LOLOLOL! Well, maybe she should profit from it and sell it! Then she can donate the money to a cancer charity for kids if she likes or other charities instead!Alphapanchito wrote:Hmm.. I have always figured she would donate it to Locks of Love.. or maybe use it to soak up any remaining oil in the Gulf of Mexico. Oh wait, that would've only worked for Rapunzel Unbraided.Rapunzel wrote: In one of the tellings I read as a kid they take her hair and weave it into a rug for the castle. I always imagine that ending into any telling of the Rapunzel story.
I would have liked to have seen more ages in between. A growing up (and hair growing longer) sequence.Sky Syndrome wrote:It bugs me that Rapunzel got way less screentime as a little kid than Tiana and Bolt. Another thing that bothers me is we're whisked through the time she is age four so fast we don't see her entire body and face in one shot. You'd have to look at the figurine of her as a child in the Disney Store figurine set to see what she looked like in entirety in that brief scene.Semaj wrote:I just noticed a pattern in the Lasseter-produced Disney films up to now (Meet the Robinsons, Bolt, The Princess and the Frog, and Tangled): They all begin with the main character as a baby.
However, I don't really care for there to be too much time as a baby or a child. I understand that with this story it was important and critical to have a baby Rapunzel, but sometimes I don't think it adds all that much. I prefer when the childhood or birth is told in still or artistic images like for Cinderella and Snow White.











