One of the best Disney movies I've seen.
"Two women wear long gowns that reveal bare arms and shoulders. A woman wears a long gown with a slit that reveals one leg to the top of the thigh."
That website seems like a parody of imdb or Rotten Tomatoes."Two women wear long gowns that reveal bare arms and shoulders. A woman wears a long gown with a slit that reveals one leg to the top of the thigh."
SCANDALOUS!
That is very weird
SUBSTANCE USE - A woman gobbles chocolate at a dance to give her courage when talking to a handsome prince, a woman and her sister say "Oooooh, chocolate!" as if it is a drug, and magic spells are used several times to create ice structures and once to heal a head injury in a little girl.That is very weird
I agree it's a bit over the top to even mention some of those details, but I wonder if some of you are mistaking the rating system. It appears that a "sexual rating" of 1 is very good and they are describing the very minor context that caused it not to be a 0.SUBSTANCE USE - A woman gobbles chocolate at a dance to give her courage when talking to a handsome prince, a woman and her sister say "Oooooh, chocolate!" as if it is a drug, and magic spells are used several times to create ice structures and once to heal a head injury in a little girl.That is very weird
This site is bonkers.
I think that depends on your perspective.It appears that a "sexual rating" of 1 is very goodSUBSTANCE USE - A woman gobbles chocolate at a dance to give her courage when talking to a handsome prince, a woman and her sister say "Oooooh, chocolate!" as if it is a drug, and magic spells are used several times to create ice structures and once to heal a head injury in a little girl.That is very weird
This site is bonkers.
Explain how saying, "Oooh, chocolate" somehow makes you think they're referring to it as a drug. WTF!?!I agree it's a bit over the top to even mention some of those details, but I wonder if some of you are mistaking the rating system. It appears that a "sexual rating" of 1 is very good and they are describing the very minor context that caused it not to be a 0.SUBSTANCE USE - A woman gobbles chocolate at a dance to give her courage when talking to a handsome prince, a woman and her sister say "Oooooh, chocolate!" as if it is a drug, and magic spells are used several times to create ice structures and once to heal a head injury in a little girl.That is very weird
This site is bonkers.
This is painfully true. My daughter runs around the house singing: "Let it go!" over and over and over.I've been with my daughters to see this twice and someone got them the soundtrack CD for Xmas... these songs are all stuck in my head all day..
Thats how it starts. Talk to me in 72 hours when you find yourself humming "Reindeers are better than people" under your breath in a line for coffee.This is painfully true. My daughter runs around the house singing: "Let it go!" over and over and over.I've been with my daughters to see this twice and someone got them the soundtrack CD for Xmas... these songs are all stuck in my head all day..
Same here. Literally has not stopped for like 2 weeks.DocHolliday said:This is painfully true. My daughter runs around the house singing: "Let it go!" over and over and over.I've been with my daughters to see this twice and someone got them the soundtrack CD for Xmas... these songs are all stuck in my head all day..
Is that the one with the scandalously high cut?Both my girls got Elsa dresses....####### glitter EVERYWHERE in my house.
Just took Monday off and Grandma and Daughter and I are off to see this..... Pray for me.Nope - they had them tucked away in Norway. And they took a 15 min break every 20 min. They looked good, I have to admit. But for such a small line it took forever. For whatever reason they weren't "moving them along" like they do with other meet and greets.No fast pass? I wish they had these girls when I was there in March. Kids would've loved it.All I know is I went to EPCOT two weeks ago and I had to wait in line 2 hours to meet Princess Iceberg and her sister Hoe. Damn near killed me.
I'm going to take my daughter next week. The snowman seems funny enough to carry the scary parts without starting a fear meltdown.
They left that off the kids costume.Is that the one with the scandalously high cut?Both my girls got Elsa dresses....####### glitter EVERYWHERE in my house.
I have seen it twice. It is not painful. It is pretty funny in spots considering what you sitting through. Your daughter will love it so you will be glad you went.Just took Monday off and Grandma and Daughter and I are off to see this..... Pray for me.Nope - they had them tucked away in Norway. And they took a 15 min break every 20 min. They looked good, I have to admit. But for such a small line it took forever. For whatever reason they weren't "moving them along" like they do with other meet and greets.No fast pass? I wish they had these girls when I was there in March. Kids would've loved it.All I know is I went to EPCOT two weeks ago and I had to wait in line 2 hours to meet Princess Iceberg and her sister Hoe. Damn near killed me.
I'm going to take my daughter next week. The snowman seems funny enough to carry the scary parts without starting a fear meltdown.
