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章節 340: November 23, 2023

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Frozen II

 

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Frozen 2 (stylized as Frozen II) is a 2019 American animated musical fantasy film produced by Walt Disney Animation Studios and distributed by Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures as the sequel to Frozen (2013). Produced by Peter Del Vecho, the film was directed by Chris Buck and Jennifer Lee from a screenplay by Lee. The directors co-wrote the story with Marc Smith, Kristen Anderson-Lopez, and Robert Lopez. It stars the voices of Kristen Bell, Idina Menzel, Josh Gad, and Jonathan Groff. Set three years after the first film, Frozen II follows sisters Anna and Elsa, and their companions Kristoff, Sven, and Olaf as they travel to an enchanted forest to unravel the origin of Elsa's magical power. It explores the themes of colonialism and advocating reparation.

Frozen 2

 Theatrical release poster

Directed by

Chris Buck

Jennifer Lee

Screenplay by

Jennifer Lee

Story by

Jennifer Lee

Chris Buck

Marc Smith

Kristen Anderson-Lopez

Robert Lopez

Produced by

Peter Del Vecho

Starring

Kristen Bell

Idina Menzel

Josh Gad

Jonathan Groff

Cinematography

Mohit Kallianpur

Edited by

Jeff Draheim

Music by

Christophe Beck (score)

Robert Lopez (songs)

Kristen Anderson-Lopez (songs)

Layouts by

Scott Beattie

Production

companies

Walt Disney Pictures

Walt Disney Animation Studios

Distributed by

Walt Disney Studios

Motion Pictures

Release dates

November 7, 2019 (Dolby Theatre)

November 22, 2019 (United States)

Running time

103 minutes

Country

United States

Language

English

Budget

$150 million

Box office

$1.453 billion

Frozen II was greenlit in March 2015 after a company debate about whether it would be perceived as inferior to the original. It used more-complex, enhanced animation technology than Frozen, and was an interdepartmental collaboration. Anderson-Lopez and Lopez returned as the film's songwriters, and Christophe Beck again composed the score. The film was translated into 46 languages and was accompanied by Into the Unknown: Making Frozen II, a documentary series.

Frozen II premiered in Hollywood, Los Angeles, on November 7, 2019, and was released in the United States on November 22. The film received generally positive reviews from critics and grossed $1.450 billion worldwide, finishing its theatrical run as the third-highest-grossing film of 2019, the tenth-highest-grossing film of all time, and the second-highest-grossing animated film of all time. It also held the title of the highest-grossing worldwide opening of all time for an animated film for three years. Frozen II received a nomination for Best Original Song at the 92nd Academy Awards, among numerous other accolades. Two sequels are in development.

Plot

King Agnarr of Arendelle tells his daughters Elsa and Anna that their grandfather, King Runeard, forged a treaty with the neighboring tribe of Northuldra by building a dam in the Enchanted Forest (their homeland). A fight occurred, resulting in Runeard's death and enraging the forest's classical elements of earth, fire, water, and air. The elements disappeared, and a wall of mist trapped everyone in the forest; Agnarr barely escaped, helped by an unknown savior.

Three years after her coronation,[a] Elsa celebrates autumn in the kingdom with Anna, the snowman Olaf, the iceman Kristoff, and Kristoff's reindeer Sven. One night, Elsa hears a mysterious voice calling her. She follows it, unintentionally awakening the elemental spirits and forcing everyone in the kingdom to evacuate. The Rock Troll colony arrives, and Grand Pabbie tells them that Elsa and the others must set things right by uncovering the truth about the past. Elsa, Anna, Olaf, Kristoff and Sven follow the mysterious voice, and travel to the Enchanted Forest. The mist parts at Elsa's touch, while the air spirit appears as a tornado, catching everyone in its vortex before Elsa stops it by forming ice sculptures. She and Anna discover that the sculptures are images from their father's past, and encounter the Northuldra and a troop of Arendellian soldiers who are still in conflict with one another. When the fire spirit appears, Elsa discovers that it is an agitated magical salamander and calms it. Elsa and Anna arrange a truce between the soldiers and the Northuldra after discovering that their mother, Queen Iduna, was a Northuldran who had saved Agnarr (an Arendellian). They later learn about a fifth spirit, who will unite the people with the magic of nature.

Elsa, Anna, and Olaf continue north, leaving Kristoff and Sven behind. They find their parents' wrecked ship and a map with a route to Ahtohallan, a mythical river said to explain the past. Elsa sends Anna and Olaf to safety and continues alone. She encounters and tames the Nøkk, the water spirit who guards the sea to Ahtohallan. Elsa discovers that the voice calling to her is the memory of young Iduna's call; her powers are a gift from nature because of Iduna's selfless saving of Agnarr, and Elsa is the fifth spirit. She learns that the dam was built as a ruse to reduce Northuldran resources, because of Runeard's contempt for the tribe's connection with magic and his intention to eliminate them and incorporate their region into the kingdom. Elsa learns that Runeard began the conflict by murdering the unarmed Northuldran leader in cold blood. She sends this information to Anna before she becomes frozen (causing Olaf to fade away) when she ventures into the most dangerous part of Ahtohallan.

Upon discovering the truth, Anna concludes that the dam must be destroyed for peace to be restored. She awakens the earth giant Jötunn, and lures them towards the dam. The giants hurl boulders, destroying the dam and sending a flood down the fjord towards the kingdom. Elsa is released and rides the water spirit to Arendelle, where she freezes the flood and saves the kingdom. As the mist disappears, she rejoins Anna and revives Olaf. Anna accepts Kristoff's marriage proposal. Elsa explains that she and Anna are the bridge between the people and the magical spirits. Anna then becomes Queen of Arendelle; Elsa becomes the protector of the Enchanted Forest, who visits Arendelle since peace has been restored. In a post-credits scene, Olaf visits Elsa's ice palace and recounts the events to Marshmallow (a snow monster created by Elsa as palace guard)[a] and the Snowgies, miniature snowmen inadvertently generated by Elsa on Anna's nineteenth birthday.[b]

Voice cast

 

 

Kristen Bell (Anna) in 2013 and Idina Menzel (Elsa) in 2008

Kristen Bell as Anna, princess of Arendelle and Elsa's younger sister, who becomes queen of Arendelle after Elsa's abdication[1][2][3]Hadley Gannaway and Livvy Stubenrauch as young Anna[4]

Idina Menzel as Elsa, former queen of Arendelle and Anna's older sister, who has magical ice powers[2][3][5]Mattea Conforti and Eva Bella as young Elsa[4]

Josh Gad as Olaf, a snowman created by Elsa[6]

Jonathan Groff as Kristoff, an ice harvester and Anna's boyfriend.[3][7] Groff also voices Sven, Kristoff's reindeer and several other reindeers[8]

Frozen II also features Martha Plimpton as the Northuldra chief Yelena[9] and Sterling K. Brown as the Arendelle lieutenant Mattias.[10] Jason Ritter voices Ryder, a member of Northuldra; and Rachel Matthews voices Honeymaren, Ryder's sister who also resides in the Enchanted Forest.[9]

Evan Rachel Wood voices Iduna (Elsa and Anna's mother),[11] and Delaney Rose Stein voices the young Iduna.[4] Alfred Molina voices Agnarr (Elsa and Anna's father),[12] and Jackson Stein voices young Agnarr. Jeremy Sisto voices Runeard[4] (Agnarr's father and Elsa and Anna's grandfather[13][14]); Ciarán Hinds voices the Rock Troll head Pabbie; and Aurora is "the voice" (a call to Elsa).[4][15][16] Alan Tudyk voices a guard, a Northuldran leader, and an Arendellian soldier. Paul Briggs reprised his role in the post-credits scene as Marshmallow, a snow monster created by Elsa.[4][17]

Production

Conception

 (left to right) Producer Peter Del Vecho, director and writer Jennifer Lee, and director Chris Buck at Frozen's 2013 premiere

Producer Peter Del Vecho said on March 31, 2014, that he, Chris Buck, and Jennifer Lee collaborated well, and he envisioned another Frozen-related project.[18] The following month, Walt Disney Studios chairman Alan F. Horn said that a sequel would not be immediately forthcoming because the studio was focusing on a Broadway musical adaptation of Frozen.[19][20] In a May 2014 CNBC interview with David Faber, Disney CEO Bob Iger said that the company would not force the development of a sequel, because it was concerned about not living up to the first film. Iger said that the Frozen franchise "is something that is kind of forever for the company", similar to The Lion King.[21]

On June 10, 2014, Lee confirmed that Walt Disney Studios CCO John Lasseter had authorized her and Buck to explore a possible sequel.[22][23] While working on the short film Frozen Fever (2015), they realized that they missed the characters. Meanwhile, Del Vecho had been asked by fans about Frozen's future. Lee, Buck, and Del Vecho discussed the possibility of a sequel.[23] Buck later said, "The one thing that we did right away was to figure out what would be satisfying for Anna and Elsa at the end of the movie."[24] They decided on ending the sequel with Anna becoming the queen of Arendelle, while Elsa would be "free".[23]

Development

At the Walt Disney Animation Studio, as with Pixar, when we do a sequel, it is because the filmmakers who created the original have created an idea that is so good that it's worthy of these characters. We enjoyed making Frozen Fever so much and being back in that world with those characters, and we love the characters in this world so much of Arendelle, that Jennifer Lee and Chris Buck have come up with a great idea for a sequel and you will be hearing a lot.

