Anyone who knows about kids' movies knows how popular princess movies are, especially Disney princesses. My child is six and absolutely loves them too. My child also loves princes and kings, but I'm having a hard time finding anything that features a character as easily beloved as Elsa or Moana for example. Even worse, a lot of the times male characters are just antagonists or at least stand in the way of the princess. I'd love to see a movie with a young prince who isn't evil or dumb (as a joke) that kids can relate to. I think it also be cool if there was singing or magic or anything mystical. My kid kind of likes Shrek but I was hoping to find one about a human prince. The protagonist in the movie The Lorax is a young boy on a good mission, and we like that movie too, but we're just looking for something bigger. I'm not looking for a movie that's primarily fighting, a little is okay, but I'd really prefer if the main focus was some honorable endeavor. Am I just missing the prince movies, or are they all about princesses instead?
How to train your dragon. The main protagonist is the son of the chief and is also generally a good person and is very likable. The supporting cast are also great. Also the subsequent movies and TV shows actually have the characters grow and age through them
I almost suggested this one too - I'd put it on when my kids were babies, since they seemed to like it well enough, and I loved the movie and soundtrack
Flynn has no redeeming qualities. He just confessed to a teenager.
I do like that movie though. The mother in Tangled is actually a good way to teach kids some important lessons about abusive relationships without being super dark. She demonstrates over-defensiveness, love-bombing, gaslighting, etc.
It was a way to teach my kids about how you can lie even though every word you say is true. If you listen to the mother, pretty much everything she says is technically true, but in almost every line she has, she is being deceptive.
Definitely don't leave it out, use it as a teaching moment instead. Blinding kids to racism doesn't help them become good people. Talking through those moment with them is what does.
Seconded! There are so many valuable lessons in this show. There are also many role models to connect with, for both boys and girls alike.
For those who have watched and rewatched the only 3 seasons, please check out the comics, which are a continuation of the story and ties up many loose ends from the show.
(There is technically prince Zuko, and his story has one of the best redemption arcs in children shows)
Zuko's a prince! He's not an awesome role model, but he's an outstanding character and there are some great lessons to be learned from watching him over the course of the whole series.
This is far from a stupid question. I have a girl and a boy and it's surprisingly difficult to find movies/books/ shows with positive male role models. A lot of times they are presented as evil or incompetent as well. I try to find more balanced things for them to watch together.
As far as Disney fare there are Lucca and Tangled. Lucca is meh but Tangled is really funny and the kids like it, and it arguably has two protagonists with one of them being male. Peter pan is fun but definitely not cool in different ways, especially to native Americans.
There's a lot more than Disney though. The Adventures of Baron Munchausen might be a bit scary depending on their age but they both love it. As others mentioned The Dragon Prince is pretty great. If you haven't yet, you should try The Sound of Music, you'd be surprised how much they get into it.
I'll try to think of more examples but thanks for posting this, I think it's an important conversation to have
How about Aladdin or The Emperor's New Groove? In the former a beggar becomes a price, and in the latter a king learns to value humility and friendship.
The Road to El Dorado doesn't have princes exactly and they're not exactly on an honorable quest at first, but I think it still fits the bill in a weird way.
I want to rationalize this. Mulan is a Disney princess because Disney princesses is a franchise, not that all Disney princesses are princesses. Atlantis was an animated Disney movie. I'll allow it.
I feel like watching him come of age while rebelling against his lot/role, going on that adventure to find himself is really important, whether he's technically a prince at the time or not.
Within the first 5 minutes of the film:
visibly naked concubines serving the prince.
concubine emerges from under the water
"The royal penis is now clean", implying she washed his royal jewels or sucked him off underwater.
Yeah, disagreeing on this one. Not suitable for kids AT ALL... I was 9 when I first saw it. None of the adult jokes or scenes flew over my head.
I don't know if either of those are good recs for OP's question. Both have female protagonists. The Baron and Howl both are mysterious and have agendas; they're not really role models. Spirited Away also falls in this category.
Ponyo and Castle in the Sky have admirable male protagonists, though they are not royalty (the girls in those stories are royalty).
Princess Mononoke has a protagonist who is a prince, but it's not really a kid movie. The stuff with demons and head-severing might be too disturbing.
Tales from Earthsea and Ocean Waves are just straight-up bad movies.
Porco Rosso is cool but he also smokes, not the best influence. Same with the main character in The Wind Rises.
The Secret World of Arrietty, The Tale of the Princess Kaguya and My Neighbor Totoro are all predominantly female casts. There are male father figures but they're not really role models, for one reason or another. The dad in Totoro is decent when he's involved, but spends too much time working.
When Marnie Was There and Kiki's Delivery Service are also predominantly female casts, no memorable male role models.
Nausicaa has some good guys but they're more like set pieces than characters.
Whisper of the Heart and From Up On Poppy Hill are more slice-of-life, no real nobility or heroics.
Grave of the Fireflies is definitely not a kid movie.
Ahem...
"Prince Ali, fabulous he
Ali Ababwa
Genuflect, show some respect
Down on one knee
Now, try your best to stay calm
Brush up your Sunday salaam
Then come and meet his spectacular coterie
Prince Ali, mighty is he
Ali Ababwa
Strong as ten regular men, definitely!
He faced the galloping hordes
A hundred bad guys with swords
Who sent those goons to their lords
Why, Prince Ali"
Lol, Aladin is technically a "Prince" movie. For that matter, The Lion King is as well. I'm sure I could think of more, but I'm tired and should have been subsumed by slumber hours ago.
Absolutely! On both counts! But I feel like it does show that just because someone is a prince and perceived as "important" doesn't mean he's gonna do the right thing. Strive to be a good person, not just a royal.
That's my opinion on the two of those characters, at least. 😋
I'll add in a recommendation for Steven Universe, though it's a show, not a movie. Interesting plot, great character development, no character-is-dumb tropes. Soundtrack is very cute, lots of original songs. It has a heavy focus on personal growth & relationships that is super refreshing for a kid's show. It's technically sci-fi, but of the flavor that feels very magic-y.
I recommend the Italian fantasy series from the 90s - Fantaghirò.
This story is based on the Italian folk tale "The Belle of Fanta Ghiro" and the legend of the Tuscan princess.
There's a handsome prince, a princess who doesn't want to listen to her father, and a talking goose who helps her on her adventures.
Not a movie, rather a show, and also not complete yet, but The Dragon Prince on Netflix is pretty good. The titular prince is a dragon, but there are human princes as well, with one becoming a king actually pretty early on. And King Ezran absolutely tries to bring people together peacefully and with honorable intentions, though there is some action/fighting as well. Caveat, while it is a kids show, it might be thematically better for kids a bit older than 6, as some of the themes can be a bit dark for a kids show, but I'd just recommend you watch a couple eps yourself before showing it to the kiddo and decide for yourself if it's appropriate.
Also, someone else mentioned Avatar: The Last Airbender in this thread, which is also excellent, and if you happen to be familiar with that show, it has a lot of similiarities and it's some of the same writers and directors of that show.