirabel’s gift or even ask a kid what they think Mirabel’s gift is because you might get some really interesting answers.

Josué Cardona 28:07
Yeah, I like the community framing of it. Because in the movie that’s really like, the family is really serving that town. Right? Like, “Oh, if you had abilities, how would you help your town? or the school? Yeah.

Stefanie Bautista 28:22
Yeah.

Ariel Landrum 28:22
What a clever assignment.

Josué Cardona 28:25
I mean, they’re already talking about it. Yeah. Speaking their language.

Stefanie Bautista 28:31
Yeah. And I think a lot of kids have been, you know, identifying their family members within, you know, “This is my cousin who always listens into whatever I’m saying, and she always repeats it. I don’t want her to, but she does it anyway.” And, you know, “There’s there’s that cousin who I don’t see very often, but I know he’s around. Kind of like their Uncle Bruno. Everybody has that uncle.

Ariel Landrum 28:54
Yeah. Yeah.

Stefanie Bautista 28:56
It always ends up being you know, like Bruno, so they they really see themselves even though they might not see themselves visually, they can find themselves in every character, which is really awesome.

Ariel Landrum 29:09
That’s interesting that you mentioned Dolores, and like a cousin that won’t keep secrets. And there is a fan theory that because Dolores can hear everything she knew the prophecy already and was just waiting to the right time to like stir the pot so that her man wouldn’t get stolen from her because she even says, “No one is worried about the magic but you and the rats in the walls.”

Josué Cardona 29:37
And in one of the songs she says “I can hear him now.” I think it’s it’s an Bruno right?

Ariel Landrum 29:46
“Mumbling and something..”

Josué Cardona 29:48
She’s like, “I can hear him now.”

Stefanie Bautista 29:49
There’s a lot of talk yeah, about what she hears and the things she shouldn’t be hearing.

Ariel Landrum 29:56
She’s got all the chisme.

Josué Cardona 29:58
So I mean, I mean she and she admits, “I I’ve always knew that Bruno was there. I could hear him. Like, I knew I know everything.” This way like, I feel like her, her power is just as sad as as Luisa and Isabela’s because like she has to stay quiet about this stuff, you know that she hears everything and she can’t say anything or do anything about it. Because for I mean, who knows what why she thinks that but that’s a lot of pressure too.

Ariel Landrum 30:27
You can also see in the background. I think her powers is the one that sucks the most. Because when well what everybody’s like clapping, she just uses her two index fingers because everything’s just so flipping loud.

Stefanie Bautista 30:41
Too loud.

Ariel Landrum 30:42
And it’s like we don’t we I don’t see her hat wearing like any earmuffs or earplugs at all. I feel so bad. Like she needs some Bose Bose noise canceling headphones. Number 45.

Stefanie Bautista 30:54
I want a Disney short of young Dolores. Like, where she did it no restraint and just said everything she heard.

Ariel Landrum 31:05
Yeah!

Stefanie Bautista 31:05
Cause there are kids who just repeat everything that they hear even though they shouldn’t…

Ariel Landrum 31:09
Oh that was me!

Stefanie Bautista 31:12
I would love to see just her just spilling the chisme. Spills everything.

Josué Cardona 31:17
It is funny because the dinner scene right, she she can’t hold it in. But then but like you learn “Oh, she said she’s had a lot of restraint.”

Ariel Landrum 31:26
Yeah. She just stirred the pot at the right moment.

Josué Cardona 31:30
Yeah yeah. I mean, this was pretty juicy.

Ariel Landrum 31:33
My girl.

Josué Cardona 31:34
I get it. Yeah.

Stefanie Bautista 31:37
But yeah, I agree. I think her powers you know, very burdensome, then that town is not that large? Now think if it was larger, if it continues to expand, is she is she using things to help her, you know, control block it out? Or? I don’t know.

Josué Cardona 31:55
I just I’ve never thought about how bad it could be. But what if she can actually hear outside of the town? And she can’t go. But she knows that. Like, all these things are happening. And there’s this whole world out there.

Stefanie Bautista 32:10
There’s life beyond the walls. There’s life beyond the walls. Oh, man, we need another episode for that one.

Josué Cardona 32:20
I don’t want to think about that. About Dolores’ plight now. The tragedy of the Dolores.

Ariel Landrum 32:28
We don’t really have a timeframe do we?

Josué Cardona 32:30
No not really? And like when things happen at the beginning? The story takes like 50 years after that.

Ariel Landrum 32:36
Yeah.

Josué Cardona 32:37
And….

Stefanie Bautista 32:40
We know that they make espresso. So we know that those processes are there.

Josué Cardona 32:46
Yeah.

Stefanie Bautista 32:47
But other than that, I mean, there’s no sign of electricity aside. I mean, they’re using carts.

Josué Cardona 32:55
But also like, we have no idea like, because we have no frame of reference for the….

Stefanie Bautista 32:59
Yeah.

Josué Cardona 32:59
initial scene…

Ariel Landrum 33:00
Yeah.

Josué Cardona 33:01
Like, technology could have advanced like, it could have been the 1900s. And now it’s 1950. And they’re still, you know, like…

Stefanie Bautista 33:07
In yeah.

Josué Cardona 33:07
There was a big change. You know, like people driving cars around that mountain. They have no idea what’s going on. They just saw about it split. And it’s like, “Wait, what?”

Stefanie Bautista 33:16
Yeah, what an homage to rural living, especially in countries like that. Because, yes, there could be cars and you know, electric cars going around. But if you live in the boonies, you would not know that. You would not know that at all. And there are places that exist today that are like that. I mean, speaking of Encanto has been so popular. So we know, the Disney route on this. We got to Frozen Two Yes, we are gonna be getting a Moana Two sometime. Do you think they’re going to push for an Enancto Two?

Josué Cardona 33:50
I mean, only because I’m sure it’s made them a lot of money.

Ariel Landrum 33:54
Yeah. Yeah, it wasn’t a flop. So…

Stefanie Bautista 33:57
Yeah…

Ariel Landrum 33:57
They have to monetize it as much as they can.

Stefanie Bautista 34:00
Yeah. I did read some people say because when she rebuilt the house at the end of the movie, you see in its destruction, the mountain splits, right? So it opens up this valley. That never gets repaired. So it’s now open. People can visit the town now. Or the townspeople can go out and venture. So I wonder if this maybe sequel would be them going out or dealing with outsiders coming in? Hmm.

Josué Cardona 34:30
Again like Frozen surprised me when when they had a sequel. Like I couldn’t imagine what the sequel would be. And, and yeah, this I think they have the opportunity to do some cool stuff. That is kind of, there’ll be like hard to expect. Because I mean, we talked about it’s been 50 years. So the world like the outside world is very different. And we don’t know what kind of world they live in. That’s another part to like when we when we see Arendelle and then we kind of expand a little more in the second one, it’s like, “Oh, this world is full of fantasy, and magic.” And like, there’s all these people who’ve been trapped for 50 years, right? I mean, I don’t remember 50 years in Frozen Two right, but like, all these people who were out there, and there’s like all this other types of magic. So it’s possible that in the world of Encanto, they’re not necessarily, maybe they’re not as special. Right? Maybe there’s other families, there’s other miracles, right? There’s other families with powers and abilities nearby, you know, and like, there’s all these things you can explore. Now that they’ve grown, you know, do you introduce some kind of? I don’t know, like, what’s, what’s the we have generational trauma here? What do we do? What what could be next? What’s the challenge? Is it just now adapting? Actually, I think, okay, here’s my theory. Here’s my theory. Abeula dies.

Stefanie Bautista 36:01
Oh, I was just gonna say that.

Josué Cardona 36:03
Yeah.

Stefanie Bautista 36:04
I was just gonna say that.

Josué Cardona 36:05
That’s how it is, right?

Ariel Landrum 36:06
There’s too many Disney mom’s in this movie?

Josué Cardona 36:08
Yeah. Yeah. You deal with the loss of Abuela, and how are you? Like, because she had so much control. And now that she’s let go, how do you? What role does everyone else play? Who who becomes the new matriarch? Who becomes? What are our roles now? How does that power shift? There it is. Lin Manuel call me.

Stefanie Bautista 36:30
I know tight? Call Josué. Call him up.

Josué Cardona 36:33
There’s also the possibility that at the end, when because they don’t they don’t say this. They don’t show either way. But when Mirabel touches the door, the whole town kind of glows. It’s not just Casita, like everything, like, what if everybody else got powers to? You know, like?

Ariel Landrum 36:50
Like that little boy who drank all that coffee?

Josué Cardona 36:53
Yeah, yeah, like he’s a speedster, now.

Stefanie Bautista 36:55
He’s had a power. His little body just absorbing all the caffine.

Josué Cardona 37:01
Yeah, but I think I think that makes sense. I mean, right. And you can see all the same roles, like all the family dynamics, you can start to see them play out in that generational way. Right, but like they didn’t get to grow, they were stifled in the cocoon, right. And now that the cocoon has has broken, how do those, we can show how all of those roles play out?

Stefanie Bautista 37:24
Yeah.

Josué Cardona 37:25
Later on. As as you get older, just like in real life, you had these roles when you were younger, and then they can now then it can explain some of the issues you have as an adult.

Ariel Landrum 37:36
What a beautiful segue Josué to what I wanted to talk about, which was a dysfunctional family roles. So as some of you know, I’m a therapist, I’m specifically what’s called a marriage and family therapist, I was trained to think systemically. So when I treat an individual, I don’t just see them, I see, you know, the, how they have been affected by those around them, and specifically the way their family affects them. And there’s this sort of theory that when a, when there’s family dysfunction, we take on roles in the family. When we see family members struggle to self regulate themselves, we take on these roles and attempt to like create homeostasis, or rebalance the family so that we can get back to, you know, quote, unquote, being functional. And though I don’t really ascribe to dysfunctional and functional, I kind of think of it as these roles are very adaptive, they’re survivor roles. And once you’ve sort of left the family, you’ve created individuation, they’re no longer useful because you’re not in survival mode anymore. In the same way. I always use like with my clients, the example of if you’re swimming in water, you’re going to propel yourself forward with your arms, but you’re on dry land. Now. These are dysfunctional family roles as they’re called in the field. But you can also just think of them as like Survivor roles or roles that we take on to survive. And so I’m going to, I’m going to read them and I want you all to say who you think in the family, they are. The Caretaker/Peacemaker/Mediator, so these are any of the terms you can use. And this is the individual in the family who is constantly alert to addressing any family issue and conflict. They often go ahead of their own personal needs and take on the duties and responsibilities of others in the family. They are seen as the one keeping the family in balance.

So So I think I think there’s a couple that fit this one.

Yeah. Yeah.

Josué Cardona 39:35
Camilo is one because he he literally takes on the duties of other people in the family because he transforms into them and then and then steps in when other people can’t And I think Julieta.

Ariel Landrum 39:49
Okay, okay.

Josué Cardona 39:50
And Mirabel, and yeah, I think those.

Stefanie Bautista 39:55
I definitely thought Julieta first just because she is the most overly motherly type. And she’s preparing food right? So it’s not usually if you’re the person cooking you eat last. And that’s what I always akin that too. So because she’s busy making food for everyone else, she probably doesn’t have time for her own needs. Especially when she has Mirabel a girl who was you know, still lost in finding herself. She’s kind of like, “It’s okay. It’s okay. I’m just gonna give you a big kiss on your face. Everything’s better.”

Ariel Landrum 40:32
Yeah, I definitely agree with you all. I also thought of Luisa in the sense that she does take on a lot of responsibilities and duties. And we literally see her like on a balancing tightrope…

Josué Cardona 40:42
And she’s constantly addressing issues. She’s like fixing things. She’s a fixer. Yeah.

