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  • The 11 biggest differences between the ‘Snow White’ remake and the animated movie

    The 11 biggest differences between the ‘Snow White’ remake and the animated movie

    Warning: Major spoilers ahead for the 2025 “Snow White” remake.

    Disney’s “Snow White” got another modern-day spin, more than 80 years after the animated movie “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs” hit theaters.

    Marc Webb’s “Snow White,” released on Friday, stars Rachel Zegler as the titular princess and Gal Gadot as her stepmother, the Evil Queen.

    While this is not the first and only “Snow White” retelling (see: “Snow White and the Huntsman” and “Mirror, Mirror”), it is the most paint-by-numbers remake of the 1937 film and the Brothers Grimm fairytale.

    Still, the new movie diverges from the source material in a few major ways. Here are the biggest changes.

  • Taylor Swift hypes up Selena Gomez’s new album in return to Instagram

    Taylor Swift hypes up Selena Gomez’s new album in return to Instagram

    Taylor Swift returned to Instagram Saturday to hype up her longtime friend Selena Gomez.

    Gomez, in collaboration with her record producer fiancé, Benny Blanco, released her fourth studio album, “I Said I Love You First,” on March 21. The album celebrates their love story, with songs that “represent our past, present and future… something I can’t wait to experience with you from now until forever,” Gomez said on Instagram Friday, March 21.

    And the album already has a fan in Swift.

    Swift uploaded the a link to the album to her Instagram story Saturday, along with a message of effusive praise.

    “I LOVE THIS ALBUM SO MUCH OH MY GODDDDDDDDDDDD,” Swift said, while tagging Gomez and Blanco in the post.

    Gomez re-shared Swift’s post to her own story, writing over it, “love you tay.”

    Since wrapping up her 21-monthslong “Eras Tour,” Swift has been lying relatively low when it comes to her social media presence. Her last post to her Instagram grid honored her final “Eras Tour” concert Dec. 8 in Vancouver. She went on to make several public appearances, including at the Grammys on Feb. 2, where she was nominated for six awards, and the 2025 Super Bowl in New Orleans.

    Swift and Gomez have been friends for years, dating back to 2008, when they both dated Jonas brothers.

    “It was amazing, because she was the girl with the big curly hair and all the bracelets and the cowboy boots,” Gomez said of Swift in a 2017 interview. “And I was definitely up-and-coming, and we just clicked. It was the best thing we got out of those relationships.”

    Gomez notably attended Swift’s 2023 Fourth of July party. Swift shared a pic from the bash at her Rhode Island home, captioning it, “Happy belated Independence Day from your local neighborhood independent girlies.”

    Swift went on to start dating Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce later that year, while Gomez confirmed her relationship with Blanco in December 2023.

  • George Foreman, the Grilling Mogul and World-Champion Heavyweight Boxer, Has Died

    George Foreman, the Grilling Mogul and World-Champion Heavyweight Boxer, Has Died

    Jesse Sparks is a senior editor for Eater.com, working on stories spanning restaurant features, breaking news, pop culture, climate change, and more.

    Two-time world heavyweight boxing champion, Olympic gold medalist, and multi-million-dollar grilling entrepreneur George Foreman died on March 21, 2025, at the age of 76, according to a statement from his family posted on the former athlete’s Instagram.

    Foreman initially gained world renown during his decades-long boxing career, which included matches against Muhammad Ali, Evander Holyfield, and Michael Moorer. Then, in 1994, he quickly re-established himself by endorsing a business selling indoor, countertop grills. In doing so, he pioneered using the power of TV and the cult of celebrity in a pre-Internet world to become a staple of American home cooking in the ’90s.

    Although he didn’t formally invent the tool, Foreman’s involvement with the product’s advertisement and marketing played a defining role in making home cooking more accessible to Americans who felt excluded from culinary culture in the 1990s. Since then, the literal and figurative significance of the George Foreman grill has been hard to estimate — or overstate. (In 2000, CNN Money projected that 12 to 15 percent of American homes in the ’90s had a George Foreman grill.)

