While we might have loved Disney princess movies when we were growing up, looking back we know there's a lot wrong with the messages those movies send. Whether it's the damsel in distress idea or the message that girls have to fit into certain gender roles, it's important that as we move forward re-watching our childhood faves we keep in mind how they are actually influencing us. That's exactly why we have so much hope when a remake comes out — it's a chance for us to revisit the movies that brought us so much joy as kids and a chance for the filmmakers to rethink the harmful messaging. It's also why the new Snow White adaptation is so upsetting.

Body positive model Tess Holliday tweeted a photo of a promotional poster for Red Shoes and the 7 Dwarfs, a Snow White spoof by Locus Studios, calling it out for obvious fat shaming. The poster shows a slender woman in a white shirt, red skirt and red shoes standing next to a plumper woman wearing the same outfit, but holding the shoes. Next to her, it says "What if Snow White was no longer beautiful and the 7 dwarfs not so short?" This, Tess pointed out, implies that the plumper version of the Snow White in the picture is not beautiful because she's fat.

"How did this get approved by an entire marketing team? Why is it okay to tell young kids being fat = ugly?" she wrote, tagging Chloe Grace Moretz at the end, who Mashable reports is the voice of Snow White.

The trailer for the movie posted on YouTube only backs up Tess' tweet. It shows the dwarfs hiding in Snow White's cottage, secretly watching her undress (which is a whole separate problem than the body shaming). As they watch her, the dwarfs are visibly excited as the slender Snow White disrobes, but when she takes off her shoes, the previously skinny woman is suddenly fatter. The dwarfs react in horror, implying that seeing a fat woman naked is gross or displeasing, but seeing the skinny woman is exciting and good. Again, the movie appears to be saying fat is ugly.

Tess makes a great point. Implying that Snow White would be less beautiful if she were fat sends the message that fat people aren't beautiful. It contributes to the stringent standards set by media that tell people they have to look one certain way to be considered pretty, when the reality is that beauty comes in all shapes and sizes. And while the movie is meant to be a spoof, it's still harmful to send the message that skinny is beautiful and fat is not because the average woman does not look like the skinny Snow White. That means the movie would tell the majority of women in the U.S. that there is something inherently wrong with their body, and that's just not true.

Others have also chimed in on the movie's message.

*Images courtesy of Twitter/@Tess_Holliday

Related: A New Study Says Playing Disney Princesses Is Bad for Kids