![]() ![]() It just can’t quite hit the exuberant highs of its predecessor. As a sequel, it’s charming enough and extremely sweet and well-intentioned. ![]() ![]() Much as it drapes itself in the costume of change, Frozen II knows all too well to stick to what works it’s a Disney film, after all, a studio allergic to risk. Unlike the snowy jewel tones of the first Frozen, that 2013 hit that grossed more than a billion dollars and cemented “Let It Go” as a perennial you-go-girl earworm, Frozen II is coated in the browns and ambers of autumn, that season of transition. “Some things never change,” sings the ensemble cast of Frozen II early in its runtime, a rousing, chipper ballad from Kristen Anderson-Lopez and Robert Lopez cheekily teasing that change is, in fact, in the air for the citizens of Arendelle. This sequel to the 2013 animated hit delivers on the songs and some lovely messaging, but essentially delivers more of the same. ![]()
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