    Nonetheless, the compact appliance has served as a symbol, or a reminder, that anyone at any age can cook. His motivational and inspirational remarks extended beyond offhand conversations to engage skeptical seniors, weight-loss-obsessed calorie counters, and high school classmates who might otherwise give up on whatever challenges they face in the kitchen, the gym, or elsewhere. His combination of boundless positivity, dazzling charisma, and a painfully corny-yet-effective catchphrase led to numerous other product endorsements and moments in the spotlight of American pop culture. Over time, these television appearances secured the boxer’s role as a complicated source of nostalgia and culinary aspiration.

    Still, Foreman’s legacy was cemented as a prominent success story of the ’90s and early aughts after the business sold its 20 millionth George Foreman indoor grill in 2000. Over time, though, his career became a cautionary tale of the pitfalls of celebrity influencers and audience disinterest in what they perceive to be over-endorsement.

    Following the announcement, the family has requested privacy and time as they process the passing of “an extraordinary man we were blessed to call our own,” the post reads.

  • Matthew Knowles Responds to Kanye West’s Offensive Remarks About Beyoncé and Jay-Z’s Children

    Matthew Knowles Responds to Kanye West’s Offensive Remarks About Beyoncé and Jay-Z’s Children

    Beyoncé’s father, Mathew Knowles, is standing up for her youngest, Rumi and Sir, after Kanye West’s offensive remarks about them on X.

    In his since-deleted post on Tuesday, March 18, West, 47, wrote, “WAIT HAS ANYONE EVER SEEN JAY Z AND BEYONCES YOUNGER KIDS,” before questioning the 7½-year-olds twins’ mental capacity using offensive language. Beyoncé, 43, and husband Jay-Z, 55, are also parents to 13-year-old Blue Ivy.

    Three days later, Knowles, 73, spoke to TMZ, saying, “People pay a price for being stupid, especially in the music industry.”

    “I’m hopeful Kanye gets the type of help he needs, in terms of mental health,” Knowles told the outlet.

    His remarks come two days after his ex-wife Tina Knowles, 71, with whom he also shares daughter Solange, defended her family on Instagram.

    “So I’m on the set of a photoshoot today for my book and I wanted to tell you a corny joke cause I have on all this glamourous hair and makeup,” she said in the Wednesday, March 19 upload.

    “I got a corny joke, want to hear it, hear I go, before saying, “What happens when a snowman throws a tantrum? He has a meltdown. Y’all know that’s funny.”

    In a since-edited caption on the post, the family matriarch spoke against “ignorance and evil” — seemingly in direct response to West’s words about her grandchildren, as reported by TMZ and the New York Post’s Page Six.

    The PEOPLE Puzzler crossword is here! How quickly can you solve it? Play now!

    “It’s hard to remain positive and classy in the face of ignorance and evil. But I know that no weapon formed against me or my family shall prosper,” she reportedly wrote. It now reads, “Corny joke, time! ❤️.”

    In a September 2024 conversation with GQ, Beyoncé said that one of the main things she’s worked on “extremely hard” throughout her career is “making sure my kids can have as much normalcy and privacy as possible, ensuring my personal life isn’t turned into a brand.”

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    “It’s very easy for celebrities to turn our lives into performance art,” she said. “I have made an extreme effort to stay true to my boundaries and protect myself and my family. No amount of money is worth my peace.”

  • Jake Paul Engaged to Jutta Leerdam

    Jake Paul Engaged to Jutta Leerdam

    The YouTuber-turned-boxer and his speedskating world champion boo announced their engagement Saturday on social media … sharing a stunning photo of Jake down on one knee on a balcony overlooking the water.

    He went all out for the special moment … decorating the balcony with white petals, flowers and pillar candles — popping the question with a massive oval diamond with two smaller stones on either side.

    Jutta could barely contain her excitement, as another snap shows her jumping for joy over the proposal.

    The pair — who whore coordinating white outfits — wrote in their caption that they “can’t wait to spend forever together.”

    Jake and Jutta met through Instagram in late 2022 and went public with their romance in March 2023 when they were caught locking lips in Miami.

    They’ve been by each other’s sides ever since … with JP flying all the way to Norway earlier this month to cheer his better half on at the ISU World Speed Skating Championship.

