Bangkok Post

Let it go? Disney thaws Frozen for blockbuste­r sequel

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Six years ago, Frozen shattered box office records, melted the hearts of youngsters and spawned a franchise so popular Disney was never likely to let it go.

And so Queen Elsa and Princess Anna return this month in Frozen II — a sequel its creators promise will be “even bigger and more epic”, with its world premiere taking place in Los Angeles last Thursday.

Inspired by Hans Christian Andersen’s The Snow Queen, the original followed Anna on her journey to find sister Elsa, whose hard-to-control icy powers had trapped their kingdom in eternal winter.

The sequel, out in Thailand on Nov 22, explores the royal family’s backstory and promises to answer fans’ questions, including the source of Elsa’s formidable magic.

“That one question was just the beginning though,” returning director Jennifer Lee told Disney’s recent D23 fan convention.

“Why was Anna born the way she was? Where were their parents really going when that ship went down? Is there really such a thing as happily ever after?”

After a prologue set in the past,

Frozen II sees a mysterious voice return to haunt grown-up Elsa. It urges her to leave her happy castle and embark upon a new, perilous quest to a faraway enchanted forest.

The first Frozen (2013) reigned as the top-grossing animated film of all time, taking nearly US$1.3 billion (9.4 billion baht) worldwide, until this year’s The

Lion King remake came along to steal its crown.

“It became an absolute phenomenon — the music, the characters, the stories really resonated,” said Paul

Dergarabed­ian, senior media analyst with Comscore.

The movie’s success was all the more remarkable as, unlike Disney’s highly lucrative series of “live-action” remakes of classic animations, Frozen was an entirely new brand.

“It is a big deal — it’s great to have your archive, to reboot your beloved Disney” stories, said Dergarabed­ian. “But it’s another thing to create something out of whole cloth, and have it now become a film that’s canonised within Disney as one of their greatest franchises of all time.” Frozen has since spawned a Broadway musical, theme park rides and merchandis­e from toy figures to books and video games.

In a show of the franchise’s importance to Disney, Frozen creator Lee was promoted to chief creative officer of Walt Disney Animation Studios following John Lasseter’s 2018 exit amid allegation­s of sexual misconduct.

The sequel sees stars Kristen Bell and Idina Menzel — who sang Oscar-winning showstoppe­r Let It Go — return, as do the original songwriter­s.

Joining the starry voice cast are Sterling K. Brown (This Is Us) as a soldier trapped in the forest, Evan Rachel Wood (Westworld) as the princesses’ mother, shown in flashbacks and Jeremy Sisto as King Runeard.

The excitement surroundin­g the sequel “will catapult it to a potentiall­y $100 million-plus opening weekend” in North American theatres, predicted Dergarabed­ian.

“At this point, it would be almost unthinkabl­e that it wouldn’t earn at least $1 billion worldwide.”

 ??  ?? From left, Kristen Bell, Josh Gad and Idina Menzel of the Frozen 2 cast.
From left, Kristen Bell, Josh Gad and Idina Menzel of the Frozen 2 cast.

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