Stefanie Bautista 40:46
Yup.

Ariel Landrum 40:47
I think the part that makes me sort of think more Julieta is the fact that that this individual has to be alert. They’re always essentially on guard. And it seems like even in like the partner she chose, who always gets like stung by bees. She’s just like, ready?

Stefanie Bautista 41:07
Very mother, like you gotta have everything in your purse.

Ariel Landrum 41:10
This one is The Golden Child/Hero/Saint/or Super Kid. This individual’s a family who could do no wrong and is often described as perfect. They have intense pressure to continue to achieve and only no praise through achievement. They appear to be well balanced and unfazed by the family dysfunction. Appear being the strong word.

Josué Cardona 41:29
I mean, in Family Madrigal, Mirabel, actually calls Julieta, I mean, Isabel, and Luisa perfect. Both of them in their own ways. So they both fit that.

Ariel Landrum 41:41
Miss Perfecta Isabela.

Josué Cardona 41:43
Isabela obviously, right? She’s definitely The Golden Child. She’s also called the golden child in that first song, literally…

Stefanie Bautista 41:49
And they sing her name like she’s from the angels.

Josué Cardona 41:53
Yeah, yeah. Yeah. But but she also describes Luisa as perfect and that’s the thing about like her eye twitching right it’s like it’s she’s breaking that that image of perfection yeah.

Ariel Landrum 42:09
Yeah, yeah, I think that that like Super Kid in the title definitely makes me think Luisa.

Josué Cardona 42:13
You can be more than one of these by the way, you can have more than one dysfunctional family role.

Ariel Landrum 42:18
Oh, yeah. You like I said, this is a role you you is either ascribe to you or you take yourself for someone both so you may shift it up depending on what balance needs to be had in the family. So the next one is The Scapegoat/Troublemaker/ or Black Sheep. This individual in the family who speaks the truth about the family’s dysfunction. Attention is only given to them when they cause a problem or a scene and they are usually assigned this role at a young age. They identify with feeling rejected, unloved and isolated. And they are often placed in situations where they’re pinned up against The Golden Child or compared to.

Camilo and Bruno.

I definitely thought Bruno and I definitely thought Mirabel and that the being pinned up against The Golden Child. But what about Camilo?

Josué Cardona 43:05
Speaks the truth about family’s dysfunction, and that is just generally, when he’s doing when he’s playing his role correctly. He’s good, but the moment he starts messing around and imitating people that’s like, “Oh like just stop it.”

Stefanie Bautista 43:20
Yeah.

Josué Cardona 43:21
“Stop messing around!”

Stefanie Bautista 43:21
Yeah.

Josué Cardona 43:21
You know?

Ariel Landrum 43:22
Okay. Okay. Okay.

Stefanie Bautista 43:24
And a lot of that has to do with you know, because he could be everybody else, you, you might get the sense that he could also get lost in who he actually is because he’s busy shape shifting. And I feel like a lot of kids who identify as the class clown usually are hiding something or they’re using humor, to, you know, cover up something that they might not want to talk about or might not want to address themselves within themselves. So they put more attention on other people so that they can that’s like their comic relief.

Ariel Landrum 43:52
So interesting that you say that because the next one is The Clown or The Mascot. This individual lightens the mood in the home, especially when tensions rise or could boil over. They appear to always be ready defuse tension with humor, and when this is successful, it perpetuates their desire to avoid conflict and conflict resolution by using amusing behavior.

Josué Cardona 44:14
Camilo.

Stefanie Bautista 44:15
Camilo.

Ariel Landrum 44:16
Finally, we have The Lost Child. This individual will do their best to blend into the background they often identify with feelings of being ignored, neglected, and fear drawing attention to themselves. They yearn for love and approval but are often withdrawn and isolated.

Josué Cardona 44:32
Bruno, Dolores, and Mirabel.

Ariel Landrum 44:35
Yes, I definitely think Bruno because he literally blends with the background, but I also think Dolores because she only speaks when she’s told to, like identify news. She’s like…

Stefanie Bautista 44:46
Yeah…

Ariel Landrum 44:47
Like a weather girl.

Josué Cardona 44:48
Also, again, her ability like it makes it so like, in many ways she has to she has to be quiet. Like she can’t even say what she knows because she knows too much.

Ariel Landrum 44:58
Yeah, I think it’s good to have some of these roles in mind, in, in therapy or when we’re doing our own work, because we can see them come out when we are trying to relate with others.We’ll and we feel tension or discomfort rise, we will take on these different roles that may not actually fit or match the needs that have to be met.

Stefanie Bautista 45:21
I noticed that we didn’t mention the husbands.

Ariel Landrum 45:23
I think Felix is the The Clown or The Mascot.

Stefanie Bautista 45:27
Yeah, I was thinking that too.

Josué Cardona 45:29
I was thinking he’s a Mediator/Peacemaker.

Stefanie Bautista 45:31
Oh, yeah that also. For sure.

Ariel Landrum 45:36
So he’s told to calm Pepa down.

Stefanie Bautista 45:38
Yeah. Augustine could be kind of the scape.. maybe not the scape… Maybe The Clown because he’s always getting stung by bees?

Josué Cardona 45:48
I don’t know… I couldn’t. I couldn’t think of one for him. I don’t think he has. I don’t think he he’s the only one that’s not dysfunctional.

Ariel Landrum 45:59
And he’s the only one.

Stefanie Bautista 46:01
Yeah. I mean, he could also be seen as The Peacemaker, or The Mediator because he loves his kids so much. And he loves his wife so much that, you know, he’s, he’s just the go to guy.

Josué Cardona 46:12
Ope like when he hides. Yeah, like when he hides the prophesy stone and stuff. It’s like no, no, yes, I think they both. I mean, yeah, they’re both playing partially that role, more more like The Peacemaker/Mediator kind of thing. Because there’s a lot of drama in that family.

Ariel Landrum 46:36
So in the book, how to do the work by Dr. Nicole LaPera, she has the Seven Inner Child Archetypes, I definitely shout out this book. And I would suggest a lot of clients get it, especially if they’re thinking of going into therapy. This is a good stepping stone if you are still not comfortable with the idea of being in the room with an individual, maybe seeing if you align with these archetypes. And so you want to think of these as internal roles. We model assign, assume and play out unconsciously again to survive. And often our responses from unmet emotional needs or broken connections. And so what I’m going to note on these roles is how, how these internal roles have us believe what love is or how we get love. So The Caretaker, this is the part of us that gains a sense of identity and self worth through neglecting our own needs. Will believe that the only way that we can resolve love, or we can receive love is by caring for others and ignoring ourselves.

Josué Cardona 47:40
That’s me. Uh-huh. Keep going.

Stefanie Bautista 47:43
Yeah. I was like “I see myself in this picture.”

Josué Cardona 47:44
Yup yup yup. Keep going.

Stefanie Bautista 47:46
Go on.

Ariel Landrum 47:47
“Shots fired. I feel called out.”

Josué Cardona 47:49
“How dare you!”

Stefanie Bautista 47:51
“How. Dare. You.”

Ariel Landrum 47:52
So in goes to the family Madrigal and not the Geek Therapy Network Family.

Josué Cardona 47:57
Oh sorry.

Stefanie Bautista 47:58
Oh, are we identifying with character? Oh, sorry. It got a little real there so.

Josué Cardona 48:01
Stef we misunderstood the assignment.

Stefanie Bautista 48:01
Yeah. Opps.

Ariel Landrum 48:07
Who do you think of the family’s a Caretaker? I definitely thought Luisa in the being self sacrificial. Or believing that the only way that she can serve the family is if she never serves herself.

Josué Cardona 48:17
Yeah. 100%.

Stefanie Bautista 48:18
Yeah.

Ariel Landrum 48:19
It’s interesting, the very different way this caretaker is presented than it is like the family role.

Josué Cardona 48:25
Hmhmm.

Stefanie Bautista 48:25
Yeah.

Josué Cardona 48:26
Yeah.

Stefanie Bautista 48:26
I mean, Mirabel because she speaks to Casita, she, I feel like she’s the only one who speaks the Casita and, like, interacts with Casita that way. It’s like she’s taking care of the house. And we see that manifest in a more larger way. But you know, she’s the one, putting stuff back, making sure everyone’s good and making sure all the tiles are in the right place.

Josué Cardona 48:45
She’s literally in the nursery, right, she can make that she has to do a deal with a lot of stuff for for, for the sake of the others.

Ariel Landrum 48:55
She don’t get no room. Okay, the next one is the Overachiever, the part of us that feel seen, heard and valued through success and achievement. This is the part that uses external validation as a way to cope with love, self worth and value. And we see love as only received through achievement.

Josué Cardona 49:17
I mean, it sounds like it’s Isabela, but I feel like you saw a lot doesn’t work hard. Like, I don’t think she’s just valued.

Stefanie Bautista 49:25
Because she is…

Josué Cardona 49:27
Because she’s the most beautiful one because she makes beautiful things. But she does that effortlessly.

Stefanie Bautista 49:33
Yeah, I think all of Julieta’s kids, those that the three of them Mirabel, Luisa and Isabela. They’re all Overachievers in some way or another, because one is trying to overcompensate for what she doesn’t have. One just trying to be, you know, the poster child and the other one who’s just trying to be strong for everyone. So, in comparison to the other two cousins, three cousins they’re way more at the forefront of, I need to be this person.

Ariel Landrum 50:04
Okay? Okay. Because if you think of like Dolores and Camilo, they could literally hide in the background and their achievement is not to be as seen as these other three their cousins.

Josué Cardona 50:14
And nobody’s praising what they’re doing.

Stefanie Bautista 50:16
Yeah.

Ariel Landrum 50:17
Yeah.

Josué Cardona 50:17
And I feel Yeah, probably Luisa is the most. Right. Like she she, what is it? Dammit, she says it. I forgot what she says in the song buti t’s like, “My worth is like, I have to have to be useful. Like I have to have to do things. And if I can’t do that, then like, what good am I?”

Ariel Landrum 50:36
The next one is the opposite of The Overachiever it is The Underachiever and this is the part that stays small, unseen, and beneath our true potential due to fear of criticism, shame, or failure. This is a part that we take when we don’t want to play the emotional game. And we believe that invisibility is the only way to get love.

Stefanie Bautista 51:00
This one might be a long shot, but I feel like because Pepa is always just trying to stop herself from crying and having big emotions. She has to feel smaller, she has to act small. Because if she lashes out or something bad happens, everyone’s gonna have consequences for it.

Ariel Landrum 51:22
Yeah. And that is beneath her true potential. Like she literally controls the weather.

Josué Cardona 51:26
She made a hurricane on her wedding day, right? She said.

Stefanie Bautista 51:29
She did.

Josué Cardona 51:29
Yeah. And I forgot all about Pepa. I’m glad you brought her up because we did not mention her in the last exercise.

Stefanie Bautista 51:36
We did not. And she’s the one with the power that can truly destroy or make everyone’s day great.

Josué Cardona 51:45
She’s always subduing right? Her ability. Yeah. I think Dolores in a way also, does that. Like she can’t talk about the fact that, you know, she knows. I think Bruno too.

Ariel Landrum 51:59
Yeah…

Josué Cardona 52:00
In a way, but a much more literal way here, right? Because, because he did speak up and was criticized. And then he literally, you know, got himself invisible. Not necessarily as the only way to get love, but like the only way to avoid….

Ariel Landrum 52:20
Rejection.

Josué Cardona 52:21
Yeah, rejection yeah.

