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Can Elsa And Anna Spend Time Together At The End Of Frozen

What does it say about Elsa that she shot Anna with a frozen blast in the castle, and that she created the snow monster to attack her?

Okay, let's go to the tape!What we notice by watching this clip is that the instant Elsa hears that she's set off an eternal winter everywhere, she loses control of her powers: it starts snowing immediately and it only gets worse as the song continues. The song concludes with her sending out a a blast of ice in all directions, notably when she's facing away from Anna and when it's highly unlikely that she could possibly see what happened in the reflection of the ice she's facing. In other words, it's a complete accident.When Elsa turns around, she sees what's happened to Anna and is immediately horrified. For years, her greatest fear was hurting Anna again - note that in the song, Elsa's line "There's so much fear!" is immediately followed by "You're not safe here!" So now her greatest fear has been realized and she reverts back to the behavior she feels has kept Anna safe for years: Anna needs to go.The thing is, Anna won't go and Elsa can't bodily throw her from the castle. So she conjures up Marshmallow to do the dirty work there. Marshmallow throws out Anna, then retreats - it's only when Anna challenges Marshmallow (which comes out to challenging Elsa's decision) that Marshmallow gets aggressive.To quote the most important song in the movie, "people make bad choices when they're mad or scared or stressed."[1] Elsa's blast was an accident, but it's a profoundly frightening experience for her, so she makes a bad decision in an attempt to keep from another such accident. She's scared beyond words that she'll hurt her sister a third time, and come hell or high water, she will not let that happen, even if doing so means never seeing Anna again.However, in an earlier draft of the film, one where the cut "Life's Too Short" was the confrontation song, Elsa did lose control due to anger. But that was a different version of the film and the characters.[1] Yes, I'm arguing that the goofy-seeming "Fixer-Upper" is the most important song in the film. It's the bridge and final chorus that make it so, by clarifying the themes of the piece and by foreshadowing the climax.

Frozen (2013 movie): Who ruled Arendelle before Elsa's coronation?

Within the context of the film, no answer is explicitly given, but all evidence points to Elsa having ruled during this time. There is no reference made by anyone to the idea that anything will change because of the coronation, which would almost certainly be a discussion topic if Elsa were only starting her rule after the coronation.  Additionally, had there been a regency in place until the coronation, it would have come back in effect when Elsa left - Anna is several years younger than Elsa and if age restrictions on rule were in place, Anna wouldn't meet them. Instead, rule goes from Elsa to Anna to a regent Anna personally appoints, which points to Elsa being old enough to be queen.This leads to the obvious question of why the coronation was delayed three years, and again, there's no explicit reason given in the film; however, it would be in keeping with Elsa's behavior if she'd been the one delaying it for as long as possible for fear of not being able to control her powers in public.

Who is physically stronger, Anna or Elsa (without powers)?

Without a shadow of a doubt I would say:Anna.Elsa might be older and taller than Anna but at the end of the day, when they were growing up, she didn't do a lot. Activity-wise that is…Anna was off climbing trees, running and riding down corridors and staircases, riding horses and getting herself into goodness knows what kind of trouble.Elsa sat in her room being a good little nerd. She read books on trade, mathematics, kingdom history etc… She learnt to be a queen and studied, all the while trying to control her ever-growing ice problem.All that being said, Anna could easily overpower Elsa if there were no ice powers involved.

Why did Elsa fall sick in Frozen Fever?

Elsa did say/sing "I've planned for weeks" and we know that she wanted to do everything in her power to make that day perfect. We also see her worrying about things in the courtyard before the song starts. She probably stressed herself out a lot to make sure everything would go according to plan while also taking care of her royal duties. Stress and worry can weaken the immune system and can make someone more easily sick. The difference between frozen and frozen fever is that Elsa now gets in contact with other humans more often, while before she stayed shut inside her room and didn't talk to anyone. Now she has more opportunities to catch a cold from someone else, and her stressing over the party for weeks would only make the chances for a cold to strike higher. While the cold probably wouldn't have become that bad under normal circumstances, we see her and Anna run around the whole day. When the short ends, the clock is somewhere around 5-6 PM (I don't remember completely) and they started from the moment Anna woke up. I'll assume she was allowed to sleep in cause it was her birthday, so let's say she woke up at 11 AM. That would be at least 6 hours of running around the castle and the town. If you already have a small cold, that cold will most likely have turned into a fever by the end of the day because you're overdoing it when your body needs to relax. Though in reality it probably mainly just happened because it would make a good and funny short story in which they could sneak in a let it go reference.

What Happens In The Movie 'Frozen?'?

I just started watching it...and turned it off because of how gruesome it was when the guy broke his legs. I really want to know what happens in it (does anybody survive?)...just not WATCH what happens...because it's really nasty and I can only assume it gets more gruesome from there on.

I also know there are wolves involved somehow...what goes on with those little buggers? :)

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