—John Lasseter, announcing Frozen II[25]

Iger, Lasseter, and actor Josh Gad announced at Disney's March 12, 2015, annual shareholders' meeting in San Francisco that Frozen II, a full-length sequel, was in development; Buck and Lee would return as directors, and Del Vecho as producer.[25][26] The production team traveled to Norway, Finland, and Iceland for background research;[27][28] they decided to make Elsa a "mythic hero" with magic ice powers and Anna a "fairytale hero" who lives in a magical world but has no magic powers. They concluded that the first film successfully combined the two elements.[5] Allison Schroeder was hired to assist Lee with the script in August 2018 after Lee succeeded Lasseter as Disney Animation's CCO;[29] Lee was credited as the film's screenwriter, and Schroeder was credited with additional screenplay material.[30] The film's story contributions were made by Lee, Buck, Marc Smith, Kristen Anderson-Lopez, and Robert Lopez.[31] Overall, the budget was approximately $150 million.[32]

Voice recording began in September 2017,[33][34] although Menzel started a couple of weeks later due to a concert tour.[35] That month, Gad announced his role in the sequel with Buck, Lee, Del Vecho, and Lasseter.[36][37] In July 2018, Variety reported that Wood and Brown were in talks to join the cast.[38] Their roles were later disclosed as Iduna[39] and Lieutenant Destin Mattias.[40] Wood was cast because her voice resembled Menzel and Bell's.[39] The voice of Agnarr was changed from Maurice LaMarche to Molina.[41] The Voice's four-note call, derived from the Latin sequence "Dies irae", is delivered in a manner resembling the Scandinavian music form kulning.[42]

Frozen II's first completed scenes were test screened at the Annecy International Animated Film Festival in June 2019,[43][44] where Becky Bresee and effects-animation head Marlon West said that the film was "still in production, with seven weeks of animation to be completed and 10 weeks of special effects".[45] The filmmakers collaborated with Sámi experts on the depiction of the Northuldra tribe with Verdett, an advisory group which was the result of an agreement between the Walt Disney Company, the transnational Saami Council, and the Sámi parliaments of Finland, Norway, and Sweden.[46] Anderson-Lopez confirmed that Elsa would have no female love interest in the film, despite some fans' desire for one.[47] Lee later explained to The New York Times reporter Maureen Dowd that Elsa's main audience did not seem ready for such a relationship.[48] Lee said in a press conference that Frozen II would not acquire elements from the television series Once Upon a Time's non-canonical Frozen storyline:[49]

No, that's not canon. We didn't see it. So I kinda made a point of certain things not to see so it wouldn't affect us that way. Frozen I and Frozen II to me are one complete story and that's really where we stay. So glad they had fun with that. I think they had a lot of fun with the characters.

— Director and writer Jennifer Lee[49]

Frozen II underwent significant revisions after its first test screening in San Diego; Disney Animation discovered that although adults liked the film, children found it hard to follow. The production team realized they needed to clarify the identity of the Voice and the point of Elsa's transformation, and add more comedy and shots of Bruni (the fire salamander). A scene of expository dialogue in which the lead characters explained to the people trapped in the Enchanted Forest why they had come there was replaced with Olaf's humorous recap of Frozen. Due to the changes, the animators needed to create 61 new shots and redo another 35. An undisclosed number of shots were cut from the finished film; about a dozen animators and artists worked for two months on an elaborate resurrection scene for Olaf before it was cut.[50]

The last major animation scene completed before the production team locked the picture was "Show Yourself", the musical number in which Elsa enters Ahtohallan and learns all the secrets she has been seeking. According to Del Vecho, the scene "required all of the resources at the studio" to get the film done on time.[23] Lopez said that the first draft of "Show Yourself" was very different from its final version.[51] Megan Harding directed an official documentary series on the production of Frozen II, which depicted the process of Del Vecho and Lopez determining The Voice's identity. Once the production team settled on Queen Iduna, the lyrics of "Show Yourself" finally began to come together, but then the studio's artists, designers, and animators needed to quickly figure out how to stage the dramatic culmination of Elsa's journey towards becoming the Snow Queen.[50] The film was edited by Jeff Draheim.[52]

Design

Costume and character designs underwent several revisions before they were finalized. According to designer Griselda Sastrawinata-Lemay, the process was the most intricate of any animated film. Technological advancements allowed the designer to create more-detailed outfits, with extra beads and sequins. The team used Marvelous Designer, a computer-generated imagery program, to drape each character's clothing.[53]