Ariel Landrum 52:23
The Rescuer or The Protector. This is the part of us that attempts to rescue those around us in an attempt to hear from our own vulnerability and attempt to get away from our own vulnerability. So we can view others as helpless, incapable and dependent. And we derive love from them and a feeling of self worth by putting ourselves in a position of power. And this part of us believes that love is received when focusing on others wants and needs and helping them to solve those problems. Even I will highlight if if they don’t think it’s a problem. So we feel the compulsion to resolve it for them. Even though they might not have said that this was the thing that bothers me.

Josué Cardona 53:10
It’s absolutely Abuela.

Stefanie Bautista 53:13
Yep.

Josué Cardona 53:13
Ferociously.

Stefanie Bautista 53:15
Ferociously.

Josué Cardona 53:16
Attempts to rescue those around them. Yup.

Stefanie Bautista 53:18
In that grandmotherly way. “I know you guys didn’t ask for my opinion. But here it is.”

Ariel Landrum 53:25
“Here’s my unsolicited advice. You’re welcome.”

Stefanie Bautista 53:30
“About your life choices.”

Ariel Landrum 53:32
We’re down to the final three. The Life of The Party. This is the part that is always happy, cheerful or comedic, and that always wants to be perceived this way. This is the part that believes that we can make others around us happy. That’s how we’ll receive love.

Josué Cardona 53:48
Camilo.

Stefanie Bautista 53:49
Felix.

Ariel Landrum 53:51
The interesting thing about this one is some people online said that this was Pepa. And the example that they said is sometimes The Life of The Party isn’t always doing good, but because their emotions affect everybody else, they have to be good.

Stefanie Bautista 54:06
Which is why she looks so tormented. Poor girl.

Josué Cardona 54:11
Yeah, I guess in that case, right. If she, by some doing her own powers, she’s, she’s making sure that other people around her are, are better off.

Ariel Landrum 54:24
“And if they’re happy then they love me.”

Stefanie Bautista 54:25
Yeah.

Josué Cardona 54:26
Yeah. Yeah.

Stefanie Bautista 54:27
I can see that. Because if she always just says, “I need to be sunny, so it can always be sunny.”

Josué Cardona 54:33
Yeah, the pressure of I mean, she can literally control the weather. Right? So she can she can if it’s raining, she can she can fix that. That’s uh, yeah…

Ariel Landrum 54:42
We have The Yes Person. This one drops everything and neglects all their needs in the service of others. This was most likely modeled to them when they were a child modeled self sacrifice, and they believe love is given when one is good to others. This is slightly different than The Caretaker ’cause it isn’t that they’re neglecting their own needs. It’s that they see someone else need something, so they’re going to stop what they’re doing to assist, but they don’t go out of their way to ignore their needs. And some people sort of said, online that they thought The Yes Person was Camilo. Because he literally turns into the to you like, “You go girl.”

Stefanie Bautista 55:25
Yeah!

Josué Cardona 55:25
in the opening scene, he’s just like, he walks by the mom taking care of the baby. And he immediately turns into the mom takes the baby and lets her take a nap. Right? Just immediately, “There’s someone needs something. I got you.”

Ariel Landrum 55:40
And I think that in modeled in childhood, I think that that he saw that from his father Felix in taking care of Pepa.

Josué Cardona 55:47
Yeah. Could be. Yeah.

Stefanie Bautista 55:49
Yeah.

Josué Cardona 55:49
Final one is The Hero Worshiper, there’s the part of us that wants to follow a person or a guru. We believe the only way we will receive love is if we reject ourselves and view others as a model to learn how to live.

Stefanie Bautista 56:03
Mirabel? ‘Cause she literally worships and loves everyone. And because she doesn’t have a power herself, she just says, “I’m part of this magical family look at what they all can do.”

Josué Cardona 56:17
We talked about like, in the in the waiting for a miracle. She’s, she’s thinking of how, you know, she could use their abilities instead of what she can do.

Stefanie Bautista 56:27
Hmhmm.

Yeah.

Josué Cardona 56:29
No… The needs to follow a person like that part. Like, I feel, I don’t know that she feels like she needs to. That part feels a little.

Stefanie Bautista 56:38
Maybe it’s manifested in her need to please Abuela in one way or the another. Not really following her but needing to please her because she doesn’t know how to do that without a power.

Josué Cardona 56:52
Yeah, yeah.

Ariel Landrum 56:53
Yeah, yeah, I definitely the way that The Hero Worshiper is essentially described in like parts work of a part of yourself, it’s like you don’t see yourself reflected around you. So you must assume that that part of you is essentially bad. And you need to hone a skill of something else that is reflected of others like, like, again, worshipping, in the sense of, “They have what I’ll never have, or I don’t have, and I need to reject different parts of myself, or how I live my life in order to be loved.” In order to be able to live it up, quote, unquote, appropriately, societally, appropriately, I don’t know.

Josué Cardona 57:33
Yeah, yeah. No.

Stefanie Bautista 57:36
I like that. I like a deep dive guys. Deep dive.

Ariel Landrum 57:41
Yeah. Okay, thank you for indulging in my family systems. Hopefully, that helps some fellow clinicians out there and talking about these characters and how they might represent family roles or parts of ourselves. I think that having something to go off of makes that conversation a little bit safer, and less scary. Because you just don’t want to be like, you know, calling out your client, right there like, “Yo, here’s your dysfunctional role.”

Josué Cardona 58:11
So whenever there’s a movie or a story with families like this, I mean, this is also why I was like, like, Inside Out, right? Oh, it was really helpful. It’s like, “Okay, you have all these examples, like, do you possibly relate to any of them? Maybe? Like, which one? Which one made you feel a certain way?” Or like, where if you have a lot of family members, you’re like, “Oh, like, help me understand how things are at home? Like who acts like, like, like, who?” You know, it’s great, because we have like that, that wide range? And it does cover these two theories really well. Like there’s a lot of videos online about that. People addressing that yeah.

Ariel Landrum 58:51
Yeah. Or to get it in a Geek Therapy mindset. “Who did you resonate with? And ah did you feel an intense repulsion towards any of the behaviors, or the individuals?”

Josué Cardona 59:02
Absolutely.

Ariel Landrum 59:02
Repulsion.

Josué Cardona 59:07
I mean, and the way that that’s, like, effective I find is you’re like, “Oh, do you feel? Do you feel like you’re like, like Camilo? Like, “No, absolutely not!” “Why?’ And then and then that’s when you go into it. And you’re like, “No, because of Ah-buh-buh-buh.” And “Ah there’s the insight.”

Ariel Landrum 59:24
“If I had the power to turn in anything, I ain’t gonna turn in other people. I serve myself.”

Stefanie Bautista 59:29
There’s so many people like talking about that, especially on like the Encanto/Reddit, like, “If I were Luisa, I would have duh duh duh all this stuff.” A lot of opinions on that one. But there was a funny one that I just saw right now. And because we were talking about Encanto 2. And what do you want to mostly if there’s an incanto sequels, somebody said, “A. backstory of the triplets getting their gifts. B. brother sister movie of Camilo doing pranks and Dolores dishing out the gossip. C. Abuela and a silver fox love interest.”

Josué Cardona 1:00:05
Oh my.

Stefanie Bautista 1:00:05
Oh.

“D. A brother-in-law buddy comedy of Felix and Augustine hanging out at the tavern. E. Bruno getting on the dating scene maybe with the woman with the dead fish? What if they got together? Or just two hours of Luisa dancing because she’s living her best life.”

Ariel Landrum 1:00:24
Cosign. Add to Cart.

Stefanie Bautista 1:00:29
I like all of those. Let’s just do a Disney+ thing.

Josué Cardona 1:00:33
We just need a series now.

Ariel Landrum 1:00:35
Some shorts.

Josué Cardona 1:00:36
Shorts. Yeah, just a series of shorts.

Stefanie Bautista 1:00:39
Oh, and if you enjoyed the art of Encanto you can get the art book for free digitally, they’ve made it available to the public. All you have to do is search up ‘Art of Encanto Disney’ and they made it available because it is award season and you may want to promote the art of the movie. And not just our intense emotions and feelings about it. It is visually beautiful.

Ariel Landrum 1:01:01
Well, thank you Josué joining us again for this reprise.

Josué Cardona 1:01:05
Yeah, absolutely.

Stefanie Bautista 1:01:07
Yeah. I love that we were able to unpack even further. This never ending suitcase.

Josué Cardona 1:01:13
I don’t know how much deeper I can go into this movie. I’m afraid of what I’ll find.

Ariel Landrum 1:01:17
This is like Mary Poppins’ bag. There ain’t no bottom.

Josué Cardona 1:01:20
No. Oh no.

Ariel Landrum 1:01:23
Well again, if you want to hear even more Encanto and you want to talk to us about it, please tweet at us or DM us @HappiestPodGT for both Instagram and Twitter. Alright Good night, everybody.

Stefanie Bautista 1:01:38
Good night.

Josué Cardona 1:01:39
Bye!

Media/Characters Mentioned
  • Encanto
  • Abuela Alma Madrigal
  • Mirabel Madrigal
  • Luisa Madrigal
  • Isabela Madrigal
  • Bruno Madrigal
  • Pepa Madrigal
  • Julieta Madrigal
  • Antonio Madrigal
  • Camilo Madrigal
  • Agutin Madrigal
  • Dolores Madrigal
  • Felix Madrigal
  • Frozen
  • Beauty and the Beast
  • Wreck In Ralph
  • Disney
  • Pixar
  • Karoke
Topics/Themes Mentioned
  • Family
  • Family roles
  • Family systems
  • Dysfunctional family roles
  • Coping skills
  • Survival traits
  • The caretaker
  • The peacemaker
  • The mediator
  • The golden child
  • The hero
  • The saint
  • The superkid
  • The scapegoat
  • The troublemaker
  • The black sheep
  • The clown
  • The mascot
  • The lost child
  • the overachiever
  • The underachiever
  • The rescuer
  • The protector
  • The life of the party
  • The yes-person
  • The hero-worshipper

Questions? Comments? Discuss this episode on the GT Forum.

—

 Website: happy.geektherapy.com
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 | Stef on Twitter: @stefa_kneee | Ariel on Instagram: @airyell3000 |
 | Josué on Twitter: @JosueACardona

Geek Therapy is a 501(c)(3) non-profit with the mission of advocating for the effective and meaningful use of popular media in therapeutic, educational, and community practice.
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| GT Forum: forum.geektherapy.com  | GT Discord: geektherapy.com/discord |

We DO Talk About Bruno

January 8, 2022 · Discuss on the GT Forum

https://media.blubrry.com/happypod/media.transistor.fm/26a5605e/ace8900d.mp3

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#26: Ariel, Stef, and special guest and past host Josué welcome listeners to the family Madrigal! In this episode, they highlight the themes of visual symbolism and color schemes to generational trauma and family roles that can be found in Disney’s Encanto.

Read the blog post for this episode for additional references and resources.

Become a member of Geek Therapy on Patreon: http://www.patreon.com/geektherapy

Transcription

Stefanie Bautista 0:11
Hello, everyone, welcome to the Happiest Pod on Earth. I’m Stef.

Ariel Landrum 0:15
And I’m Ariel.

Josué Cardona 0:16
And I’m Josué.

Ariel Landrum 0:17
And we’re all Disney fans! But really so much more.

Stefanie Bautista 0:20
Yes, I’m an educator who uses her passions and fandoms to help my students grow and learn about themselves and the world around them.

Ariel Landrum 0:26
And I’m a licensed therapist who uses clients passions and fandoms to help them grow and heal from trauma and mental and wellness.

Josué Cardona 0:32
And I used to host this podcast and now I’m back.

