YTread Logo
YTread Logo

14 Amazing Frozen 2 DELETED SCENES You Never Got To See!

Jun 01, 2021
Yippee-ki-yay movie lovers, I'm Jan and in this video I reveal to you 14 incredible

scenes

cut from Frozen 2, plus the incredible Anna and Olaf songs that you wish could have been in the movie. If you want to skip to individual

deleted

scenes

or songs, there are timestamps in the video description. There's an intriguing

deleted

scene from the beginning of the film called "Elsa's Dream," which was the original inspiration for Elsa's big ballad "Into The Unknown." The scene takes place just after the sisters fall asleep together after their game of charades; Anna then wakes up to snowflakes falling from a cloud created by Elsa's dream.
14 amazing frozen 2 deleted scenes you never got to see
This deleted scene shows how Elsa's ice magic can manifest physically even when she is sleeping, and that she can unconsciously project moving images of her dreams. The images of Iduna and the Enchanted Forest from this outtake scene became the basis for the dreamlike memories and visions that appear to Elsa during Into The Unknown. Elsa's dream continues and takes a nightmarish turn when images of Arendellian soldiers appear in the forest. And the strong emotions this generates in Elsa draw more of the magic out of her, creating a mini storm inside the bedroom. In that final moment, Elsa literally freezes the rain outside the castle into thousands of ice crystals, which is where the idea of ​​filling the sky in Arendelle with crystals at the end of Into The Unknown came from.
14 amazing frozen 2 deleted scenes you never got to see

More Interesting Facts About,

14 amazing frozen 2 deleted scenes you never got to see...

In another fascinating deleted scene from the beginning of the film, Elsa and Anna discover a hidden room inside Arendelle Castle, where they discover secret studies being carried out on the origins of Elsa's powers. "Magical arts. Dangers of dark magic. Father was studying magic." "Oh oh!" "He was studying me too." "Hope for?" "This is a kind of diary. I can't find any record of a human with power like hers, except for ancient myths with her tragic fates." "Wait a minute, this isn't my father's handwriting, it's my mother's." If we look closer at the diary, we can see a page about the white gloves that Elsa's father gave her in the first movie in an attempt to suppress the ice magic from her. "Gloves will help.
14 amazing frozen 2 deleted scenes you never got to see
See? Hide it." "Do not be sorry." And the diary entry that mentions "the ancient myths with her tragic fates" helps us understand why Elsa's parents wanted to try to contain their daughter's powers from her for fear that her magical nature would lead her to the tragedy. This moment would also have established the idea of ​​Elsa as a mythical being and foreshadowed her fate later in the film when she freezes deep in Ahtohallan. The final part of the deleted scene gives the sisters another shocking revelation: "The following pages are in English, but also... Noruldian." "Northuldrian? But that language is forbidden.
14 amazing frozen 2 deleted scenes you never got to see
Why would Mom know it? Or would she dare use it?" "No matter how much evil my people have done, no matter how much darkness still roams our forest, I can no longer turn my back on the past." This tells us that Northuldra culture was actively suppressed within Arendelle and is likely why Iduna kept her research a secret, including writing in her own language, and perhaps why she hadn't told them yet. her daughters that she was Northuldra. The deleted scene helps explain how much Iduna and Agnarr were searching for answers about how to deal with Elsa's magic and shows why they attempted the journey to Ahtohallan.
It also reveals how the sisters ended up with their mother's Northuldra scarf. It is also likely that this is where Elsa and Anna would have sung the deleted song "I Seek The Truth" in which they try to understand the meaning of the messages hidden in this secret room. A wonderful song removed from the beginning of the movie was a solo by Anna called "Home" in which she sings about how much she loves Arendelle. We'll see. The intention behind this beautiful number was to establish how Anna will be the perfect Queen for Arendelle at the end of the movie.
It shows how she is completely at ease and loves everything about her kingdom. "Anyway, for what it's worth, this perfect corner of the Earth is my home, my home." And it would also have highlighted how much Anna had to lose by her decision to destroy the dam that threatens to flood Arendelle. And it would also have highlighted how much Anna had to lose by her decision to destroy the dam that threatens to flood Arendelle. The sweetness of this song also contrasts perfectly with her much sadder song "The Next Right Thing", which she sings in her lower key after realizing that both her sister and Olaf are gone. "Home" would also have contrasted more with Elsa's big number "Into The Unknown", highlighting the differences between the sisters and foreshadowing the end of the film.
In other words, Anna loves her kingdom and her place is there. "Hey, come here. Take this coin and go buy everyone a custard bun." "OK." While Elsa is drawn by a distant calling and her destination is outside of Arendelle. Unfortunately, the filmmakers had to cut the song and replace it with the joint number "Some Things Never Change" when they realized they still hadn't set things up enough to show what was at stake for Elsa, Kristoff and Olaf when Arendelle would fall threat. However, they took the general theme of the deleted song and one of its lyrics and compressed it into the line that Anna says to Olaf right before singing "Some Things Never Change": "I have you, Elsa, Kristoff and to Sven.. and the doors are wide open... and I am no longer alone." "Unmeltable Me" is a great Olaf song that ended up being cut from the final film.
It was the movie's original way of explaining why the magical snowman no longer needed the little flurry of snow that Elsa gave him in the first movie to keep him from melting. "Who's present but not liquefied? That's right, I just learned to read and I like big words." I imagine many fans would have loved to see him in the movie. In the final film, this song was replaced by the scene where Anna visits the little snowman and casually asks him about his new "permafrost" while he enjoys the warmth of an autumn day. There's a great shot in the first Frozen 2 trailer of Anna grabbing Kristoff's sword and attacking someone off-camera.
That scene

