Pocahontas: Ii
Once in England, Pocahontas navigates a world of courtly intrigue, cruel noblemen, and a scheming Governor Ratcliffe (returning from the dead, because Disney villains are harder to kill than cockroaches). She eventually meets a very-much-alive John Smith, who has been lying low. After a predictable betrayal, Pocahontas saves the day, charms the king, and—in the film’s most staggering deviation—chooses to stay in England with John Rolfe, hinting at the couple’s eventual marriage and her new life as “Rebecca Rolfe.” To call Pocahontas II historically loose is like calling the Atlantic Ocean “damp.” The real Pocahontas (Matoaka) did travel to London in 1616 with John Rolfe, whom she had married after being taken captive by the English. She was not a willing ambassador but a political hostage and a converted Christian used as a propaganda tool for the Virginia Company. She died at age 21 or 22 in Gravesend, England, never returning to her homeland.
Musically, the sequel lacks the iconic “Colors of the Wind” or “Just Around the Riverbend.” The new songs, such as “Where Do I Go from Here?” and “Between Two Worlds,” are forgettable adult contemporary ballads. They attempt to explore Pocahontas’s internal conflict but land with all the weight of a Hallmark card. You will not remember a single lyric ten minutes after the credits roll. Why does Pocahontas II matter beyond its mediocre animation? Because for millions of children who grew up in the 1990s and early 2000s, this was their only exposure to the end of Pocahontas’s story. Disney chose to follow a controversial film not with a correction or a mature reflection on colonialism, but with a cheerful fairy tale that erases kidnapping, cultural genocide, and premature death. pocahontas ii
If you want to teach children about Pocahontas, skip the Disney sequels entirely. Hand them a book by a Powhatan scholar, or watch the documentary Pocahontas: Beyond the Myth . The real story is far more heartbreaking—but it deserves to be told with honesty, not softened into a journey to a new world where the only price of admission is amnesia. Once in England, Pocahontas navigates a world of