Ariel Landrum 0:36
And Happiest Pod is a place where we dissect Disney mediums with the critical lens.

Stefanie Bautista 0:39
Why do we do that? Because just like we are more than just fans, we expect more from the mediums we consume.

Ariel Landrum 0:45
So Josué. what are we talking about today?

Josué Cardona 0:48
So um, you know, last time I was here, we wrapped up by saying what we’re most looking forward to regarding Disney. And I said Encanto was the thing that I was most looking forward to.

Stefanie Bautista 0:59
Yes.

Josué Cardona 1:00
Yeah. And it delivered.

Stefanie Bautista 1:05
It sure did.

Ariel Landrum 1:06
So what specifically is in Encanto that word or term? How are we interpreting it? And then how are we interpreting it in the form of this movie?

Josué Cardona 1:14
Good question. I’m curious I’m curious what but both of you think. I have I’ve done I have like five layers the more I watch the movie.

Ariel Landrum 1:22
We watch these I don’t know if they were called like shorts or like it’s short interviews with Lin Manuel and some of the cast members and they were describing encanto as like your joy, your magic. The the reason you lived almost like not so much purpose. But the the value that you see in your life in your world, in that you can almost ascribe it to anything you can describe it to a location like this place is in cncanto. Or you can ascribe it to a feeling.

Josué Cardona 1:51
Yeah, yeah, it’s funny in Spanish. When you say like, “I’m pleased to meet you,” or like “It’s a it’s a pleasure to meet you.” I guess it’s it would most translate to in English like, “Oh, I’m Charmed.” Right? But but But you say like, oh, you know, and un encanto like to meet you, it’s like, oh, it’s a pleasure. And it can also in Spanish, at least I do. And in Puerto Rico, they use the word to, like in English when we say “I really like something” or like, “I love something.” So in Spanish who would say you know, megusta would be like I like but me encanta would be like, like, I love that thing. And it’s almost like again, like you’re maybe you’re enchanted by it, right? Like it. There’s something I never think about it in that way. And so so when I first heard about the movie to me, it was like, oh, like, oh, there’s this enchantment. Right. And in very much the, the magical fantasy fairy tale way. And I had no idea what the movie was, was going to be, but that’s cool. It’s like it’s gonna be a, like a, like a Latin American fairy tale. But I have a completely different way of thinking of the word now after watching the movie.

Stefanie Bautista 3:03
Yeah, definitely.

Ariel Landrum 3:04
Okay, how did it change?

Josué Cardona 3:06
But I see it as an enchantment in the sense of an illusion, like something that’s not real, almost like a lie.

Oh.

Ariel Landrum 3:15
Yeah.

Stefanie Bautista 3:16
Foreshadowing.

Ariel Landrum 3:18
Trickery!

Josué Cardona 3:21
It can definitely I feel like it can definitely be that. Ya know.

Stefanie Bautista 3:25
I mean, for me, I speak Tagalog. And obviously Tagalog has a lot of Spanish background, and it pulls a lot from you know, Spanish. And when I heard encanto the, the word itself, I pulled canta means to sing. And so I’m not sure about the evolution or the history of that. But when I watched it, I was like, “Oh, this makes sense. They’re singing a ton.” I mean, I knew that it meant something like enchantment, and something like that. Because, you know, all the interviews and all the things that all the trailers that were leading up to it, you know, there’s magic, everybody has powers, and you know, even the houses alive, like, I knew it was going to be some sort of magical thing, but I just kept thinking sing in my head.

Josué Cardona 4:11
Yeah.

Stefanie Bautista 4:12
And even before knowing Lin Manual Miranda was involved in this. I was like this is gonna be a musical for sure. Yeah, yeah. And yeah, it’s an your worm…

Ariel Landrum 4:22
Yes.

Stefanie Bautista 4:22
For everyone and everything. It’s everywhere.

Josué Cardona 4:25
Because it’s funny the language aspect of it. And I’m sure I’ll bring this up, like 100 times during this conversation, but I went, I watched it in Spanish. And of course, there’s a lot of Spanish words in it. I even watched part of it in French afterwards, just to see how they treated the Spanish in it. And it’s really respectful and I like that. One time I was watching it in English, I had the subtitles on the closed captions. And they miss translated one of the one of the words in it. And it’s so funny because it just like you said, like Encanto like, oh, and Encanto has gone to like the word singing in the word. So there’s a part I’m in the Dos Oruguitas scene where they sing in Spanish it says “Con sentimiento,” which is with feeling the subtitle it says, with consent, because consentimiento is the word for consent, but it’s actually two words in the song with feeling, but they translated as as as consent. I love language anyway, I think that’s gonna play I think that plays a big part of in the movie, like, because the words that we use to describe things aren’t necessarily the best ones or, or we’re not all in agreement.

Ariel Landrum 5:41
That Google Translate, though.

Stefanie Bautista 5:44
It’s not always reliable. And I feel as Disney reaches out and does more ethnic content. I mean, you really have to think about the way it’s being translated into English. I mean, there’s so many times I know Josué you know, when we’re watching anime, and you know, certain words mean something in, in Japanese, but then when you read the English subtitles, you’re like, “That’s not what they mean. That’s not exactly what they’re trying to say. But I mean, I guess, good job?” But it doesn’t necessarily convey exactly what the feeling is. So I’m curious to see that, you know, how they’re gonna take it from now on.

Josué Cardona 6:20
I mean, so when I, when I lived in Puerto Rico, whenever there was a Disney movie, it would always appear in theaters in Spanish. And I feelings about that. And as a kid, like, that’s a whole other podcast. But I think, you know, they’ve, and you can tell on Disney+, like, whenever you go into any, any new movie, it’s just in so many languages. And, you know, it’s, I mean, it’s always been part of their thing. But it’s, it’s hard when you have songs too right? Like so many Disney movies are musicals, and they have these songs that are translated, and there’s so much that can get lost in translation, or completely, it’s, there’s just a lot, right, not just the cultural aspect. I mean, there’s some movies, right, there’s some Disney movies that are that are so like, you take Aladdin as as like a 90s example. And maybe Hercules feels that way too. I’m trying to think of a newer one where I had this feeling. But it’s like they’re making pop culture references like of the moment, but of course, they’re like American pop culture references, and how do you translate that in other languages and other in other parts of the world? It’s very, that’s an art form in itself.

Ariel Landrum 7:31
I was watching TikTocs with people who had watched the movie in English and in Spanish, and they had mentioned that there were parts that were more meaningful because they were in Spanish that the way that they had to change the translation in English, it lost a little bit of its depth. And spoilers spoiler there’s all spoilers don’t listen to this if you haven’t seen it, they were gonna spoil it. This is a spoiler I’m going to mention again spoiler if you go to the end and say we spoiled it for you. Yeah, cuz they’re spoilers.

Stefanie Bautista 8:03
Turn off. Now listen to another episode, if you have not seen in Encanto go real quick, quick, quick, quick.

Ariel Landrum 8:08
It’s on Disney+

Stefanie Bautista 8:09
And come back.

Ariel Landrum 8:10
Yes. And so at the very end, I’m going to start with the very end someone had pointed out on Tik Tok that, in English, we say, we made this for you. And they gave a doorknob tomb Mirabel, but I guess in the Spanish version there, they actually said this was waiting for you.

Stefanie Bautista 8:30
Oh, that’s different.

Josué Cardona 8:31
I don’t remember that. I was trying to I was trying to pick out the small things like that, because there’s a lot of them.

Ariel Landrum 8:36
Essentially, they were saying that the the nuance that you miss is that she was always meant to have a door. And that her door was always meant to be the house and saying that we made this for you. Makes it sound like again, it was a gathering of the family and the community connectedness this, which is what made the house come together.

Stefanie Bautista 8:55
Yeah, I would have translated that as, “You finally get one, because it was never written in the stars.” But it makes so much more sense. If I think about that it had always been there for you. You just needed to seek it out a different way.

Ariel Landrum 9:10
And it was the doorknob, like the exact design of the original one when she was a little kid because it did have the M.

Stefanie Bautista 9:16
Yeah. That’s interesting. I mean, that changes the whole thing for me, because then it’s not like they’re finally giving her validation in the sense that they’re accepting her it’s validation in the sense that she had always been a part an essential part of the family, which is much deeper than you know, you can finally you know, be Madrigal like you always wanted to be so that’s interesting.

Josué Cardona 9:39
Okay, so so I’m looking at the scene right? And Antonio handed to her in the subtitles in Spanish it still says, “We made this for you.” Estoy para aquí porte,” he says in Spanish, which is like “It’s it’s waiting for you.” It’s not so much like it was waiting for you. But I mean, there is a subtle difference like I guess it it could be like, we made this for you. It’s been, we’ve been waiting to give it to you or this has been here waiting for you.

Ariel Landrum 10:07
Yeah, the TikTocker or had interpreted it as like this item and always been here and it’s been waiting for you. And then to say that the family made it was is essentially alluding to, for the American audience is like, “Oh, now your family accepts you.” Versus like, “You always had value and purpose.”

Josué Cardona 10:26
Yeah, yeah. I found like four different interpretations for the movie in general.

Ariel Landrum 10:31
Okay.

Josué Cardona 10:33
Yeah, yeah. But but the language stuff like subtle things like that can make a huge difference. Well, there’s like the enchantment piece. And the miracle, like, if you go back, and you start looking at when they refer to it as the Encanto and when they refer to the miracle, those are two different things, I think. Yeah. And then there’s also the idea of the gift. In Spanish, they use two different words. In English, I guess you could say, like, your gift or, or it’s funny in French, who says pouvoir which, I believe is like power. And then. But in Spanish, there’s a word that’s I dong, which is like, it’s more like, talent or skill.

Ariel Landrum 11:13
Okay.

Josué Cardona 11:14
Right. Like the nuance between saying, like, this is an ability, like, is this like, an ability that you earned and grew and developed or an ability that you were given because of this miracle? Like, there’s, there’s a lot of nuance there. And depending, you know, and I didn’t think about it until you you think of the different words. And again, like, the language, just even just an English as using different words can mean different things.

Ariel Landrum 11:40
Yeah. And there’s so much nuance. And I don’t know if I’m, for me, personally have seen any other Disney movie that has had that same nuance, and maybe it’s because I’m seeing more people talk about it, and so that’s what’s having me notice, or if it was intentional by the creators, and maybe a mix of both.

Josué Cardona 12:01
Yeah, I feel the same way. I was thinking, I don’t think I’ve ever studied Disney movie this hard. What makes it super helpful for like Geek Therapy conversations is how relatable that can be and different ways that it is relatable, the more helpful it can be. And I keep seeing so many layers in it. And I don’t know like I feel like Elsa’s movies. What else has movies called?

Ariel Landrum 12:24
Oh Frozen.

Josué Cardona 12:25
Frozen. I’m like yeah, what?

Ariel Landrum 12:26
Oh, I was about to say ice age for like a quick second.

Stefanie Bautista 12:33
Oh, yeah.

Josué Cardona 12:34
Yeah, so my dad, no, it doesn’t DreamWorks. So they’re technically not Disney movies.

Stefanie Bautista 12:40
That’s not even Disney.

Ariel Landrum 12:42
Yes, yes. They’re not even Disney.

Stefanie Bautista 12:45
They fully have animals, not even people.

Ariel Landrum 12:48
So does that count as one?

Stefanie Bautista 12:50
Oh, my gosh, we haven’t counted in a very long time.

Ariel Landrum 12:53
It is a new year. If you are new audience member and you have not been listening to our past episodes. I have a tendency to name things very similar, but not the same. And they match in my mind. And so I think this counts as one.

Josué Cardona 13:08
Like consentimiento and consent.

