Thread:Dragonboy6491/@comment-25389622-20140907210809/@comment-24199126-20141101191858

The use of doors as metaphors was definitely noticeable in the film. Often people question the intentions of the creators of books/films but when there's repeated usage of a word, phrase, or idea, you can bet it's something the creators wanted to focus on :). I'm not 100% certain, but I think the word door has appeared in almost every single song in Frozen.

You know a film is a success when it becomes somewhat of a cultural phenomenon; I've said it before, but Japan is the best example for it. Some say its popularity will fizzle out but I think what we have here is something that will be relevant for generations to come. Let all the haters ramble; they'll eat their unfounded criticisms when their grandchildren are watching the film xD

Whoa, are you saying you saw Photshopped pictures of violent Elsa? I gotta say, I thought the Helsa/Jelsa shippers took Photoshopping far, but wow, that's just a new extreme. I didn't realize people were into such grisly content ... I suppose it makes sense considering how the fairy tales Disney based its stories on were originally quite graphic, Cinderella being one of the best examples. As for how you see Elsa's rage, I agree. In fact, I like to draw on what Star Wars has said about fear being the path to the dark side. Fear leads to anger, anger leads to hate, hate leads to suffering. It's literally what happened when Elsa faced the guards. Regarding people and sadistic scenarios ... well that's human nature for you. It's like how we remember the killers of a serial murder spree but not the victims, or how we stare at a car wreck, horrified by what has occurred, yet remain fixated on it. I can think of Ted Bundy and his crimes but I'm ashamed to say I cannot name a single victim. Shows like Criminal Minds and CSI are named to reflect pursuing the perpetrators, not comforting the victims. I forget where I heard this quote, but it's unfortunately true: "One death is a tragedy; one million is a statistic."

Yes I agree. As much as I appreciated hearing other people talk about the film, I had to remember where I was and focus my attention elsewhere and ignore the conversation at hand. I doubt Frozen is capable of being tainted, but I'd still rather not blend it with the rigors of school and work.

My shift can be two things: either I sit there and hand out practice room keys to our music students and just stare off into space. Or, I can sit at a desk answering an endless array of phone calls about events throughout the building (i.e. need more/less chairs, tables, food in a room. Sometimes calls are about room cleanliness so I need to call the building janitorial staff; there could be suspicious individuals so I have to redirect individuals to Public Safety. There are calls from clubs and organization about booking space for the future). I also have to conduct tours of the building to make sure it's not burning down. I don't mind the first or the last, but the phone calls are horrible. People are very pretentious sometimes, and though I used to have sympathy for clients, after dealing with people at work, I find that the adage "the customer is always right" is completely false. But anyways, yeah the Frozen behind the scenes was not nearly as comprehensive as I'd liked. I was bummed when I saw that the "Making of Frozen" on my DVD was just a little sing-along ... it was cute and all but wasn't all that informative. So I guess the Story of Frozen was definitely a step above that.

Oh man, having work and home intertwined like that would be horrible. Would bring us one step closer to the world envisioned by George Orwell in 1984. And you don't want to know Maitland Jones; he's a brilliant man but he does not realize that his genius eclipses everyone else's. I appreciated he put all his students on the same playing field as himself, but it made comprehending his material incredibly difficult >.>

If I can find the books, we can discuss what to do in greater detail. I'd say they're canon enough to be placed into the main article, assuming we can establish the time-frame. If not, well then we'd be forced to place it in the Trivia due to chronology issues.

I've changed Elsa's picture at this point so let me know here or on the thread what you think :).

Santino Fontana has a great voice but you're right, I was expecting him to look different. But as bad of a person Hans was, you've got to appreciate his singing skills; talk about an impressive vocal range. Then again, every Disney villain seems quite capable of singing well ...