Mia Thermopolis ends the film not as a bride, but as a queen with a parliamentary majority, a legislative agenda, and a supportive partner. In doing so, The Princess Diaries 2 transforms the fairy tale from a story about finding a king into a story about becoming a queen. And in the annals of children’s cinema, that remains a surprisingly rare and valuable lesson. Marshall, Garry, director. The Princess Diaries 2: Royal Engagement . Walt Disney Pictures, 2004.
This paper will argue that The Princess Diaries 2 uses the tropes of the romantic comedy to subvert them. The film systematically dismantles the notion that a woman’s coronation depends on male validation, transforming Mia from a passive romantic subject into an active political agent. Through its depiction of an outdated law, a false suitor, and a true partner who respects her authority, the film offers a radical proposition for a family-friendly movie: that a queen’s first duty is to herself and her nation, not to a husband. The film’s primary antagonist is not a villain in the traditional sense, but a legal text: the “Law of Reluctance,” which stipulates that the Queen of Genovia must be married within thirty days of her accession or forfeit the throne to a male heir, the scheming Lord Viscount Mabrey (John Rhys-Davies). This plot device is a direct allegory for real-world patriarchal inheritance laws that have historically excluded women from power. By externalizing sexism into a literal legal obstacle, the film allows young audiences to understand a complex political concept: that institutional rules, not personal failings, often limit women. princess diaries 2
Rowe, Karen E. “Feminism and Fairy Tales.” Don’t Bet on the Prince: Contemporary Feminist Fairy Tales in North America and England , edited by Jack Zipes, Routledge, 1986, pp. 209-226. Mia Thermopolis ends the film not as a
Cabot, Meg. Princess in Training . HarperCollins, 2005. (Note: The film diverges significantly from the sixth novel in the book series, Princess in Training , but shares the forced-marriage premise). Marshall, Garry, director
Subverting the Fairy Tale: Gender, Governance, and the Modern Monarch in The Princess Diaries 2