Hmm, its funny because out of the big giant list of things my ex grew to hate about me, toy collecting oddly enough wasn't one of em.
this is my opinion and im sorry if you don't like it. there is no need to be rude in every post you make. you have been reported to the mods.
He wasn't being rude, he was pointing out the flaws in your post. If you're going to post an opinion you have to be ready for someone to refute it.
I've now got that stuck in my head. Well, that is assuming it was ever not stuck in there. Seriously though guys, I'm not reading anything particularly offensive in anyone's posts, good points being made on both sides but I'd encourage everyone to just take a step back and cool off a little, okay? Now, let's get back to the topic. I do question what else must have been going on in the background for this to have been what broke the camel's back.
... ... ...oh now i get it! i saw the movie while babysitting my nephew, my mom thought it was funny and bought it for my nephew. doesn't really get his attention. i thought it was boring.
I think I'm the only person who saw the trailers and thought Olaf wasn't going to be annoying at all.
I wasn't too worried, I liked Pascal and Maximus in Tangled better than Eugene and Rapunzel anyway. I was pleasently surprised how nuanced they managed to make him, considering the overall track record of such characters in Disney movies.
I was in Disney World a few weeks ago and seemed like Frozen was everywhere. I don't think that even the studio execs had any idea that it was going to blow up in popularity like it did. At the new Princess meet 'n' greet there were two lines: one to meet the Frozen girls and one for all the other princesses. And the Frozen line was still much longer. Hell, even the Stormtroopers were singing that damn song. I finally got around to seeing this last night. It's pretty much what I expected from a movie that starts with a Disney logo and centers on two sisters. It actually sort of reminded me of Tin Man. (My only complaint: If it's only been a few hours, how do you know it's a perpetual winter?) I did like how they sort of played on that trope about a princess finding her true love in the first prince she meets.
The eternal winter came about I suspect because the film takes place in the summer: she's just shifted them forward many months meteorogically and I recall them saying it was getting colder as the hours went by. It could also be the hyperbole of very frightened people, but given the dickish nature of magic I don't think they would have been far off the mark in their assumptions.