Anna's outfit was inspired by the Norwegian folk bunad, worn during the 1840s and 1850s. Typically made of wool, it had decorative embroidery. Anna lost the pigtail braid she had in Frozen because she is three years older in Frozen II, and it was replaced by a braid across the back of her head. Aging Elsa three years was inspired by artists Alexander McQueen and Elie Saab. Saab's designs had long trains and cumbersome floor-length hemlines; the designers instead created a tailored coat with a double-panel cape and epaulettes, highlighting Elsa's strength.[53]

The animation team used a curve-based method for the intricate embroidery. A program interpreted two-dimensional visual designs as line strokes, rendering them as curves. This allowed quick changes, minimizing manual work during design modifications. It also supported free-form stitching with threads of various widths, colors, and densities, crucial to the production of a variety of embroidery styles.[54]

Animation

About 800 people, 80 of them animators, were involved in the production of Frozen II.[55] Tony Smeed and Becky Bresee were the film's heads of animation;[5] Hyun-Min Lee replaced Bresee as supervising animator for Anna, while Wayne Unten again served as supervising animator for Elsa as he had done on Frozen. Steve Golberg was the supervising animator for visual effects.[56][57] Scott Beattie was the director of cinematography layout, while Mohit Kallianpur was the director of cinematography lighting.[58]

Frozen II made use of advancements in technology, artistic performance, and skeletal animation.[59] Before the animation began, Unten showed scenes of superheroes like Frozone to Elsa's animators as examples of what to avoid.[56] Creating the personal flurry effect was so difficult for the animators that the directors had Elsa put a permafrost coating on Olaf in Frozen II instead.[60] Elsa's graceful movements were modeled on Frozen and modern dance, particularly Martha Graham's work.[56]

In accordance with Disney's preference for a different style for each film and the directors' and production designer's artistic vision, the multi-departmental animation team[30] was instructed to reconstruct the characters so they were slightly different in tone and style from Frozen. They differed in "very subtle ways", with a "through line from the first movie to the second".[59] As well as making the Enchanted Forest vegetation autumnal, the effects team applied two internally developed applications (Vegetation Asset and Fire Tree) to enhance the film's vegetation and fire animation.[61] Lighting and special effects were applied to glacial ice, spirit magic, and memory.[62]

The first step for the animation team was to study the screenplay and understand the characters. Blocking (creating key poses) was next, followed by effects and layout.[57][63] Effects were proposed for layout before animation process to choreograph the dam-collapse scene.[64] Although Frozen's greatest difficulty for Frozen was the winter snow, Frozen II is set in fall; its main challenge was how to consistently depict the wind and "pass that downstream".[57][63]

Frozen II's animation software was influenced by the software in several other Disney films. Anna's hair was animated with Quicksilver, developed for Moana (2016) to deal with wind; for Elsa's hair, the lighting software Beast was used. A vocal coach instructed the animators on how a singer would breathe.[65] The animators then spent about eight months creating Nøkk, which has a liquid appearance, with effects supervised by Erin Ramos. Jötunns had a long rigging process to avoid making rocks distracting.[30] The water simulation was intended to be more realistic than in Moana.[66] To create Gale, the wind spirit, a tool called Swoop was developed. They later received real-time feedback from the supervisors, directors, and producer.[67][68]

Music

Main article: Frozen II (soundtrack)

 

 

Songwriters Kristen Anderson-Lopez and Robert Lopez in 2019, and composer Christophe Beck in 2012

Lopez and Anderson-Lopez returned from Frozen to write songs for the sequel, and Christophe Beck returned as composer.[69] The soundtrack album was released on November 15, 2019,[70] after the release of Panic! at the Disco's version of one of the film's songs, "Into the Unknown".[71] The seven-song album also contains a remix of "Reindeer(s) Are Better Than People" from Frozen.[72]

Beck said that the score conveys Elsa and Anna's emotional growth, "matured and introduc[ing] more sophisticated musical concepts and thematic elements". He wanted it to reflect the film's complex, intense imagery.[72] Anderson-Lopez described the album's theme as a "meta-story". Although Harding sent a camera crew to the Lopez home in Brooklyn to document their songwriting and composing,[73] the composers found the crew intrusive and did most of their work off-camera.[74]

Thematic analysis

 Reindeer have been venerated by the Sámi people, who consider them symbolic of Sámi strength and identity.

