15 Secrets From Frozen That We Still Can't Let Go Of

There's still a bit of the Frozen-fever among us.

Liezel
15 Secrets From Frozen That We Still Can't Let Go Of

Even though you've somehow found a way to avoid watching frozen or even if you listened to the film's songs nonstop, chances are you still know exactly what happened and at least a bit of the songs. It became such an iconic film that people of all ages, even those who weren't really into cartoons or musicals, were forced to swallow down Frozen and its songs.

At its height, the film was just everywhere. The songs were being played on almost every speaker, the faces of Elsa, Anna, and Olaf were on everything, and almost every kid out there was dressed as Elsa.

It was just crazy and you got to admit, it somehow deserved the craze. The animations alone were amazing and the songs were just so catchy that once you hear them, you can't really get them out of your mind.

Plus, come on, we all got to admit that although the story isn't the first of its kind, the packaging of the entire thing was just so well done.

Even now, years after the first film has been released, the film still holds a place in the hearts of many including us. That's why it always delights us to know more secrets about it and all the behind-the-scenes.

They bring a little bit more magic into it. Here are some of those very secrets we still can't get over.

It wasn't always meant to be "Frozen"

1. Before Frozen, there was an adaptation of Hans Christian Andersen's 1845 fairy tale The Snow Queen that was in development over at Disney for almost over a decade.

The first modern attempt was in 2002, then again in 2003. More attempts followed over the years, however, Frozen didn't really start coming together until Christopher Buck, the director of Tarzan, came aboard the project in 2008.

The film wasn't commissioned until after the box office success of Tangled, however, and in 2012, Jennifer Lee who initially signed up as a screenwriter was named co-director making her the first woman to direct a Disney animated film.

2. The original title of the film was The Snow Queen after the original fairy tale, however, the filmmakers decided to change it to Frozen. "To us, it represents the movie. Frozen plays on the level of ice and snow but also the frozen relationship, the frozen heart that has to be thawed," producer Peter Del Vecho explained to Bleeding Cool

It wasn't always meant to be Disney

They were just meant to play the part

3. Menzel and Bell met and auditioned with the producers of Tangled for the role of Rapunzel but the role ultimately went to Mandy Moore.

Bell, whose dream it was to voice a Disney character ever since she was a little girl was the very first actress to audition for Anna. Of that, Lee said, "We did audition a lot of people for that but she was the first and the best. We just fell in love with her."

4. Menzel's audition, on the other hand, was a table-read with Bell before they had both been officially cast. "They read the whole script and at the end—we didn't have any songs written yet—and what they did was sing a duet and they sang 'Wind Beneath My Wings,' but they sang it like sisters and what you mean to me," Lee said. "And there wasn't a dry eye in the house after they sang...that is when they knew, that was the whole potential and understanding the power of music and of what this emotional story can be."

They were just meant to play the partMichael Buckner/Variety/Shutterstock

She wasn't supposed to be a hero

5. In the early versions of the film, Elsa wasn't supposed to have her redeeming moment. In fact, she was actually the villain of the story according to former Disney animation designer Claire Keane who released the early concept art designs inspired by Bette Midler and her showgirl stage presence.

"Originally, she was much more villainous," Buck told Nerdist. "It's very easy to go in that direction for that type of character, but as the time went and we evolved the story, she became much more three-dimensional. Before I thought she was one-dimensional but a very fully fleshed-out character."

When they watched earlier cuts and realized it wasn't working though, they decided to go in another direction. "Someone came up with the brilliant idea...' what if the protagonist, Anna, and Elsa were related?'" art director Michael Giaimo revealed. "Because they weren't always siblings, they weren't always related, and that was the beginning of finding these characters."

She wasn't supposed to be a heroDisney

Olaf wasn't supposed to be all so innocent and Hans wasn't even supposed to be there

6. Another character the Frozen team had a hard time nailing down was Olaf who was originally supposed to be the the-villainous Elsa's first guard. "She created these snowman guards and Marshmallow was kind of a holdover from that because he was this scary snowman guard. Olaf was the very first guard she created," Buck explained

It was only after they changed Elsa's character completely and sat down with Gad that they found the Olaf we knew now. "Josh adlibbed the line 'it's like a baby unicorn' and there was something about that innocence," Del Vecho told Kidz World. 

