Article about the story development of the film, including mentions of aborted attempts.
Jim Hill should be a little careful with his editor's notes though. He is falling into the same trap of believing that Kristoff=Kai based on the fact that they are both male."Mind you, this was before Jennifer (Lee, the co-director of "Frozen") joined Chris on this project. So the Anna character (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is what the Gerda character is called in Disney's version of "The Snow Queen") was there. And we knew that there would be a Snow Queen in the picture. That we knew," Giaimo continued. "There was definitely a Kristoff character (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the character that Hans Christian Andersen called Kay in the original version of this fairytale). So those three were in place. But that was about it."
Also, more impressions of the film:
http://news.moviefone.com/2013/10/18/ne ... n-trailer/But so far the trailers for "Frozen" have been somewhat lackluster, failing to capture that "classic Disney" spirit that the movie really embodies (I've seen it and it is spectacular). Well, that has just changed with an online-only trailer that wonderfully exhibits the tone and spirit of the movie. In fact, this trailer gives off the vibe that "Frozen" that could have followed, say, "Beauty & the Beast" in the Disney lineage. Because it really could have; it's that good.
Based loosely on Hans Christian Andersen's fairy tale "The Snow Queen," a story that Walt Disney himself tried unsuccessfully to develop in the studio's post-war years, "Frozen" follows Anna's quest to thaw Elsa's heart and return the kingdom to less icy conditions. Kristoff (Jonathan Groff), a gruff mountain man and Olaf (Josh Gad), a chatty snowman, join Anna on her quest. It's a magical movie, folks. The trailer calls it "The Greatest Animated Event Since 'The Lion King,'" which is pretty fair. It also doesn't hide the fact that the movie is (gasp) a musical, with some really, really wonderful songs.





