Let us consider, in turn, two cases where the application of the Proppian model
offers some interesting insights about narrative structure. Both film narratives, the
first is Disney’s
cartoon
The Jungle Book
which is based, rather loosely it has to be
said, on Rudyard Kipling’s ‘Mowgli stories’. The second is Chris Columbus’s feature
film
Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone
which is based, more closely this time,
on the first instalment of J. K. Rowling’s hugely successful series of ‘Harry Potter’
novels. What follows is a short exploration of the types and degree of coalescence
that there is between the core categories of Propp’s model and the key plot advancing
functions of both films.
First of all, to Disney’s animated film
The Jungle Book
which was released in 1967.
Realising the first of Propp’s functions, absentation, Mowgli the ‘mancub’
is displaced
from his parents and home and is found wandering in the jungle. Mowgli, clearly
fulfilling the character role of ‘Hero’, then acquires a Helper, a character role dually
occupied by Bagheera the panther and later by Baloo the bear. Both friends warn
Mowgli of the dangers of being in the jungle on his own (the ‘interdiction’ func-
tion), advice which of course Mowgli ignores (violation of the interdiction).
Numerous other Proppian functions are realised thereafter. In a famous and hugely
comic scene from the film, the Villain, Shere Khan the tiger,
carries out reconnais-
sance on the Hero by interrogating the snake, Kaa. The Villain then attempts to take
possession of the Hero (the sixth of Propp’s functions) but in the course of the
struggle injures Baloo, Mowgli’s protector. This second event realises the eighth func-
tion of the model where the Villain hurts a member of the Hero’s circle of family
and friends. Hero and Villain eventually join in combat (function sixteen), and in
the course of the struggle Mowgli uses fire (function twelve, the intercession of a
magical agent) in order to scare off Shere Khan (function eighteen,
the Villain is
vanquished). Mowgli, having been enticed by the ‘water girl’ and her song, eventu-
ally goes back to the ‘man village’, and so the film concludes with the realisation of
function twenty, the Hero returning home, and with perhaps the suggestion that the
Hero will eventually be married or crowned (function thirty-one).
Clearly, not all of the thirty-one plot advancing functions are present in Disney’s
cartoon, but those that are realised square very closely indeed with the key Proppian
categories. This is not to suggest that the makers of Disney’s film worked to any kind
of explicit blueprint of narrative structure – a copy of Propp is unlikely to have been
to hand in the production process! The main issue is really about what makes a good
story. Disney’s cartoon draws out, from a finite list of universalised functions, a
specific selection of plot advancing devices. What is interesting is that even though
their
particular settings, ‘dramatic personae’ and historical periods may change, a
great many Disney films work to the same basic plot typology.
Columbus’s film
Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone
(2000) is some fifty
minutes longer than
The Jungle Book
and is pitched at older viewers, so its even fuller
display of Proppian functions is perhaps no surprise. A running commentary on all
realisations in the film would be rather dull, so Table B5.1 shows the main connec-
tions between Propp’s model and the narrative functions realised in
Harry Potter
.
The left of the table displays a category of the model, numbered in accordance with
Propp’s own sequence of functions, and on the right of the table is a short summary
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D E V E L O P M E N T