Mushu | |
---|---|
Mulan character | |
First appearance | Mulan (1998) |
Created by | Robert D. San Souci |
Designed by | Tom Bancroft (supervising animator) |
Voiced by | Eddie Murphy
|
In-universe information | |
Species | Chinese dragon |
Mushu [1] is a fictional character in Disney's Mulan franchise, first appearing in the 1998 animated film of the same name. A small Chinese dragon, Mushu was a guardian of Mulan's family before being demoted for failing to protect an ancestor. He plots to redeem himself by ensuring Mulan's safety and success when she enlists herself in the army in her father's place, ultimately becoming her closest confidant.
Although Mulan is based on the Chinese legend Hua Mulan, Mushu is an original character created specifically for the film, at the suggestion of Roy E. Disney. Inspired by Robin Williams' performance as the Genie in Aladdin (1992), Mulan's producers hoped to cast a comedian as Mushu, and had originally hired Joe Pesci in the role. After deciding to go in an African-American direction for the film's sidekick, they cast Eddie Murphy, who recorded his dialogue from his home studio due to scheduling conflicts. Supervising animator Tom Bancroft studied both Chinese culture and dragon characters from previous Disney animated films to design the character, while drawing inspiration from Murphy's previous work and mannerisms.
Mushu's humor was generally well-received by American critics and audiences. Most reviewers praised Murphy's performance, but some found the character distracted from and weakened the film's otherwise serious message. Meanwhile, Mushu was poorly received in China, with viewers accusing him of trivializing Chinese culture. Several publications have ranked him as one of Disney's greatest sidekicks. Disney's decision to not include the character in the 2020 live-action adaptation of Mulan in an effort to be more culturally sensitive to Chinese audiences drew mixed reviews from fans of the character.
When the Great Wall of China is breached by the Huns led by Shan Yu, the emperor demands that one man from every household enlists in the Imperial army. [2] Mulan, the only child of aging war veteran Fa Zhou, disguises herself as a man and enlists in the army, risking the death penalty should her true identity be discovered. Mulan's ancestors plan to send a dragon guardian to protect her and summon Mushu, a small dragon who was previously demoted, to awaken him. [3] When the dragon guardian fails to awaken, Mushu seizes the opportunity to accompany Mulan instead, with his own intentions of redeeming himself by becoming her guardian. [4] During a battle in which Mulan defeats most of the Huns by causing an avalanche, Mulan is injured, and her true identity is revealed to the army and General Li Shang. Shang spares her life in return for saving his moments earlier, but banishes her from the army and abandons her on a mountain. Mushu gains the courage to reveal his true intentions to Mulan and promises that they will overcome any challenges together. They discover that Shan Yu and a few of his army's surviving members are on their way to the kingdom and decide to pursue them. Mulan successfully traps Shan Yu on the palace rooftop, and Mushu launches a firework that kills him. Upon their safe return, the emperor praises Mulan as a hero and pardons her transgressions. Mulan decides to reject an offer to join the emperor's council and instead returns home to her father's embrace. Lastly, Mushu is finally promoted back to being a guardian.
Mushu is not mentioned in the Chinese legend about Hua Mulan or the Ballad of Hua Mulan, on which the film is based. [5] [6] [7] He was created specifically for the animated adaptation of the film. [8] [9] Disney was initially concerned that a dragon sidekick would make Mulan appear too small in comparison, [10] despite feeling dragons are among the most recognizable aspects of Chinese culture and imagery. [11] Disney chairman Roy E. Disney suggested the character of Mushu upon learning that dragons in Chinese folklore can be different sizes, [12] [13] ultimately replacing a panda sidekick named "Moo Goo Gai Panda". [14] The character was created to provide comic relief, and named after Chinese-American dish. [11] [15] At one point, Mushu was intended to be two characters: a gryphon and a phoenix. [16] Producer Pam Coats said they had originally planned for Mushu to be featured in the film much more prominently. [17] Inspired by the success of Robin Williams' performance as the Genie in Aladdin (1992), [18] [19] the producers hoped to cast a comic actor in the role, and had considered Joe Pesci, Steve Martin, and Sinbad. [20] Pesci was originally cast, with an early version of Mushu being described as a serpent with two different heads and personalities voiced by Pesci and Richard Dreyfuss, respectively. [21] [22] [23] The filmmakers had originally envisioned the character having a "New York, tough guy, streetwise" accent reminiscent of actors Billy Crystal and Danny DeVito, but felt these traits were too derivative of supporting characters from previous Disney films. [24]
