"The cold never bothered me anyway."
"In Arendelle's fair kingdom, a ruler did appear,— The second North American trailer
Frozen is Disney's 53rd entry in its animated canon line-up, an original story inspired by Hans Christian Andersen's longest Fairy Tale, The Snow Queen, using CGI imagery like its predecessor Tangled. It is directed by Chris Buck (Tarzan (1999), Surf's Up) and Jennifer Lee, features songs penned by Robert Lopez and Kristen Andersen-Lopez and an orchestral score by Christophe Beck.
Queen Elsa (Idina Menzel) and Princess Anna (Kristen Bell) are the royal sisters of the pseudo-Scandinavian kingdom of Arendelle. On the day of Elsa's coronation as queen, her Dark Secret is revealed to the world: she uncontrollably conjures up snow and ice from thin air. As Elsa flees to the North Mountain to start a new life alone, she unknowingly unleashes a potentially Endless Winter on the kingdom. Now Princess Anna teams up with rugged mountain man Kristoff (Jonathan Groff), his pet reindeer Sven (who acts like a dog), and singing snowman Olaf (Josh Gad), to track down Elsa, hoping she will return the summer to Arendelle.
It is only the second time they tapped Hans Christian Andersen for a full-length feature (in addition to shorts used for Fantasia), following up The Little Mermaid.
A new Mickey Mouse short entitled Get a Horse! played in front of the main feature.
The film was followed by a short feature, Frozen Fever in March 2015 (paired theatrically with Cinderella) and a feature-length sequel with Frozen II in November 2019, both made by the original creative team. It also spawned a whole franchise of Extended Universe material, including a second short, the Christmas Special known as Olaf's Frozen Adventure in November 2017 (paired with Coco), as well as various books, comics, and video games. A third short, Once Upon a Snowman, serves as an Interquel for this film.
See the franchise's character pages for character tropes.
Definitely not to be confused with the drama/thriller hybrid, Frozen (2010).
"Let it trope, let it trope, can't hold them back any more":"Gliiide, and pivot, and gliiide, and pivot, and gliiide, and pivot..."
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