Tangled
Tangled is a 2010
American 3D computer-animated musical adventure film produced by Walt Disney
Animation Studios and released by Walt Disney Pictures. Loosely based on the
German fairy tale "Rapunzel" in the collection of folk tales. The film tells the story of a lost, young
princess with magical long blonde hair who yearns to leave her secluded tower.
Here comes all sorts of inevitable problems the princesses of old stories
basically subjected to.
As like how the
story would be woven in fine quality without being faced a snag. Here comes Mother Gothel who used the flower to retain her youth,
for centuries, and she is angered when soldiers from a nearby kingdom pluck it
to heal their ailing and pregnant queen. Shortly afterward, the Queen gives
birth to Princess Rapunzel,
whose golden hair contains the flower's healing properties.Here the disney
story anchored through a bit magic embellished in traditional folklore. Gothel
tries to steal a lock of Rapunzel's hair to use the magic once again, but
discovers that cutting the hair renders it powerless. She instead abducts
Rapunzel and raises her as her own in a secret tower. In order to keep the
confined and isolated Rapunzel content, Gothel teaches her to fear the outside
world and its people. A couple times she tries to convince Mother Gothel to let
her out, but Gothel does not let her.
Then we’re being
introduced with a dashing bad
boy, musicalized in old-school Broadway fashion and shot through with broad
comedy. The story devised on the tension between Gothel's need to keep Rapunzel
away from the outside world and the yearning of the captive, who's about to
turn 18, to discover it. This part of story is quite innovative as the hero was
none but a rapscallion, unlike the price charming of other stories.
Still, given the modern take
here, it might have been amusing to acknowledge that growing up in solitary
confinement might give a girl some complexes and misconceptions about life on
the outside. Once she absconds with a dashing thief with the unlikely moniker
of Flynn Rider, a bumpy learning curve as to the real world could have provided
a bountiful extra layer of humor and behavioral interest.
Along the way, there
is a rollicking encounter in a roadside tavern with a band of ruffians who turn
out to be as congenial and musically prone as the seven dwarfs as well as the
shenanigans of a comically vigilant white horse, all of which reflects the
antic showbizzy animation
But more than all this is the
state-of-the-art which transforms the fairy tale into an eye-popping story. And
the conventional live-happily-ever-after technique where she found her real
parents, her princesshood followed by a lovey-dovey relationship with Flynn.
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