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posted by maryksand
Music

At this point it is safe to conclude that the music is the most prominently outstanding aspect of Frozen. Moreover, the soundtrack, score and presentation of marvelously spectacular and masterfully performed songs are objectively and noticeably superior to those of any of the other movies pertaining to a so-called “New Era” of Disney such as Princess and the Frog, Tangled, Brave and Wreck it Ralph. That undoubtedly have their merits and are exceptionally competent and engaging in terms of using music to set up a necessary mood. However, are nowhere in the neighborhood of the breathtakingly captivating, emotionally powerful, challenging and mesmerizing creative/artistic endeavor that Frozen soundtrack is. “Let it go” specifically meets Disney’s asserted criteria of iconic, rivaling universally beloved and notable musical numbers from movies like “Aladdin”, “The little Mermaid” and “Lion King”.

Animation

Animation was, frustratingly, considerably less detailed in terms of backgrounds, patterns and surfaces that were not nearly as fleshed out and substantially crafted as in case with other Disney’s CGI hits such as Tangled and Brave. Frozen animation is too artificial but nonetheless remarkably impressive in regards to elaborately executed facial expressions and conveyance of characters’ emotions.

Elsa and Kristoff in particular showcase a wide and extensive variety of feelings by means of very subtle, barely visible yet distinct glances, mimicry and depiction of how the muscles of their faces move when they were unsettled, distressed, annoyed, exhausted, determined, playful, tired, etc. Portrayal of Anna’s emotional spectrum was less consistent there where her expressions are concerned but the aforementioned flaw was entirely compensated by touchingly awkward, distinguishing gestures and a compellingly displayed body language, easily recognizable when compared to actual human movements.

The plot/character dynamics & conflict

Plot narrative is structured around an incredibly important and crucial issue many families with “special” children - and essentially those children themselves as they grow up and have to face and work through/cope with their differences from established societal norms and unfortunate instances of antagonism imposed on them for the mere fact of their uniqueness - are confronted with.

Admittedly, the movie could have provided a more thorough insight into Elsa’s psychological struggles and specifically her rehabilitation after years of anguishing, mentally burdening and highly traumatizing isolation harmful impacts of which the movie unreasonably downplayed.

That said, Frozen is the first Disney Princess film to address and straightforwardly, without any hesitance or double meanings emphasize the issue of societal rejection not induced by someone’s external/outward features that ultimately prompt people to demonize them for both legitimate and invalid reasons. For instance, in case with Beast the ignorance of the villagers and their inherent inability to accept what was conventionally perceived as inappropriate and off putting on the surface nearly cost him a life. Yet Beast’s own lack of consideration and basic decency towards others could have entailed Belle’s father’s death if she hadn’t pursued him and begged Beast to take her captive instead. BaTB narrative largely oversimplified and reduced this premise to a cute moralistic tale of a misguided man being redeemed and reformed by love of a morally superior woman whose consistent patronizing and devoted investment in exposing him to table mannerism and Shakespeare resulted in his miraculous revamp both literally and figuratively as though the severity of his mental and anger management issues never existed.

This is NOT what happens in Frozen. Poignantly, Elsa is bound to adjust to her condition and live with it. The movie highlights a commonly misleading manner in which Elsa and Anna’s parents handled Elsa’s uniqueness. Rather than helping their daughter to harmonize and balance out her internal ongoing struggle they insisted that she represses the essence of her capacities. Thus inadvertently depriving a brightly imaginative girl of a formative and valuable opportunity to unleash her creative potential - which came directly from a place of her emotions she was advised to fiercely struggle with and keep undisclosed on behalf of other people’s convenience and safety. Not excluding that of her own sister whose well being has always been Elsa’s dominant priority especially after a terrifying childhood incident she never stopped inwardly blaming herself for.

Ultimate lack of help and support led to total and utter alienation Elsa was meant to relive, on top of being emotionally caged and subjected to carrying an unbearable burden of psychological restrains placed on her due to her family’s incompetent and ineffective approach towards the controversy of her unusual abilities and Anna’s obscurity in that respect. The narrative outright acknowledges how tremendously and enormously problematic and destructive the environment Anna and Elsa’s parents created for either of them appeared to be in a grand scheme of things, making both girls miserable.

What further contributes to the morbidness of the situation is the fact that the King and Queen sincerely and genuinely strove to protect both of their daughters. Without recognizing how vital it was for them to maintain a verbal connection which could have helped accustoming to Elsa’s issues and for the latter to learn to handle her mental struggles efficiently. Fulfilling herself by indulging in her prominent skills and using them to her own and her sister’s advantage without an incessant paralyzing fear of negative consequences.

