Allison Swank
If you thought that a children’s film could escape the exaggerated eye roll of this cultural critic, then think again. I found the 2005 animated film Madagascar,  to be as problematic as any live action adult flick – if not more – so simply for the fact that it’s promoting a “West and the rest” mentality in our young people.

Madagascar is the story of four animals that escape/are removed from the Central Park Zoo in Manhattan. They wind up in wooden crates aboard a ship that is hijacked by penguins. The ship runs aground on Madagascar – the small island nation off the east coast of Southern Africa.

At the zoo, the animals have  access to all the modern world’s luxuries, including dinner served every night on a silver platter. However, Marty the Zebra (voiced by Chris Rock), is discontent with cosmopolitan life, and is thrilled at the possibility of adventure and freedom in “the wild.” He gets his wish in Madagascar. The primitive nature of the island is such that the skeletal remains of a plane wreck are the only reminder that humans, modernity, or civilization exist.

Does this narrative sound familiar?

European explorers and colonizers alike conceptualized wild Africa as the ultimate freedom from the stiff moral confines underway in Europe at the height of colonization. Europeans went to Africa to “feel free” and conquer the wild. Unfortunately, the same imperialist sentiments are recited repeatedly in the film’s character dialogue and sound track. The characters talk about “the wild” spaces of Africa as if they are still just as dark as Conrad’s described “Heart.” The use of lighting, color, and the representations of “native” island animals as either savage or crazy support this dichotomizing colonial narrative.

The lighting in the scene where the zoo animals first encounter the native lemurs is crucial to this binary. The lemurs have created a dance club atmosphere under the dark canopy of the jungle and they are dancing wildly to I Like to Move It by Reel to Real. They are lit at a low angle from a sort of glowing flower that casts large flickering shadows of the creatures on the surrounding tree life. Coupled with the music, the shadows designate this ‘other’ space as exotic and exciting. What is ultimately also being described is the normalcy of known spaces – the Western model of modernity: New York.

The urban landscape of Manhattan is juxtaposed against the jungle island through the use of color. Manhattan is represented through browns and grays – drab colors, while Madagascar’s palate is full of rich greens.

Like all tales of the white man in Africa, the protagonist, in our case, Alex the Lion (voiced by Ben Stiller), must be challenged by the perilous jungle to prove his resilience and enterprise. Without identifiable food on the island, Alex the Lion “goes savage.” His hair becomes kinky and he inexplicably lusts after Marty the Zebra’s rear end. However, Alex ultimately snaps out of his “savage” trance to save his friends from the foosa (the island’s unsophisticated predators), thus proving that he is far more resilient than any native animal could be.

It doesn’t take a microscopic reading to see that Madagascar is a colonial narrative. The West is represented as the norm, and Africa is represented as savage and exotic to promote the idea of Western normalcy. The only thing that makes this worn-out binary interesting in Madagascar is the comedy it’s cloaked in.

Further Reading

Goodbye, Piassa

The demolition of an historic district in Addis Ababa shows a central contradiction of modernization: the desire to improve the country while devaluing its people and culture.

And do not hinder them

We hardly think of children as agents of change. At the height of 1980s apartheid repression in South Africa, a group of activists did and gave them the tool of print.