If by "feminist" you mean virulent man-hater who thinks embryos should be ripped from wombs just because we can, no. You appear to have made an assumption about me that has zero to do with the subject at hand, and let that color your opinion of my comment.
I appreciate stories that feature strong heroines. In the original book series, Eilonwy is clever, resourceful, practical, and brave. As the female counterpart to Taran's role in the bildungsroman that is the Prydain series, she also has a crucial character development. In the first book she is often obnoxious, untactful, oversensitive, outspoken to a fault, and unrelentingly stubborn. If you know her history, all these things can be argued to be defense mechanisms as she has grown up in a hostile environment.
By the end of the series she has mellowed into a mature young woman - still strong, brave, practical, etc. but without the brashness, rudeness, or cutting sarcasm. Some feminist critics of the series have, in fact, argued that she "fails" to be a progressive heroine because ultimately she sacrifices both her powerful heritage and immortality in order to stay with Taran in a stereotypical wife role. The fact that this role also makes her Queen of Prydain apparently is not enough for them. I think it's a ridiculous argument, as the self-sacrifice she undergoes is exactly the same type that Taran makes in the course of the series, but whatever. You can't please everyone. Personally I find the final direction of her character to be a beautiful typification of a strong and wise woman.
So, I disagree that she is spunky and independent in the movie. She is whiny, insipid, and annoying, in ways that cannot be blamed on her history but were simply decisions made by the screenwriters. I agree that she need not be a warrior or a snob to be empowered and she is neither in the books - she is involved in battle only very briefly, and only because she refuses to stay behind when her friends are in peril; as far as snobbery, Taran is the one obsessed with status and she is the voice of reason to his nonsense. I am, in fact, irritated at the modern film trope that as long as you let a female character swing a sword or toss some arrows that automatically makes her a strong character. It's cliched, stupid, and an insult to women to imply that the ability to chop people's heads off makes women "just as good" as men.
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