"Better a fallen rocket than never a burst of light."
~ Tom Stoppard, The Invention of Love

Wednesday, October 21, 2015

Relationship Spotlight: Elsa & Anna (Frozen)


How cool is it that the central relationship in what’s basically the biggest Disney Deal of All Time is between a pair of sisters?  I love it – I love that anything romantic is a subplot, I love what it says about the varied nature of true love, and I love that this sister connection is what fuels the story.  This is Elsa and Anna.  (A few spoilers.)



Given where they are in the first act of the film, their actions are major testaments to their love for one another.  Keep in mind, when Elsa comes out of reclusiveness for her coronation, Anna hasn’t seen her in probably about ten years.  Her older sister has literally been in her bedroom for a decade, saying nothing to her but, “Go away, Anna.”  Elsa has her reasons (more on that later,) but Anna isn’t privy to any of them.  All she knows is that Elsa shut her out when they were children.  Despite all this distance, when the big bombshell drops that Elsa has been hiding magical powers, when they accidentally go haywire and plunge the kingdom into eternal winter, and when Elsa panics and bolts, Anna has complete faith that it’s all a mistake/misunderstanding and takes it upon herself to singlehandedly find Else and bring her home.



Another important consideration:  because of Elsa’s situation, the king and queen pretty much shut the palace doors to the rest of the kingdom.  Anna hasn’t seen Elsa in ten years, but she probably hasn’t seen anyone, besides her (now deceased) parents and the palace staff, in that time, either.  She likely hasn’t been outside.  It’s not quite Rapunzel-sheltered, but it’s still crazy sheltered.  Her life has been so so limited, and yet, when her sister is in trouble, Anna doesn’t even balk at the idea of venturing off to help her.  She is not very good at adventuring; she doesn’t dress for the weather, she doesn’t know her way through the countryside, and she doesn’t have the first idea how to climb a mountain.  That said, she approaches it with unquenchable tenacity, never letting any of her slips or stumbles slow her down.  Because Elsa needs her.



And what about Elsa?  It’s indicative of her incredibly-damaged self-image, but the only reason she cuts herself off from Anna for so long is because she’s convinced that she (Elsa) is dangerous and is terrified of hurting her sister.  (Side note:  how awful are Elsa and Anna’s parents?  I get that they’re overwhelmed and well-meaning, trying their best to help their daughter through something they don’t understand, but they couldn’t have gotten it more wrong.  Ooh, our young daughter’s magical powers are directly tied to her emotional state?  I know, let’s do our darnedest to create an atmosphere that makes her feel like she’s a monster?  Seriously, so much parenting fail.)  For the past decade, she’s been lonely, afraid, and self-loathing – no doubt that the loving, optimistic Anna would have been all too glad to offer comfort, reassurance, and caring, but Elsa denied herself all of that out of her desire to protect Anna.  Essentially, due to her misguided fear, she’s showed her love for her sister by not allowing herself to have the sister she loves.  Talk about tragic!


Finally, I love that, in the end, it’s Elsa’s familial True Love for Anna that saves Anna from the “frozen heart” spell.  I mean, I love me some Anna/Kristoff, but with everything that’s been informing the sister relationship, Anna and Kristoff haven’t known each other nearly long enough to compete with that, and it’s so fitting that the sisters’ love takes pride of place.  In recent years, a few fairytales have subverted the usual True Love’s Kiss/Act of True Love trope, but Frozen was the first that I saw, which automatically makes it special for me.

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