Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Pinocchio as Anti-Fascist Superhero
Pinocchio as Anti-Fascist Superhero
May 9, 2025 12:54 PM

The latest in a string of adaptations of the 19th-century Italian children’s bines brilliant artistry with ideological incoherence and absurdity, all in the service of both lionizing and subverting childhood.

Read More…

Guillermo del Toro’s career is evidence that the Oscars still favor the romance of the left. He has just won the Best Animated Feature award for his Pinocchio, which he set in Fascist Italy. If liberal opinion can treat political opposition as fascism, why shouldn’t del Toro do likewise? His previous success was The Shape of Water (2017), which won him Best Picture and Best Director awards for portraying ’50s America as fascist. His Oscar nominations are similar: Nightmare Alley (2021) hints at America as fascist and Pan’s Labyrinth (2006) was set in Franco’s Spain.

This prestige persuaded Netflix to pay for this new Pinocchio and its impressive cast. Ewan McGregor plays Walt Disney’s Jiminy Cricket, Tilda Swinton the Blue Fairy, Christoph Waltz and Cate Blanchett are the villainous fox and monkey that tempt Pinocchio with theatrical glory, and Ron Perlman is a fascist villain (del Toro’s conceit), with John Turturro and Tim Blake Nelson in other small roles. They are voice actors here: Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio is stop-motion animation, and it’s better animation than anything available. It makes Disney, including its own new Pinocchio, look amateurish.

If all this suggests a movie made for adults rather than children, that is because our society is continuously blurring the difference between children and adults, including by rewriting stories. So del Toro’s Jiminy Cricket is a fan of Schopenhauer, so ical moments depend on his decrying life as suffering. The Blue Fairy is now a spirit of the woods; her sister, Death, shaped like a chimera, explains to Pinocchio that the meaning of es from its brevity.

Why tell children’s stories then? Because childish moralism is the most popular, possibly the only really popular, part of left-wing politics. It sells a revolutionary individualism whose es from hysteria at being rejected or denied. Behold: The story begins in a small Italian town in 1916, in a conservative paradise. Geppetto prays with his son and his major work is the carved Christ statue for the local church. He’s called a model Italian citizen.

But then he loses his son to bombing during the Great War and later, when he makes Pinocchio, the people in church call Pinocchio the devil’s work and reject him, while the Fascists call him a dissident and independent thinker; “belief” and “obedience” are presented as Fascist slogans. munity is now presented as witch hunters. Authority is damned as authoritarianism, and the story es an indictment of fathers’ demands of their sons, as wrongful counsels of fear or trauma.

Instead of being tempted on Pleasure Island, the boys in this version of the story are tempted petition—they are trained to e child soldiers in a Fascist fortress. But as should be obvious by now, children are pure, their desires are above reproach, and they easily prefer friendship and fun to anything harsh. They prove incapable of cruelty and courageous enough to risk death to save each other. This liberation of the youth seems to be the epitome of left-wing political psychology—only on the basis of this fairy tale purity can the young be encouraged to practice every violence against the society that failed to educate them.

This is why it’s necessary to have Pinocchio mock Mussolini. What is more childish than such a fantasy of speaking truth to power that puts pacifist sacrifice at the moral core of life only to suggest that sacrifice is fake, you can eat your cake and have it, e the happy end! But behind the politics lies the source of art—religion: Pinocchio asks Geppetto why people sing to the carved Christ and yet don’t like him, Pinocchio, a carved puppet, another of Geppetto’s creations. Then the Blue Fairy tells Geppetto that Pinocchio became a real boy to save him. Indeed, Pinocchio is also crucified by the vulpine villain. Apparently, left-wing politics needs Christianity’s salvific story as a puppet, but must also destroy religion by caricaturing the faithful and the priest both.

I dislike the left-wing politics, but the movie is as clever as its animation, far outstripping the films that usually win Oscars. Pinocchio is a metaphor for works of art “taking on a life of their own,” which is an obvious enough interpretation but not usually taken seriously. Del Toro’s script has Pinocchio e immortal. He ing back to life when he dies, although he faces temporary oblivion; every time he dies, he spends more time suspended in a kind of limbo, which extends the metaphor—stories are forgotten and recovered or reinterpreted, they get a new life, but they can face political destruction for being too provocative.

As the audience expects, Pinocchio chooses mortality instead, to live with his loved ones. This is where the metaphor collapses and any claim to art is replaced by a moralistic ideology that wants both the benefits forts of peace and the moral stature of pacifism. As a work of art, Pinocchio can be of some benefit or give pleasure but cannot love. As a character in a typical drama involved with other characters, Pinocchio would be annihilated by chance or tyranny given the childish irresponsibility or innocence, which nevertheless charms the audience. The story thus collapses but only for those who think things through.

Everyone else can enjoy the way del Toro mixes two different meanings of creativity by the emphasis on childishness. Giving life and giving meaning are put together in Pinocchio, just like the left-wing moralism and the attack on “patriarchy” are put together as deluded and bound by death. Just like every other adaptation, this one also plays on childhood’s sense of wonder and the way it charms adults. But it goes further than any other in suggesting that nowadays people divinize their children or else the confusions in the story wouldn’t work emotionally. As divinities, the children are able not only to fulfill their parents’ fantasies but also to protect them. This is, of course, a full inversion of the natural order.