It would have undeniably been a more constructive method of working towards resolving the problem than separating sisters from each other by metaphorical walls of perpetually concealed truths. Until the point when - similarly to the way such issues tend to function for people wrestling with emotional triggers in real life - Elsa’s secret finally backfires immensely resulting in instant societal rejection her parents were unwaveringly preoccupied with not letting happen in the first place.

On the other hand, Elsa was exposed to the same set of choices a person whose deviation from a traditional mold is not embraced/accepted by their surrounding gets to face: either being left at mercy of integrally judgmental, implausibly dismissive and condescending society or construct an environment where isolation is still inevitably prevalent but at least you can finally attain a long awaited contentment and comfort with yourself. Reveling in your uniqueness, setting your own pace of life and dwelling on your capabilities with no additional concerns about not being perceived as socially acceptable. Or worse, ending up inflicting irrevocable and unwanted damage on others (as it already happened once if analyzed from the stand point of the context behind Elsa’s situation specifically).

Anna is an amusingly and overwhelmingly realistic representation of a family member affected by the toxicity of faulty methods used to deal with the problems endured by the other family member. Frozen does an endearingly heartwarming (yes, the pun is completely intended and inserted here on purpose) job examining and drawing a necessary attention to importance of support. Without positioning Elsa as a damsel for the mere fact of needing help after years of persistently ongoing anguish and irreversible trauma imposed by continual psychological terror - to the point where she legitimately started considering herself a monster.

The sequence where Anna informs her sister about the latter setting up an eternal winter is particularly powerful and bittersweet. Unconditional optimism and devastatingly immeasurable yearning to offer Elsa a helping hand on Anna’s part equates with a discouraging futility of similar efforts made by family members and friends of people with psychological issues. Because said issues require large amounts of time and space to be sufficiently studied and explored by the person undergoing and experiencing them.

“You’ll only make it worse!” - this line comes off as outstandingly realistic depiction of a person whose anxiety and emotional escalation have reached an exceeding and dangerous point while someone else is desperately trying to tell them to just miraculously overcome this progressively intensifying internal conflict. Disney certainly deserves a credit for such an unapologetic, unabashedly and brutally honest presentation of the issue.

And obviously, sisterly dynamic is what primarily drives the plot and leads it to satisfying yet ambiguous conclusion: once the society finally exhibits recognition of Elsa’s condition which is no longer repressed or cleverly hidden from the watchful eye of the world she is able to reclaim her title as a ruler. Becoming a competent authoritative representative despite not reflecting conventional and highly exclusive/restrictive concepts of appropriate or conforming to designed notions of what is or isn’t acceptable that are based on deeply instilled and unreasonable prejudice. Proceeding to enjoy a delightful and well organized existence by the side of her sister who has solidified her loyalty and willingness to stick around through thick and thin.

The villain

Villain “switch” was tritely predictable and utterly contrived not only because the Duke was too much of an exaggerated shady and greedy elderly person a la Principal Guilty from Stripperella but due to obnoxious reinforcement of a heavily unflattering and insufferably outdated “right guy vs. wrong guy” dichotomy the movie unwisely resorted to. Which comes across as considerably unsettling after the brilliant deconstruction of this cliche riddled formula graciously provided by “Enchanted” where the heroine doesn’t end up with her initial suitor but a chivalrous, old fashioned Prince is not antagonized for being expressively narcissistic and presumptuous/exceedingly confident. Nor is painted as an inherently cunning, morally corrupt evil schemes plotting pretender in order to uphold the agenda of a yet another male lead with flaws (vastly unappealing - at least to me - trope that significantly diminished the validity and credibility of Beauty and the Beast where Gaston vs. Beast fiasco was forcibly imposed on the audience as a part of it’s patronizing narrative revolving around a “don’t judge the book by it’s cover” premise). Speaking of a male lead with flaws…

Romantic storyline

Kristoff is a firmly and paradoxically opinionated anti-social outcast and a willful loner who prefers the company of his inexhaustibly loyal and devoted reindeer Sven. His budding romance with Anna and a fundamental concept their relationship’s evolution was molded by - from a fictional stand point - was dangerously close to devolving to the same aggravating contrivance the development of such Disney romances as Giselle & Robert or Tiana/Naveen fell a victim to (and definitely did not initially seem reminiscent of adorably organic journey of unconditional acceptance Rapunzel and Flynn set out on when growing to appreciate, respect and cherish the least appealing and engaging facets of one another. Instead of scolding and nitpicking on each other until the point where one of them or either undergoes a drastic transformation and matches their potential romantic partner’s standard and expectations of a perfect boyfriend/girlfriend material as in case with the majority of Disney pairings that didn’t start as “love at first sight”. What stood out the most about Tangled was the lack of “rehabilitation” arc and two characters starting to fall for each other BEFORE any changes on either part occurred).

