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Bienvenidos a WatchMojo Español. En este video, exploraremos las sorprendentes similitudes entre la mágica película de Disney, Encanto y la emblemática novela de Gabriel García Márquez, Cien Años de Soledad, junto con momentos clave de la adaptación de Netflix.

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00:00Your love is forbidden
00:03I don't understand
00:05Yes, because she's your aunt and she has amnesia
00:07So she doesn't know that she's really your aunt
00:09That's why her relationship is forbidden
00:11I said no
00:12I understand
00:14Hello and welcome to WatchMojo Español
00:16I'm Jackie and today we will be counting our elections
00:21For the 10 best references of 100 years of loneliness in Encanto
00:26For this list we will use the Netflix adaptation
00:29To detail how the Madrigal family keeps surprising similarities with the Buendía
00:35So if you haven't read the book or seen the series
00:38We warn you that there could be some spoilers
00:42Colonel Aureliano Buendía
00:46Had to remember that remote afternoon
00:51In which his father took him to know the ice
00:54Number 10
00:56Foundation of a matriarchal town
01:03Both the Madrigal and the Buendía
01:05They carry out expeditions in search of a new home
01:08Where the families are led by matriarchal figures
01:12That hold the weight of entire generations
01:15On the one hand Alma assumes leadership after the tragic loss of her husband
01:20Guiding her family with the strength that the miracle gives her
01:42On the other hand, Ursula takes the reins of the Buendía
01:45When her husband is losing his mind
01:48I don't want to imagine everything Mrs. Ursula has had to do
01:51To support this family alone
01:57Thank goodness I have worked all my life Mr. Icano
02:01Both women share an obsession for appearances and family honor
02:06Turning their respective families under strict codes of conduct
02:10Alma and Ursula reflect a strong sense of control
02:14In part symbolized by their desire to prepare their legacy for marriage
02:33Number 9
02:36I won't tell you anything else about me
02:38I am part of the amazing Madrigals
03:06What are you doing to not get confused?
03:19On the other hand, the house of the Buendía
03:21Is the epicenter of a story that covers seven generations
03:26The complexity of the repeated names and family ties
03:30Makes the genealogical tree of the book
03:33It is essential not to get lost in the story
03:37Number 8
03:38The black sheep
03:39In Encanto, both Mirabel and Bruno have a distant relationship with Grandma Alma
03:45Which reflects a similar dynamic to that of Arcadio and his father José Arcadio
03:50In 100 years of loneliness
03:52What did you say?
03:55That everyone became gods of love
04:00In the book, Ursula rejects Arcadio for being an illegitimate child of José Arcadio
04:05Who decides to leave the family to go with the gypsies
04:09Ursula agrees to give Arcadio a home and last name
04:12With the condition of keeping the truth about his origins in secret
04:18I'm still waiting for an apology
04:22Where are you going Arcadio?
04:25There is a free room
04:28In Encanto there seems to be an implicit silence
04:31Regarding the lack of the gift of Mirabel and the departure of Bruno
04:35Where the new generation of the town
04:37It seems not to be aware in order to maintain appearances
04:41The magic is still strong
04:43Everything here is fine
04:46We are the Madrigal
04:49Mirabel!
04:51Which brings us to our next key element
04:54Number 7. The family portrait
04:57A symbolic object related to the identity and family belonging is photography
05:03In 100 years of loneliness
05:05The daguerreotype that Melquiades takes to the house of the Buendía
05:09Captures a portrait of Amaranta, Aureliano and Rebecca
05:13But excludes Arcadio
05:15Reflecting the rejection that Ursula feels towards him
05:21The family portrait
05:29In a similar way, in Encanto the family photograph plays a key role
05:33When Mirabel is out of the portrait
05:36Underlining her feeling of exclusion within the Madrigal
05:51Yes, both characters want to have a role in the family
05:54But unlike Arcadio
05:56Mirabel would follow in the footsteps of another member of the Buendía
06:00Number 6. The omens and visions
06:05You should have told me so soon you had the vision
06:08Think about the family
06:10I was thinking about my daughter
06:12I was thinking about my daughter
06:14I was thinking about my daughter
06:16I was thinking about my daughter
06:18I was thinking about my daughter
06:20Beba, calm down
06:22Don't you see I'm trying?
06:24Be grateful that it's not a hurricane
06:26Both in Encanto and in 100 years of loneliness
06:28The search for answers is linked to the magical realism that characterizes both stories
06:33In Encanto, after witnessing the danger that threatens her gifts
06:37Mirabel embarks on a search to understand Bruno's vision
06:41Facing the dilemma of whether she is the salvation or the perdition of her family
06:48I got into Bruno's tower, I saw his last vision
06:50The family is in danger, the magic agonizes
06:52The house collapses, the don of Luisa gets lost and I think it's because of...
06:54Nia?