Ariel Landrum 13:10
Yes, exactly. That is exactly it.

Stefanie Bautista 13:14
The Ice Age one threw me for a loop. I had no idea where that came from.

Ariel Landrum 13:17
Well, I went in my head. So this is exactly what went in my head. He said, “What was that Elsa movie?” And I was like, “Frozone? No, that’s a character so must be something with Ice. Ice Age. That’s it. That’s a movie. Oh, no, wait, no, it’s Frozen.”

Stefanie Bautista 13:31
Frozen.

Josué Cardona 13:32
I want to study you Ariel.

Stefanie Bautista 13:35
Do a deep dive. Let’s do another rewatch of Ariel and see what we find out. But anyway, um..

Ariel Landrum 13:47
Not studying me studying the movie that we were talking about.

Josué Cardona 13:54
Yeah, I feel like Frozen one was way more straightforward, Frozen two have had more depth, where like, on a second viewing, I felt like oh, that song means something different. Like, Let It Go just means Let It Go. But like…

Stefanie Bautista 14:09
Into the Unknown?

Josué Cardona 14:09
Into the Unknown has has some depth, right? It’s like, “Wait a minute. That’s a few different things happening at the same time.” And this one, I feel just a lot of that. And not just because of the of the language and the culture piece. I think just the story that it’s telling has lots of different layers. It’s almost like, the last time I watched the movie, I felt like I could see multiple things happening at once. And they’re saying one thing, but at the same time you see something else happening? And you could interpret either one.

Stefanie Bautista 14:42
I think I I’m glad that you mentioned that because I remember when I started to watching Encanto. It felt a little messy to me, because I didn’t know the perspective it was trying to take at first because she was introducing them as if like she was yes introducing us to her world and her family when she’s talking to me these kids, but then it was almost like a show she was introducing.

Ariel Landrum 15:04
Yeah.

Stefanie Bautista 15:05
And I’m like, “Wait, is it gonna take that like breaking the fourth wall perspective? Is it not? Is she involved in this? The kids seem to be aware but not fully informed of what’s going on, which is why they’re asking her all these things?” in the opening number. And they keep asking her like, “What’s your gift? What’s your gift? What’s your gift?” And she keeps avoiding it, avoiding it, avoiding it, then you’re like, “Okay, I see where this is going. You you’re taking this outsider perspective, but like, with an insider, I, and it confused me for a bit, but then as the song kept going, I was like, “Okay, I kind of see what’s happening here.” And another thing is, I like how you mentioned Frozen, and I’m thinking Moana, because all of those are not Pixar, but also CGI Disney movies.

Josué Cardona 15:50
Yep. Yep.

Stefanie Bautista 15:51
And I feel like that depth and multi perspective. Let’s do another rewatch, and see what else we get from this is very common in all of those movies.

Ariel Landrum 16:00
Mm hmm.

Josué Cardona 16:01
Yeah.

Ariel Landrum 16:02
And, and when I think of that first intro song, I, I when I saw it, and I heard it, I immediately thought like, “Oh, at some point, they’re gonna make this into a Broadway play, because there’s no way that this song isn’t the start of a Broadway musical.”

Stefanie Bautista 16:14
Yes, exactly.

Ariel Landrum 16:15
And I was like, “Well, I know who wrote it. So that makes sense. Like, okay.” But then I got that, that shift when they were pressing her and pressing her was like, “Oh, there’s a tonal shift here.

Stefanie Bautista 16:26
Mm hmm.

Ariel Landrum 16:26
Watching the shorts. There’s like a part. Lin Manuel wrote as a trumpet sound and, and then she had to sing it like that trumpet sound. And he he was like, “Well, I trusted that you know, Stepahnie could do it. I trusted that she could do it.” But when you hear the way the trumpet goes, and how she sings it, it’s like she’s cracking in her voice. Like, “Oh, my God, they’re gonna catch they’re gonna, they’re gonna know that I’m the one who’s not gifted.”

Josué Cardona 16:52
Yeah yeah.

Stefanie Bautista 16:54
she thinks that hurriedly to like, she’s just like, I can’t really keep up. And I’m like, really trying to avoid it. But I mean, even mentioning that her voice is cracking that kind of alludes to the house later on.

Ariel Landrum 17:06
Yes

Stefanie Bautista 17:07
So yeah.

Ariel Landrum 17:09
Symbolism. Depth.

Stefanie Bautista 17:10
It’s heavy! So much.

Josué Cardona 17:16
I just thought one of the funniest jokes I saw online about that song at the beginning, was that there’s only six cousins. She makes it seem like so complicated. And so there’s only six cousins. The family is not that big. They all fit in one house.

Stefanie Bautista 17:30
Doesn’t it make you think of your family? And you’re like, “Oh, I have to keep track of like 16 to 20 something. And she’s only keeping track of six.”

Josué Cardona 17:39
Yeah, like I went to visit a an aunt once in, like my grandmother sister in Delaware. And they owned like eight houses in the area. And they were over 40 cousins at that point. I was like, “This is ridiculous.” I never even met them all. I was there for two days. Yeah. So…

Stefanie Bautista 17:56
I think maybe that would have blown the general audience’s mind a little bit too much.

Josué Cardona 18:02
But my favorite part of this of the of that whole scene is at the end when the kids at the end say like, “I think you’re I think your power is denial.”

Ariel Landrum 18:12
Denial is not just a river Egypt.

Stefanie Bautista 18:17
Your power is denial. And were like, “Hmmhmm I can relate.”

Josué Cardona 18:20
Yeah, yeah.

Ariel Landrum 18:22
I subscribe.

Stefanie Bautista 18:23
Yup. Did the opening the family madrigal song remind you of the first song in Beauty and the Beast because of the way it was paced, and that, you know, just keeps getting faster and just like in Beauty and the Beast, how like the townspeople end up? Joining along. At the end, I immediately went to beauty in the piece. And I’m like, Oh, this is like the same pacing, but like, on a grander scale. So I don’t know if you guys, it reminded you of anything, but I was just like, “Oh, this is kind of like it’s kind of Beauty and the Beast. Where we’re being introduced in…”

Josué Cardona 18:57
Yeah, and it’s an introduction. Yeah. To the characters and the location. Right. It’s like literally moving you through and Yeah, welcome to the although in this case, it’s Welcome to La Familia Madrigal, right. And there. It’s like, what what does it say? In in Beauty and the Beast?

Stefanie Bautista 19:13
Their singing about Bell.

Josué Cardona 19:14
Oh right, it’s like an introduction to her and anyways, yeah, yeah. Yeah.

Ariel Landrum 19:18
Okay. Curious. Where did everybody see it?

Stefanie Bautista 19:20
I watched it right. When it was the day it was released at home. Yeah. So I did have to pause a couple times. Because of my child. He did sit through like the first five minutes of it, because there was just like, lots of colors and stuff. And that was really cool. And then he just bounced, he’s like, this is too much exposition for me at this point. I need to go.

Ariel Landrum 19:44
Peace out. Mama.

Stefanie Bautista 19:45
Tell me tell me the synopsis later. I’ll listen to the podcast.

Josué Cardona 19:50
I saw it at home as well. COVID you know, I wanted to I couldn’t bring myself to do it. And and so yeah, was it couple days after it came out on Disney+ that I saw it.

Ariel Landrum 20:02
So I saw it in theaters when it came out that that opening weekend in Thousand Oaks which for those who aren’t around here that’s like the rich neighborhood. And the funny thing is their AMC tickets are cheaper than our area, which is not the rich neighborhood. So that’s odd. But we chose that one really, because there was when we bought the tickets like that night, there were only two other people in the theater. So I was like, oh, and it was lounger seats. And it was one of those like, you could order from your seat if you wanted to. And it was my roommate, Greg and my roommate Travis, who we have had on the podcast before. We got up close parking. It was actually very magical. There was nobody in the theater the musical was great. The movie was great. We and then I bought the ectoplasm popcorn bucket from Ghostbusters. They had one it was a gift from my partner it did not have any signatures on it. So apparently What’s His face had signed them secretly some of them… Uhh

Josué Cardona 21:05
Slimer?

Stefanie Bautista 21:07
Bill Murray,?

Josué Cardona 21:09
Dan Aykroyd?

Ariel Landrum 21:09
That’s it. Dan Aykroyd okay. Yeah, yeah, yeah

Stefanie Bautista 21:12
We were gonna Slammer was a good guess though. blah

Ariel Landrum 21:18
I really liked it in theaters. I felt bad for the like the other two people that were there because I think they were on a date and they probably would have liked to just have the theater to themselves. And it was just like these three mooches like in the middle.

Josué Cardona 21:29
Sucks to be them.

Stefanie Bautista 21:30
Nah they know what they were getting into. They know what they’re getting into. Pick another theater. Good job. Nice. Did you watch it at night Ariel?

Ariel Landrum 21:40
Did watch it at night. It was a Saturday night. I will be honest, when I first saw it in theaters, so much was had happened. Like in the movie. When I left. I was like, “I don’t know, I can’t tell if I like this or not.” And then in watching it at home with my roommates, who also sort of other roommates. I have too many roommates. We live in LA so that’s what happens. But anyways, they also said “Well, I don’t know if I like this or not. I have to think about this.” And I had already processed it that I loved it. And I think the pause for me was I was I was looking for a bad guy. I for me the what I took was like the bad guy being essentially generational trauma.

Stefanie Bautista 22:20
Oh, yeah.

Ariel Landrum 22:21
Because I was looking for that that boogeyman to just like pop out and never did. I was like, where’s I’m I don’t know, if I feel resolution yet. When I saw it the from that lens the second time, I loved it, because I saw all the intricacies and like, like facial expressions and nods and the way people were communicating with each other and, and even like I would say for a lot of the women like, man, their most expressive facial expressions, like if I look at other Disney princess movies or other Disney movies with women, like they got two faces. Like that’s, that’s pretty much about it. And I could see just like, like, what we see Luisa eye twitching. Like it was great. It was great.

Josué Cardona 23:01
I think Moana and the Frozen movies do the same thing. They’re like, there’s it’s everybody’s misunderstood or they have different intentions, right? And like, there’s no, there’s no bad guy in them. Or love interest either.

Stefanie Bautista 23:15
Both movies are very family centric.

Josué Cardona 23:18
Yeah.

Stefanie Bautista 23:18
I mean Frozen. You have the struggle between the two sisters now sans parents, and how they’re navigating their community, their world and their responsibility. Same with Moana. What is her responsibility as somebody coming into this established family and path for her? And then now you’re talking about Mirabel. And what is her role? There isn’t a clear path because she’s an outlier, technically. So where does she fit in, in this puzzle, which is so essential to her community? Like those unknowns become your villain?

Ariel Landrum 23:54
Mm hmm. And that’s it almost feels too real and unsettling. And it’s like, “But this is a movie about a family with magical powers. Like how, how can I hit very, very close to home?”

Stefanie Bautista 24:06
Like they’re mutants?

Ariel Landrum 24:07
Yes they’re mutants.

Stefanie Bautista 24:07
That’s cool.

Ariel Landrum 24:09
I need Professor Xavier.

Stefanie Bautista 24:12
Which is the grandma.

Josué Cardona 24:14
All Disney movies after Frozen are also just super everybody’s got superpowers. That’s, uh, yeah, yeah.

Stefanie Bautista 24:21
I Moana didn’t think she did. But I mean, she did.

Josué Cardona 24:24
Yeah, technically. She’s. Yeah, the bad guy. I don’t know. Huh? Yeah, the more I’ve watched the movie. I guess I’ve watched it three times now. And it’s like an M Night Shyamalan movie. I didn’t realize what was really happening. Now I see other things.

