
A week later and everyone is still talking about the failure of Disney’s live action “Snow White” at the box office, but the nature of this speech has become much more interesting than the film itself.
After the Usual Post-Mortem office on Monday, a Variety feature film essentially indicated that the star of the film Rachel Zegler and a handful of his publications on social networks became the scapegoat for the film’s failure.
Few discussions have been given to other factors, of the kind of live remake over-excessive and often not posted for bad criticisms that painted Zegler like the saving grace of the film, the poor at the box office for films based on adaptations of Disney IP almost centenary, and the films “Snow White” in the past-especially the “snow whit and the human” films.
This was followed a day later by actor Jonah Platt, son of the film producer Marc Platt, accusing Zegler on Instagram (via THR) of “dragging his personal policy” in promoting the film and damaging his potential at the box office.
A subsequent rumor of scooping mytimetoshinehello, suggesting that Zegler and the Co-Star Gal Gadot were considered for major roles in the Marvel cinematographic universe, attracted mixed responses.
But this is where things become really interesting. While some were happy to slam Zegler and claim that she has burned her career, there is a wave of support for the young actress who held her land, kept the scrum online this week, and did not decide on any of her previous publications.
In fact, Vanity Fair reports that others’ attempt to involve Zegler in the failure of the film apparently has the opposite effect of what he probably intends to do.
Platt’s publication was completely dragged on the coals in the answers and he has since deleted. The variety article was nicknamed a “successful work” by journalist Mark Harris, with an open letter signed by 178 journalists to the last count strongly condemning the play. Variety respects her reports in a press release published in Vanity Fair.
Meanwhile, actress “Scream” Melissa Barrera, who was dismissed by “Scream 7” after having allegedly engaged a political discourse on social networks, said (via pedestrian television) that the Whisper campaign against Zegler made it appear “cool like hell and full of integrity”.
Zegler herself did not engage in the debate. What she published this week has been several Slide Image Carrouls on Instagram of photos and videos speaking of her great experience of making the film, although some stressed that these publications initially inclined any Gadot.
She has also changed her description of Instagram biography to read “Golden Globes winning that does difficult things”. She and the film both tend on social networks for a large part of the week, and recently the discussion turned to a “scooby-doo” as Gadot’s line delivery in a scene.
Disney himself is faced with another problem at the moment, the Federal Communications Commission officially opening an investigation into Walt Disney Company and ABC’s DEI efforts according to the President of the FCC, Brendan Carr, in a publication on X today. The studio recently fell into some of its Dei programs, but Carr says that “important concerns remain”.