also Zavvi's releasing this set and oh is it ever nice!
https://us.zavvi.com/blu-ray/disney-s-f ... 70557.html
This puts a blemish on this movie that cannot ever be removed now ^^ I don’t like Elsa’s statement nor do I appreciate Kristoff’s taking advantage of the situation in that same scene. It seems to me a bit unclear what J. Lee actually thinks for if I’m correct the idea of a redemption came from her in the early drafts for the sequel around 2014/2015. So if your statement is true, it seems like she can easily change her mind. Nonetheless I will always love Hans from the bottom of my heart whatever filmmakers might say about him <3 <3unprincess wrote:Clindor since youre a Hans fan, Im curious what you thought of the scene where Elsa calls Hans an irredeemable monster. Alot of Hans fans felt it was J. Lee's (rather meanspirited)answer to the Hans fans about giving him a redemption arc.

What I found most funny is their mother is a Northuldra, so she's basically a POC even though her adult self looks very white while her child self doesn't, but it also mean that very white Anna and Elsa are actually POC.thedisneyspirit wrote: Do the new characters do anything of interest, or are they just window dressing so people don't attack the film of being too white? People seem to be shipping Elsa with the new girl for randomness.
A. Because she was afraid of revealing who she was to the people of Arendelle. She acknowledged it several throughout the movie. And after all it is justifiable, even justified. Remember of the war context between the two groups? Remember how Arendelle people became suddenly suspicious of their OWN queen the day of her coronation when it was revealed that Elsa has powers? Only the king knew about Inunda’s origins. The fact that she escaped the forest was even a secret to her own people. And being alone in Arendelle, she was uncertain about revealing this to anyone else. Including her own daughters. The fact that Elsa was born with powers surely didn’t help. The first movie precisely shows this.farerb wrote:A. Why didn't Iduna say anyhthing about the spirits and the fifth spirits since she's from the Enchanted Forest and knows about these things.
B. Why didn't Grand Pabbie say anything since it seemed in the sequel that he was knowledgeable about the Enchanted Forest and the spirits.
C. Why did it take their parents too long to take that journey? They've been dealing with the problem of Elsa's powers since she was a little girl, but waited for her to be 18 to find answers from that magical place?
But no people of Arendelle were present at the scene. Only the trolls, her husband and her girls, so who was she afraid of?Clindor wrote:A. Because she was afraid of revealing who she was to the people of Arendelle. She acknowledged it several throughout the movie. And after all it is justifiable, even justified. Remember of the war context between the two groups? Remember how Arendelle people became suddenly suspicious of their OWN queen the day of her coronation when it was revealed that Elsa has powers? Only the king knew about Inunda’s origins. The fact that she escaped the forest was even a secret to her own people. And being alone in Arendelle, she was uncertain about revealing this to anyone else. Including her own daughters. The fact that Elsa was born with powers surely didn’t help.farerb wrote:A. Why didn't Iduna say anyhthing about the spirits and the fifth spirits since she's from the Enchanted Forest and knows about these things.
B. Why didn't Grand Pabbie say anything since it seemed in the sequel that he was knowledgeable about the Enchanted Forest and the spirits.
C. Why did it take their parents too long to take that journey? They've been dealing with the problem of Elsa's powers since she was a little girl, but waited for her to be 18 to find answers from that magical place?
B. Does Grand Pabbie know anything about all this?? It seems more like he can “feel” things and have visions rather than accurate knowledge. Being a magical creature like a troll it make sense. Remember how his visions about Elsa’s future was unclear in the first movie? Well, apparently it has changed since.
C. You have to revisit the first movie to answer this question. During the “Do you want to build a snowman?” sequence, it is showed that the parents first wanted to control their daughter’s powers, thinking that it was possible for Elsa to achieve that. THEN the parents decided to take that journey exactly RIGHT AFTER Elsa’s ultimate statement: “I’m scared. It’s getting stronger!”. At that exact moment they understood that Elsa was incapable of helping herself and that there was no other choice but to venture through this perilous journey, even if it was life-threatening.
What scene? When Elsa is brought to the trolls for the first time? Her mother having no powers, and no one having a clue what Elsa’s powers mean, what’s even the point of revealing something the parents personally intend to keep secret? As for Elsa, fear doesn’t necessarily gets the best of them. Was it even rational to make a connection between those two facts then?farerb wrote:But no people of Arendelle were present at the scene. Only the trolls, her husband and her girls, so who was she afraid of?Clindor wrote: A. Because she was afraid of revealing who she was to the people of Arendelle. She acknowledged it several throughout the movie. And after all it is justifiable, even justified. Remember of the war context between the two groups? Remember how Arendelle people became suddenly suspicious of their OWN queen the day of her coronation when it was revealed that Elsa has powers? Only the king knew about Inunda’s origins. The fact that she escaped the forest was even a secret to her own people. And being alone in Arendelle, she was uncertain about revealing this to anyone else. Including her own daughters. The fact that Elsa was born with powers surely didn’t help.
B. Does Grand Pabbie know anything about all this?? It seems more like he can “feel” things and have visions rather than accurate knowledge. Being a magical creature like a troll it make sense. Remember how his visions about Elsa’s future was unclear in the first movie? Well, apparently it has changed since.
C. You have to revisit the first movie to answer this question. During the “Do you want to build a snowman?” sequence, it is showed that the parents first wanted to control their daughter’s powers, thinking that it was possible for Elsa to achieve that. THEN the parents decided to take that journey exactly RIGHT AFTER Elsa’s ultimate statement: “I’m scared. It’s getting stronger!”. At that exact moment they understood that Elsa was incapable of helping herself and that there was no other choice but to venture through this perilous journey, even if it was life-threatening.
Grand Pabbie was pretty knowledgeable in the sequel. Not just sensing things. He even mentioned the spirits before he started doing his thing with the lights
When Elsa said it she was what 12? 14? They went to the journey and drowned when she was 18. That's still a long time.
If Elsa actually ascended and became the fifth spirit or whatever then yes, but the only transformation she got was a new shiny dress so probably not.thedisneyspirit wrote:With the way the film ended,would it be possible for Frozen 3 to be the faithful adaptation of the Snow Queen? Or has that ship sailed long ago?
I find it really odd that they didn't go this route. When the spoilers were first leaked a few months ago, this is what I assumed was going to happen along with Elsa and Anna's separation, but basically they just don't live together anymore. And even then, it doesn't take much for one sister to reach the other.farerb wrote:If Elsa actually ascended and became the fifth spirit or whatever then yes, but the only transformation she got was a new shiny dress so probably not.thedisneyspirit wrote:With the way the film ended,would it be possible for Frozen 3 to be the faithful adaptation of the Snow Queen? Or has that ship sailed long ago?