Stefanie Bautista 24:41
That’s funny. I mean, I think even watching it at home, and I live at home with my family. And you know, we’re multi generational family living in here. It was too real. So I was like wait, “These are feelings that I feel on a daily basis, this generational trauma.” So I had to like, I remember because I was watching it you know, it’s it’s bright in there, it’s not like you know, you can hide your emotions because it’s dark. Like we’re just watching it me my husband, my brother, and you know, my son running around with parents are like in the kitchen. And I’m just like, shielding myself. “Let me just wipe this tear real quick. I mean, go the bathroom, but you can keep watching.”

Josué Cardona 25:18
So how do you how do you both define the generational trauma like? Like, how would you which generational trauma do you see in the movie as the kind of the obstacle or the, the, the negative thing in the movie?

Ariel Landrum 25:32
For me, I do see it starting with Abuela’s experience. I don’t want to say starting with Abuela, and simply because I think that she obviously suffered great grief and loss, she had to be a single mother to triplets which, like single mother one would already be difficult. But I think it was the displacement, the colonization, I, they showed it very subtly, in the very beginning, when she’s telling the story of their of their miracle, and then you see it more in depth later on. But I think that if I were to look at it from my white side, I wouldn’t see that. I would think the generational trauma is that Abuela is kind of like really mean. That’s, that’s I would just paint it as this like, basic thing. When I’m looking at it from my Filipino side, and that lens, I see that displacement and colonization being so huge, because literally having to start from the ground up of building a community and a family and creating support networks. And it being really all on her to support the family. I and and literally her I don’t know, power of like she built walls. Technically, she like she built mountains. And she built walls, that desire to protect constantly. I think that is where the generational trauma started, because that over need to protect didn’t allow everyone else their individuality and the way that they probably could have embraced it.

Josué Cardona 27:04
Yeah. Is it has it, like been confirmed, or in any of the shorts or anything like that, that what they experienced was like that the people that were attacking the town, like who they were, or what was happening? Because the movie itself doesn’t say…

Ariel Landrum 27:19
Yeah, I haven’t seen anyone actually confirm that. I would say that I I’m just seeing it from that lens. And I think just because it’s placed in Colombia, and I’m thinking of the history of that community, it would just make sense. Even if the invaders were not colonizers, and essentially this was potential civil war, civil unrest or neighboring town taking over this town Abuela is still displaced a minimum, a refugee.

Josué Cardona 27:51
Yeah, yeah. Yeah. Colombia. I mean, a lot of countries do. And and I’m not super familiar with the history of Colombia, and I don’t know, when sort of this takes place. But yeah, the the impression I got was that there’s just, there’s just bad people. Right? It’s like, we’re, we’re escaping violence, which, like today, so many people are displaced, because they’re there. And so many people enter the United States, right through that they try to cross the border, because they’re escaping different types of violence, whether it’s from the government or whether it’s from, you know, other either criminal activity or other things that people are leaving, because they’re trying to find a, a better place for their family is a place where, where they they can feel safe. And so they had to leave, because like, we do see violence at the very least, right? It’s not, it’s not, um, I think it’s up for interpretation. It can definitely, and colonization can obviously be very violent, but it seemed like just people coming in and, and they literally killed the Abuelo. Right. So So there’s, and they’re burning down houses. No, but I like that the movie doesn’t confirm either way. Because again, you can you can read it in a few different ways.

Ariel Landrum 29:07
Really, interestingly, I was also looking for other individuals in the town that were Abuela’s his age. And I wasn’t seeing that a lot.

Stefanie Bautista 29:19
They seem slightly younger, but not as young as her children. Maybe like a little bit older. So that’s interesting.

Josué Cardona 29:29
Yeah, because we saw Mariano’s mom, but we didn’t see Mariano’s grandmother or grandfather. That’s true.

Ariel Landrum 29:35
Yeah. I think that like her being a matriarch for the town, is that added pressure? And because I was in that, in this, my rewatches I was trying to find like, maybe there are these other people that are like, Abuela’s crew, you know, like the elders of the town. And I was not seeing.

Stefanie Bautista 29:52
Oh, no, she is the elder of the she is the crew. She is the crew. And I think that’s part of the loneliness of, you know, migrating? For me, I saw a lot of, you know, my grandma, I mean, my grandparents who migrated here. They’re not all here anymore. So I could only imagine what they went through. And we as third generation, I guess, don’t hear about those stories. And so it was very relatable. Watching all of the grandchildren, all of the kids even not having that story in their head to go off of and that’s, you know, maybe something that they can identify with Abuela. But she kept it locked in, because it was so traumatizing for her that she just did not want to revisit that. And I mean, even personally, for me, I didn’t hear about our migration story until I was a full grown adult. And I had to pry and ask, because they just, it’s, it’s just not something that they want to talk about, it makes, makes total sense. And, you know, seeing that, they had to start a new life in a whole new place. They just wanted to protect what they could control, which was essentially, how we took school, how we picked our careers, and all of that was kind of already laid out for us, because they knew it was a sure shot, you’re going to make money doing this, you’re going to you know, have a stable job. But if there was any deviation from that, it was kind of like, “I don’t know, and are you really part of this family? Or are you even really thinking of, you know, what, how, how much difficulty it took for us to get here and to establish a life here.” So there were many, many layers, as I was thinking about, and these thoughts didn’t come to me until like almost the end of the movie. Especially when they flashback to what actually happened on the river. Like, that’s when it was like, boom, it hit full force. And I was like, “Wow, there’s there’s a lot happening in, you know, Abuela’s experience. And up until then, you’re talking about Mirabel. And we’ve been calling her MaryBelle Mirabel’s experience, and how she you know, you see her as the full protagonist, like, you know, “Why doesn’t she have her power? Why isn’t she you know, she’s special too. And, you know, look at all these amazing things that she’s doing. She’s supporting the family, keeping them together.” And you almost antagonize Abuela, because she keeps being that’s her roadblock. But then once that breaks, you’re just like, “Oh, wow. There’s so much more that she doesn’t even see. And it’s not even having to do with whether she has a power or not. It’s really about you know, what role she brings individually to the family.”

Ariel Landrum 32:44
even when you’re talking about those loss stories and narratives. When I think of this story and how it aligns with a lot of my clients who are a second or third generation. They talk about whole families, they don’t know. And we don’t know Abuelo’s family. Mirabella doesn’t know if she has other cousins on that side. Other aunts and uncles, it was this this huge cut off that’s probably never never going to be healed or reconciled. That unspoken questioning, like, like, we don’t talk about Bruno, right. Like there’s, there’s those family members who it’s like, in some cases, I don’t even know if they exist. That’s how that’s how much sacrifice my family’s had to make, especially when I think of my clients who are refugees, specifically, like my Cambodian clients. They just whole sides that they can’t ask their parents or their grandparents about because they were like the discipline, we made the sacrifice to survive. We also essentially have to say, “I’m not going to think or talk about them, because if I do, I would be in too much grief, I wouldn’t be able to move on in my life, I have to pretend that that part of my life never happened.”

Stefanie Bautista 33:51
As if they were responsible.

Ariel Landrum 33:52
Mm hmm.

Josué Cardona 33:53
So that the scene at the end Abuela says, “I’ve never come.. I’ve never been here since.” Right. I mean, they literally she hasn’t been to this location, but like, metaphorically, right? It’s like, “I don’t I don’t talk about this. I don’t think about this. I don’t come back here.” And but she she had literally built a mountain between the town and where that happens. So she didn’t right that she didn’t want to revisit that. The power of denial. So like, there’s this literal piece of like, “Oh, I haven’t actually been here.” And then again, like whenever you watch a movie, right, it’s two hours, we can make a lot of assumptions about what what they do or haven’t talked about over the years at the dinner table. But But Mirabel, it says, “Now I see I had no idea like, I didn’t know this story.” You know, and she had never seen that place right when she when they see that that moment in Bruno’s vision. It’s like, “Where is that? It’s like, nobody knows where that is. No one’s ever seen it except Abuela.

Stefanie Bautista 34:58
No one’s ever been there. Yeah. They’ve never been outside of the, you know, the community.

Josué Cardona 35:04
Yeah, yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So so like everything you’re saying, right, like they showcase that literally. They actually, they actually play with those ideas at the end. “This isn’t something that we talk about.”

Stefanie Bautista 35:18
Yeah.

Josué Cardona 35:19
“Or would visit.” Yeah.

Stefanie Bautista 35:20
Everybody has that one family member that they don’t like talking about. And that was super relatable. I feel there’s I mean, there’s so many stories like what as as a child, and I think looking at it as a child’s perspective, like watching it, you’re just like, “Yes. I have lots of family members, they’re in and around, I see most of them sometimes.” I mean, even now, I feel like posts are, during this pandemic, you’re seeing less and less of these people, you know, you’re not, especially if you’re from another country, you’re not traveling back to see and connect with these people. So as far as you know, they could be fairytales. So if you, you know, ask, there’s only so much information that’s going to be divulged to you. Because, you know, not everybody goes through their family tree like that. And I even see it we do a family tree activity in I think it’s first or second grade. And we have to give them at least a month, because they can’t, they can’t fill as much as possible, because some of the information isn’t there, especially for my students who you know, migrated here, or my students who, you know, families migrated here, they have to do some digging, being able to identify that. As a kid, you’re just like, :oh, wow, do I have other cousins? Do I have other family? What? Who are these people? How do I connect to them?” And then you open a Pandora’s box, and then all of a sudden, they just want to know everything about their families.

Josué Cardona 36:48
Yeah, the way they show that, you know that that song with Bruno and like, the version, and everybody’s mind that story that everybody tells, and then when you meet him, he’s so different from that. And he’s giving you his perspective on things. He really does that a little bit when he’s talking to Mirabel. And then at the end in the song, right? He’s like, he comes right out. Because in the, in the wanna talk about Bruno song, they talk about how he ruined the wedding.

Ariel Landrum 37:14
Yeah.

Josué Cardona 37:14
And immediately when he gets his part to sing at the end, he’s like, let me set the record straight. It’s like, I this is what I was saying, like, I love you. I just like, it wasn’t even a vision. Right? But everything I say, you know, I’m always everything I do is wrong. So it doesn’t matter what I do, it’s interpreted incorrectly, even when he shows Mirabel the vision. And she’s like, interpret it interprets it a certain way. And he’s like, Oh, every time.

Stefanie Bautista 37:44
Here we go again.

Ariel Landrum 37:45
It happened again.

Stefanie Bautista 37:47
This is why send the rats out. I don’t want to deal with your people.

Ariel Landrum 37:50
Well, and looking at like family systems and roles, Bruno could be or is identified, essentially, as the first black sheep of the family.

Stefanie Bautista 37:58
Yeah, I mean, so much so that he is so desperately trying to connect through even the cracks of his room. And the food, which is such an essential part of family and gathering him just reaching out through that wall and getting scraps like that was, oh my gosh, my heart. Like…

Josué Cardona 38:19
Yeah, yeah.

Stefanie Bautista 38:20
I get that. It’s, it’s like not being invited to the family party, and just getting scraps from whoever reaches out to you. Like, that’s, that’s a real thing.

Josué Cardona 38:31
Yeah, he says my gift wasn’t helpful for the family, to the family. So like, like, I was a burden, kind of right. Or my gift was a burden.

Stefanie Bautista 38:41
I mean, that can mean so many things. It could be you know, your, your values, your beliefs, the way you know, you choose to identify yourself, it could be the career choices you make. There’s so many different ways to connect and interpret that into, you know, everyday lives of navigating around family, community and connection really, between blood relatives.

