[1] Disney's Pocahontas can understand the many historical inaccuracies of the legendary Captain Pocahontas and John Smith. This is a good reason. There are few things that can be interpreted as historically accurate in a movie, but Disney insists it is not their intention. In their previous film, Disney was attacked for race discrimination and sympathy of ethnic minorities. As Disney said, their answer is a movie, its sole purpose is to promote ethnic tolerance. The question is, if the problem is incorporated in the wrong history, can the movie promote racial tolerance, and if my history is told accurately to explain its opposite?
It is also to respect each others' culture "(Pocahontas 35). In a sense, this is facilitated by the story of Pocahontas, two ethnic groups that are considered "different" from each other. The problem is that Disney has chosen the real legend that shows the real person and the subject.
Disney further stated that their intent has a contemporary meaning, "This is an important message that stops fighting generations from fighting and stops killing each other due to the color of your skin" (Pocahontas 37). Obviously, Disney was attacked with malicious intention, so I did not plan to write or rewrite history. They wrote articles about tolerance and understanding, and they also respect the Native Americans. Movie maker James Pentecost thinks "Film producers should not handcuff when using authentic stories as jumping places for entertainment" (Kim 24). Disney just loves the idea of the wind; they like the message it conveys, making it suitable for Hollywood.
[5] Gary Edgeton and Cathy Mallock Jackson conveyed the same view of the wind wonder with their comments on the movie. They said, "Nevertheless, Disney's filmmakers have never intended to keep Pocahontas's history accurate.
"The wind is not happy, she is not happy, she is the worst.You know Pocahontas - I am harming Pocahontas, it is too unfair for Pocahontas - but this Elizabeth Warren, I call her "Baka" Elizabeth Warren, one of the worst Senators in the US Senate overall. Donald Trump likes to put a nickname on his critic and Senator Elizabeth Warren (one of the D-Massachusetts state nicknames is the "wind of the wind" that he has been using for the past few weeks "Since Warren backed Clinton earlier this month, Warren and Hilary Clinton made their first speech at the campaign rally, and the cards raised their nicknames again.
President Trump continued his fanatic about racial hypersensitivity at an event that is said to commemorate Navajo war veterans. Trump played out her native American tradition and called Senator Elizabeth Warren (D - MA) "character in the wind". What is even more unpleasant is the room named President Andrew Jackson, a reference to the native American Pocahontas, the name Pocahontas, which is regarded as one of their ancestors by Navajo veterans. Portrait Jackson 's infamous head moved Native American from his hometown and killed thousands. (The way to tears)