Disney's Frozen - Part 1

Status
Not open for further replies.
I do know that. However, looking at the lineup for the year, I'm not expecting to see one I'll like more. There's one with a possibility but I'm still expecting to end up liking this one more.

The movie that I think I'm probably going to enjoy the most is Cap 2. However, among the movies I've seen in 2013 I have to rank Frozen pretty much right up there with the best that I saw.
 
I might check this out later this week. I hope I enjoy it as much as you guys. :woot:

you better go see it!! :cmad:

and you better love it, too!! :o

or I will use this!!

tumblr_lvpcgzFEQQ1qcddlw.gif
 
We've seen so much of this movie before. With the whole princess having to be kissed by her true love to save her, with the two suitors with which one might be her true love is reminiscent of Enchanted. In this film they turned on the fairy tale clichés, especially with the whole perfect prince thing and then turning that on its head. Then they set up the true loves kiss angle and then they turned on that as well. They set up this movie with all the formula cliché’s of previous princess movies and then over turned them for modern audiences, like making fun of the whole falling in love and trusting the other completely on the first date thing that we've seen in previous princess films. The troll song was there to say that whomever you end up with will be somewhat of a fixer upper for you and that people don't change, basically telling the audience your significant other won’t be perfect. This film is in the same vain as films like Enchanted and the first two Shrek movies and as well as Brave, that they are princess films that basically negate the unhealthy messages about love and relationships and women. We get that Disney wants to turn away from its unhealthy depiction of love and relationships from previous princess films, but all the while they still depict princesses with their perfect little bodies and faces that little girls emulate and want to look like when they grow up. I'm sure Disney is willing to continue making a fortune on princess dolls and gowns for little girls based on those images.

Also why does Disney always have to kill off the parents?

The facial animation seamed stiff on the two girls faces, there were subtle movements around their eyes, but there wasn't a wide range of facial expression on the two of them. Their cheeks were like stiff plastic. In terms of great character animation what really stood out for me was during the the 'Let it Go' sequence.
 
Last edited:
I was walking down the street one night and this lady had her window down blasting "Let It Go" and singing her heart out. I would have given her a thumbs up, but it was kind of late, and I don't want to look like a crazy person. I made it clear down the other end of the block and I could still hear the music. **** is contagious.
 
I was walking down the street one night and this lady had her window down blasting "Let It Go" and singing her heart out. I would have given her a thumbs up, but it was kind of late, and I don't want to look like a crazy person. I made it clear down the other end of the block and I could still hear the music. **** is contagious.

:woot:
 
And it did it!!

Frozen's crossed the $300m mark.

Tues made $1.9m to push the total to $300,321,753!!

Congrats Elsa and Anna!!
 
We've seen so much of this movie before. With the whole princess having to be kissed by her true love to save her, with the two suitors with which one might be her true love is reminiscent of Enchanted. In this film they turned on the fairy tale clichés, especially with the whole perfect prince thing and then turning that on its head. Then they set up the true loves kiss angle and then they turned on that as well. They set up this movie with all the formula cliché’s of previous princess movies and then over turned them for modern audiences, like making fun of the whole falling in love and trusting the other completely on the first date thing that we've seen in previous princess films. The troll song was there to say that whomever you end up with will be somewhat of a fixer upper for you and that people don't change, basically telling the audience your significant other won’t be perfect. This film is in the same vain as films like Enchanted and the first two Shrek movies and as well as Brave, that they are princess films that basically negate the unhealthy messages about love and relationships and women. We get that Disney wants to turn away from its unhealthy depiction of love and relationships from previous princess films, but all the while they still depict princesses with their perfect little bodies and faces that little girls emulate and want to look like when they grow up. I'm sure Disney is willing to continue making a fortune on princess dolls and gowns for little girls based on those images.

Also why does Disney always have to kill off the parents?

The facial animation seamed stiff on the two girls faces, there were subtle movements around their eyes, but there wasn't a wide range of facial expression on the two of them. Their cheeks were like stiff plastic. In terms of great character animation what really stood out for me was during the the 'Let it Go' sequence.
I fail to see the problem. There's nothing wrong with the princess genre in an of itself. What annoys a lot of people is how the princesses are depicted, particularly in the earlier Disney movies. They were passive, bland, helpless damsels to be rescued and the romances were shallow. Disney has been trying to rectify that in recent years, and Tangled/Frozen are two steps in the right direction. They are how you do princesses right.
 
They just had no lines.

and yet without saying a single word, they conveyed more emotions in their facial expressions and body language than some real actors can through dialogue.

that was one thing that really impressed me in Tangled.
 
and yet without saying a single word, they conveyed more emotions in their facial expressions and body language than some real actors can through dialogue.

that was one thing that really impressed me in Tangled.

That scene before the lighting of the lanterns. The expression on the father's face really got to me.
 
Mine favorite scene of them was the look that they gave each other right before they saw Repunzel as a teenager for the first time. Worry, hesitation, hope, etc. It was all there. The Queen's reaction when she recognizes Repunzel as her daughter was also excellently done.
 
Wow, I didn't even really notice Rapunzel's parents had no speaking line. That has never crossed my mind. Good job, Disney animation.

And yeah, when the see their daughter for the first time as a teenager it made me feel all warm in the inside as I was tearing up.

Superb.
 
Close enough.

I suppose, but being as how this is Disney's official representation of the characters, the least they could do is get Elsa's hair color right!

You'd think somebody at the studio that created the movie would know she's a platinum blonde.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Staff online

Latest posts

Forum statistics

Threads
202,266
Messages
22,076,011
Members
45,875
Latest member
Pducklila
Back
Top
monitoring_string = "afb8e5d7348ab9e99f73cba908f10802"