Frozen featured two avidly individualistic protagonists with diametrically opposing and conflicting mentalities whose worlds collided unexpectedly and under less than natural and casual circumstances. There was a brief moment when I almost expected the movie to throw in an unbearably forced, supposedly poetic line that would make me shudder and cringe the same way “if I can mince you can dance” did. This romance mold Disney is inexplicably prone to endorsing is something I’m still having extremely hard time perceiving as compelling. Seeing as the premise of this trope at it’s core basically stands for two people forcing their subjective ideas of entertainment and their internalized outlooks on worthwhile and deserving life style on one another which the narrative unconvincingly passes for character growth and romantic progression. Giselle and Robert did not escape a similar unenviable sloppiness.

Surprisingly, this was not the case with Anna and Kristoff per say. Kristoff’s frustration with certain aspects of Anna’s behavior had little to nothing to do with her personality type and rather was related to HIS lack of experience in regards to social interaction - qualities they coincidentally had in common. Their partnership was based on effective and equal mutual reliance.

"Fixer Upper", despite being arguably the weakest song of the film (and definitely the one that could have been replaced and/or omitted to leave a room for other, higher quality and more character driven musical numbers such as "We know better" that unfortunately didn’t make it into the movie) addressed a crucial point Disney doesn’t deliver to the audience through it’s narratives NEARLY enough (often perpetuating the reverse message): you cannot fix a person or change them. It IS, however, possible to perceive and firmly grasp the positive, remarkable and admirable underlying layers of them if there is a profound emotional bond between two people that gradually strengthens as they expose each other to more dimensions of their persona.

The romance in Frozen pays homage to traditional fairy tale concepts of “meant to be”. As corny and sappy as this trope might seem to some it works in established context and logically fits the characterization. Anna and Kristoff is a prime example of a predestined love, especially in the light of little Kristoff’s overflowing curiosity leading him to Anna years before they crossed their paths again, never to part.

Sidekicks

Sven and Olaf are essentially tied into the plot moving it forward and playing relevant roles concerning the story arc. Kristoff and Sven’s backstory and relationship are a sympathetic representation of people’s attachment to their pets that have been with them since early childhood. Worthy of a special mention is also the moment when Elsa realizes she breathed the life into Olaf with her powers. Her eyes light up with radiance for she couldn’t possibly imagine her extraordinary ability ever entailing pleasant consequences rather than negative ones.

In conclusion

Frozen is a fascinatingly enjoyable, esthetically pleasing and artistically valuable film that might not live up to legendary status of some of it’s predecessors but without a shed of a doubt is going to take a high niche in Disney franchise and is worth familiarizing yourself with.
posted by avatar_tla_fan
I thought I'd do this one next. Anyways, keep in mind that this is my opinion, and we may disagree, so respect my opinion and I'll respect yours.

Enjoy the article! :)



When Will My Life Begin?
I don't care if people say it's unmemorable, I absolutely love it, and it's my favorite song from the movie. I love Mandy Moore's voice, and it's one of my favorite Disney Princess voices. I also enjoy the tone of the song, and think it's quite lovely. I don't really like the ending too much though. I still love the song though.



Mother Knows Best
I like this song too, though not as much as When...
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Hi! I'm @arendelle and this is my list, least to favorite. Enjoy!

11: Beauty and The Beast

This movie, I simply found boring. It reminds me of most movies where a girl looks inside of the man and he saves her. The end. To me, it was a very cliche modern fairy tale, one I'd probably make up as a child to tell an adult. I feel like Beauty and The Beast scores better with a younger audience than an older one, since it teaches good moral values that maybe little one's don't know but we do.
Music: I found the music poorly written and rushed. Even though I do like the chorus in the song Belle a lot,...
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posted by arendelle
Hi! I'm @arendelle, aka Ariana, and this is my get to know me article.

I'm a huge fan of Disney/Broadway, without a doubt. I'm going to see Wicked (sometime in early December, tickets aren't on sale until September), and Phantom of the Opera (January 11th). The first ever play I saw was Beauty And The Beast, and I got to meet Belle. (I was really excited when I did meet her as a child).

So I see people make a list of their favorite Disney Princesses, so I guess I'll make mine :)

1: Cinderella
2: Aurora
3: Ariel
4: Pocahontas
5: Mulan
6: Belle
7: Tiana
8: Rapunzel
9: Merida
10: Elsa
11: Anna
12: Snow White...
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1st place: "I See the Light" - euny
1st place: "I See the Light" - euny
Welcome to the 3rd Icon of the Month Article!!!