Voice was the guy from that 1600 Penn show that did not last long.my daughter downloaded the soundtrack and is constantly playing it in the house. that snowman was pretty damn funny. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UFatVn1hP3o
It maybe bonkers, but it does detail EVERYTHING that is even faintly questionable for kids. It is a nice thing to read to see all of the details.(HULK) said:SUBSTANCE USE - A woman gobbles chocolate at a dance to give her courage when talking to a handsome prince, a woman and her sister say "Oooooh, chocolate!" as if it is a drug, and magic spells are used several times to create ice structures and once to heal a head injury in a little girl.This site is bonkers.That is very weird
"Do You Want to Build a Snowman?" or "In Summer"?My daughter (6) asked us to buy the soundtrack and now my 3 year old son who is going to speech therapy knows and sings all the lyrics. I liked the movie except the Broadway singing where there should be talking annoyed me a bit. I was upset I was in charge of refilling popcorn during the snowman song, but I have seen the part on youtube. Definitely my favorite part of the movie.
In summer"Do You Want to Build a Snowman?" or "In Summer"?My daughter (6) asked us to buy the soundtrack and now my 3 year old son who is going to speech therapy knows and sings all the lyrics. I liked the movie except the Broadway singing where there should be talking annoyed me a bit. I was upset I was in charge of refilling popcorn during the snowman song, but I have seen the part on youtube. Definitely my favorite part of the movie.
Whatever floats your boat but that site is wacky and is highly offensive to the intelligence of a child.It maybe bonkers, but it does detail EVERYTHING that is even faintly questionable for kids. It is a nice thing to read to see all of the details.(HULK) said:SUBSTANCE USE - A woman gobbles chocolate at a dance to give her courage when talking to a handsome prince, a woman and her sister say "Oooooh, chocolate!" as if it is a drug, and magic spells are used several times to create ice structures and once to heal a head injury in a little girl.This site is bonkers.That is very weird
This isWent with my kids (daughter 8, son 5, daughter 2.5) and wife. I liked it. My daughters loved it. My son thought it was ok. Like someone else said, he was just happy to be at the movies.
"Let It Go" has been on constantly around the house. I like it enough (all right, I like it a lot), so it hasn't been irritating. My youngest absolutely loves pretending to be Elsa. Whenever the song is on, she HAS to put on a Disney dress up skirt and a headband. Whatever she's doing, she stops and bolts for her dress up bin to get in costume. Then, when "the past is in the past," she throws the headband and messes up her hair. Every time. It's the cutest thing. The rest of the song, she's dancing around (basically it's just spinning with her arms flailing) and singing along with Elsa.
BTW, the Idina Menzel version of "Let It Go" is better than the Demi Lovato one.![]()
because my 3 yr old does the exact same thing. She's pretty much got every move Elsa makes during the song down to a tee.To the first part, I think you're right. It's a full-blown musical. There are some good songs in there.I thought it was pretty good. Definitely going to be a broadway play in 5 years.
The 3d Mickey short in the beginning was mind blowing. Crazy good.
That was hysterical. Caught me off guard when it said "Mickey Mouse -- Walt Disney"To the first part, I think you're right. It's a full-blown musical. There are some good songs in there.I thought it was pretty good. Definitely going to be a broadway play in 5 years.
The 3d Mickey short in the beginning was mind blowing. Crazy good.
To the second, it was very inventive. I enjoyed it. The best part was the credits which listed like 300 people to make a 10 minute short.
Shocking.Already confirmed it will be on Broadway
The gay agenda to normalize homosexuality is woven into Disney's movie Frozen not just as an underlying message - it is the movie. In a liberal culture tenacious at normalizing immorality, stripping those of faith from their ability to speak out in opposition, this needs to be taken seriously.
She finds all the gay meanings in the song lyrics too.With that said, here is a brief summary of only 'some' of the gay messaging found in the movie Frozen, intended to advocate the homosexual agenda to legalize same-sex marriage and normalize the practice:
Elsa has a great power that she has been taught by her parents from the time she was a child, is not publicly acceptable and that she must fear its expression, at all cost, thus hide it from people, even her own sister who could be hurt by it - even killed. Shame is at the core of Elsa's feelings about her magical powers: same-sex attraction.
As Elsa’s power increases, her parents’ urge her to learn how to control it, as it would be perceived as evil to others, but Elsa can't; it's impossible. Her parents' make the decision to close the castle to the public, and lock Elsa in her room so that her power won’t be discovered. Not even her sister is allowed to see and play with Elsa: demonetization of homosexuals by society.