The indigenous Sámi people were historically associated with reindeer, and identified with the animals' strength. Trude Fonneland wrote that a female divinity emphasized female contributions with themes including unity, courage, hope, friendship, and truth.[75][76][77] Elsa attempted to send Anna away because she was concerned about her sister's safety.[78][79]

In animation, female characters embody female images as a whole. The film's female characters are emotionally diverse, motivated by social status and awakening of feminism. The elegant, noble Elsa wants to be free and live a normal life, and Anna is dreamy, cheerful and enthusiastic; both acted to defend their kingdom from danger.[80]

Frozen II has been interpreted as a critique of colonialism and as advocating reparation.[1][81][82] Before Elsa and Anna were born, their grandfather King Runeard built a dam for the Northuldra tribe. Ostensibly a gift, the dam weakens the tribe's magical power. Runeard's plot fails after he murders the leader of Northuldra and war breaks out. The forest spirits which preside over Northuldra shroud it in an impenetrable mist, preventing anyone from leaving or entering.[1][82] The Northuldra are modeled on the Sámi people, indigenous to Scandinavia and northwestern Russia, who experienced discrimination as pagans reputed to be skilled in magic and witchcraft. In 1609, King Christian IV of Denmark wrote that the Sámi were adept at magic, and no mercy should be granted in cases involving Sámi sorcery. Nordic missionaries confiscated or destroyed religious items and sites and built churches to supplant Sámi shamanism.[1][83]

 A subplot in which a dam is built on tribal land by King Runeard alludes to Norway's controversial Virdnejávr Dam.

The Northuldra dam reflects Sámi history. A hydroelectric power station was built on the Altaelva river in Norway from 1979 to 1981; the controversial Virdnejávr Dam flooded a Sámi village, disrupting traditional hunting and herding.[84] Slate critic Inkoo Kang said that although Frozen II was obviously influenced by Sámi history, the Northuldra may also be interpreted as representing displaced Native Americans; Arendelle can be seen as representing the United States' colonial past, evocative of the embellished life of Pocahontas.[1] The Northuldra are presented in an appealing way, romanticized as a people with magical power who live in harmony with the spiritual and physical worlds.[85]

While Elsa attempts to find out who was calling her, Anna destroys the dam to make amends to the Northuldra for Arendelle's mistakes. Elsa's last-minute intervention prevents the destruction of the kingdom, but Anna destroys the dam in the belief that Elsa is dead. According to Kang, the film promotes reparations for past atrocities.[1] Matt Goldberg wrote that the symbolism of the film's ending is undercut by having Elsa save Arendelle, instead of rebuilding the kingdom elsewhere.[82]

Racial issues in Frozen II are mitigated by making Elsa and Anna half Northuldran, and their mother is depicted as a heroine who saved their father (King Agnarr) from death during the battle.[1][86]

Jennifer Baldwin described Frozen II as a film about trauma, transformation, and faith communities' more-active role in environmental repair.[87] Environmental trauma is caused by the dam, which weakens the elemental spirits. Olaf describes the forest as a place of transformation, including venturing into the unknown, befriending the spirits and the indigenous Northuldra, and confronting trauma. Elsa gains the trust of the spirits, each leading her closer to the truth and her transformation into one of the elements. Anna employs the giants (symbolic of the earth) to break the dam (symbolic of trauma and mistrust) and gains her own strength, independent of her relationship with Elsa. According to Baldwin, this encourages the audience to adopt more sustainable practices, make amends, and work together to preserve the natural world.[81] The film can introduce young children to environmental issues, such as climate change.[88]

Sociologist Lauren Dundes describes Elsa's relationship with the mythological horse Nøkk and concludes that "her skills as a horse whisperer do not threaten men's ascendancy [...] These themes show how Disney balked at modernizing Elsa, retreating to outdated conceptions of gender roles".[89] Nia Kurniawati wrote that Frozen II's feminist message was subtle and realistic.[90]

Marketing and release

Disney released the first trailer for Frozen II on February 13, 2019.[91] Viewed 116.4 million times in its first 24 hours, it was the most-watched animated film trailer until the teaser of Inside Out 2 (2024) surpassed that record in November 2023.[92][93] At the release of the preview poster, American astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson commented that "water crystals have hexagonal 'six-fold' symmetry" (shown correctly in Frozen) but the poster had a four-sided snowflake.[94] Lee replied that it was not really a snowflake; the four sides represented the four elemental spirits and its center represented Elsa, the fifth spirit.[95][96] Disney partnered with 140 other brands worldwide to promote Frozen II, the highest number of brands for a Disney animated film. They marketed Frozen II in the U.S. through internal and external partners, including Enterprise Rent-A-Car, McDonald's, and Lego.[97] To support the film's marketing campaign, the lead voice cast made several public and televised appearances; these included a "Friendsgiving" stunt night on ABC, introductions on The Masked Singer, and a Women of Impact program on Nat Geo Wild.[98] In November 2019, the lead voice cast's schedules were so full that Bell said: "Time [was] not there".[99]

The 103-minute film Frozen II premiered on November 7, 2019, at the Dolby Theatre in Hollywood, Los Angeles.[100][101] It was initially scheduled for release on November 27,[102] but was moved up five days.[103] On January 17, 2020, a sing-along version of Frozen II was released.[104] It was localized by Disney Character Voices International into 45 languages by its original theatrical release date;[105] Frozen had been translated into 41 languages.[106] The success of Frozen's localized versions led to the release of an album with all versions of "Let It Go",[107] and Jikŋon 2 (a Northern Sami version) was released to honor the people's contributions.[108]

Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainment released Frozen II for digital download on February 11, 2020, and on Blu-ray and DVD on February 25.[109] At the same time, a 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray, Ultimate Collector's Edition, and 4KUHD Blu-ray steelbook edition was released.[110] Special features include a sing-along audio recording of the film, a presentation of the Nordic mythology on which the Enchanted Forest is based,[111] musical clips, and 29 translated versions of "Into the Unknown", as well as deleted music and scenes.[112] The film, initially scheduled to premiere on Disney+ on June 26, 2020, was moved up to March 15 in the United States and March 17 in Canada, the Netherlands, Australia, and New Zealand due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[113][114]

Documentary series

Main article: Into the Unknown: Making Frozen II

Megan Harding (who had directed a 2014 making-of ABC television special about Frozen) reached out to Disney Animation about documenting the production of Frozen II; with the company's cooperation, Harding, working with Lincoln Square Productions, commuted from New York City to Burbank, California and shot 1,300 hours of footage in 115 days between December 2018 and the November 2019 world premiere.[74] She edited the footage[115] down to six episodes, about 35 to 45 minutes long.[74] Disney Animation knew that Harding intended to take a "fearless" and "honest look" at the filmmaking process; her crew was asked to leave only once,[73] when the production team wanted to decide the mysterious voice's identity.[50] The documentary series, Into the Unknown: Making Frozen II, was released on June 26, 2020.[74]

Reception

Box office

Frozen II grossed $477.4 million in the United States and Canada and $976.3 million in other territories, for a worldwide total of $1.453 billion.[32] It was the third-highest-grossing film of 2019,[116] the tenth-highest-grossing film of all time,[117] and the second-highest-grossing animated film of all time.[118] On December 15, 2019, Frozen II passed the $1 billion mark at the global box office.[119] Deadline Hollywood calculated the film's net profit as $599 million, accounting for production budgets, marketing, talent participations, and other costs; box office grosses and home media revenues placed it second on their list of 2019's "Most Valuable Blockbusters".[120] According to Disney (who did not consіder the 2019 Lion King remake an anіmated fіlm but a live-action reboot), Frozen II is the hіghest-grossing anіmated fіlm (surpassing Frozen).[121] Frozen II's box-office success was attributed to its release date near Thanksgiving. According to Comscore analyst Paul Dergarabedian, the film was "perfectly positioned to play well into 2020."[122]

Frozen II was released with A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood and 21 Bridges on November 22, 2019, in 4,440 theaters:[123] 2,500 in 3D, 800 in the premium large format (including 400 in IMAX), and 235 in D-Box/4DX.[124] It grossed $41.8 million on its first day,[125] including $8.5 million from Thursday night previews.[123] The film debuted grossing $130 million, the highest opening for an animated film that month.[126] Frozen II primarily drew a mostly female audience and approximately 70 percent of the viewers were families.[127] Its second weekend grosses dropped by 34 percent to $85.6 million (with a record $125 million over the five-day Thanksgiving weekend)[128] and followed by another $34.7 million the third weekend.[129] By December 29, the film's domestic grosses topped $400 million.[130] Frozen II left theaters by March 19, 2020, making it the fourth highest-grossing film of 2019 in the United States and Canada,[131] at which point the film industry became significantly affected by the COVID-19 pandemic.[132][133]

Worldwide, Frozen II grossed $228.2 million in its opening weekend in 37 markets, for a global debut total of $358.5 million. This surpassed the 2019 remake of The Lion King to become the highest-grossing film for an animated title until The Super Mario Bros. Movie (2023) took over. It had the best all-time opening of an animated film in the United Kingdom ($17.8 million) and France ($13.4 million); the biggest start for a Pixar or Disney Animation title in China ($53 million), Japan ($18.2 million), Germany ($14.9 million) and Spain ($5.8 million), and the third-biggest opening of any film in South Korea ($31.5 million).[127][134][135] The film grossed $11.4 million in its second week in the United Kingdom, bringing its total gross there to $35.3 million.[136] By January 5, 2020, the film's offshore gross had exceeded $875.3 million.[137] As of July 2021, its top international markets were Japan ($122.6 million), China ($122.3 million), South Korea ($95.5 million), the United Kingdom ($69.7 million), Germany ($60.6 million), and France ($53.9 million).[32]