I criticized the Disney Pinocchio for its therapeutic ideology; but this ideology of pacifism and creativity deserves even more criticism, precisely because it is more attractive to the Oscars, to audiences and artists as well, more likely to be considered idealistic, pure, well-intentioned. Pinocchio as anti-Fascist hero is an even worse attack on art, including children’s stories. Something else, neither warlike nor pacifist, something moderate, is needed to oppose this madness, and I can’t say I’ve seen any such entertainments recently.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Captain Marvel’s grit
The latest Marvel film has done well at the box office, and for good reason. It is a solid entry in the MCU, and an introduction to a new character that promises to be central to the ongoing narrative arc following Avengers: Infinity War (some spoilers follow). There are quite a few notable themes in Captain Marvel, and I’ll highlight a couple here. First, we learn a fair amount more about the Kree, the civilization introduced in Guardians of the...
Tenderness: a spiritual ‘currency’?
Pope Francis intelligently realizes that Christ, our model for winning the hearts and good will of others, was a tender listener who carefully and constantly invested his gentle concern and advice in others. The return on such investment paid off as the poor and suffering sinners who listened to him – and still do through his vicars on earth – were converted by the tender Lamb of God. Read More… On March 18, in a meeting with representatives from the...
Interview: Margarita Mooney on communism, freedom, and the ‘irreducible person’
The Acton Institute alumni network is now over 8,000 people strong. This group spans many disciplines and contains many of the most influential leaders from those disciplines. Margarita Mooney is one of those influential people. pleted her undergraduate studies at Yale University and her doctorate at Princeton University. She is currently an Associate Professor of Practical Theological at Princeton Theological Seminary, and is an education entrepreneur. As the founder of Scala Foundation, she has built programming designed to strengthen classical...
Acton Line: Neighborly help for the poor; Americans flunk political science
On this week’s Acton Line podcast we hear about a church-based ministry that engages with the homeless and poor “relationally, responsibly, passionately.” James Whitford, executive director of Watered Gardens Gospel Rescue Mission in Joplin, Missouri, joins Acton’s Andrew Vanderput in a thought provoking conversation on private charity and the intensely personal nature of the organization’s outreach. In the second segment, Aquinas College economist David Hebert and Acton’s Tyler Groenendal dig into the public’s deep dissatisfaction with America’s political institutions –...
Why do pastors receive a tax exemption for housing?
A federal court of appeals recently upheld the constitutionality of the ministerial housing allowance. The Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals in Chicago ruled unanimously that the sixty-five year old tax provision does not violate the First Amendment clause that prohibits government establishment of religion. The decision reversed a federal judge’s 2017 opinion that invalidated the allowance as a violation of the establishment clause. The court ruled the housing allowance is constitutional under two of the U.S. Supreme Court’s church-state precedents....
Game of Theories: Real business cycle
Note: This is post #115 in a weekly video series on basic economics. The “real” part of the real business cycle (RBC) refers to real shocks to an economy, specifically to supply shocks. As Tyler Cowen of Marginal Revolution University says, RBC is useful for plex supply shock, such as a sudden rise in oil prices. But it can also explain many of the economic downturns throughout human history. For instance, in ancient times when economies relied primarily on agriculture,...
Nihilism and mass murder: Christianity in reverse
Brazil was rocked last week by a deadly shootout in a high school in Suzano, a suburb of Sao Paolo. Two former students armed with a gun, crossbows and axes killed nine people and mitted suicide. Immediately, the media began another campaign against Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro, leading people to believe that the massacre had something to do with his pro-gun policies. There is, of course, an elementary problem of logic in this argument: Bolsonaro assumed the presidency 63 days...
The ‘true politics’ of the gospel: An imprisoned Chinese pastor’s sermon on peace and freedom
In response to the explosive growth of Christianity in China, the munist authorities have ramped up efforts to curb the trend—imprisoning Christians, shutting down churches and schools, and moving to release their own state-sanitized revision of the Bible. Last December, Early Rain Covenant Church in Chengdu became a target of such efforts, forced to shut its doors as an estimated 100 members were hauled away by state police. This included the pastor, Wang Yi, and his wife, Jiang Rong, both...
Scandal and school, education and freedom
It’s not news that a college education costs a boatload today. But as we’ve all learned over the past week, the cost of a college education is much more – about $500,000 more over tuition, room, and board if you’re a TV celebrity like Lori Loughlin. Add $1 million bail and the possibility of prison time to boot. Some people will do anything for their kids, up to and including bribing school officials to admit their less than stellar students...
Explainer: President Trump’s executive order on campus speech, student loans
What just happened? Earlier this month, at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC), President Trump announced he would sign an executive order to promote free speech on college campuses.The president is set to sign to sign that executive order today, which he has vowed will require colleges to “support free speech” or face “very costly” penalties. What does this executive order do? The title of the executive order is “Improving Free Inquiry, Transparency, and Accountability at Colleges And Universities” with...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved