Canonically, she is not romantically interested in anybody. And lest you wonder if that description means Elsa is asexual or aromantic, neither of those qualities is canon either. Canonically, she's nothing when it comes to her sexuality. Which also means she isn't (yet) canonically straight.
Okay, so technically, Elsa didn't get a girlfriend. But. There are some teensy, tiny nods at what Elsa's life could look like after Frozen II. It turns out that Elsa's mother is a member of the Northuldra tribe, who were at odds with Arendelle for many years, meaning Elsa and Anna are half-Northuldra.
Children respond to stories that employ magical realism, so Elsa—as a superhero with what one of our daughters (Maryam's) and her friends call “ice powers” (the ability to create a whole castle of snow and ice using only her fingers)—has special appeal.
In Part I of the Frozen series, I suggested that Elsa experiences something like borderline personality disorder (BPD). In this interpretation, Elsa's frozen rages are an outward display of the emotional dysregulation she feels inside.
The site reports, “We're told it's definitely happening and again, the intention is for Elsa to have a girlfriend in the prequel, confirming her sexuality in the process.”
Chris Hemsworth and Elsa Pataky are still going strong after over a decade of marriage.
Kristoff. A rugged mountain man and ice harvester by trade, Kristoff was a bit of a loner with his reindeer pal, Sven, until he met Anna. As Arendelle's official Ice Master and Deliverer, Kristoff has found love with Anna and his new family: Elsa, Olaf and Sven.
Furthermore, another thing in the series that has grasped people's attention is the condition that Kristen's character Anna suffers from - Ombrophobia, which is the fear of rain. Surely, not many of us have heard of it before and believe it to be as fictional as the narrative itself.
A traumatic brain injury (or TBI) has many similarities to PTSD. Anna isn't traumatized, but she is also stuck replaying events. Her injury causes her mind to loop, and she starts and ends every single day of her life trying to figure out what happened to her sister.
The result of this research shows that Count Olaf has a personality disorder called antisocial personality disorder. Antisocial personality disorder is also known as psychopathy, sociopathy, or dyssocial personality.
Anna Is Brave
Elsa is often seen as a coward, while Anna is undeniably brave. She was never afraid of what lay ahead as she was always all-in no matter the cost. She was willing to sacrifice it all, while Elsa chose to cower in her ice castle in order to avoid confronting her own demons.
According to Jennifer Lee, Anna is 18 years old in the film, while both Elsa and Kristoff are 21 years old and Hans is 23 years old.
What sets Elsa apart from the mass array of Disney princesses is her inner battle with mental illness, anxiety and depression. In Frozen II, Elsa is the only person who can hear a voice but everyone couldn't.
Canonically, she is not romantically interested in anybody. And lest you wonder if that description means Elsa is asexual or aromantic, neither of those qualities is canon either. Canonically, she's nothing when it comes to her sexuality.
Although the sequel reveals how Elsa got her powers and offers insight into the mysterious death of her parents, Elsa does not get a girlfriend in the film.
While they're in there, Anna and Elsa also discover another twist: They're half-Northuldran.
At the beginning of Frozen, Elsa accidentally injured Anna while they were playing with Elsa's magic power. In the name of protection, her parents taught Elsa to hide what she is capable of, in order to stay safe. Not only that, they erased Anna's memory, pretending that Elsa's power did not exist.
Kristoff. Their adventure having brought them together, Anna and Kristoff began a romantic relationship. Anna initially recruited Kristoff to aid her in finding Elsa.
Q: Let's talk spoilers for The Woman in the House Across the Street from the Girl in the Window, starting with the first big reveal that the husband is actually Anna's therapist.
Dora is the pseudonym given by Sigmund Freud to a patient whom he diagnosed with hysteria, and treated for about eleven weeks in 1900. Her most manifest hysterical symptom was aphonia, or loss of voice.
In the movie The Little Mermaid (Clements & Musker, 1989), Ariel displays symptoms of disposophobia, which is defined as the fear of getting rid of things.
The character of Anna does not have Clinical Depression or Anxiety. In her case, she is faced with debilitating grief that threatens to paralyze her. But being overcome with immobilizing levels of fear, hopelessness, and overwhelmedness has many origins. Depression and anxiety can be crippling.
Elsa of Arendelle is a fictional character who appears in Walt Disney Animation Studios' animated film Frozen (2013) and its sequel the animated film Frozen II (2019). She is voiced mainly by Idina Menzel, with Eva Bella as a young child and by Spencer Ganus as a teenager in Frozen.
Anna doesn't love Kristoff any less than Elsa just because she worries for Elsa all the time instead of him, and assuming that she has less affection for Kristoff because Elsa is there insinuates that she has more love for him once Elsa is gone, and that wouldn't paint Anna in a very good light.
It is also apparent that there's no longer any affection between the two sides, as Anna currently hates Hans for his treacherous actions, and Hans appears to have never had any strong feelings of any kind toward Anna at all even with his current designation as an enemy of her family and kingdom, having considered her ...