Critical response

Frozen II received generally positive reviews.[138][139][140] It has an approval rating of 77% based on 336 professional reviews on the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, with an average rating of 6.7/10, lower than Frozen's 90% rating out of 251 reviews. The former's critical consensus reads, "Frozen II can't quite recapture the showstopping feel of its predecessor, but it remains a dazzling adventure into the unknown."[141][142] Metacritic (which uses a weighted average) assigned Frozen II a score of 64 out of 100 score based on 47 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews", whereas Frozen received a higher 75 score out of 48 critics.[143][144] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of A− (lower than Frozen's A+) on an A+ to F scale,[145] and PostTrak rated it 4.5 out of five stars on the film's opening day.[123]

Frozen II continues in the same nonthreatening, emancipatory vein, jumping to life when Elsa responds to the siren's call. As before, the songs by Kristen Anderson-Lopez and Robert Lopez are pleasantly melodious with lyrics that can have the quality of a confession, as if a friend were sharing her inner-voice struggles.

Manohla Dargis, The New York Times[146]

Critics praised Frozen II's craftsmanship, delivery, and themes.[c] The New York Times critic Manohla Dargis called the narrative a "pink world of adventure and aspirational uplift", and Nell Minow of RogerEbert.com noted its frank, compelling depiction of issues which were understandable by audiences of all ages. Dargis cited Frozen II's engaging visual imagery, balanced by romance and history, and Minow noted the film's autumnal palette.[31][146] Peter Travers (Rolling Stone), Simran Hans (The Guardian), and Todd McCarthy (The Hollywood Reporter) praised the film. Travers, who enjoyed reconnecting with the characters, called the animation stunning and referred to the music as "tantalizing earworms". Hans compared the film's narrative to real-world efforts to mitigate climate change. McCarthy praised its "catchy songs", "easy-to-like characters", and "astonishing backdrops", with humor and a plot driven by "female empowerment galore".[147][148][149]

Frozen II's narrative, music, and focus were criticized.[d] In The Wall Street Journal, John Anderson noted that the sequel was not innovative and criticized the film's flawed narrative and low-quality music in comparison with Frozen.[150] In an Empire review, Ben Travis said that the narrative relied too much on mythology and hazy backstories.[152] Minow criticized the film's excessively detailed narrative,[31] and Observer writer Oliver Jones said that the film's energy and originality were overly focused on the sisters.[151] Reviewers for the Los Angeles Times and The Washington Post cited Frozen II's complicated story and dark tone.[160]

Accolades

Main article: List of accolades received by Frozen II

At the 92nd Academy Awards, Frozen II received a nomination for Best Original Song.[161] The film's other nominations include eight Annie Awards (winning two),[162] a British Academy Film Award,[163] two Critics' Choice Movie Awards,[164] and two Golden Globe Awards.[165]

Sequels

Two Frozen sequels are in development as of 2023.[166][167] Gad was set to reprise his role as Olaf in the third film,[168] and Lee was no longer involved in the project.[169]

Notes

 

As depicted in Frozen (2013)

 

As depicted in Frozen Fever (2015)

 

Attributed to multiple references:[31][146][147][148][149]

 

Attributed to multiple references:[150][151][152][153][154][155][156][157][158][159]

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Jenkins, David (November 14, 2019). "Frozen 2". Little White Lies. Archived from the original on April 14, 2021. Retrieved August 10, 2021.

 

Mendelson, Scott (November 14, 2019). "Frozen II Review: A Flawed But Funny Walt Disney Sequel". Forbes. Archived from the original on August 12, 2021. Retrieved August 12, 2021.

 

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Multiple sources:Chang, Justin (November 14, 2019). "Review: Disney's Frozen 2 is far from essential, but charmingly avoids the sophomore slump". Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on March 1, 2021. Retrieved July 26, 2021.

Page-Kirby, Kristen (November 20, 2019). "Neither hot nor cool, Frozen II serves up lukewarm leftovers from the 2013 hit". The Washington Post. Archived from the original on November 20, 2019. Retrieved November 21, 2019.

Lawson, Richard (November 14, 2019). "Frozen 2 Is a Disney Minus". Vanity Fair. Archived from the original on November 12, 2020. Retrieved July 16, 2021.

Barber, Nicholas (November 14, 2019). "The sequel to the global smash hit is 'a meandering psychedelic journey' with 'fumbled twists' writes Nicholas Barber". BBC. Archived from the original on May 22, 2021. Retrieved August 20, 2021.

Jenkins, David (November 14, 2019). "Frozen 2". Little White Lies. Archived from the original on April 14, 2021. Retrieved August 10, 2021.

Mendelson, Scott (November 14, 2019). "Frozen II Review: A Flawed But Funny Walt Disney Sequel". Forbes. Archived from the original on August 12, 2021. Retrieved August 12, 2021.

Willmore, Alison (November 20, 2019). "Frozen 2 Exists Because the Market, Not the Story, Demanded It". Vulture. Archived from the original on March 2, 2021. Retrieved August 20, 2021.