  • Channing Tatum to Never Take on ‘Fat Roles’ Again

    Channing Tatum to Never Take on ‘Fat Roles’ Again

    Tatum said gaining and losing weight for roles was “too hard on the body.”

    Channing Tatum will no longer take “big swings” when it comes to his weight for movie roles.

    On Friday (March 22), the Blink Twice actor, 44, shared an Instagram carousel of his fluctuating weight, where he went from 235 to 175 pounds for the upcoming crime drama Roofman before gaining enough to reach 205.

    “We back up!” Tatum began the caption alongside a photo showing him poolside.

    The actor went on to share gratitude for his chef and nutritionist in addition to his trainer. “I couldn’t make these big swings in my weight without you guys. But i won’t be doing anymore fat roles haha,” he wrote.

    “It’s [too] hard on the body and to hard to take off now. But damn when i look at these pics it’s just wild what the human body and will can do,” Tatum concluded.

    Tatum, who led the Magic Mike franchise for three installments, appeared on The Kelly Clarkson Show in 2022, where he revealed that the weight loss process for the series is unhealthier than one might expect.

    “You have to starve yourself,” he said in the video below. “I don’t think when you’re that lean, it’s actually healthy.”

    “Truly, I don’t know how people that work a 9-to-5 actually stay in shape, because it’s my full-time job and I can barely do it,” he added.

    Referring to his weight, Tatum also shared that he “can’t get it off,” and fluctuates 15 pounds at most when he used to drop 15 pounds easily.

  • Taylor Swift gushes over bestie Selena Gomez’s new album with Benny Blanco: ‘OH MY GODDDDDDDDDDDD’

    Taylor Swift gushes over bestie Selena Gomez’s new album with Benny Blanco: ‘OH MY GODDDDDDDDDDDD’

    Taylor Swift is giving her full support to close friend Selena Gomez’s new album with Benny Blanco, which was released on March 21.

    “@selenagomez & @bennyblanco I LOVE THIS ALBUM SO MUCH,” Swift, 35, wrote in a March 22 post on her Instagram story next to the album link. “OH MY GODDDDDDDDDDDD.”

    Entitled I Said I Love You First, Gomez’s latest LP marks her fourth studio album but her first with Blanco, her now fiancé.

    The couple got engaged back in December 2024 after 18 months of dating.

    Gomez proceeded to repost Swift’s shoutout on her own Instagram with the caption, “Love you, Tay.”

    In a post on Friday, the former Disney Channel star honored the debut of her new album in a touching tribute to Blanco.

    “Benny, thank you for being my own personal journal throughout this process. These songs represent our past, present and future,” she wrote. “Something I can’t wait to experience with you from now until forever. Thank you for pouring your unconditional love into creating this project with me.”

    The 14-track project includes collaborations with CharliXCX, Gracie Abrams, Julia Michaels, and Finneas.

    Blanco — a 37-year-old producer who’s famously worked with beloved artists such as Katy Perry, Kesha, Rihanna, Justin Bieber, and Ed Sheeran — praised the album online with a video of Gomez sitting in front of a ballon arrangement spelling out the title.

    “Wow… i still can’t believe today is actually real… our secret little album we made in our bedroom is out for the rest of the world to hear,” he wrote. “I may not b able to remember when we first met over 15 years ago but i do remember our first kiss and how it changed our lives forever.

    “I feel like today is different than all of the other times i’ve put albums out bc im not doing it alone i get to do all the scary parts of being an artist with my best friend by my side,” he continued. “This album wouldn’t exist without u … saying u r my rock is an understatement … i couldn’t picture life without u … u may have said i love u first but ill make sure i never stop saying it… I LOVE U !!! I LOVE U !!! I LOVE U !!!”

    While this may be their inaugural album collaboration, the soon-to-be married couple have made music hits together in the past. Blanco is credited as a co-writer on Gomez’s two tracks, “Kill Em With Kindess” and “Single Soon.”

    Before I Said I Loved You First, Gomez put out a seven-track EP in 2021 called Revelación.

    Ahead of her latest album release, the “Who Says” singer and her beau sat down with Jimmy Fallon on his eponymous late-night talk show, dishing about their relationship, musically and otherwise.