According to director Tony Bancroft, Mushu had always been described as the opposite of Mulan's personality, and felt an African-American character would deliver the perfect contrast to the heroine's more traditionally Chinese characterization. [24] [26] They started interviewing several African-American performers, [24] with Disney executive Michael Eisner ultimately selecting comedian Eddie Murphy, [27] who had expressed interest in doing an animated film at the time. [18] Tom Bancroft, Mushu's supervising animator and Tony's twin brother, was initially unsure about contrasting the film's serious depiction of Chinese culture against an urban voice, but ultimately felt the character would bring dynamic chemistry to Mulan. [28] Mushu's role was expanded to that of one of the film's main characters as the story evolved, [29] and the silent character of Cri-Kee was added to balance him. [30]
Murphy accepted the role partially because he wanted to make some films that his own children could watch, having mostly starred in movies intended for adults prior to Mulan. [31] He was also one of its few non-Asian main cast members. [32] Due to his busy filming schedule, [33] Murphy requested that Disney allow him to record his part from his home studio in Englewood, New Jersey, [34] [35] to where Disney brought character sketches. [34] According to Tony, they were forced to comply with Murphy's demands to avoid the risk of not completing his animation on time, which he admitted ultimately benefited the performance. [33]
Songwriters Matthew Wilder and David Zippel had written at least two songs intended for the character to sing when he introduces himself to Mulan. [36] [37] One of them was entitled "Keep 'Em Guessing", in which Mushu would have taught Mulan how to be a convincing male soldier. [38] [39] The song was cut because Murphy did not want to sing in the film, [40] despite several attempts to re-write it to his liking. [36] Tony felt Mushu's songs ruined the pacing of the film. [24] They decided to replace it with Mushu introducing himself to Mulan in the manner of an African-American preacher because they felt they needed a big introduction in the song's absence. [24] In 2020, Ming-Na Wen, who voices Mulan, revealed that she had yet to meet Murphy in person, despite having voiced characters in the same film. [41] Murphy is one of the film's few original cast members who did not reprise his role in the sequel Mulan II (2004). [42] Mushu was Murphy's first voice acting role, [19] [43] and Tom theorizes this inspired DreamWorks to eventually cast him as Donkey in the Shrek franchise. [44]
Tom Bancroft, Tony's twin brother, was Mushu's supervising animator, [45] while Chris Sanders was one of his character designers. [16] Tom had originally expected to be assigned a less prominent character, but Mushu ultimately became his first job as a supervising animator. [29] Hired to work on Mushu a year before production began on Mulan, Disney had yet to cast the character or determine his personality. [44] [46] Additionally, character designer Harald Siepermann drew concept art from his studio in Germany for the first few weeks on production, [47] but remained uncredited due to working less than 200 hours on the entire project. [48] The animators had considered several animals, including a two-headed serpent. [21] At various stages of development, Mushu was changed from two different dragons who morph into one dragon by the end of the film, to a phoenix, and finally a dragon. [44] Due to constant script revisions, Tom drew generic versions of the character, avoiding poses and facial expressions. [46]
Tom drew inspiration from many aspects of Chinese culture when designing the character, including wood block print artworks and sculptures in Chinese temples. [49] Although Disney had drawn several European-style dragons in previous projects, Mushu was the studio's first Chinese dragon, and Tom worked to differentiate the character from his animated predecessors. [44] The animator realized that Chinese dragons are very different from European dragons, describing the former as "thin and snake-like while the European dragons were often thick and more like a crocodile". [50] Tom also researched dragon and dragon-like characters from previous Disney animated films, including Elliott from Pete’s Dragon (1977), Maleficent from Sleeping Beauty (1959) and the Hydra from Hercules (1997), as well as The Reluctant Dragon (1941) to study how animators approached a simplified, humorous dragon during the 1940s. [51] Tom was also inspired by the cartoonish work of animator Eric Goldberg, who had briefly sketched Aladdin's Genie turning into a dragon. [51] He described the final design of Mushu as a combination of many different animals, possessing "whiskers like a catfish, scales like a fish, cow ears, the hairy lip of a camel, horns like a goat and talons of an eagle". [49] Although the animators had wanted Mushu's tale to be purple, a Disney executive insisted that they make it red like the rest of the character much to the chagrin of Tony. [52] As an act of protest, they secretly colored his tail purple in one scene in the film. [52]
