🐱 Turning Red’s Period Scene Is A Groundbreaking Moment For Animation - As written by a fetishist who’s never had one

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Pixar’s Turning Red is bursting with youthful energy, fresh ideas, and a wondrous central narrative about family and acceptance that hits harder than anyone could have expected. It rules, and feels like the start of something new from the animation studio as a storyteller. We need more films like this, partly because it’s so real.

True, Meilin Lee’s hereditary transformation into a giant red panda as a response to any form of emotion isn’t going to happen in reality, but the message it represents is something young girls go through as they usher into womanhood. Turning Red is filled with references to growing up, whether it’s Mei’s desire to see 4Town with her friends, or developing newfound crushes on awkward convenience store losers. Children will see themselves in her struggles, learning that it’s totally okay to stand apart from your guardians and rebel for the betterment of everyone. I mean, so long as you aren’t murdering anyone or smoking the Devil’s lettuce.

She’s maturing, but finding herself becomes increasingly difficult when attached to a caring mother who wants the best for her, so much so that it stifles all forms of growth she hopes to facilitate. I come from a white family so can’t speak to how Turning Red echoes the experience of coming from an Asian upbringing like this, but the overarching messages about adolescent rebellion and learning to stand on your own is something that shines across all races, and one Pixar is all too keen to emphasise throughout.

I could be here all day talking about fascinating lessons learned from Turning Red and the observations many will take away from its depiction of generational trauma, but there’s one particular scene I want to focus on. Early in the film, Mei awakens and finds herself having transformed into a giant red panda. She has no idea what to do, freaking out about being seen like this and having to confront embarrassing problems at school without coming across as both a literal and figurative wild animal. She crashes about the place, making a mess of her room before rushing into the bathroom with a scream.

Caring as she is, Mei’s mother quickly springs into action in an effort to find out what’s wrong. She’s gentle and considerate, speaking with a hushed tone as Mei cries out. While she’s aware of her family’s habit of turning into giant pandas, it isn’t the first thing that comes to mind. It feels too early for this transformation, and thus it’s brushed over in favour of something equally premature. Children’s animation, especially from a Western perspective, often avoids the reality of puberty, hiding life lessons away from children despite many audiences going through such struggles while watching shows and films like this.

Turning Red, which is directed by a woman and very much told from that perspective, doesn’t shy away from what it means to have your first period and the pressure it puts on a person. Mei’s mother is both proud and terrified when she assumes the news, reassuring her daughter with her usual suffocating parental style while whipping out a variety of feminine hygiene products. We hear talk about blood, flow, time of the month, and dialogue that describes what a period is in no uncertain terms - and that’s amazing.

Young girls have rarely had films speak to them on this level before, treating periods with a level of normalcy that few pieces of media have ever managed. The fact it’s Pixar, and in a film that is all about the empowerment of a young female character striving to stand apart from her heritage, is equally groundbreaking. Much of the film is a metaphor for puberty, learning to love your family while providing them the tough truth of being your own person, and it’s built around a very direct metaphor for the embarrassment and confusion of menstruation.

I’ve seen some takes online that scenes like this don’t belong in a children’s film - but why not? Periods aren’t inherently linked to sex, they’re a biological constant that the majority of cisgender women will face in their lives. Children will get periods whether you tell them about periods or not. Greater exposure to those who might not have the resources to handle it when periods come knocking will be better for films like Turning Red because of their honesty, and baked in experience from writers who understand that.

Much like how Turning Red marks a new frontier for Pixar from a visual standpoint, perhaps reception to its honest storytelling will encourage Disney to broaden the perspectives it hopes to depict, whether it be through showing the truth of growing up through periods, grief, making friends, or being yourself alongside loved ones who seek to shape you into something you simply aren’t. This film is great, and you should totally watch it.
 
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Looked up "Turning Red period scene" and got this. Doesn't seem that bad. Nothing graphic is shown, the mom just asks if the "red thing happened".
So they took the premise of Frozen (girl gets uncontrollable magic power when upset) and they added a cute animal, and diversity and inclusioned it into...this...and then animated it in the style of the Kroger abominations.


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I would not allow a kid to watch this for the sole and simple reason that it is offensively cynical.
 
This shit was flying under the radar for me, but it looks like it's just another excuse for troon fetishists and pedos who get off thinking about children reaching sexual maturity.

Trust me dude, there's no keeping that shit private if you're married or live with a girl, you'll know her period's starting even before she does, when the random bouts of emotion and anger out of nowhere start. That starts before the bleeding.

What is with the progressive’s obsession with menstruation? I genuinely don’t understand it. It’s simply another body function that girls are told about from a young age (be it from parents or teacher, whichever comes first) that they’re told to prepare for so the sight of blood doesn’t shock them when it finally happens.

I have never felt shame for the act of having a period (sure, accidents happen but still). But maybe it’s because I’m not a mentally ill histrionic.

This education has existed for decades, so you can’t really argue on that angle. There is no reason why progressives need to obsess over it to the extent that they do.

