MOANA Guess which one is voiced by the Rock.

IF YOU NEED hope for the next generation, look no further than Disneyโ€™s latest. Somewhere on a South Pacific island where natural elements have literal spirits, Moana (voiced by Auliโ€™i Cravalho) is the teenage daughter of the chief. She can be characterized as a Polynesian โ€œprincessโ€ only because she wears a dress and has two animal sidekicksโ€”an adorable piglet and a mostly braindead rooster. Itโ€™s immediately clear her destiny is to be a leader: With her islandโ€™s wildlife dying, and thanks to some nudging from the โ€œvillage crazy lady,โ€ Moana discovers her people have abandoned their purpose as the greatest voyagers in the world. Teaming up with demigod Maui (Dwayne Johnson), Moana travels the now-treacherous watersโ€”and when Maui shows heโ€™s ultimately unreliable, she has to learn to trust her own voice.

Iโ€™d be lying if I said I didnโ€™t get misty during Moana, in large part thanks to the music, by Opetaia Foaโ€™i, Mark Mancia, and Hamiltonโ€™s Lin-Manuel Miranda. And unlike virtually every other Disney film with a female lead, itโ€™s refreshing that Moana is saddled with no romantic agenda: I warily watched for signs of love between Maui and Moana until the very end, but after struggling to work together the entire movie, the two eventually develop a friendly camaraderie. Instead, the movieโ€™s most important relationship is between Moana, her wise grandmother, and the spirits of nature. In other words? Moana provides a great message for little girls (and grown ones) in a time when their feminine power and the sanctity of the environment are under threat.

Jenni Moore is a former music editor and hip-hop columnist and current freelancer at The Portland Mercury. She also writes about comedy, cannabis, movies, TV, and her hatred of taxidermy.