Tom then refined his facial expressions and poses once the character's personality was determined and Murphy was cast, [44] [46] attending at least two of his recording sessions. [44] Murphy's performance greatly influenced Tom's drawings, claiming he would spend up to a week animating a particular scene while listening to tape recordings of Murphy's recording sessions. [46] He was also inspired by Murphy's work in Trading Places (1983) and Saturday Night Live , specifically his facial expressions, line delivery, and how he uses his hands, [46] as well as prints of the actor's face. [53] He maintains that the character is very similar to Murphy personality-wise, despite their difference in outward appearance. [44] Despite Murphy's influence on Mushu, Tom maintains that he incorporated more of himself into the character than his actor, [54] and considers him a favorite out of the characters he worked on. [29] He claims he learned from friends working at DreamWorks that their animators had reviewed animation footage of Mushu when developing Donkey for Shrek, who was also voiced by Murphy. [44]
At the time of Mulan's release, Mushu was generally well-received by critics and audiences. [55] Film critic Roger Ebert said the character "quickly grows on us", despite initially finding him disconcerting due to the film's historical setting. [56] Margaret A. McGurk of The Cincinnati Enquirer called Mushu "a major hoot ... although how this thoroughly modern American personality landed in ancient China is a pure mystery". [57] JoBlo.com's Berge Garabedian crowned him the film's "real star", claiming Mushu "managed to get a crack out of the audience during every single one of its wonderful appearances". [58] Several reviewers compared Mushu and Murphy's performance to Robin Williams' Genie from Aladdin. [59] [60] [61] [62] [63] [64] Jeff Vice of the Deseret News said Murphy "has his share of amusing one-liners", despite feeling the actor was trying too hard to imitate Williams. [65]
Murphy's performance has received positive reviews. [66] [67] Film critic Richard Corliss found him "very funny", [68] and Dan DiNicola of The Daily Gazette said he "delivers a knockout performance". [69] Eileen Fitzpatrick, a critic for Billboard , called Murphy "hilarious" in the role. [70] Salon's Jenn Shreve said Murphy contributes enough comedy without stealing the spotlight, and felt the character's cliché s "seem to exist for the express purpose of being destroyed, and they're often responsible for some of the film's most hilarious moments". [71] Film critic Owen Gleiberman called Murphy irresistible, but wished his character had been provided with stronger material. [63] Barbara Shulgasser of SFGate said the actor "gives a rather dull movie whatever life it's got". [72] Essence considers Mushu to be one of Murphy's most iconic roles, [73] while several publications such as Entertainment Weekly and Gold Derby have ranked it among the best performances of his career. [61] [74] [75] [76] Variety ranked Murphy's work as Mushu the 11th greatest voiceover performance in a Disney film, [77] and MovieWeb ranked it 8th. [78] Backstage named it among the 14 "Best Voice Acting Performances of All Time". [79] Mushu also launched the family-friendly period of the actor's career, [61] during which he acquired a younger fanbase by appearing in several family films; [80] [81] he did not star in an R-rated film until 2019. [61] Writing for Paste , Josh Jackson quipped that Murphy’s best comedic performances since Coming to America (1988) appear to be animated. [82] Tim Grierson of Cracked.com ranked Mushu his second-best family film performance, citing it as a precursor to his long-running role as Donkey in the Shrek franchise. [83] According to a Metacritic article published in 2023, Mulan was the sixth best-reviewed film of Murphy's career to that point. [84] Ethan Alter of Yahoo! Entertainment said the film "capped a successful mid-‘90s comeback for the comedy icon". [55]
Both Hollis Chacona of The Austin Chronicle and film critic Todd McCarthy described the character's anachronisms as jarring, despite finding some of his humor amusing. [85] [62] Writer Mari Ness called Murphy an irritating, unnecessary addition to the film, criticizing his perceived reliance on anachronistic humor, and deeming him inferior to the Genie. [13] Animation historian Jerry Beck said Mushu's jokes weaken the film and clash with its serious subject matter. [86] Jeffrey Gantz of the Boston Phoenix dismissed him as a less interesting "African-American take on" sidekicks from Disney's Aladdin, The Lion King, and Hercules. [87] Ian Freer of Empire dismissed Mushu as "obligatory" and "completely superfluous". [64] For The New York Times , Janet Maslin criticized the film for relegating a "Black" character to the role of a "servile clown". [88] According to Country Living and The Baltimore Sun , some viewers found his characterization to be an inaccurate and insensitive depiction of Chinese culture. [89] [90] Alter noted that not some of Murphy's material has not aged well in the decades since the film's release, specifically his character's jokes about Mongolian cuisine and wearing drag. [55]
