Home » Blog » Frozen: The Good and the Not-As-Good

Frozen: The Good and the Not-As-Good

Frozen

I finally saw Frozen last night and I found it to be entertaining with magnificent art direction, a stunning production design and beautiful animation. As they always do, even when the story isn’t great, the artists at Disney produced work that is really second to none.

While this film has a good story, however, I didn’t feel it reached its full potential. It’s a well constructed story, and the emotional highs and lows all occur at the appropriate times. It has good dramatic structure and it follows the classic Hero’s Journey formula. In those regards, the story is actually well done. The problem with the story in Frozen is that it’s shallow. They didn’t do a good enough job of getting deep inside the characters and developing relationships that had real meaning and emotional impact. That was accomplished much better in Tangled and to this day, even after multiple viewings, Tangled gets a much greater emotional response from me than Frozen did last night.

I think the main reason for the lack of depth in the story is that there are too many songs. With five songs, Tangled had it just right. The songs in Tangled, as well as all of the best Disney films, served to introduce characters and/or advance the story. There are no fewer than nine songs in Frozen, and even though some of them are very short, there are still nine of them. In the first act especially, it seems like the characters are constantly breaking into song. Now, the songs are all good, so I can see why the filmmakers wanted to keep them in the film, but they did so at the expense of adding depth to the story. For while the songs are good, most of them do very little to advance the story or to develop the characters. If they had taken out 2-3 of the songs, they would have had an extra 7-10 minutes of story time to add depth to the story and give the audience more of an emotional impact.

Now, is Frozen devoid of emotion? Of course not. Overall it’s a terrific film, and worthy of the Golden Globe that it won over the weekend and the Academy Award that it will probably win next month. It’s not a perfect film, however, and I don’t think that it meets the standard that they set with Tangled. I cared about the characters, but I could have cared for them more if the story were made to be deeper. For example, why was Else born with this power? Her father wanted her to learn to control it, but instead they just took steps to conceal it. Instead of hiding from the world, why didn’t Else try to learn how to control her power? She probably would have been a much more interesting and likable of a character if she had spent the years between the death of her parents and her coronation attempting and failing to learn to harness her power instead of locking herself away.

Else-Frozen

Something like that also would have allowed for a deeper relationship between Else and Anna, who wants nothing more than to be in a sisterly relationship with Else, but Else will not let her get close. At different spots in the film, it seems like they’re going to move Anna in the direction of getting back lost memories from the beginning of the film when Else accidentally hurt her using her powers, but they never quite get there. That’s an example of what, to me, was frustrating about Frozen. They scratched the surface of a lot of issues, but never fully explored any of them.

Anna-Frozen

Overall, though, the characters are quite likable. Anna is decent as the heroin of the story, but like the story overall, she lacks the depth needed to make her a truly great character. Certainly, she doesn’t have the depth that Rapunzel had in Tangled. Else is one of the more interesting characters, and skirts the line between hero and villain. Again, it would have been nice of the filmmakers had explored her inner conflict in a way that wasn’t so superficial. She spends the first half of the movie just walking around  and looking sad, and that’s how the filmmakers expected to gain sympathy for her. As an audience, we really needed to see her do more in order to more fully relate to her. I expected that Olaf, the enchanted snowman, would be something akin to JarJar Binks, but he was actually a very sympathetic character that offered more than an attempt at cheap laughs. His comic relief was genuine and his character offered emotional depth that JarJar Binks never came close to offering. Kristoff is a solid love interest, and they gave him a nice twist where it looks like he’s going to save the day in the formulaic Disney way, but the filmmakers cleverly flipped the script in what an act of true love really is. I’ll let you see the film to find out what that twist really is.

All of that said, this is a film worth seeing, especially from a storytelling perspective. It offers examples of how to do things right in terms of solid 3-Act structure, and a well-developed plot to how things can be improved in terms of lack of story depth. And as always with Disney’s animated films, it’s beautiful to look at.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *