Regarding Mulan, a female character sacrifices herself to protect the central male figure in her life through deceit and cunning all the while being helped by the male guardian spirit of her ancestors. In the process of protecting her father to make time she pines for the first strong male figure to enter her life. She then gets discovered as a female and banished from the army as a deviant and told never to come back in spite of proving to be quite capable. Apparently there is then a discussion about how doing this was to prove that she could finally do something right (because she never could have before by being female, she had to be a MAN to do something right). Then the Huns attack and everyone proceeds to ignore her warnings because hey she is just a girl. The Huns sneak in to the palace and hold everyone hostage, so again the female is off to save the day through deceipt and general trickery. She saves the day and then turns down any offers of power or positions of respect to go back home to her strong male figure (Father) and gets followed home by First strong male figure she came accross and they presumably live happilly ever after. Now I quote Wikipedia on this with what seems to be a direct quote Shang, having been advised by the Emperor that 'you don't meet a girl like that every dynasty,' reminding us that being a competant female is truely exceptional.
Yeah I am not exactly holding this up as an amazing banner of progressive entertainment.
See, I see that film a bit differently.
The military draft comes for an old cripple who can barely walk, demonstrating the stupidity of a male-only draft. Mulan, who is quite obviously the better candidate, sees the stupidity in this rule and goes in his place.
The male guardian of their ancestors that they send is completely useless--can't tell the difference between a horse and a cow, gets her caught cheating during training when she had done no such thing, advises her to punch a guy in the back of the head and then slap him on the behind and then yells insults to him causing her to make enemies and get in a fight the moment she walks onto the camp, and later lights a firecracker alerting the enemy to their position. Basically he's more of a hinderance. I wouldn't read too much into the fact that at first she's fooled into following his advice--even in 19th century England, men and women didn't talk too much, and if they did they were expected to get married (one of the culturally weirder parts of Jane Austen books to me).
Despite the adversity, Mulan is soon the head of the class. They move out (because the male guardian forges orders) and she makes the smart tactical decision to cause an avalance. All this causes the commanding officer to say "Ping, you have earned my trust."
Side note: I wouldn't say she pines over the first male figure in her life--she denies liking him, and she never has a moment where she says "oh my god he's hot" even when she's alone. Arguably her actions betray her somewhat, but not to the point that any of the other soldiers notice (they don't even call her a suck-up).
So...anyway, they discover her gender, and go "OH MY GOD HE'S A TRANNY! By law all trannies must be put to death!!!" and the commander responds "No, a life for a life, I'm not going to kill someone who saved me. But I'm no longer sure I can trust you."
Then we come to perhaps the most interesting conversation in the movie. "Maybe I didn't do it for my father. Maybe I did it for myself, because I never fit in as a woman. Maybe I hoped I'd fit in as a man, but I was wrong." *cries* (Or to translate: maybe Mulan really IS a tranny). The male guardian tries to cheer Mulan up by showing her the female reflection and saying "look, you're pretty," at which point Mulan turns away (oh my god he IS a tranny!) So...then Mulan sees six huns pop out of the snow (compared to the millions that arrived) sees them walking towards the city of a million people and thinks "Oh I will need to personally fight them off! I can postpone going back to my hated female life! Hell yes!"
So anyway...the remaining soldiers arrive in the capital, all looking horribly downtrodden and guilty for losing Mulan. On hearing Mulan's voice, the captain immediately responds with a hopeful "Mulan?" (Note that he has only heard this name exactly once). Before changing his tone to "Oh fuck, dude, you shouldn't be here I was supposed to kill you. Get lost." So Mulan's like "I saw huns in the mountain, trust me." And he's like "Why should I trust you? You deceived me the entire time I knew you."
Mulan goes up to some total strangers in the crowd and says things like (direct quote from the movie) "Please sir, you have to help me," in a large city...and gets predictable "don't touch me" results. The incompetent male guardian chalks this up to sexism and laments the unequal treatment of women.
So...Mulan is proven right, and somehow in a crowded square, six huns take the emperor hostage. The Captain and his crew try to break down the door, Mulan sees the strategy they're using, and decides that it's going to take too much time. She determines that the best way to speed things up is to use more trannies! So she gets three of the men to crossdress (including applying full makeup) as part of her "faster" solution. Naturally this fits these "men" psychologically to a T, and one of the soldiers asks "does this dress make me look fat?" Also, they all seem to know how to walk...and kick in a full length dress.
Natrually the trannies singlehandedly take out all the guards, but then they send in the only non-tranny in their group, and he gets knocked out. So Mulan stays behind to make sure he doesn't die and to make sure the hun can't follow the group with the emperor. Before proceeding to kill the hun using inferior weaponry, Mulan makes sure the hun knows that they've met before, and knows that Mulan is really a boy inside.
So anyway, once the hun is dead, the emperor makes this speech "I've heard a great deal about you Faa Mulan. You stole your father's clothing. Ran away from home. Started living full-time as a man. Became so successful in your new life that not even your commanding officer suspected. Oh, and I guess you also blew up my palace, broke the anti-tranny laws, and saved everyone in China. Whatever, you're a totally awesome tranny, and I'm going to bow to you now."
The Emperor offers Mulan a position in the council, but makes the mistake of calling Mulan a woman. Mulan politely declines making up some excuse about seeing family. So he insists Mulan at least take a medal, to get some level of family respect instead of the original hated life. Mulan hugs the emperor, the other soldiers hug Mulan, then the captain...holds back from hugging and says "uhh umm uhh...you're a good fighter?" Mulan's like "dude wtf?" and walks off.
So the emperor goes up to the Captain and makes the comment "the flower that blooms in adversity is the rarest of them all." And the captain's like "Sir?" And the emperor's like "Dude, that's like a slave from Georgia becoming a Shakespeare-level playwright. Hey, did you know we normally kill trannies in Ancient China? Funny story..."
So Mulan goes back to the old female life, goes up to her father and says "look, I know I'm a tranny and stuff, but hey, I got the sword of the kingdom and the medal of the emperor.
Please don't reject me for being a tranny." And her father's like "the greatest gift and honour, is having you for a daughter." (At this point, Mulan's probably thinking "thank god he didn't disown me, because if this movie were at all realistic, that was highly probable.")
So...the lovesick captain follows Mulan home, but on seeing Mulan, loses all coherency again and says "you forgot your helmet. Wait, I guess it's your...hemlet...oh my god trannies make me so confused!" Mulan takes charge (the first actual move she's made on him) and says "do you want to stay for dinner?" Might as well keep reminders of the old male life nearby.
The moral of this story is that trannies save kingdoms. The more trannies the better. Also, parents shouldn't reject their kids for being a tranny, and you shouldn't mistrust someone for being a tranny.