Engl 1101 100
Sewell
24 October 2017
The Lone Wolf
Some believe a parents' influence on their children is what makes them the person they will be in the future. For every set of parents, they have their unique way of doing so. For Anna, a child raised in isolation with an outgoing persona can cause a social disconnect. Anna yearns for human interaction, something she has been deprived of since the incident in the ballroom, up until Elsa's coronation. Tragedy strikes leaving her parents' dead and a sister forced into the shadows, leaving Anna, a very extroverted being by herself in an enormous castle. The parents in Disney's Frozen had a negative influence on Anna by isolating her within the castle, preventing her from building …show more content…
Connecting with a man, you instantly meet after years of being alone, is not a shock because of the small human interaction she has had in her life so far. Anna does this in fear of losing this relationship Anna has "built" with Hans and being alone again. If Anna had relationships when she was younger, she would not rely so heavily on another person, like she does with Hans now.
Anna being a naïve young woman believes the love that Hans and her share is true love. Being the older sister, Elsa sees the absurdity of Anna marrying a man she just met and says, "what do you know about true love" (0:26:39). Anna claims she knows more about it than Elsa since all she does is "shut people out" (0:26:43). Indeed, Elsa did shut Anna out, and Anna spent all of her childhood alone. She has no memory of her and Elsa ever being together. On top of that, Anna is even more confused because she has no idea why her only sister is treating her this …show more content…
Viewers see that Anna and Hans' relationship lose that trust when he does not to kiss her to save her life when Elsa froze her heart on accident. Because her heart is slowly freezing to death, the audience sees Anna's hair turning into a whitish blonde color. A hair color that finally matches her personality. It is not a coincidence that the moment we see Anna realizing her mistake by quickly trusting Hans without getting to know him at all her hair is turning blonde. Revealing in his monologue why he ever showed interest in Anna and fooled her was to further his plan to be king of Arendelle. Hans even points out how "desperate for love” she was and “were willing to marry [him], just like that" (1:16:15). This reinforces how dependent Anna is and how if she continues to be desperate for love all of her relationships will end like Hans and hers because she trusts so quickly due to her fear of