Disney’s Frozen should melt the coldest heart
Disney’s ‘Frozen’ can cure the winter blues, while the amazing short ‘Get a Horse’ puts Mickey Mouse and friends back on … and off … the big screen!
It hasn’t been a great year at the movies for animated films. There have been a few bright spots — Monsters University and Despicable Me 2 did well — but for every hit, there were more films that did not live up to box office expectations — Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs 2, Free Birds, The Croods, Turbo. But you can usually count on Disney to breathe life into the genre with one of their “princess” movies, and it’s safe to say that Frozen will not get a chilly reception from audiences or critics.
The story seems simple on the surface: two princesses are the best of friends growing up. The oldest, Elsa, is blessed/cursed with the ability to create snow and ice, much to the delight of her younger sister Anna. But an accident in their grand ballroon — Elsa accidentally zaps Anna in the head — forces their parents to seek help from a tribe of trolls to heal the girl and remove any memory of Elsa’s powers from her mind. Elsa withdraws from the world and refuses to interact with Anna anymore, leaving the girl to wonder what she’s done. This being a Disney movie, you can bet the parents don’t survive the first act, leaving Anna basically alone in the castle, but on coronation day, Elsa must finally come out of hiding and open the gates to their tiny kingdom. The pressures of the day and Anna’s announcement that she is going to marry a prince she just met cause Elsa to lose control of her powers, sending the land into a deep winter … even though it’s the middle of summer. Elsa flees the kingdom, but Anna is determined to find her and bring her home.
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