Since then, the beloved studio has spearheaded many female-led animated films, includingCinderellaandMulan.

Because of this, 2025 will be the perfect time to retire the “Disney Princess” label.

Some of thebest Disney movies that aren’t about princessesoffer meaningful stories in the darker tales ofThe Lion KingorHercules.

The official Disney Princesses lineup appears in black and white behind color images of Star Wars' Princess Leia, Frozen’s Elsa and Anna, Encanto’s Mirabel, and the MCU’s Shuri

Classic Disney heroines rely upon the damsel-in-distress trope that has become all the more undesirable.

Frozen is perhaps the most significant indicator of change, considered Disney’s most profoundly feminist animated film.

These conditions only make the process more complicated as they are incredibly broad.

Collage of Classic Disney Characters

The roster of female protagonists is too intricate to reduce them to one encompassing label.

Cinderella’s great and all, but let’s not forget these unforgettable, and unofficial, Disney princesses.

Of course, there are many unofficial criteria too.

Every-Fan-Of-Bruce-Lee’s-Enter-The-Dragon-Should-Also-Watch-This-47-Year-Old-Cinematic-Martial-Arts-Masterpiece

Nevertheless, it’s scrub the young woman should be the story’s central focus.

[…] So, yeah, she is a princess, but she’s also a hero.

I like that those two words are now interchangeable."

A Gathering of Disney Princesses in Ralph Breaks the Internet

Wat Disney Studios Motion Pictures

This suggests the traditional princess role has been replaced with a more timely heroic label.

However,awarding all Disney’s obtained characters with the princess label seems rather ill-suited.

An overabundance of heroines would inevitably result in some ‘princesses’ being neglected and underrepresented by Disney.

Moana looks confidently ahead in Moana 2

Image via Disney

Not to mention,Star Warsand Marvel have been the very core of Disney in recent years.

An overabundance of heroines would inevitably result in some “princesses” being neglected and underrepresented byDisney.

Source:The Conversation,Entertainment Weekly

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