Sleeping Beauty was raped in her sleep, Pinocchio gets hanged…the REAL endings to these Disney fairy tales will haunt you
Our favourite princess movies are all based on really gory stories
HAPPY endings are part of the joy of our favourite fairy tales.
But a mum has called for Sleeping Beauty to be banned from her son's school because the Prince is a "sex pest."
Sarah Hall believes the stolen kiss that wakes the Princess gives the wrong message about consent - and she may have a point if the original tale is taken into account.
Like many of our classic children's stories, and the Disney adaptations of our childhood, they are bases on much darker stories – where rape, murder and mutilation is all par for the course.
And Sleeping Beauty is one of the most disturbing - involving the rape and impregnation of the comatose Princess.
Here we reveal the classic Disney animations which are based on fairy tales that are more grim than Grimm.
Sleeping Beauty
Italian writer Giambattista Basile’s original version of Sleeping Beauty, written in the 17th Century, has the comatose princess being repeatedly raped by the king who comes across her and then giving birth to his children, all while still asleep.
She finally wakes up when one of her children sucks an enchanted splinter out of her finger and, in revenge, the queen attempts to get the king to EAT his kids.
The king then murders his wife so he can be with Sleeping Beauty.
Snow White and the Seven Dwarves
The queen is pretty evil even in the Disney version, but in the Brothers Grimm original, she’s actually a cannibal.
She orders the huntsman to kill Snow White, cut out her liver and lungs and bring them back to the palace so she can eat them.
But she comes to a gruesome end after turning up at Snow White’s wedding – she’s forced to step into red hot iron shoes and dance until she dies.
Cinderella
The original, again by the Brothers Grimm, had the ‘ugly sisters’ mutilating themselves in a bid to bag the prince.
One cuts off her toes to get them into the golden slipper – which later became a glass slipper – and the other slices off a heel but both are found out after doves sent by Cinderella’s dead mother alert the prince.
At the wedding of Cinders and her prince, the same birds return to peck out the EYES of the sisters who were blinded for the rest of their lives.
The Little Mermaid
Hans Christian Andersen’s mermaid not only lost her voice but her transformation into a human form means she suffers agonising pain with every step.
Despite her ordeal, her prince marries another, condemning her to melt into sea foam.
To save her, the mermaid’s sisters strike a bargain which means she must kill the prince and drip his blood on to her feet to get back her tail but she refuses and perishes.
Pinocchio
Carlo Collodi's 1883 story has the wooden puppet running away and Gepetto being arrested on suspicion of child abuse.
Pinocchio then accidentally kills the wise cricket - known as Jiminy Cricket in the film – with a hammer.
Later, bandits catch Pinocchio and HANG him from a tree, leaving him to suffocate.
But he does survive... so that’s OK.
The Princess and the Frog
Instead of a kiss, the amphibian suitor in the Frog Prince is turned back into human form by having its head cut off in some versions of the story dating back to at least the 13th century.
The Grimm tale toned it down slightly and had the princess slam the frog into the wall instead.
Mulan
The Disney movie is based on an old Chinese legend of Hau Mulan, a young girl who dresses as a boy to save her ailing father from compulsory military service.
In author Chu Renhuo’s 1675 version the female warrior comes home from war to find her father has died and her mother remarried.
When Heshena Khan, the foreign ruler of their occupied territory, insists Mulan comes to his palace as his concubine, she kills herself rather than submit to him.
Tangled
This 2010 hit was based on the well-known story Rapunzel, who let down her long hair to let her prince up to the tower.
The Brothers Grimm’s version has an evil witch discovering her secret liaisons and cutting off the girl’s hair and banishing her.
When the prince climbs up to see his lover, the witch pushes him out of the tower and into thorn bushes, which rip out his eyes.
The Fox and the Hound
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Yes, even this cute animal tale has a very dark beginning.
The 1967 novel, by Daniel P. Mannix, is no buddy movie and has the fox leading a dog onto a railways track to kill it.
The dog’s owner then trains another dog to hunt and he chases the fox until it dies from exhaustion.
The dog doesn’t fare much better either.
After agreeing to move into a nursing home his alcoholic master shoots his faithful hound because he can’t take a dog with him.