Elsa is devastatingly lonely and depressed being forced to live a life of isolation, believing her powers to be evil. Her sister, kept from the truth, and affected by the inflicted secrecy also becomes victim to the dysfunction of her family and experiences equal isolation and confusion: not "coming out" and being who you are meant to be (acting on the power) is harmful to the person, family and society.
The parents are killed in an accident while traveling abroad (expendable and best out of the way for progression - represent authority), which means that Elsa must take her rightful position among her people, as queen. (Right to be queen: make what you want out of this one.) To do so, she faces great fear in going out publicly for her coronation, worrying that her powers might show because she has no control over them: rejects the ability of those with same-gender attraction to control behavior.
While at the same time her sister, Anna, is beyond thrilled at the opportunity to go outside, make friends and perhaps even meet her special someone and have her happily-ever-after: heterosexuals are free to pursue happiness through sexual relationships and gays are not - making them unequal in society.
The gates are opened - Elsa is terrified that people will see through her and that her power will show itself, regardless of what she has done to hide it. (Stay in the closet.) Anna, on the other hand, burst through the gate and experiences joy in being out in the open and meets someone whom she immediately falls in love with: heterosexuals are free to pursue happiness, without restriction. Insinuating that heterosexuals don't value marriage in the way those who work at preserving traditional marriage say that they do. No-fault divorce, as one example, is seen as evidence of this lack of care.
After only a brief interaction, Anna and Hans decide to marry. Elsa is freaked out that her sister wants to marry someone she only just met: heterosexuals diminish marriage, freely given to them without judgment of any kind - SSM can't do any more harm.
Please do not equate her to Mormon thought.Bad news, people. You've all been sucked in by the homosexual agenda.
A Well Behaved Mormon Woman will explain it for you. Down the rabbit hole.....
The gay agenda to normalize homosexuality is woven into Disney's movie Frozen not just as an underlying message - it is the movie. In a liberal culture tenacious at normalizing immorality, stripping those of faith from their ability to speak out in opposition, this needs to be taken seriously.She finds all the gay meanings in the song lyrics too.With that said, here is a brief summary of only 'some' of the gay messaging found in the movie Frozen, intended to advocate the homosexual agenda to legalize same-sex marriage and normalize the practice:
Elsa has a great power that she has been taught by her parents from the time she was a child, is not publicly acceptable and that she must fear its expression, at all cost, thus hide it from people, even her own sister who could be hurt by it - even killed. Shame is at the core of Elsa's feelings about her magical powers: same-sex attraction.
As Elsa’s power increases, her parents’ urge her to learn how to control it, as it would be perceived as evil to others, but Elsa can't; it's impossible. Her parents' make the decision to close the castle to the public, and lock Elsa in her room so that her power won’t be discovered. Not even her sister is allowed to see and play with Elsa: demonetization of homosexuals by society.
Elsa is devastatingly lonely and depressed being forced to live a life of isolation, believing her powers to be evil. Her sister, kept from the truth, and affected by the inflicted secrecy also becomes victim to the dysfunction of her family and experiences equal isolation and confusion: not "coming out" and being who you are meant to be (acting on the power) is harmful to the person, family and society. The parents are killed in an accident while traveling abroad (expendable and best out of the way for progression - represent authority), which means that Elsa must take her rightful position among her people, as queen. (Right to be queen: make what you want out of this one.) To do so, she faces great fear in going out publicly for her coronation, worrying that her powers might show because she has no control over them: rejects the ability of those with same-gender attraction to control behavior.
While at the same time her sister, Anna, is beyond thrilled at the opportunity to go outside, make friends and perhaps even meet her special someone and have her happily-ever-after: heterosexuals are free to pursue happiness through sexual relationships and gays are not - making them unequal in society. The gates are opened - Elsa is terrified that people will see through her and that her power will show itself, regardless of what she has done to hide it. (Stay in the closet.) Anna, on the other hand, burst through the gate and experiences joy in being out in the open and meets someone whom she immediately falls in love with: heterosexuals are free to pursue happiness, without restriction. Insinuating that heterosexuals don't value marriage in the way those who work at preserving traditional marriage say that they do. No-fault divorce, as one example, is seen as evidence of this lack of care.
After only a brief interaction, Anna and Hans decide to marry. Elsa is freaked out that her sister wants to marry someone she only just met: heterosexuals diminish marriage, freely given to them without judgment of any kind - SSM can't do any more harm.
I'd probably go with it but that song from Despicable Me is great as well.That's gotta be the biggest lock for an oscar... best song