    During the conversation, Gomez revealed how she almost ruined Blanco’s proposal.

    The Only Murders in the Building actor admitted she had no idea Blanco was going to ask her to marry him the day he proposed. In fact, Gomez was under the impression the two of them were going to shoot promotional content for their upcoming album.

    “I was so confused on where we were going because it seemed kind of far,” she remembered of the engagement location. “I’m kind of a little grumpy. I’m tired and I’m like, ‘This is too far.’”

    Blanco then said Gomez almost bailed on their plans, asking him if they could “shoot the promo” another day. In the end, she agreed to go with him.

    Blanco proposed to Gomez on set, laying out a picnic with all her favorite food from Taco Bell.

  • Matthew Knowles blasts Kanye over comment on Beyoncé, Jay-Z’s kids

    Matthew Knowles blasts Kanye over comment on Beyoncé, Jay-Z’s kids

    You do not mess with the Knowles family. First, it was Tina Knowles and now it’s Matthew Knowles speaking out against Kanye’s disgraceful comments about Beyoncé and Jay-Z’s youngest children.

    Beyoncé’s father, Matthew, told TMZ that Kanye has another thing coming to him if he thinks he will get away with speaking ill of his grandchildren. Matthew was Destiny’s Child manager and later Beyoncé’s when she began her solo career and says that Kanye needs to watch out.

    “People pay a price for being stupid, especially in the music industry,” the veteran music manager tells the outlet.

    Matthew is also aware of the mental health conditions that Kanye has been suffering from over the years and hopes he will get seek help to address them.

    “I’m hopeful Kanye gets the type of help he needs, in terms of mental health,” Mathew added.

    Ye was diagnosed with bipolar disorder in 2016.

    Matthew’s comments about Ye follow the rapper’s epithet he used to describe Bey and Jay’s seven-year-old twins Rumi and Sir mental capacity on X.

    “WAIT HAS ANYONE EVER SEEN JAY Z AND BEYONCES YOUNGER KIDS,” Ye posted after using derogatory language to describe the twins.

    Matthew wasn’t the only Knowles grandparent to defend their grandbabies as Beyoncé’s mom, Tina, also shared her view on Kanye’s insults. Tina took to Instagram to clap back at Ye for speaking ill of her grandchildren.

    “So I’m on the set of a photoshoot today for my book, and I wanted to tell you a corny joke,” she said in the clip referencing her soon-to-be-released memoir Matriarch. “What happens when a snowman throws a tantrum? He has a meltdown. Y’all know that’s funny.”

    The caption on her video is, “Corny joke, time! ❤️ ” but she allegedly had a more direct caption at first according to TMZ. It read “… it’s hard to remain positive and classy in the face of ignorance and evil.” She adds, “But I know that no weapon formed against me or my family shall prosper.This battle is not mine, but the Lords, I know that God has got this.”

    What’s Up With Kanye and Jay-Z’s Friendship?

    It’s no secret that Jay and Ye used to be tight. The two got started in music at the same time and each helped one another rise to stardom. After the lack of appearances together and Beyoncé and Jay not attending Ye’s 2014 wedding to Kardashian, it was clear to fans that their friendship has run its course.

    In Ye’s latest tirade across social media, he also made it clear how some of Jay’s actions in the past have affected their friendship. He alluded to him running on stage at the 2009 VMAs to snatch the mic from Taylor Swift but also how it hurt that Jay didn’t show up to his wedding.

    “I’D RUN ON STAGES THINKING I WAS DOING THE RIGHT THING AND WOULD ALWAYS BE A SLIGHT HOV NOT COMING TO MY FIRST WEDDING,” Ye wrote.

    Kim Kardashian and Ye got married in 2014 and then they finalized their divorce in 2022. They share four children together: North West, Saint West, Chicago West and Psalm West.

    Another reason as to why Jay was a target in his recent social media tirade was potentially because the 4:44 rapper decided to go with Kendrick Lamar for the 2025 Super Bowl halftime show. He also called out his political affiliations which may not align with Jay-Z’s.

