5 / 10
Frozen 2 is the sequel to the 2013 Walt Disney Animation Studios film that became the highest-grossing animated film of all time. Chris Buck and Jennifer Lee co-directed. Lee wrote. Kristen Bell returns as Anna. Idina Menzel returns as Elsa. Jonathan Groff voices Kristoff. Josh Gad voices Olaf. Sterling K. Brown voices Lieutenant Mattias, an Arendellian soldier trapped in the enchanted forest. Evan Rachel Wood voices Queen Iduna, Elsa and Anna’s mother. The plot follows Elsa hearing a mysterious voice calling her north, the sisters traveling into the enchanted forest, and the revelation that their grandfather King Runeard committed an atrocity against the Northuldra people that has cursed the region.
The film made approximately one billion four hundred and fifty million dollars worldwide on a one hundred and fifty million dollar budget. The commercial performance was strong. The critical reception was mixed compared to the universally acclaimed first film. The film is included on the Woke Disasters list not because it failed commercially (it did not) but because its narrative content represented Disney’s clearest commitment to applying indigenous-reparations frameworks to its core princess properties.
What Made It a Woke Disaster
The film’s central revelation is that Anna and Elsa’s grandfather, King Runeard of Arendelle, committed a colonial atrocity against the indigenous Northuldra people. Runeard had built a dam in the Northuldra forest under the framing of a goodwill gift. The dam was actually intended to suppress the Northuldra’s spiritual connection to the elemental forces of nature. When the Northuldra leader challenged Runeard about the dam, Runeard killed him. The action triggered the curse that trapped soldiers and Northuldra together in the magical forest for thirty years.
The third-act resolution is that Anna must destroy the dam to free the Northuldra and lift the curse. Destroying the dam will flood and destroy Arendelle. Elsa intervenes at the last moment to save the kingdom, but the moral logic is unambiguous. The dam represents Arendelle’s wrongful claim to Northuldra land. The dam’s destruction is the necessary reparation. Anna, the kingdom’s reigning monarch, makes the choice to flood her own civilization to make right what her grandfather did wrong.
The framework is indigenous reparations applied to animated fantasy. The Northuldra are the displaced indigenous people. The Arendellians are the colonial settlers. The dam is the infrastructure of colonization. The moral conclusion is that the descendants of the colonizers must accept reparation through destruction of their own civilization. The film does not present this as one perspective. The film presents it as the moral solution that earns the curse’s lifting and the resolution’s joy.
For Writers
A film that asks the audience to celebrate the destruction of the civilization it has spent the previous installment loving has structured a moral argument the audience cannot easily accept. Frozen 2 spent two films building Arendelle into a beloved fictional kingdom. The sequel argues that the kingdom must be flooded. The audience reads the contradiction. The lesson is that established sympathy for fictional settings creates obligations for sequels. If you intend to argue against the setting, you have to do the work of moving the audience’s loyalty before you ask them to accept the setting’s collapse. Frozen 2 did not do that work.
The Elsa Retreat
The film’s other major narrative choice is that Elsa abandons her queenship to live with the Northuldra in the enchanted forest. Anna is left as queen of Arendelle. The structural argument is that Elsa belongs with the indigenous people because her magical nature is connected to theirs. The rational, civic, governance-focused role belongs to Anna. The mystical, nature-connected, spiritually authentic role belongs to Elsa with the Northuldra.
The structure positions civilization as the realm of the unmagical and indigenous wilderness as the realm of true spiritual authenticity. Elsa’s authentic self requires leaving the kingdom and joining the indigenous. The civilization is depicted as the place where she cannot be fully herself. The wilderness is where her real nature lives. The Noble Savage framework, which had been criticized in academic and political contexts for decades, returns here as Disney’s resolution to its protagonist’s identity arc.
For Writers
Romantic primitivism in fiction reads as politically progressive to writers and as patronizing to the groups being romanticized. Frozen 2 codes the Northuldra as spiritually purer than the Arendellians. The framing is meant to be respectful. The framing is also the Noble Savage trope dressed in 2019 Disney costume. The lesson is that idealizing a fictional indigenous group is not the same as respecting them. Both Disney and its critics have struggled with this for decades. The 2019 film did not break new ground in either direction.
The Music
The film’s most successful individual element is the song “Into the Unknown.” The song was written by Kristen Anderson-Lopez and Robert Lopez, the team behind “Let It Go.” Idina Menzel’s vocal performance is the production’s strongest individual moment. The song was a major commercial success, charting in multiple international markets. The sequence is the film’s most-quoted and most-replayed passage.
The other songs do not match “Into the Unknown.” “Show Yourself” is structurally similar to “Let It Go” and reads as a sequel attempt to recreate the original’s standout moment. “Lost in the Woods,” Kristoff’s power ballad, is staged as comedy in a way that undercuts its emotional intent. “The Next Right Thing,” Anna’s mourning song, is the second-strongest piece but is less memorable than the first film’s “Do You Want to Build a Snowman.” The soundtrack has highs but does not match the consistency of the original.
For Writers
Sequel songs face an impossible bar when the original produced an all-time standout. Frozen 2’s “Into the Unknown” is strong, but it is compared to “Let It Go,” which is a defining song of 2010s animation. The lesson is that sequels inherit their predecessors’ high points as expectations. The audience does not grade the sequel against typical work. They grade it against the predecessor’s best moments. Plan for this. Either find a new register or accept that the comparison will be unflattering.
Craft Note
The sequence in which Elsa rides the water spirit Nokk across the Dark Sea is the film’s strongest individual visual passage and one of Walt Disney Animation Studios’s strongest action sequences of the decade. The animation team designed Nokk as a horse made of water, with the kelpie’s translucent body responding to Elsa’s movements and the surrounding waves. The Dark Sea sequence demonstrates the technical capability of the production and the design team’s commitment to specific creature work. The sequence is what the film looks like when its craft serves a moment of pure adventure rather than ideological argument.
The Verdict
5/10. A commercially successful Frozen sequel whose narrative content represented Disney’s clearest commitment to applying reparations frameworks to its princess properties. “Into the Unknown” is excellent. The Nokk sequence is the production’s strongest action work. The dam destruction and the Elsa retreat are the film’s ideological commitments. Watch the first Frozen instead. Watch this only if your child has demanded it.
FAQ
Is the dam destruction really framed as moral reparation?
Yes. The script positions destroying the dam as the act that lifts the curse and resolves the wrong King Runeard committed.
Does Arendelle actually flood?
Elsa diverts the flood at the last moment. The kingdom is saved. The moral framing of the destruction-as-reparation remains intact.
Who are the Northuldra meant to represent?
The production has cited the Sami people of northern Scandinavia as inspiration. Disney signed an agreement with the Sami Parliament about cultural consultation.
How is “Into the Unknown”?
Excellent. The song is the strongest individual track and the film’s most-quoted moment.
Will there be a Frozen 3?
Yes. Jennifer Lee has confirmed development. As of 2026, no theatrical release date is set.
How does it compare to the first Frozen?
Significantly below. The 2013 first film is one of the strongest animated features of the 2010s. Frozen 2 has good elements but does not match its predecessor.
Should I watch this?
If you have children who request it, yes. As a Disney completist, yes. Otherwise, lower priority.