Board Thread:General Discussion/@comment-25389622-20141101150445/@comment-24199126-20150101144356

The song can be suggesting a lot, which is why we can't definitively say "Anna took Bulda's knowledge and applied it to Elsa's situation." There's nothing to suggest that actually happened. You cite her "look of realization", but again, that look could have applied to either Kristoff or people as a whole. It could even have been her just seeing the sense of the Bulda's words. I'm not saying your interpretation is wrong, in fact, I have a similar one. But the Wiki isn't the place for us to put our opinions. It's for us to report fact.

Regarding "Let It Go", I think you misunderstood me; I never bashed the song's usefulness. All I said was that for the purposes of the Wiki, we already knew plenty about Elsa's personality without it. And yes, you could say everything is interpretive, but there are differing degrees of interpretation. Whereas we can gauge Anna's emotions in "For the First Time in Forever" and easily say she's happy (especially since the lyrics actually corroborate her expressions), the visual cues in "Fixer Upper" aren't as obvious as you make them out to be. Not everyone would necessarily agree with your statement that she had an epiphany about Elsa's situation in those moments. As previously stated, the song is mostly about Kristoff; it could have just as easily been Anna realizing, "Kristoff really is a nice guy, and maybe his gruff disposition from our first meeting was from being mad, or scared, or stressed." And again, towards that instance, the song was reaching more broader implications, meaning it might not even have been about him at all. Nothing needs to be completely explicit; that's preferable, but as long as there's evidence beyond a reasonable doubt, it can be accepted. For "Fixer Upper", that just isn't the case.

The statement about the dignitaries is speculative. We see the dignitaries cheer at Anna punching Hans in the face. Nothing there suggests anything about accepting Elsa as a ruler; it has more to do with Anna than anything. And the French dignitary returning Hans doesn't suggest anything about his relationship with Elsa. All it tells us is he offered to transport Hans back to the Southern Isles. But it seems you want a statement about what they thought about Elsa, so I have decided to add that bit about them joyously watching her thaw Arendelle.