7. Has,Anna's suitor-turned-villain wasn't also supposed to be in the film. "Hans was never originally in the story in older versions...Kristoff always was in the story or a version of the Kristoff character and Anna," Glaimo explained. "And then Hans was brought in at one point but he wasn't always a villain who turned initially, and then someone came up with the idea of him turning. He was always potentially a villain, but we gave it away much sooner."

Olaf wasn't supposed to be all so innocent and Hans wasn't even supposed to be thereDisney

Adele + Avril Lavigne + nature = Frozen's most iconic song

8. Anna's "Wait, what?" catchphrase was ad-libbed by Bell.

9. The scene that took the longest to create was the one where Elsa was walking out onto the balcony of her new palace. It took over 132 hours to render.

10. After the first few songs they created didn't make it in, songwriters Robert Lopez and Kristen Anderson Lopez were feeling pretty beat down so they went for a walk in Brooklyn's Prospect Park while listening to Adele and Avril Lavigne songs and being surrounded by nature.

" We were in this kind of emo place of imagining what it would be like to be this perfect person who messed up once, and was chased away from everything she has known and all the people she has been sacrificing for," Anderson-Lopez said.

Within the day, they were able to write the film's most iconic song which went on to sell over 10 million copies and win the Oscar for Best Original Song.

Adele + Avril Lavigne + nature = Frozen's most iconic songDisney

Shaping Elsa's character

11. After listening to "Let It Go" for the very first time, Lee said she knew they had to rework Elsa's character.

"Half of us were crying. And then I just went, 'I have to rewrite the whole movie,'" she said on the Scriptnotes podcast. "I really, it was—I was just like I'm going to go lie down for a couple minutes. But it was the best thing. We knew we had the movie."

12. On the same podcast, Lee also admitted there was a lot of push and pull when it came to Elsa's look and how sexy to make her after her awakening.

"Everyone was seduced by her. And so there was this tug of war I think, a bit, of letting people have a little—people who wanted to have that a little and not be afraid of it, but not make it a sexual statement," the co-director explained. "It's more a moment of, for me, it was like you strut and you say nobody is looking, this is what I'm going to — I'm not going to be afraid of my sexuality. I'm not going to be afraid of who I am. I'm not going to be afraid of anything about myself."

Shaping Elsa's characterDisney

Eagle-eyes

13 One of the many easter eggs spotted by eagle-eyed fans in the film is Tangled's Rapunzel (post haircut) and Eugene during the morning of Elsa's coronation. It also helped fans form a pretty compelling argument that Frozen, Tangled, and Little Mermaid were all connected.

What if Anna and Elsa's parents died when they were on their way to the Tangled pair's wedding? And what if the sunken ship on Little Mermaid was the ship they were sailing on?

14 However, that theory only works if you believe that the kind and queen of Arendelle did die in that shipwreck, something Buck speculated about on Reddit. He said that in his mind, the king and queen as well as their newborn baby boy didn't actually die but washed up on the shore of a jungle where they built a tree house before being eaten by a leopard.

That baby boy? Tarzan and nobody else.

"That's my fun little world," he later told MTV. While that theory isn't official, Buck said, "Whatever people want to believe, go for it. If you want to tie them all together, then do it."

Eagle-eyesWalt Disney Company

A drastically different ending

Given that Elsa was initially the villain, the ending of the film was drastically different as well. In fact, the film would have revolved around a prophecy about "a ruler with a frozen heart will bring destruction to the kingdom of Arendelle."

Viewers would then learn that Elsa became the Snow Queen after she was left at the altar and decided to freeze her own heart. By the end, Anna would convince Elsa to use her powers to protect Arendelle from an avalanche caused by Hans with the ultimate reveal being the prophecy was actually about the two-faced prince.

Elsa's heart would then unfreeze making her capable of loving again.

"The problem was that we felt like we had seen it before," Del Vecho told EW of the original ending. "It wasn't satisfying. We had no emotional connection to Elsa—we didn't care about her because she had spent the whole movie being the villain. We weren't drawn in. The characters weren't relatable."

A drastically different endingYouTube

Honestly, if they went the way they initially planned to with Frozen, we don't really think it would be as big of a hit as it was plus, we don't really think it would resonate that much with the young audiences who loved the movie so much. Thankfully, they decided to go on a much better route and one that made the movie a lot more memorable.

What were your favorite facts about Frozen?

Liezel