1. For an animation, Hans' transformation from good to evil seems too sudden (even if the prince becomes a villain, the expression is still the good person expression series in the traditional Disney animation, is it blurring the line). But after thinking about it, it makes sense for the poster to be designed like this.
2. At the cinema, I heard my parents explaining to the children that the storm and the two large tombstones meant the death of the king and his wife. This is not a matter of the plot. Indeed, many animations require parents to explain to the children on the side. However, the Chinese version has a series of "love" in the later lines, which caused the children to imitate it very lively. (This has nothing to do with the plot, it's too far)
3. The dangerous description of the Queen's magic backlash seems a bit strange. It just felt red, and then suddenly the queen came back.
4. The two heroines seem to look like they are using the same skeleton model but the skin is changed. But if they don't look alike, they don't look like sisters... that's a bit difficult indeed. Maybe the main thing is that the expression is too similar. In reality, even twins differ in the movement of their expressions.
5. It was an interesting comparison with Andersen's Snow Queen.
I think that true love is simply a big rant. It feels like the screenwriter is silently saying, come on, come on, there are carrots in the pit to eat, and then you jumped in and he took out a periscope and said, look, here it is.
The movement of the reindeer was another noise. Running is normal, walking is frustrating. Suddenly I remembered the modeling of the rubber band villain.
In conclusion, it seems that Disney is frantically making fun of its own classic routines. I don't know how the children will react after seeing it, but it's really interesting to laugh at themselves.
The special effects of snowflakes can't be better...
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