    “HIM PUTTING KENDRICK ON THE SUPERBOWL OVER ME OR EVEN US NEVER BEING INVITED TO S[ — ]T TAKING [sic] JABS ABOUT MY RED HAT ON DONDA,” he added about this year’s Super Bowl and his support of President Donald Trump.

    That being said, Ye shared that he has no intention on apologizing to the Knowles-Carter family.

    “THERE WILL NEVER BE AN APOLOGY TO THE CARTER FAMILY UNTIL THEY HELP ME WITH MY CHILDREN N — S BE GETTING ONE N — A OUT OF JAIL AT A TIME TO LOOK PRESTIGIOUS THE CARTERS AND THE KARDASHIANS ARE BASICALLY THE SAME EXCEPT THE KARDASHIANS ARE S-X TRAFFICKING,” he wrote.

    Since Ye’s post, the superstar couple are allegedly looking to take legal action against the Donda rapper.

    “Jay-Z and Beyoncé are aware of the posts Kanye has since deleted and are discussing how they want to handle this situation, whether that be privately and/or in a legal matter,” an insider tells Page Six.

  • Jake Paul announces engagement to Dutch speedskater

    Jake Paul announces engagement to Dutch speedskater

    Controversial YouTube star-turned-boxer Jake Paul has announced his engagement to his longtime girlfriend, Dutch speed skater Jutta Leerdam.

    Paul, 28, shared the news on Instagram on Saturday with pictures of his proposal on a balcony covered in white flower petals with a mountainous backdrop. The images showed the couple dressed in all white as Paul got down on one knee.

    “We’re engaged,” Paul captioned his post. “We can’t wait to spend forever together.”

    In one photo, Leerdam, 26, showed off her massive, oval diamond engagement ring beset with two smaller stones on either side. It’s unclear how much the stunning ring cost.

    The engagement comes after the Dutch native supported Paul at his blockbuster boxing bout against Mike Tyson in November, which Paul won.

    Leerdam is an Olympic speed skater who represented her nation at Beijing 2022, taking home a silver medal in the 1000m race.

    Paul recently showered Leerdam with praise after her performance at the World Championships last weekend.

    “So proud of my baby 1st, 2nd, and 3rd this weekend at the world championships. She’s a 7 time world champion now.. The hardest worker and the most gorgeous. You inspire me babe,” Paul said in a post on Instagram.

    The couple met via Instagram in 2022 and went public with their relationship in 2023.

    In the Netflix documentary series, Countdown: Paul vs. Tyson, Leerdam spoke about her first interaction with the internet celebrity.

    “Jake sent me a DM on Instagram and asked if I wanted to be on his podcast,” she said. “When he contacted me online, I thought, ‘What an arrogant idiot. He thinks he can do anything, but he won’t get me’… but we really clicked in these two fast-paced worlds on a deep and super personal level. Since that moment, we have been inseparable.”

    The couple celebrated their first anniversary on April 12 last year.

    “I adore you, I’m so grateful for you, you make me the happiest girl in the world,” Leerdam wrote on Instagram at the time. “The man with the best heart. Let’s never stop dancing baby.”

    In his own tribute, Paul said he’s “been in love since day one.”

    Paul previously dated fellow YouTuber Tana Mongeau. The pair got engaged and livestreamed a chaotic wedding for pay-per-view, which was later revealed to be fake.

    On an episode of her MTV show No Filter: Tana Mongeau, Mongeau stated that the ceremony was something “fun and lighthearted that we’re obviously doing for fun and for content.” The couple announced their break-up in January 2020.

  • Disney’s “Snow White” Remake Whistles But Doesn’t Work

    Disney’s “Snow White” Remake Whistles But Doesn’t Work

    Nothing good ever seems to come of Gal Gadot singing. Those of us with clear memories of March, 2020, during the early days of pandemic lockdown, may recall the video montage she beamed out of herself and other celebrities, all warbling John Lennon’s “Imagine.” It was meant to bring us together, and on that score it was a total success. Amid a crisis of mass illness, unemployment, poverty, and death, the internet users of the world — suddenly faced with an off-key medley of hope, performed by famous people sheltering in multimillion-dollar hideaways — found themselves united in pure, unmitigated hatred. Only a few days into quarantine, a loathsome instant classic of Hollywood vacuity had been born.