This time our Winner is *Drumroll*

euny with her Icon: "I See The Light"
Congrats girl!!!

2nd: nmdis: "Red"
3rd: CraZy_rawR: "Details"

Here is the interview with the winner, euny!

~ About You ~

When did you join?
I don’t remember, but I wasn’t very active until last year.

Why did you join?
Because I was starting to love Disney.

How did you pick your username?
It’s a short version of my real name.

What is your favorite Princess?
Rapunzel. She's so sweet, intelligent and fun.

~ About the icon: ~

What program did you use?
PicMonkey.

How did you...
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posted by amnakhan44
Let it go, let it go
Can’t hold you back anymore
Let it go, let it go
Turn my back and slam the door

The snow blows white on the mountain tonight
Not a footprint to be seen
A kingdom of isolation and it looks like I’m the queen
The wind is howling like the swirling storm inside
Couldn’t keep it in
Heaven knows I try

Don’t let them in, don’t let them see
Be the good girl you always had to be
Conceal, don’t feel, don’t let them know
Well now they know

Let it go, let it go
Can’t hold you back anymore
Let it go, let it go,
Turn my back and slam the door
And here I stand
And here I’ll stay
Let it...
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posted by bluethunder25
bluethunder25: Hello everyone, this is bluethunder25 and I am here with the First Lady of The Disney Princesses, the lovely Snow White. Snow, thank you for taking the time to be here.

Snow White: Thank you very much for having me.

bluethunder25: Well, Snow White, obviously, you're the first Disney Princess. You were a Disney Princess before it was even cool to be one. How did it all start for you?

Snow White: Well back in the days cartoon stars had to meet a certain criteria. You had your Betty Boop's, your Koko's, your Bimbo's; I first approached Flescher Studios and told them I wanted to be...
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added by MJ_Fan_4Life007
added by MJ_Fan_4Life007
added by cynti19
Source: disneyscreencaps
added by cynti19
Source: disneyscreencaps
added by cynti19
Source: disneyscreencaps
added by cynti19
Source: disneyscreencaps
added by cynti19
Source: disneyscreencaps
added by cynti19
Source: disneyscreencaps
added by sweetie-94
Source: thedisneyprincess.tumblr.com
added by sweetie-94
Source: thedisneyprincess.tumblr.com
posted by sweetie-94
Chapter 3: Two Sleeping Girls
"I just got a message from my parents, they're not on a party as they had told me before, they're in Greece and won't be back until the next month", Anika told the other girls
"That means we could stay here during that time if our parents allow that", Jodi replied
"Well, shall we all go to our houses and ask our parents if we can stay with you for a month", Paige asked the others
"You mean all the ones who are feeling well", Linda said
"Yes, that was what I meant", Paige replied
"Sure, sounds like a great idea", Irene answered

While the others where away Anika stayed...
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posted by GreatLance_30
Mulan going to Ursula
Mulan going to Ursula
She found out that Mulan is secretly communicating to Ursula. Aya then hides and heard their conversation. Mulan said "Please make me a spell that will change me back into a strong Disney Princess again!", Ursula answered "Sure warrior, but remember, in every spell there is a condition..." Mulan replied "What?", Ursula quickly said "She!" pointing to Aya...

Aya then accepted it bravely, but Mulan contradicts she said "No I don't want anybody hurt because of me" Aya replied, "But what about you?" Mulan said "Maybe there is another way?". Ursula said "There is a harder way, since the princesses...
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posted by BookWorm26
Prologue
Once there was a kingdom were everyone and everything lived in peace. Were this was in was in a storybook. But in that storybook land, there were villains who wanted a happy ending and power. They would go to great lengths to get what they want, but would never get what they went there for.

One day, they found a way. It set back the stories, and the characters never had any memory. But there was a twist. Anything that made the villains angry, they make it worse. Each villain had their own memory and would do anything to keep their story the same.

But something happened. A young woman...
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posted by DsnyPrincess
1. Congratulations for being December Fan of the Month! How did you feel?
I think it's so sweet when people give me good feedback. I'm happy that my contributions are appreciated. So I feel honored to be FOTM.

2. How did you first get on Fanpop and Disney Princess spot?
I was searching for random DP lists and images, then discovered Fanpop.

3. What is your favorite activity on Fanpop? The polls, I love making them and voting on them. I'm not good at expressing my opinions though.

4. Is there a Disney Princess whom you can relate yourself to? If yes, who? If no, to which Disney/non-Disney heroine...
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