She wasn't so much a villain as an anti-hero. I believe she got a redemption and what became the duke of Weaselton was a bigger villain.
Then they wrote Let it Go, decided it was too good to be a villain song, completely rewrote the film so that Elsa wasn't villainous at all and rushed it finished (which is why there are a bunch of animation mistakes). Let it Go doesn't even really make sense in the final film as about 5 minutes after she goes back to being scared of her powers again.
>"No right, no wrong, no rules for me; I'm free" >She decides to keep her kingdom in eternal winter and doom all the people who picked on her to slow death rather than try to fix it because she finds it more emotionally authentic
>"No right, no wrong, no rules for me; I'm free" >She decides to keep her kingdom in eternal winter and doom all the people who picked on her to slow death rather than try to fix it because she finds it more emotionally authentic
says the No right No Wrong would be peak declaration of villainy in a different context.
The absolute visceral reaction in the theater when he revealed he was a villain was pretty great though.
I get he was pretty much the start of Disney's shitty twist or non-villains but I loved the experience when the film came out.
>after this movie no woman villains exist at Disney >especially hot ones with ice powers >not even BH6 where the director stated that villains are dumb and heroes didn't need an iconic villain to fight against
evil elsa is an even worse villain
Why?
Evil Elsa was the whole reason the movie was being made I nthe first place
This is not the argument you think it is
Evil Elsa would have been great you fricking coomer
He did fit thematically. He only needed to say 'love is an open door' when he locked Anna.
Evil Elsa would've been a thing of beauty. And booty if they kept the hips.
She wasn't so much a villain as an anti-hero. I believe she got a redemption and what became the duke of Weaselton was a bigger villain.
Then they wrote Let it Go, decided it was too good to be a villain song, completely rewrote the film so that Elsa wasn't villainous at all and rushed it finished (which is why there are a bunch of animation mistakes). Let it Go doesn't even really make sense in the final film as about 5 minutes after she goes back to being scared of her powers again.
>"No right, no wrong, no rules for me; I'm free"
>She decides to keep her kingdom in eternal winter and doom all the people who picked on her to slow death rather than try to fix it because she finds it more emotionally authentic
Parts of let it go do have villain echoes.
As
says the No right No Wrong would be peak declaration of villainy in a different context.
And her subsequent actions back that up.
The absolute visceral reaction in the theater when he revealed he was a villain was pretty great though.
I get he was pretty much the start of Disney's shitty twist or non-villains but I loved the experience when the film came out.
>after this movie no woman villains exist at Disney
>especially hot ones with ice powers
>not even BH6 where the director stated that villains are dumb and heroes didn't need an iconic villain to fight against
BH6 was way better movie despite Frozen excellent source material
>we were cucked out of evil elsa
We got the superior Elsa instead. Never mind the sequel ruined her but oh well.
indeed
>villain
He would have been the monarch the common man needed.
If they were so bent on making the Snow Queen good, they should have done it like John Silver in Treasure Planet