WillkommenBienvenue Do you have an interest in adoption? Just curious.
I think the issue for me is three fold.
The language used is sometimes not what is normally used these days - e.g. 'real dad' for 'birth father'.
These stories do not deal with real life situations where adoption happens. In Kung Fu Panda the panda is found on the stork's doorstep after the panda's parents are brutally killed (spoiler alert - by a peacock!!). In Elf the baby is in a home and crawls into Santa's sack! Of course a small number of children who are adapted ma be genuine 'orphans' or may have lived in homes (perhaps abroad) but that is not the norm nowadays in Britain and some adopters have adopted from abroad.
Also as a parent to an adopted child I don;t know what he has experienced or seen. I have a fairly good idea what my birth daughter has seen and experienced, since she has been in my care or the care of trusted adults all her life. For some children it really is that there is uncertainty. I don;t mean that in a sense of euphemism. I mean genuinely we do not know if they have seen or experienced things your average child will not have seen. There are features of some films that can be very scary and although all kids may be affected by this the things like the child catcher taking away children could be triggering for children who have been removed in sometimes very scary circumstances from birth families.
I am not saying these films are 'wrong', they are stories, but for some kids who joined their family by adoption they may be unsettling. If the child in question says 'This is scaring me' or whatever it is fine but some kids may watch and not say anything but be internalising some scary messages. As Kew says My owrst experience was the book of the first Stuart Little film where the adoptive parents giving him back to the fake birth parents so easily was phrased horrendously.
My birth dd watched the Rug Rats movie and I was vaguely aware of children feeling ousted by a new sibling, children alone in the wild etc! For my dd, who is 10 and my birth child, this film might be a useful to think about her own feelings of handling having a new sibling via adoption. For my son it might just spell out some of the emotions my dd has experienced and voiced in episodes between her and him!
I think, if I remember rightly Humpty Dumpty is made bitter in the film Puss in Boots because he is in an orphanage and so becomes a 'criminal'. Just some messages we may not always feel comfortable with. In the case of 'Tangled' a lovely film, which my kids adore and watch often, there is a birth mum who is a lovely queen.
Any other films to 'explore'?!