 

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Works cited

Baldwin, Jennifer (2020). "Trauma, Eco‐spirituality, and Transformation in Frozen 2: Guides for the Church and Climate Change". Dialog: A Journal of Theology. Hoboken, New Jersey: Wiley-Blackwell. 59 (2): 60–61. doi:10.1111/dial.12546. S2CID 218822839.

Dundes, Lauren (2020). "Elsa as Horse Whisperer in Disney's Frozen 2: Opportunity 'Nokk's to Quash Gender Stereotypes". Social Sciences. Westminster, Maryland: McDaniel College. 86 (9): 11. doi:10.3390/socsci9050086.

Fonneland, Trude (2020). "Religion-Making in the Disney Feature Film, Frozen II: Indigenous Religion and Dynamics of Agency". Religions. Tromsø, Norway: University of Tromsø. 11 (9): 430. doi:10.3390/rel11090430.

Jiang, QianQian; Hun Chung, Jean (2021). "Analysis of the female character and modeling design features of Frozen 2" (PDF). Journal of Digital Convergence. 19 (6): 3. doi:10.14400/JDC.2021.19.6.309. ISSN 2713-6442. Archived (PDF) from the original on September 4, 2021. Retrieved September 11, 2021.

Kurniawati, Nia (2020). "Representation of feminism in the main characters of the films Maleficent Mistress of Evil and Frozen 2". Hortatori Jurnal Pendidikan Bahasa Dan Sastra Indonesia. Cianjur, Indonesia: University of Suryakancana. 4 (2): 133–142. doi:10.30998/jh.v4i2.532. Archived from the original on September 29, 2021. Retrieved September 29, 2021.

Kittelsen, Theodor; Østby, Leif (1975). Theodor Kittelsen. Dreyer. ISBN 978-8-20901-226-0.

Liu, Ying; Wright, Jared; Alvarado, Alexander (August 17, 2020). "Making Beautiful Embroidery for "Frozen 2"". ACM SIGGRAPH 2020 Talks. Siggraph '20. Vol. 73. p. 2. doi:10.1145/3388767.3407360. ISBN 9781450379717. S2CID 221178053. Archived from the original on September 4, 2021. Retrieved September 26, 2021 – via ACM Digital Library.

Moses, Joseph Norman; Gaddipati, Vijoy; Fiske, Benjamin; Tollec, Marie; Miller, Tad (August 17, 2020). "Frozen 2: Effects Vegetation Pipeline". ACM SIGGRAPH 2020 Talks. Siggraph '20. Vol. 7. p. 2. doi:10.1145/3388767.3409320. ISBN 9781450379717. S2CID 221178097. Archived from the original on September 4, 2021. Retrieved September 26, 2021 – via ACM Digital Library.

Midkiff, Emily; Austin, Sara (2021). "The Disneyfication of Climate Crisis: Negotiating Responsibility and Climate Action in Frozen, Moana, and Frozen 2". The Lion and the Unicorn. 45 (2): 154–171. doi:10.1353/uni.2021.0013. S2CID 239859494. Archived from the original on September 4, 2021. Retrieved September 29, 2021.

March, Julia (2019). Disney Frozen 2: The Magical Guide. Dorling Kindersley Limited. ISBN 978-0-241-35767-5.

Sathe, Amol; Summers, Lance; Yuan-Chiang, Matt Jen; Newland, James (August 17, 2020). "The Look and Lighting of "Show Yourself" in "Frozen 2"". ACM SIGGRAPH 2020 Talks. Siggraph '20. Vol. 71. p. 2. doi:10.1145/3388767.3407388. ISBN 9781450379717. S2CID 221178086. Archived from the original on September 4, 2021. Retrieved September 26, 2021 – via ACM Digital Library.

Tollec, Marie; Jenkins, Sean; Summers, Lance; Cunningham-Scott, Charles (August 17, 2020). "Deconstructing Destruction: Making and breaking of "Frozen 2"'s Dam". ACM SIGGRAPH 2020 Talks. Siggraph '20. Vol. 24. p. 2. doi:10.1145/3388767.3407333. ISBN 9781450379717. S2CID 221178145. Archived from the original on September 4, 2021. Retrieved September 27, 2021 – via ACM Digital Library.

Wilkins, Jonathan (2019). Frozen 2: The Official Movie Special. Titan Publishing Group. ISBN 978-1-78773-227-8.

Further reading

Julius, Jessica (2019). The Art of Frozen 2. Chronicle Books. ISBN 978-1-4521-6949-1.

External links

 Media related to Frozen II at Wikimedia Commons

 Quotations related to Frozen II at Wikiquote

Official website

Frozen II on Disney+ 

Frozen II at IMDb 

Frozen II at AllMovie 

 

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