    Now, five years later, Gadot is singing a new tune, and how. She doesn’t warble; she belts, or at least makes a valiant attempt. Her backdrop is not a mansion but a palace, where she descends a Vegas-ready grand staircase, with bewimpled ladies-in-waiting as backup dancers. And what she sings is not a song of hope but an anthem of fascist aggression: “All is fair when you wear the crown / A little perk that your power provides / If they dare speak up, swat them down / She, with the diamonds, decides.” Here it may be worth noting that Gadot delivers this performance in the new film “Snow White,” Disney’s live-action remake of its own 1937 animated masterwork, “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.” She plays the Evil Queen (“She. Was. Evil!” a narrator helpfully intones), which accounts for the severity of Gadot’s royal regalia: a black balaclava-style hood, a glittering cloak, and an enormous stained-glass crown so sharp and spiky that Her Majesty might have run headfirst through a cathedral window.

    Gadot has worn ridiculous things before, notably and delightfully as Wonder Woman in various DC Comics movies, but then the role of Diana Prince was particularly well tailored to her charisma and behind-the-beat comic timing. In “Wonder Woman” (2017), as a demigoddess encountering the oddity of the human world for the first time, Gadot projected a pleasurable fish-out-of-water disorientation — a disarming mix of courage and naïveté. But, in “Snow White,” she must embody exactly the opposite, and the strain is immense. Tasked with reinterpreting one of the most frightening and emblematic villains in the Disney canon, Gadot evinces no feel for malevolent cunning, or even knowing cynicism; smacked down repeatedly by her Magic Mirror, she can barely conjure a decently icy glare in response. The great Jean Marsh, who gave us such blood-freezing villainy in “Return to Oz” (1985) and “Willow” (1988), makes Gadot’s Evil Queen look like the mushiest of poisoned apples.

    Snow White herself does offer something of an antidote. She is played by Rachel Zegler, who, from the moment she appears, wearing scullery rags and a smile, reveals a winning calibration of radiant innocence and underdog conviction. Although Snow White has lost her parents and finds herself at her stepmother’s unreliable mercy, she hasn’t abandoned hope; she’s “waiting on a wish,” to quote the most tuneful of several new songs, written by Benj Pasek and Justin Paul. The Snow White of 1937, voiced by the opera singer Adriana Caselotti, leaned over a well and sang, “I’m wishing,” with sublime, lilting simplicity; Snow White 2025, by contrast, must dart hither and yon, across seemingly half the castle grounds, as she croons her way through a breath-sapping manifesto of self-empowerment.

    And, against considerable odds, Zegler sells every word. She has the gift, rarer than it seems, of not only singing well but also acting well as she sings; her pipes are as potent, and her nerves as steely, as they were when she made her sterling film début, as Maria, in Steven Spielberg’s “West Side Story” (2021). One day, Zegler may well tire of headlining faintly sacrilegious remakes of beloved movie musicals, and rightly so; based on her track record so far, though, I can register no complaint.

    The internet, however, has registered plenty. When Zegler, who is of Colombian descent, was first cast in the film, racist trolls across the land registered their displeasure, much as they had done when Halle Bailey, a Black singer and actress, was cast as Ariel in “The Little Mermaid” (2023). In subsequent interviews, Zegler offered some mild criticism of “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs,” pointing out its dated sexual politics, and noted that she would be playing a bolder, less lovelorn, more proactive fairy-tale heroine. Her remarks, mild as they were, generated fierce backlash. From there, the controversies snowballed. The less said the better about the vague rumors of a feud between Zegler, a vocal pro-Palestinian advocate, and Gadot, an Israeli actor who has been staunchly supportive of Israel, and whose own involvement with the film has fuelled calls for a boycott.

    “Snow White,” in other words, may be the latest in a long, generally uninspired, and cumulatively numbing line of Disney remakes. But the sheer breadth of pre-release ill will it’s accumulated, across such a broad swath of the political spectrum, feels almost impressive. By the time the film finally arrived in theatres this week, it had sprouted almost as many controversies as dwarfs — and, of course, the issue of dwarfs predictably triggered one of the movie’s very first representational dustups. In 2022, the actor Peter Dinklage, who has a form of dwarfism, expressed his annoyance that Disney was “still making that fucking backward story about seven dwarfs living in a cave.”

