Psychologist Carolyn Newberger, reviewing the Disney film
The Lion King in the
Boston Globe, June 27, 1994:
This movie is full of stereotypes: The good-for-nothing hyenas are
urban blacks; the archvillain's gestures are effeminate, and he
speaks in supposed gay cliches. The film embeds messages that are
hostile to the impoverished and the different. Why should lions be
rich while hyenas are poor? The implication here is that somehow
the lions deserve what they have and must guard against those who
have less. Why does Pride's Rock [home of the lions] deteriorate to
barren rubble when the hyenas move in? Because they have too many
children—they eat too much. There's no thought of sharing here,
no compassion for their unequal plight.
†