never

made it into the final film because the story changed and it was no longer necessary. However, when the filmmakers discovered how much fans loved seeing Anna wield a sword, they made sure she had one in the film, albeit in a slightly different way. In the final film, when the gang is frightened by the noise of approaching strangers in the forest, Anna takes an ice sword from one of Elsa's ice memory statues and uses it to defend the group against the Northuldra and Arendellians who appear suddenly. Kristoff's role in Frozen 2 underwent some major changes as the film developed.
At the beginning of the original story, Kristoff was a lord in Arendelle, having been promoted again from his official title of "Master and Liberator of Ice" that Elsa gave him at the end of the first film. However, given Kristoff's humble background, he found it difficult to fit into Arendellian high society. And he kept his feelings about it a secret, presumably to avoid upsetting Anna. However, the truth would eventually come to light in a deleted scene with Kristoff and the water spirit Nokk. "I think he's offering you a ride." "Are you afraid?" "No, afraid of what?" "Are you afraid that I won't see the truth in your heart and will drown you?" "Hey." "Are you?" "What?
No. Of course not." "Then go ahead." "Look, I knew it would be okay. Kristoff!" "I'm fine. I'm..." "Except for the part where apparently his heart is full of lies." "Are you okay? Are you okay?" "I'm fine thanks." "Except you're lying about something." "I don't like fancy shoes or regal jackets." "It is not a problem." "I don't like ceremonies or polite conversations." "How about mastering and delivering the ice?" "No, because it doesn't exist." "Formal dinners and ballroom dancing?" "No and no." "Do you even like your life in Arendelle? Just tell me the truth." "No, I don't like my life in Arendelle." "So, it was all a lie, all of that? "Anna, I..." "I don't think we should get married." I think this scene would have happened halfway through the movie, after the gang enters the Enchanted Forest. she briefly appeared to Olaf in the forest in the final film, and this breakup between Anna and Kristoff would have been an alternative way to separate them.
Overall, this unused scene feels a bit unhappy in comparison until the final film where she sees her. couple separates in the forest because they are a little out of sync with each other and because Anna is focused on helping her sister in her search for Ahtohallan. However, there are other scenes in which Kristoff and Anna propose to her. great, glorious, fun way when he sings to her. You can see my full breakdown of that in my video of the deleted ending of Frozen 2. The opening scene and prologue of Frozen 2 that tells the story of Young Iduna and Agnarr and the forest.
Haunted was changed many times during the film's development, as it had to coincide with any other story changes in the main part of the film. On the Blu-ray, there is an alternate prologue that would have shown how Iduna and Agnarr escaped the fight between the Arendellians and the Northuldra. In this version, when the spirits become angry, young Agnarr nearly falls off a cliff before Iduna rescues him. Mattias then picks them both up and puts them on a cart, fleeing the chaos inside the forest and returning to Arendelle. In the final film, Agnarr says that he

never

knew who saved him that day, and instead of the deleted scene, what we see is Elsa seeing past memories inside Ahtohallan and discovering that it was Iduna who smuggled her and an unconscious Agnarr in a cart that took them out of the forest.
An interesting detail in this alternate prologue is that there is a mysterious human character in the forest who can change shape or move in the appearance of a reindeer. This mysterious human saves Iduna at one point and is also attacked by Agnarr's father, the King of Arendelle. This Is Us star Sterling K Brown's character Mattias also had a different story in earlier versions of the film. Originally, the high-ranking military man was going to be trapped in the Enchanted Forest alone, rather than with his fellow Arendellians as happens in the final film. Mattias' original story would have included him singing a song, although he ended up being cut from the film because he ultimately "didn't fit the story." The scene in the trailer in which the wind spirit Gale discovers young Agnarr from a bed of leaves in the forest and throws him into the air also did not make it into the final film.
The reason for this is that the scene is actually part of a test the animators did to learn how to animate the wind spirit's personality. The longer version of this scene is on Blu-ray and also shows some cute moments between young Iduna and Agnarr. Another scene cut from the trailer shows a young Iduna carrying a baby reindeer as Northuldra crosses the dam to greet the Arendellians. And this trailer scene of Kristoff riding a charging herd of reindeer wasn't in the final film either. The scene in the trailer of Olaf standing next to Elsa as he tries to put out the fires in the forest was modified for the final film where Elsa fights the fire spirit alone.
And in another change from the trailers, this shot of Queen Iduna looking out the bedroom window at the Northern Lights was replaced with Iduna carrying young Elsa to look out the window together. There is also a much darker original ending to Frozen 2 in which Disney almost kills Elsa and destroys Arendelle. To learn all about that, as well as Kristoff's alternative proposal to Anna, tap here or follow the link in the video description. And if you want to see all the deleted scenes in their entirety, check out the Blu-ray; I added links to that in the description.
So which of these deleted scenes and songs do you wish had been in the movie and which ones are you glad they were removed? Leave your thoughts in the comments below! If you liked this, we greatly appreciate you sharing and liking it. Tap left to watch another Frozen 2 video or tap right to watch something else you're sure to like. Thanks for watching and until next time. Yippee-ki-yay, movie lovers!

If you have any copyright issue, please Contact