06:56In a similar way, the Buendía family lives surrounded by a mysticism that envelops their destiny
07:01Through visions and supernatural phenomena
07:04José Arcadio II dedicates his days to studying the manuscripts of Melquiades
07:09But it is his descendant Aureliano Babilonia who finally deciphers the destiny of his lineage
07:16Until he found himself in one of them with his descendant, Aureliano Babilonia
07:21Reading many years later, in the manuscripts of Melquiades
07:26That same moment that he was living
07:30Number 5. Bruno is not spoken
07:33Mom, the pot is going to fall
07:36It's well put Aureliano
07:39It is undeniable that both stories explore how their characters become interpreters of the future
07:48Facing the weight of family destiny and the uncertainty of their role in it
07:54In 100 years of loneliness, Colonel Aureliano Buendía has the ability to foresee the future
08:00Like when he glimpses Rebecca's arrival long before it happens
08:05Visitation always speaks of how you saw Rebecca's arrival months before
08:13It's true
08:16Yes
08:17In a similar way, in Encanto, Bruno has a premonitory ability that makes him the center of family tensions
08:25I had this vision the night your gift did not manifest
08:31Grandma was worried about magic, so she begged me to look to the future
08:36Both characters are marked by loneliness
08:39Bruno is isolated in the walls of Casita
08:41While Aureliano takes refuge in his father's laboratory and in his thoughts
08:47Number 4. Impossible Love
09:02Speaking of premonitions, in the case of the Madrigal cousins
09:06Bruno's prediction about the impossible love of Dolores
09:09Reminds the rivalry between Rebecca and Amaranta
09:13Like Isabela, Rebecca is considered as a beautiful woman
09:17Who competes with Amaranta for the attention of Pietro Crespi
09:26I swear you will never marry my sister
09:29So you have to go through the door of my own corpse
09:34Even in Encanto, where Isabela plans to run away with her boyfriend
09:39Resonates with Rebecca's final decision to marry José Arcadio
09:43Despite the opposition of her family
09:46Those who, beyond the rumors and gossip that run through the town, are not brothers
09:53Another curious detail is how a piano is mentioned
09:56Like Pietro's during Mariano's proposal
09:59And how Dolores mentions that Mariano likes to write poems
10:03Similar to the occasion in which Rebecca receives love letters
10:07And Aureliano writes verses about remedies
10:11Do you like to talk? You protect your mother and she is proud
10:14At night before going to sleep you usually write poetry
10:16And I take advantage of the moment in case you want to think about me
10:19Dolores, I see you
10:21Number 3. Gifts
10:23We already talked a little about Bruno
10:26But he is not the only Madrigal who shares certain qualities with the Buendía
10:32For example, Juliet evokes the gift of Ursula
10:35Of preparing herbal remedies to treat Rebecca's appetite
10:39Or when Melquiades takes care of the illness of insomnia
10:50On the other hand, Luisa's gift is similar to José Arcadio Buendía's
10:56Which is described as a force similar to that of a bull capable of knocking down horses
11:10Pepa recalls how Macondo suffers from meteorological adversities
11:15Related to the emotions of the characters or tragic events
11:33Camilo's gift symbolizes the fluidity of identity
11:37And how it can be adapted or confused according to family expectations
11:42An interesting similarity with the relationship between the twins José Arcadio II and Aureliano II
11:55Number 2. Casita
11:57The family home plays a central role
12:00In Encanto it is theorized that Casita houses the soul of grandfather Pedro
12:04That although it has not been fully confirmed
12:06It is similar to how José Arcadio Buendía dreams of infinite rooms
12:11Where in the adaptation of Netflix this idea is magically illustrated with doors that seem to open by themselves
12:19José Arcadio Buendía consoled himself with the dream of infinite rooms
12:23He dreamed that he got up from bed, opened the door and went to another room
12:31The cracks that begin to appear in Casita reflect the emotional fracture of the family and the loss of the miracle
12:38While the house of the Buendías experiences a physical and symbolic deterioration
12:43When Aureliano Babilonia deciphers the manuscripts of Melquiades
12:48Pointing out the end of the lineage
12:51Both houses end up being destroyed
12:54The Buendía house, swept away by the apocalyptic wind that puts an end to the town of Macondo
13:00And Casita with a terrible earthquake that divides the town in two
13:14We have not reached the end yet, but almost
13:17Just make sure to subscribe to our channel and activate the bell to receive notifications of our latest videos
13:24Very well, let's go to the end
13:26Number 1 The Yellow Butterflies
13:29The yellow butterflies are a characteristic insect of the Colombian Caribbean region
13:35So it is not surprising that both Disney and Gabriel García Márquez
13:39Use them as an emblematic narrative resource
13:42To enhance the magical realism present in the novel and the film
13:47And we sort of sprinkle the, you know, the candle motif, iconography and the butterflies
13:54All over the house, all over the town
13:56So like when you see like just details if you watch the movie again
14:00You'll notice like candles, you know, hidden everywhere or butterflies hidden everywhere
14:07In 100 Years of Solitude, the butterflies are associated with Mauricio Babilonia
14:12Which represent a symbol of love and solitude in the universe of the Buendía
14:18In Encanto, the yellow butterflies appear as a recurring motif
14:23At the end they become a visual emblem of the miracle
14:26And the restoration of the family bond when Mirabel and Grandma Alma reconcile
14:32Outro

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