
There's that white streak again. And this is when she's with Hans, presumably before the coronation.


Then why do you keep watching it?TsWade2 wrote:Eeew! I hate Spongebob!disneyprincess11 wrote: Exactly why this is fake! I'm praying that Santino is singing in this (which I'm guessing he will), but previously in the "leaked" songs, Hans does not sing. Oops, now magically with a Broadway star, he has a song.![]()
Well, of course, R. Lopez just finished the songs recently, so the Santino song could be added in the last second?
Plus, Hey People?That IMMEDIATELY makes me think of:
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[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=THlUD-VQry4[/youtube]
The movie is not going to tank. It's a generic 3D film with stupid sidekicks, which is basically ticket bait these days for families who could care less whether animated films are good as long as they entertain their 3 year-old's. Combine that with the fact that they've strategically stolen everything possible from Tangled (and its own stolen ideas/designs from B&tB/TLM/Aladdin), it's clear that any idea that it might tank is just hopeful wishing.disneyprincess11 wrote:Does Disney want this to tank?
You mean " melted off "DisneyJedi wrote:Why do I get the feeling that Olaf will end up being the most lovable character in the film, only to end up being killed off for real?
Remember Ray from The Princess and the Frog? When the first teaser for that movie came online, everyone thought he was going to suck. But when the movie came out, he became the most lovable character in the film and he got killed off.
Mike Giaimo wrote:And then when I started looking back at all my notes from the Scandinavian book, I realized that about 80 percent were all on things and locations from Norway. So I decided Norway was it.
Why didn't they make Kristoff a Sami outright since they were influenced by them?Mike Giaimo wrote:We were influenced by a Sami couple who ran a reindeer farm. The Sami are similar to our Native Americans in the U.S. They are indigenous; they’ve lived in Norway for thousands of years. Their cultural roots run really deep. They influenced our creation of Kristoff. His outfit is Sami influenced.
Really, seeing little Kristoff, Elsa and Anna, I can’t wait to see how this opens! Hopefully with a song too?And that’s how our film actually opens—we see the ice harvesters at work and we meet, at that time, a very young Kristoff and Sven. He’s about six years old and he’s learning the trade from the adult ice harvesters. We see a baby Sven with him, too, who’s trying to tow his own block of ice with the big guys”
Is this really that much different from what they've been doing in the past. Films like Snow White and Cinderella also take place in fictional kingdoms in unspecified locations, it isn't mentioned that they were set in Germany/France etc nor were they realistic representations of those nations in either case.Sotiris wrote:Mike Giaimo wrote:And then when I started looking back at all my notes from the Scandinavian book, I realized that about 80 percent were all on things and locations from Norway. So I decided Norway was it.
Since they were so heavily inspired by Norway, why didn't they set the film there? You can still have a fictional kingdom in a real country.
Why didn't they make Kristoff a Sami outright since they were influenced by them?Mike Giaimo wrote:We were influenced by a Sami couple who ran a reindeer farm. The Sami are similar to our Native Americans in the U.S. They are indigenous; they’ve lived in Norway for thousands of years. Their cultural roots run really deep. They influenced our creation of Kristoff. His outfit is Sami influenced.
Why does everything need to be so vague and generic whether it's a location, a culture or a race?
It's not, I know. It's a Disney practice I never liked.qindarka wrote:Is this really that much different from what they've been doing in the past?
Sotiris wrote: Since they were so heavily inspired by Norway, why didn't they set the film there? You can still have a fictional kingdom in a real country.
I think more like Mediterranean in general. I'd think it's southern Portugal/Spain judging by Eric's castle.atlanticaunderthesea wrote:I think it was set somewhere hot to simply show how Ariel was so seduced by the warm, bright land above, compared to the comparatively cold and dark world she lives in. I'm not quite sure where they mentioned, but I know a specific location was mentioned by the creators. Greece rings a bell ?
Yeah. I said it was an exception because the movie specifically said it was in France and If I remember correctly, it also has a specific time period too, (1700's) which France is a country by that point as oppose to just a land mass that held several separate kingdoms (like it would in Sleeping Beauty).Disney Duster wrote: The only thing I disagree with is I think you could say Beauty and the Beast had a fictional land (or lands?) located in France.