Anthony Brett of The Daily Telegraph and Petrana Radulovic of Polygon panned Mulan II for undoing Mushu's character development by having him attempt to sabotage Mulan and Shang's wedding. [91] [92] Brett also criticized Disney for replacing Murphy with white actor Mark Moseley, calling it "voiceover blackface". [91] Kevin Wong of GameSpot called these changes to Mushu "the worst, most left-field aspect of Mulan II". [93]
Mushu has been called a beloved and fan-favorite character from the Mulan franchise. [8] [94] [95] [96] [97] Phil Pirrello of The A.V. Club ranked Mushu the 44th best Disney character of all-time, describing him as a more fully-rounded supporting character than Aladdin's Genie. [98] Disney Rewards and Esquire described Mushu as one of the studio's most beloved animated sidekicks. [9] [99] In 2022, Entertainment Weekly reported that the character appears to be widely loved as a sidekick. [100] HuffPost ranked Mushu 14th on their "Definitive Ranking Of Disney Sidekicks", [101] and Country Living ranked him 29th. [89] Bustle ranked him second, behind only Timon and Pumbaa from The Lion King (1994). [102] Several publications consider Mushu to be among the greatest dragons in popular culture, [103] [104] [105] [106] including MTV News, [107] USA Today , [108] Polygon , [109] and Comic Book Resources . [94] Collider ranked him the second greatest dragon in the history of cinema. [110] In an article for The Guardian , young adult fiction author Julie Kagawa ranked Mushu the sixth best dragon across films and books, [111] while The A.V. Club ranked him the ninth best movie dragon. [112] Dictionary.com cited Mushu among pop culture's most famous dragons in 2022, writing, "This depiction differs from typical Chinese dragons, who are often portrayed as being elegant, imposing, and wise". [113] Sketches and concept art of Mushu was featured in Tom's book The Art of Disney's Dragons (2016). [114] [115] The character's popularity has led him to appear in various tie-in media, including sequels, video games, and theme parks. [112]
Mushu has also been described as a controversial character. [116] Chinese viewers are reported to have disliked the dragon upon the film's initial release. [117] [118] [119] According to the University of Southern California professor Stanley Rosen, the character was well-received in the United States, but accused by some Chinese audiences of trivializing their culture and Mulan's story. [116] [120] [121] [122] When the trailer for the 2020 live-action adaptation of the film was released, several fans complained about Mushu's absence from the preview on social media. [9] [123] [124] [125] [126] By July 2019, the Twitter hashtag "There’s no Mushu dragon in Mulan" had been viewed over 310 million times. [127] Director Niki Caro confirmed that the character would not be in the remake, and dispelled theories that the phoenix was "an updated version" of Mushu. [128] Producer Jason Reed explained that Mushu was written out because "the dragon is a sign of respect and of strength and power and sort of using it as a silly sidekick did not play well with a traditional Chinese audience". [129] Tom also appreciated that removing the character from the remake would allow its team to create their own version of Mulan without the additional pressure of adapting Mushu, a character he created. [45]
Believed to have been written out of the film due to being "deemed culturally inaccurate and racist", [130] some academics and culture critics defended Disney's decision to remove Mushu, describing it as their attempt "to represent Chinese culture and history in a more authentic manner". [131] Olive Pometsey of British GQ found the adjustment necessary to adapt Mulan respectfully, [122] and Esquire's Adrienne Westenfeld said the lack of Mushu resulted in a stronger, more self-reliant Mulan, despite being a fan of the character herself. [9] However, Jeva Lange of The Week reported that Chinese fans also voiced their disappointment over Mushu's exclusion on the Chinese microblogging platform Weibo. [132] [133] Lange opined that Mushu's absence deprives the remake's version of Mulan of meaningful dialogue by removing the supporting character with whom she shared most conversations, suggesting that that he could have been reimagined as a more serious character, a female dragon, or another sort of character entirely, instead of eliminated altogether. [132]
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Fans of the animated classic were outraged when word spread that Mushu would be excised from the big budget, live-action remake of Mulan
Mushu was embraced by audiences at the time
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: CS1 maint: date and year (link)Eddie Murphy ... tries to jolt the movie with the same motormouth exuberance that Robin Williams brought to Aladdin.
He provided the voice of Mushu the Lizard in Disney's animated picture Mulan (1998) to enormous critical praise
Murphy's energy and attitude propelled glowing reviews of the movie
Unfortunately, though, his appearance didn't please everyone—as dragons are supposed to be stately, and many viewers found his character insensitive.
"This is not a Chinese dragon...I can tell the people who designed the dragon are from America."
any Chinese viewers disliked his character
Reactions to the lack of Mushu and the other changes made to the film ranged from disappointment, to anger, to sadness.