Just because Kim Possible, the Disney Channel's new
animated series, appeals to pre-teens and is not mean-spirited,
eerie, or rife with sexual innuendo, doesn't mean it lacks
value. Its merit lies primarily in heroine Kim Possible (Christy
Carlson Romano, known best for her role as overachieving high
schooler Ren Stevens in Disney's Even Stevens). A feisty
red-haired teen, Kim divides her time between cheerleading
practice and saving the world from the evil. She attends
Middleton High (you can visit Middleton High on the show's
website and try out for the Mad Dog cheerleading squad, of which
Kim is a member). She wears baggy, low-cut jeans and crop tops.
She doesn't have her driver's license, so she has to call on her
friends for rides; fortunately, she knows folks with airplanes
and helicopters at their disposal.
When not fighting crime, Kim lives a dream life in a two-parent,
two-big-income household; her mother (Jean Smart) is a brain
surgeon and her dad (Gary Cole), a physicist. She has two bratty
but lovable little brothers. Her family and friends know about
her other life and even support it; she's quite famous and her
exploits are often written up in the newspaper. Still, though,
they are parents: her father asks her not to talk about
"hotties" at the breakfast table.
Kim's sidekick and best friend, Ron Stoppable (Will Friedle),
would like to be more than friends. Kim, however, has her eye on
-- or, as she puts it, "crushes on" -- Josh Mankey (A.J.
Trauth). While Josh causes Kim some anxiety, Ron, on the other
hand, is a loyal, enthusiastic, freckled boy who, with his pet
naked mole rat Rufus (Nancy Cartwright, also the voice of Bart
Simpson), accompanies Kim on her dangerous international
missions. Usually Ron and/or Rufus do something to jeopardize
the mission, but Kim comes to the rescue.
Mostly, though, Kim has devices and abilities that might seem
highly desirable to youngsters who want to be "cool" when they
get older. These include her "kimmunicator," the hand-held
everything-in-one mechanism, on which she receives communiqués
concerning dire threats to the planet, as well as her own
internationally known website, run by her friend Wade (Tahj
Mowry). And she gets to stay out late on school nights, as long
as it's for a good cause.
Here, high school existence is framed by yet another
formulaic-but-fun cartoon with a retro, "too-cute" aesthetic,
like The Cartoon Network's Powerpuff Girls or Dexter's
Laboratory. The characters are drawn with huge eyes and
heads, the good ones all speak in smooth, sweet tones, and they
live inside a series with a catchy theme song, Christina
Milian's "Call Me, Beep Me." And while it clearly targets
pre-teen and younger viewers, Kim Possible includes
adult-friendly humor, in the event that parents feel the need to
watch tv with their kids. But nobody in or watching the series
will ever be offended or over-stimulated, or even surprised.
Kim Possible adopts what has recently become a familiar
formula for tv, the series featuring a crime-fighting female.
It's, well, impossible not to compare Kim to other TV
females like Buffy the Vampire Slayer's Buffy Summers
(Sarah Michelle Gellar), Sydney Bristow (Jennifer Garner) of
ABC's
Alias, or even Blossom, Bubbles, and Buttercup of
Powerpuff Girls. But how cool is it that we can now say,
"Oh, just another crime-fighting female"?
Even better, this one is even more self-assured than some of her
predecessors. Unlike Buffy, for example, Kim is able to stay on
the cheerleading squad while saving the world. Her double life
actually helps her. On the show's website, Kim observes that the
exercise and acrobatic demands of cheerleading are "mega-handy
when I'm going up against those wacko bad guys." As her
arch-nemesis, evil scientist Dr. Drakken (John Di Maggio), puts
it, "Why did she have to be a cheerleader? If she'd been on the
debate team, I would have vaporized her by now." But his
stereotypical view, that brawn is harder to fight than brains,
doesn't hold up with regard to Kim. In fact, she is clever, as
well as graceful and physically fit. She even puts her girly
implements to work, using lip gloss and her compact mirror to
defeat her adversaries.
Dr. Drakken isn't her only problem: she also has to deal with
the hostility and disparaging remarks of fellow cheerleader
Bonnie Rockwaller [Kirsten Storms].
For Kim, these two are equally aggravating, and equally possible
to overcome. But Kim has another, more secret nemesis, one that
will be familiar to many young viewers: her own self-doubt.
Despite her good looks, bubbly personality, and superhero
status, she is still afraid of being rejected by Josh, a
heartbreaker with fashionably two-toned hair and blasé attitude.
Perhaps there's a grain of truth in Kim's fantastic existence:
while she is a high school student, her most passionate
interests are not her classes or homework assignments. Instead,
she expends her boundless energy on extracurricular activities,
both standard (cheerleading, getting a date with Josh for the
school dance) and less so (maintaining global security). The
only thing scarier than evil villains are boys you like. And in
the end, the formula always wins, and Kim always gets the
villains -- and the boy -- by combining use of her brains, body,
and heart. Perhaps she'll inspire similar representations of
flesh-and-blood high school females.
10 June 2002