"She's your anti-princess," said "Brave" co-director Mark Andrews. "She isn't your typical princess. She doesn't wear nice clothes except in a couple of scenes when her strict mom, Queen Elinor,
makes her do it for special functions. She's an active and
action-oriented person. She wants to get out in the outdoors of the
Highlands, escaping from castle life and exploring the woods."
"Brave," scheduled for release June 22, 2012, is set in medieval Scotland and features the voices of "Boardwalk Empire" actress Kelly Macdonald as Princess Merida, Emma Thompson as Queen Elinor, Billy Connolly as her one-legged father, King Fergus, as well as Craig Ferguson, Kevin McKidd and Robbie Coltrane as the kingdom's noblemen.
Despite
being the first Pixar film to focus on a female heroine, Andrews said
"Brave" will be less about girl power and more about the oppositional
relationship between mother Elinor and daughter Merida, likening the
defiant red-haired princess to a scrutinized teenager who is forced to
attend the same high school where her mother serves as the principal.
In
the film's full-length trailer, out Tuesday, Merida's father tells of
the 12-foot-tall beast with razor-sharp claws, a face scarred with a
dead eye and "hide littered with the weapons of fallen warriors," that
chomped off his leg while the rebellious Merida transverses a lush
forest, ascends a mountain and lands a bull's eye at a tournament.
The
role of Merida in "Brave" marks the first animated film part for
Macdonald, a Scottish actress who has appeared in such movies as
"Gosford Park" and "Finding Neverland." She acknowledged being struck by
the significance of playing Disney royalty during a visit to Disneyland
earlier this year as she watched Disney princesses gallivanting during
the afternoon parade.
"I just
thought, 'My goodness! There's eventually going to be a Merida doing her
thing up there,'" said Macdonald. "The people that they cast to be the
characters and wear the costumes at Disneyland have to do the accent, so
somebody at Disneyland is going to be doing me. Some American girl will
have to do my accent. It kind of blows my mind, really."
Other
imagery teased in the new trailer includes Merida encountering mystical
blue-hued wisps and the gnarly bear that took her father's leg. Andrews
said despite the 3-D film's darker tone and visual style compared with
past Pixar movies like "Toy Story" and "Cars," ''Brave" won't be
"missing any of the comedy or entertainment you usually associate with
Pixar."
By DERRIK J. LANG - AP Entertainment Writer | AP
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