Ariel Landrum 39:01
I also think when like, again, that family systems, the person Bruno was protecting was Mirabel and she is the new generation black sheep. The difference is that he he left when he was ostracized and then chose to leave now when we come to find out he living in the walls. She’s the one who stays and tries her best to conform to the family tried try to find a place to to be useful to try and be appreciated, understood. She’s really working hard and I think that that makes her a very different black sheep because she gets the pain in person of just the regular rejection she I almost picture her as like the kid that while you didn’t get the lead in the play, you were only the tree so that’s not something to celebrate. Not the fact that you went out and did something fun for yourself or that you stepped out of your comfort zone and like joined the theater group is the fact that you didn’t show that you were the best.

Josué Cardona 40:05
Yeah, yeah.

Ariel Landrum 40:07
Yeah. Even when we’re thinking about Bruno being able to see the future, that makes me think of someone who’s just an insightful in a family that sees the way things are interconnected, and it’s like “You spoke about it. That’s why you’re being ostracized. That’s why you’re the you’re the black sheep, you highlighted stuff that we all, you know, agreed was going to not be highlighted in the way that you presented it. You were you were too honest.”

Stefanie Bautista 40:37
He was just checking facts.

Josué Cardona 40:39
Yep.

Stefanie Bautista 40:39
He was just speaking facts. And they were like, no, no, no, we don’t like that fact.

Josué Cardona 40:43
Yeah, I think that’s my, or the other one that resonates the most with me like that, that version of it, right? Like that metaphor of like, you need to shut up, man. Like, you got to stop saying, You got to stop spitting facts. You cannot tell people how it is. You need to choose your delivery. It’s like, like, it’s what I do. Like, I just like, I’m I got an opposite version of that would be like, oh, you know, he’s a town Oracle. And he helps us, you know, by foreseeing the future and helping us prepare for the things that are coming, but instead everybody’s like, “Ah, this asshole he told me I’m gonna get fatter, I’m gonna lose my hair and look.”

Ariel Landrum 41:23
“He killed my goldfish.

Josué Cardona 41:25
Yeah. Yeah.

Ariel Landrum 41:26
He just said it, and it happened.

Stefanie Bautista 41:28
Yeah it happened.

Ariel Landrum 41:28
It wasn’t the fact that I wasn’t feeding the goldfish.

Josué Cardona 41:32
Or like, Oh, my goldfish is gonna die then like the me. Let me enjoy this time with it. Right. And like, let me prepare for it. Nobody saw it that way.

Yeah.

I think I mean, every power we can go through, like how each of them was

Ariel Landrum 41:48
A blessing and a curse.

Stefanie Bautista 41:49
blessing and a curse.

Josué Cardona 41:50
Yeah, it’s like gifts in in, in, in quotations. Right?

Ariel Landrum 41:56
Well, do we want to go through everyone’s powers? Or do we want to talk about their doors? Or do we want to talk about their clothes? Because I’m gonna tell you, my my art therapy, symbolism, all the colors, like it’d be coming out. So

Josué Cardona 42:11
I’m following your lead.

Stefanie Bautista 42:12
I mean, I think we can shift to visually how beautiful this movie was. And I think celebrating color, and how they played with color and shadow and light and making Bruno look super drab, spoke to our visual appetite of you know what we expect from not only a Disney movie, but a Disney CGI movie?

Ariel Landrum 42:36
So if you look at Bruno’s..Yeah, well, if you look at his outfit..

Stefanie Bautista 42:41
His rags poor guy…

Ariel Landrum 42:42
His rags.. For anybody goes to the Disney parks that Disney Imagineers created two colors to hide objects in plain sight that they do not like. And one of them is called Go Away Green. And that is the color of his outfit. And if you look at the movie posters, he is in plain sight. He’s in the background next to all the green objects. And like to me that we don’t talk about Bruno, but he’s been here the whole time. And we actually do talk about him. It’s just an whispers and away from Abuela. That Go Away Green was just like so in your face of like how we treat this character.

Josué Cardona 43:16
That’s so cool.

Stefanie Bautista 43:17
You see him in the shadows, but only on the second like watch. You’re like, Oh there he is!

Ariel Landrum 43:21
He’s in the song when Dolores is singing and she’s doing the hip and boom there he is.

Josué Cardona 43:30
I’ll watch it again.

Stefanie Bautista 43:34
Go Away Green. That’s hilarious.

Josué Cardona 43:36
Yeah.

Ariel Landrum 43:36
The other thing with the colors is that Pepa, so how you can tell who’s related to who is Pepa’s side of the families wearing warm tones, and Julieta’s side of the family is wearing cool tones. And the interesting thing is that Abuela’s a purple. So sort of like a mix of warm and cool. And that Go Away Green is actually you know, getting more towards the cool side. And that’s also where the person who’s the new generation black sheep is. So it also shows you somewhat of how the family is split.

Josué Cardona 44:07
Yeah, yes. Yeah.

Stefanie Bautista 44:09
Mirabel expresses a lot of those purple tones, which implies that she draws from everyone, both sides. You can see a little bit of everybody’s color in her skirt, the flowers on her shirt, and the fact that it’s white.

Ariel Landrum 44:23
Yes.

Stefanie Bautista 44:24
That says a lot because her shirt is white. It’s white and black. And, you know, it makes all of the other colors standout which says a lot about her role in the family.

Ariel Landrum 44:34
Yes, yes, that she essentially highlights everyone’s powers and celebrates them. And the other interesting thing is the patterns on everyone’s outfits. So Abuela has butterflies and so does Mirabel. Sort of alluding to that moment in the future and alluding to how connected they are to the the miracle or the magic or the encanto and how they each celebrating their family members, gifts but very differently because Abuela was essentially saying you have to use the gift in this very specific way. And Mirabel saying like, no, it’s your gift, celebrate it how you know would be beneficial for you and you know, it doesn’t have to be a burden.

Stefanie Bautista 45:20
Mm hmm.

Josué Cardona 45:21
Butterflies everywhere.

Stefanie Bautista 45:22
Butterflies everywhere.

Butterflies in the sky. Let’s see. Okay, other outfits. Okay. Julieta has a mortar and pestle and hearts. And she is the person who heals…

Josué Cardona 45:34
Through cooking…

Ariel Landrum 45:35
Through cooking to the cooking and a mortar pestle can be used for for medicine and it can be used for food. Like that’s that’s the interesting thing about it. And I think the hearts are important because she tells Mirabel that she healed her with her love.

Stefanie Bautista 45:49
Yeah. My love healed you.

Ariel Landrum 45:52
My love healed you.

Stefanie Bautista 45:53
What a mom thing to say.

Ariel Landrum 45:56
Pepa has the sun earrings and the sun dress. So you know whether. Bruno has hour glasses, like for time. Dolores has soundwaves on her collar. Isabella obviously has flowers almost everywhere. Luisa has dumbbells at the bottom of her skirt.

Stefanie Bautista 46:14
She does.

Ariel Landrum 46:15
Camilo has chameleons on his outfit, and I think his name even means chameleon.

Stefanie Bautista 46:19
Oh!

Josué Cardona 46:23
Wow!

Stefanie Bautista 46:24
I missed that. It looks pretty plain to me.

Josué Cardona 46:26
Well, I mean, he’s always like shape shifting. Right?

Ariel Landrum 46:28
He’s always shape shifting.

Josué Cardona 46:29
Yeah, yeah.

Ariel Landrum 46:30
And then Antonio at first had doesn’t have anything. And then when he gets his door, he changes his outfit, and it has animals on it.

Stefanie Bautista 46:38
Cute.

Josué Cardona 46:38
And then very interesting. Lee, Julio says husband, Augustine, who is like very protective of Mirabel. His outfit has a piece for each daughter. So he’s got a flower in his pocket. And then his socks, one sock has dumbbells, the other one has embroidery.

Stefanie Bautista 46:56
Oh, I need to I need to zoom in on these details.

Ariel Landrum 47:02
The other thing that I thought was really interesting with the doors is that everyone’s door picture, their doors of them as an adult, except Antonio, he’s the only one who has a kid. And that to me really represents like the generational curse being broken, because he’s the one who got to grow up with his power and choose like, how it benefit for him. Whereas everybody else when there’s going to be broken was when they were adults. And it’s like, this is how far your power is going to go.

Stefanie Bautista 47:31
Yeah.

Ariel Landrum 47:31
And and then there’s kind of like this endpoint of like, there, it’s just going to be up to the family if they decide to continue to flourish. Or if that’s it. They all take a picture with Abuela in front of their door, and they’re all little kids in front of their door but their doors an adult.

Josué Cardona 47:49
I don’t know what photos like the photos that you’re referring to.

Ariel Landrum 47:53
There, they’re actually on the wall.

Josué Cardona 47:55
So is there a photo that shows them as children in the photo, but their adult version on the door?

Ariel Landrum 48:01
Yes.

Josué Cardona 48:02
Ah…

Ariel Landrum 48:03
Yes, yes.

Josué Cardona 48:04
Okay. Okay. Okay.

Ariel Landrum 48:05
So it’s taken right when they got their powers.

Josué Cardona 48:08
That’s a hell of an attention to detail if that if that.

Ariel Landrum 48:12
This is one screen grab. This is the first one that I could find and see how they’re their doors are all taller than them. But with a Antonio, he’s about the same size.

Stefanie Bautista 48:20
There’s Dolores, and her hair is big. I like how Bruno’s looks super scary….

Ariel Landrum 48:28
Right?

Yeah.

Stefanie Bautista 48:32
I know that there’s been a lot of like Easter eggs that people have been seeing. I haven’t quite looked at all of them. But it seems like there’s much more to discover, aside from seeing Bruno creep in the back during the songs because, like we mentioned earlier in the podcast, there was just a lot happening. And a lot of that continues to happen through the story. Because there’s a lot of people that you’re keeping track of, there’s a lot of stories you’re keeping track of there’s a lot, there’s just a lot you’re you’re processing at the moment. So it would be easy for them to embed something, especially within the house because the house itself, it’s it’s, it’s its own character.

Ariel Landrum 49:12
Yes.

Stefanie Bautista 49:12
It represents the family. So and it’s alive. So, I mean, I wouldn’t be surprised if there was a lot of things that either foreshadowed or explained.

Josué Cardona 49:23
The symbolism is is all over the place. Right? And in some ways, like referring to the clothes, it’s like in your face. If you watch the movie in English, the scene where with the flashback at the river, it plays Dos Oruguitas in Spanish. And then I’m assuming when you saw it at theatres Ariel there were no subtitles for the song.

Ariel Landrum 49:45
No, None None. It was just playing in Spanish so that I mean, I got the feeling for what was being presented. It was really emotional.

Josué Cardona 49:55
So so if you watch if you watch To the end, then he plays the English version of the song of the Dos Oruguitas during the credits.

Ariel Landrum 50:05
Oh credits. Oh okay.

Josué Cardona 50:06
Yeah yeah. And then if you listen to the actual lyrics, like if, if the song if Dos Oruguitas was translated during that scene, it would, it literally explained some things, that it’s very literal the song in English, it’s way more subtle in Spanish. But this, the very literal version kind of explains a bunch of stuff. And when I, when I saw it again, so many things jumped out, like, sure we talked about like the butterflies in the clothing. The song is Dos Oruguitas, two caterpillars, just like the song is all about to butterflies, and Abuela and Mirabel are the butter, like I’ve gone through different interpretations of the song, but when you rewatch it, they just put the subtitles on for the song as it’s going. And you’re like, oh, and it’s and that’s actually, I mean, the way I’ve interpreted this is that the song goes into, it’s actually two stories. There. It’s a Abeula’s story with with Pedro. And then Abeula’s story with Mirabel, and and it’s like, oh, you know, like, we’re in love, you know, blah, blah, blah. But then the point is when something changed, like we were trying to avoid anything changing, right? Like we talked about the generational trauma. And then once things changed as a caterpillar, I created a cocoon.