    Although Disney promised to approach that aspect of the story with greater sensitivity, purists can rest assured that the director Marc Webb and the screenwriter Erin Cressida Wilson have seen fit to keep Doc, Grumpy, Happy, Sleepy, Sneezy, Bashful, and Dopey in the picture. They still toil merrily in a diamond mine, albeit one that’s been souped up to resemble a future high-speed Disneyland ride, and they still sing “Heigh-Ho,” though a version that has been tricked out with extended, over-explanatory lyrics. But the word “dwarfs” has been conspicuously banished from the movie’s title, and it is never once uttered in the film, which takes pains to emphasize that the seven men are nonhuman creatures. Indeed, there is a dispiriting absence of humanity in their bulbous and curmudgeonly computer-generated faces; the less human they look, the logic seems to go, the less offended any actual humans will be.

    There are other, less perplexing differences. For one, the little men — for convenience, let’s call them the Seven — do not return to their woodland cottage, as they did in the 1937 film, to find that Snow White and various four-legged forest denizens have cleaned the place from top to bottom. This time, the Seven tidy up the house with Snow White, who calls the shots, delegates the tasks, and shrewdly chips away at the notion of household chores as purely women’s work. Fortunately, Snow White’s newfound enlightenment does not deny her the possibility of romance, although princes are now strictly off-limits; her love interest here is a fetchingly impudent bandit, Jonathan (Andrew Burnap), who is leading a scrappy rebellion against the Evil Queen.

    Snow White and Jonathan — honestly, it doesn’t sound promising. Who wants a fairy tale to end with “And Cinderella and Bob lived happily ever after”? Still, Zegler and Burnap do make a cute duo, even in cloying magic-hour interludes illuminated by highly swattable C.G.I. fireflies. From time to time, you are reminded of the fleet romantic-comedy touch that Webb brought, years earlier, to “(500) Days of Summer” (2009) and parts of “The Amazing Spider-Man” (2012). Mostly, though, you are arrested by the combativeness of the characters’ screwball banter, much of which is devoted to the explication of clashing political ideologies. How do you overthrow an Evil Queen — by trying to reason with her, or by pillaging the castle’s food stores and giving back to the subjects who are starving under her reign of terror? The film makes more than a token effort to explore the material and psychological realities of life under fascist rule, and the transformation of a charming agrarian utopia into an austere military dictatorship. In these moments, “Snow White” doesn’t feel entirely like a fairy tale; it’s like “I’m Still Here” with C.G.I. chipmunks.

    Does that make Gadot’s Evil Queen the fairy-tale embodiment of Trump? Putin? (Netanyahu?) To even ask such questions is to imbue “Snow White” with an undeniable, even ostentatious, resonance. Seen from another angle, it bears out the calculation — as well as the mounting futility — of the interminable Disney remake project, which, from Day One, has exuded a cynical, self-cannibalizing reek. The cynicism derives from at least two interrelated forms of corporate cowardice. With a few rare exceptions — I’m thinking fondly of Tim Burton’s endearingly nutty 2019 remix of “Dumbo” — the remakes have smacked of a maddening artistic timidity, a reluctance to irritate fans by departing too boldly from classic material. That blandness has gone hand in hand with a shifty political opportunism, marked by half-hearted representational milestones — Ariel is Black! LeFou is gay (sort of)! — that Disney has either celebrated or downplayed, depending on which faction it’s trying to avoid offending at any given moment.

    None of this could be further removed from the spirit, let alone the sheer overpowering visual beauty, of the original “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.” A work of art made with wild risk and abundant imagination, the film looks like classicism now but was, in 1937, nothing short of revolutionary. One of the first full-length animated features ever made, it proved especially ingenious in its use of the multi-plane camera, with hand-drawn backdrops on shifting layers of glass, so that when Snow White fled into the darkness of a haunted forest, her terror — and ours — was amplified by an artful and astonishing illusion of depth. The new “Snow White” has its own illusions of depth, though not the kind that one can commend. ♦