If you need a Disney film to educate children on puberty instead of relying on good ol’ PSAs that get the point across then you have failed as a parent and teacher.
Any shame about periods ended decades ago. The only places where still happens, are shitholes where women are sent to outside the village until the bleeding stops because the elders think it's witchcraft.

Even men nowadays are well informed of the basics of periods even before getting married or living with a girlfriend. Sure, it's not something they talk openly, but they are very aware.

And as @Grub says, men know beforehand. As a male friend told me once, the whole body moves to (npi) red alert mode because they know they're about to deal with a completely deranged and ultra emotional creature for a few days.
 
What is with the progressive’s obsession with menstruation? I genuinely don’t understand it. It’s simply another body function that girls are told about from a young age (be it from parents or teacher, whichever comes first) that they’re told to prepare for so the sight of blood doesn’t shock them when it finally happens.

I have never felt shame for the act of having a period (sure, accidents happen but still). But maybe it’s because I’m not a mentally ill histrionic.

This education has existed for decades, so you can’t really argue on that angle. There is no reason why progressives need to obsess over it to the extent that they do.

If you need a Disney film to educate children on puberty instead of relying on good ol’ PSAs that get the point across then you have failed as a parent and teacher.
Menustraul blood is gross, I'm ashamed of it because of the cramping and mood swings, and blood, not because of the patriarchy. Most normal bodily functions are pretty gross, regardless of gender.
 
I actually liked turning red, but I'm tired of people making a big deal of the period scene. Like it's not that ground breaking.

I thought periods were transphobic against troons.
There is a whole troon subculture fetishizing periods and it is so much larger than it should be. Just look at Jonathan ( I refuse to call him Jessica) Yaniv as a prime example.

Glad to hear that the movie is actually enjoyable though. I wish articles praising the film would focus on why it's good instead of hyper focusing on one scene that was benign. Like that's where the idea that the film has got to be bad creeps in, if one scene that wasn't anything special is all reviews can praise, then how bad is this movie?
 
I actually thought the entire film was going to be about "coming of age" with the whole turning into a werepanda similar to the use of Teen Wolf as a complicated metaphor to look at the struggles of puberty. This time instead of the testosterone driven werewolf, we would have a werepanda dealing with estrogen storms and menses and social life. I was kind of hoping it would be a decent film, mildly expecting something good... oh, nevermind.
 
Ignoring the troonery, Turning Red's backlash has made me morbidly curious. From the discourse online, it is either:
  • Another in the line of grooming films testing the limit by insinuating that "the right move" as a parent is to throw your kids to the wolves, so to speak, regarding the commodification of sexualization under the guise that guardianship and repression are the same thing.
  • A wonderful film about coming of age except 20 years ago where it speaks to the 30-somethings writing and watching it and has fluffy animals to appeal to those 30-something's children.
Then I remember I could spend the time it would take to watch Turning Red and not write a review doing something like watching anything else and not writing a review.
 
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one of my family members wanted me to watch it, before they let their kids watch it, I did, and its just a story of a girl turning into a red panda, I thought it was cute, nothing really about mensuration. but tbh I wish troons would stop contaminating everything though.
 
The movie currently has a 7.1 rating on IMDB. If you click on reviews, most are positive in the 7-9 range. However, IMDB’s default sort is now “Prolific Reviewers” aka shills. If you sort by “Helpfulness” instead most reviews are in the 1-5 range, with the majority being closer to 1 than 5. No one actually likes this movie.

The featured review calls it one of the worst Pixar movies of all time:
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Guess the shills haven’t downvoted it enough yet.
 
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I saw a thirty second trailer, and I'd rather eat glass than watch it.
I saw ads for it and apparently the setting is 2000s Canada but the school class the Chinese main character is in is composed of 90% black kids for some reason.

Aside of that and all the love from the usual suspects it's getting, if for no other reason I have no desire to watch it because it has the most repulsive art style I've ever seen in a theatrical animated film. It's literally CalArts in 3D CGI form, which somehow looks even more sickening than the traditional 2D version.
 
The metaphor for puberty, is the panda. The main girl literally has a subversive jewish girl convince her to sell pictures of her 'Panda', and go behind the bleachers to 'show off her panda;.'. Hollywood noncery at play yet again.
This truly happens, you're not taking the piss? That's the most disturbing detail yet.
 
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Pixar’s gotten really weird.
The post-grubhub pixar films seem to havegone from "what if [THING] had feelings" to "OK SO WHAT IF THERE WERE THESE PEOPLE THAT WERE ALSO OTHER THING TOO?" Like Luca it's freaky fishmen that become basically normal humans when on land and now with this turning red movie it's a normal human asian family that turn into red panda people when they get too emotional.

Seriously though this over-emphasison period shit and "hornyness" clickbait media sites are doing about this moviefucking weirds me the hell out in a not-good way but also makes me laugh in a manner similar to the overhyping of the M&Ms design change.
 
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