Stefanie Bautista 51:21
Yeah.

Ariel Landrum 51:22
Oh, interesting that hardshell.

Josué Cardona 51:25
Exactly. Once you go through, you’re like, Oh, she made a cocoon around the town around herself for every single one of her children. Right. And then as you keep listening to the song, and then you see it again, like now I can’t unsee it, but it’s like, in the song at the end. It’s like, oh, now we’re talking about this butterfly who breaks cocoons open and sets people free. And like the yellow butterfly is there at the beginning of that scene.

Ariel Landrum 51:55
Yeah.

Josué Cardona 51:55
In front of Pedro, right, like in the scene when when when Abuela meets him. And then it appears again, for Mirabel right it’s like it’s like it’s it’s a well as story in two parts with two different people like he tried to hold on so hard to the first one. And then the second person who came along is the one who’s breaking all the cocoons and like if you look at that, at the again, we’re talking about this visual storytelling that’s almost separate. There’s something going on there right like it’s it’s almost like the more I The more I think about the movie, the more I realize that everybody thinks that they’re doing one thing like everybody’s just misinterpreting their own ability and misusing it. So yeah, Abuela I wants to protect, but she’s gone beyond protecting. Now she she doesn’t, it is what the song is all about, like the song telegraph’s the whole story. Oh, okay, I’m protecting. But now I don’t want to let go. And the song is all about like, you have to let go. Like, that’s part of the process little caterpillar. Never. Like that’s the miracle. The miracle is like you growing. And so there’s this visual and I think this is why I think that actually Mirabel does have a power and like I can go into all that because visually, the cracks always stem literally from where she is. And there’s like even when she goes to Bruno’s cave like, and she like stomps on the ground. She like she she breaks the floor, like and she and whenever she meets with any of our sisters, or cousins, she she makes everybody she basically takes down the barriers. Right? Like she’s like, Luia, do you want to talk? She’s like, No, boom, she she burst into song.

Ariel Landrum 53:34
A friggin awesome song.

Josué Cardona 53:35
With Pepa she’s like, you know, but Bruno. She’s like, we don’t talk about Bruno. But on my wedding day, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, right? When she’s talking to Isabela. She’s right. She’s literally her like hypeman in the background, right? She’s in the sun. She’s like, Yeah, grow, grow, Rise, Rise as she’s doing this thing. She’s so taking everybody. She’s breaking down all these barriers. And basically like, the more I’ve again, I’ve obsessively listened to Dos Oruguitas of you that today listen to it twice simultaneously by accident, because I sound alarm with it. And I was listening to it separately on my phone, and it was playing twice. Pretty funny.

Stefanie Bautista 54:12
So it was echoing itself.

Josué Cardona 54:17
So there’s this, like this visual pattern throughout the movie from the very beginning, where it’s almost like what she’s doing is what Mirabel is able to do is always take down these barriers or like, destroy the cocoon. So like, I think that the the doors the rooms are Abuela’s way to create another cocoon for them and protect them as much as possible. Like, what if I made your perfect room?

Stefanie Bautista 54:47
Yeah.

Josué Cardona 54:47
Right. You’ll be the safest place I can possibly make for you is like is like the room of your dreams. And she creates this for each of them. And then but Mirabel’s power is the opposite of that right? It’s like not to create because it’s to unite everybody so she touches the door and it just disappeared. It’s like nope, that’s why I think that at the end when the door when she when she touches the door, it creates a new door with everybody on it, including the family members who don’t have powers. And then when you go back into the house, the new the newly modified House…

Stefanie Bautista 55:23
New casita!

Josué Cardona 55:24
Yeah, all the doors are have disappeared, like they’re not there anymore. They’re just blank. They’re just like, they’re, they’re like portals. They don’t actually have the doors on them anymore. Because she’s like, she’s broken the the chrysalis I think she’s like, broken all the cocoons, even in the vision, when you turn it, it’s almost like the the cracks are sprouting out of her. They almost look like wings in a way, right? But it’s like she’s she’s literally breaking all the cocoons all of this stuff. And again, you could you could translate to like, she’s breaking the barrier of talking about the trauma, she’s..

Stefanie Bautista 55:56
She’s breaking the barriers of secrets.

Josué Cardona 55:59
Now, it’s, it’s almost frustrating. I go through the movie, and I see, I see all of those things, and we see all of that symbolism. And then you see that the family doesn’t see it. Right. Like the family is completely, they’re always missing the mark, like, like, we had that whole conversation about Bruno just now, like, everything he could have been so helpful to you had you just reframed your thinking.

Stefanie Bautista 56:21
And now that as we’re talking about this, I’m like, yeah, what comes out of a cocoon must, it will. And you’ll never know, it’ll, it might be much more beautiful than what you were trying to protect. And I think that’s what Mirabel was, you know, trying to convey, even though she didn’t know it herself. Because what comes out of cocoon sometimes is unpredictable, it may look one way and may look another, but it has to go through that transformation. I think that’s what happens between generations. Families transform and change. They don’t always look like the generation previous the one right before, they’re all different. And you know, it goes with the evolving of relationships, how we view them, how we see them, how we connect with generations before us, given what we have to deal with in present day.

Josué Cardona 57:11
Again Dos Oruguitas it mentions a world changing and turning always and you don’t want anything to change. So you’ve created this cocoon. And you know, I didn’t even I hadn’t even thought about like the outside world until the right now in that movie, but yeah, I mean, that’s, that’s kind of that’s another metaphor right there. Like if you if you close yourself off from the world that you stop, you stop learning. I think in the English version of the song, I don’t think it says this in the Spanish word and the English version of Dos Oruguitas as it goes. Our Two Oruguitas is what it’s it’s called in English. If you check the soundtrack, it talks about like, where every day we’re loving and learning. Right, like, yeah, and then but once we close ourselves off, we stopped learning.

Ariel Landrum 58:01
Hmm.

Stefanie Bautista 58:02
Hmm.

Ariel Landrum 58:04
I’m curious. Did they actually say the name of the town?

Josué Cardona 58:08
I don’t think so. No.

Ariel Landrum 58:10
Like it’s just Abuela’s hood. Like we like…

Stefanie Bautista 58:12
I don’t think so no.

Josué Cardona 58:14
So I looked up I Abeula’s name earlier today, and I couldn’t remember that they mentioned that in the movie.

Stefanie Bautista 58:18
Oh yeah what’s her name?

Josué Cardona 58:18
But her name is? Her name is Alma.

Ariel Landrum 58:21
Oh, oh, boy. Alma. Okay. Yeah, yeah, I remember hearing that.

Stefanie Bautista 58:26
I’ve got it Abuela Alma. I do. That’s funny.

Ariel Landrum 58:33
Well, before we end today, I do want to mention I made arepas con queso last night. Friggin amazing. Now I’ve never had it authentically. So I’m gonna say it tasted good from what I was able to put together from watching three different TikToks and Binging with Babish.

Stefanie Bautista 58:55
They looked good on your Instagram stories.

Ariel Landrum 58:58
Thank you!

Stefanie Bautista 58:58
They looked good.

Ariel Landrum 58:59
I use mozzarella and oaxaca cheese. What I found out is it needs to be a low moisture, cheese, whatever you put in there.

Stefanie Bautista 59:07
Yeah.

Ariel Landrum 59:08
So…

Josué Cardona 59:08
It’s gotta it’s gotta be like stringy kinda but like, yeah, yeah..

Stefanie Bautista 59:12
Yeah.

Josué Cardona 59:12
So I’ve I’ve had them in street fairs and stuff. And the stands always though is called a mozzarepas, like mozzarella arepas. Right?

Ariel Landrum 59:21
That’s what Binging with Babish called it. Okay.

Josué Cardona 59:24
Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Ariel Landrum 59:25
There used to be a food truck that would go to my old apartment complex every Thursday. And they only made arepas, and it was so good. And it was I look forward to every Thursday, just like any more of this in my life. So every time there’s like an arepas stand at like, a street fair, or like, a pop up, I’m like, oh my god, let’s go. Because there’s so few and far in between here. I mean, even in LA, which you could probably find any sort of cuisine out here. You got to seek them out. So, you know, I don’t remember the name of that truck, but they were doing the Lord’s work.

I had a lot of people saying that like arepas looked exactly like pupusas and so the difference is that pupusas are filled before you cook them and arepas and gorditas are stuffed after you cook them. And then pupusas and gorditas they’re made with instant corn mesa and arepas are made with pre cooked corn mill called masarepa. So. So if you make it here, you’re probably going to find instant corn mesa. So it’s probably it’s gonna taste more like a pupusas. But if you have access to masarepa, then you’d be chef’s cheese good to go.

Stefanie Bautista 1:00:32
I mean, that’s a difference between storebought tortillas and you know, hechas a mano. Right. So different.

Josué Cardona 1:00:39
They look good in the movie. Disney you did good. Those arepas look good.

Stefanie Bautista 1:00:42
Yeah.

Ariel Landrum 1:00:43
Well, if you want to give us your thoughts on Encanto, your theories, anything that you discovered, please tweet at us @HappiestPodGT or DM us on Instagram @HappiestPodGT. We would love to hear if you tried arepas.

Josué Cardona 1:01:03
As always, just you know, go to GeekTherapy.org Check out everything. We’re working on all different shows and projects that we’re cooking up. Yeah.

Ariel Landrum 1:01:12
Yeah. Thank you for coming.

Stefanie Bautista 1:01:13
Yes.

Josué Cardona 1:01:14
Thank you for inviting me. I want to talk about this movie all the time.

Stefanie Bautista 1:01:17
I know. Let’s do some more. Let’s do it. Thank you for listening. We will see you next time.

Ariel Landrum 1:01:23
Yes. Happy New Year, everybody!

Stefanie Bautista 1:01:25
Yeah Happy New Year!

Josué Cardona 1:01:25
Bye.

Media/Characters Mentioned
  • Encanto
  • Abuela Alma Madrigal
  • Mirabel Madrigal
  • Luisa Madrigal
  • Isabela Madrigal
  • Bruno Madrigal
  • Pepa Madrigal
  • Julieta Madrigal
  • Antonio Madrigal
  • Camilo Madrigal
  • Agutin Madrigal
  • Dolores Madrigal
  • Felix Madrigal
  • Moana
  • Frozen
  • Elsa
  • Beauty and the Beast
Topics/Themes Mentioned
  • Diversity
  • Family
  • Family roles
  • Family values
  • Black sheep
  • Generational trauma
  • Expectations
  • Secrets
  • Gifts
  • Mircales
  • Powers
  • Superpowers
  • Symbolism
  • Metaphors
  • Forshadowing
  • Color theory
  • Hues
  • Visual representation

Questions? Comments? Discuss this episode on the GT Forum.

—

 Website: happy.geektherapy.com
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 | Stef on Twitter: @stefa_kneee | Ariel on Instagram: @airyell3000 |
 | Josué on Twitter: @JosueACardona

Geek Therapy is a 501(c)(3) non-profit with the mission of advocating for the effective and meaningful use of popular media in therapeutic, educational, and community practice.
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| GT Forum: forum.geektherapy.com  | GT Discord: geektherapy.com/discord |

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Welcome to The Happiest Pod on Earth! On the Geek Therapy Network we believe that the best way to understand each other, and ourselves, is through the media we care about. On this show, we focus exclusively on Disney!

Hosted by Stefanie Bautista and Ariel Landrum!

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