![]() When she learns that she caused an Endless Winter in Arendelle, she would like to fix it, but ends up panicking over not knowing how. The trope ends when she finally controls her powers. Elsa acts distant and aloof to Anna because she's afraid of losing control of her powers. Afraid of Their Own Strength: Ever since she was a child, she has obsessively tried to suppress her ice powers and stay as far away from people as possible and is afraid that she will hurt others like she did Anna.Affection-Hating Kid: Elsa is seen as a child being disgusted by her sister Anna's story that has everybody get married.This is especially prominent in Frozen II, where she repeatedly refuses to work with others and ends up becoming frozen after ignoring warnings about going too far into Ahtohallan. While Elsa is more open, she displays a reluctance to believe in Anna or acknowledge her own need for help. In the following installments, Elsa has a bad habit of forgetting this. Aesop Amnesia: In the first movie, Elsa learns the importance of opening up and trusting in people, especially Anna, after her attempts to avoid her problems by avoiding other people backfire and while no perfect solution exists, love turns out to be much more helpful.While Elsa fears she's the latter, she's really the former, especially in later installments. Adaptational Heroism: The Snow Queen was a neutral entity in the original tale, open to interpretation as either good or evil.Adaptational Name Change: Is a Composite Character of the nameless Snow Queen and a boy named Kai from the source material, The Snow Queen, but is called "Elsa".It also plays a key role in how she deals with the fire spirit, blasting ice before charming it with ice flakes after it becomes clear it's a super-adorable and cuddly salamander. It's how she deals with the wind spirit and the water spirit, freezing the wind spirit and beating the water spirit in battle with her ice magic. Action Heroine: As the token super of the main cast, using her superpowers to blast ice at things is her main method of problem-solving.The only way for her to do what is really the right thing and come into herself is to let go of those ideas. Essentially, she is rejecting right and wrong because she's internalized a toxic view of what right and wrong actually are. Nonetheless, when she finds out she has unknowingly frozen the entire kingdom of Arendelle, she is deeply horrified. After running away to be alone, she resolves to discard concepts like "right" and "wrong" and simply live by her own rules, no longer caring what the rest of the world will think of her actions. Abdicate the Throne: At the end of Frozen II, Elsa passes the crown on to Anna while she herself retreats to the Enchanted Forest.Once she is able to end the Endless Winter and the prince's deceptions are exposed, though, her popularity returns. After it looks as if she murdered said sister, Hans is able to convince people to accept him as their new ruler and even comply with his orders to sentence the former queen to death without fuss. Pretty much everyone begins to fear her and believe that the new queen intentionally doomed them to freeze and starve, with the exception of her sister and, once she creates him, her snowlem Olaf. She then flees the kingdom as, unbeknownst to her, her Power Incontinence sends the country into an Endless Winter. When she enters the crowded courtyard, she starts to lose control of her powers, which turn a fountain into spiky ice, and accidentally shoots a blast into the crowd. She starts off well-liked, and people are excited to see her crowned, but during the coronation ball, Elsa loses her temper and shoots ice spikes at her sister, then flees the castle. It starts and ends well, and doesn't reach absolute zero, but comes close for much of the story. ![]() 0% Approval Rating: Downplayed, exploited, and zig-zagged.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |