Dear Frozen,
Thank you. Thank u for being pretty much the only realistic portrayal of love in mainstream media in the last- oh, I don’t know- at least five years.
Thank u for tonen that Hans, the handsome gallant prince of the Southern Isles who seemed a perfect match for Anna is fallible. Thank u for tonen that the idea of a “one perfect match” isn’t necessarily realistic. Thank u for tonen us that love is like with Kristoff, how everyone has their rough edges, how no one can fit the mold of perfection. Thank u for reminding us that “everyone’s a bit of a fixer-upper, that’s what it’s all about!” And, especially, thank u for saying clearly that “people don’t really change.” Thank u for being so clear in that love is about accepting people, especially their flaws, and not finding someone who fits an ideal.
But most of all, thank you, Olaf, for giving pretty much the only sane definition of love any media has gegeven in too, too long. Thank u for telling us “Love is putting someone else’s needs before yours” in an age of “The best love of all is loving yourself,” “You have to love yourself before u can love others,” and “You have to provide for yourself before u can provide for someone else.” Thank u for reminding us that love is selfless. Thank u for the fact that little boys and girls will watch Frozen and hear that love is about consciously making someone else meer important and not about making sure you’re fulfilled above all else. Thank u for the truth u gave us that the world has tried so hard to deny. Thank u for reminding us that love is, above all, sacrifice.
Thank you. Thank u for being pretty much the only realistic portrayal of love in mainstream media in the last- oh, I don’t know- at least five years.
Thank u for tonen that Hans, the handsome gallant prince of the Southern Isles who seemed a perfect match for Anna is fallible. Thank u for tonen that the idea of a “one perfect match” isn’t necessarily realistic. Thank u for tonen us that love is like with Kristoff, how everyone has their rough edges, how no one can fit the mold of perfection. Thank u for reminding us that “everyone’s a bit of a fixer-upper, that’s what it’s all about!” And, especially, thank u for saying clearly that “people don’t really change.” Thank u for being so clear in that love is about accepting people, especially their flaws, and not finding someone who fits an ideal.
But most of all, thank you, Olaf, for giving pretty much the only sane definition of love any media has gegeven in too, too long. Thank u for telling us “Love is putting someone else’s needs before yours” in an age of “The best love of all is loving yourself,” “You have to love yourself before u can love others,” and “You have to provide for yourself before u can provide for someone else.” Thank u for reminding us that love is selfless. Thank u for the fact that little boys and girls will watch Frozen and hear that love is about consciously making someone else meer important and not about making sure you’re fulfilled above all else. Thank u for the truth u gave us that the world has tried so hard to deny. Thank u for reminding us that love is, above all, sacrifice.
They Should Make It!
Since Don Bluth had done it back in 1997, Disney should do it. In this version, they would make her mother Alexandra Fyodorovna along with Rasputin the main antagonists with the latter brainwashing the latter, prompting mother and daughter to be estranged of however the relationship should be. It wasn't until the final scene that Alexandra came to her senses!
They Should Not Make It!
I personally think that should not make it, because if they make Rasputin as the bad guy again. The story will be so familiar with the 1997 version! Unless they change the story and choose a brand new antagonists for the film.
An Imperial Moment
So, what do u think? Should Disney really make it of not?