How does tangled begin




















Stranger things have happened see: horse barbers. Have you seen the light anything else in Tangled after watching it endlessly? Tell us in the comments! Oh My Disney. Share This. We bet only the biggest Tangled fans will have noticed all of these things in the film! Related Post. Share this article. Realizing that she's in danger, Eugene tries to escape, but more guards come in and subdue him. They drag him out towards the gallows, but he catches sight of a tiny ceramic unicorn in a little alcove on a wall along the way.

Suddenly the doors slam shut behind and in front of them, and the thugs from the Snuggly Duckling appear to help Eugene, fighting away the guards. They get him out to the courtyard and using a wagon to catapult him over the jail wall, where he lands on Maximus' back.

It turns out Maximus was the one who went to get them, and he will help Eugene find Rapunzel instead of arresting him. They leap off of the palace roof and set off for the tower. When they reach the tower, Eugene stands at the base and calls up for Rapunzel. Just as he starts to climb up himself, Rapunzel's hair comes tumbling down, and he uses it to climb up. When he reaches the top, though, he finds Rapunzel chained and gagged, and Gothel appears behind him and stabs him in the stomach with her knife.

Gothel kicks open a secret passage and begins to drag Rapunzel out of it, telling her that she's going to take her somewhere where no one will ever find them ever again. A bleeding-out Eugene protests, but Rapunzel doesn't back down.

Gothel finally agrees and chains Eugene up, too, in case he tries to fight again after being healed. Although he's still protesting and telling her not to throw her life away like this, Rapunzel starts to wrap her hair around his wound in preparation to heal him. He leans in like he's going to give her a last kiss, but just before he does, he cuts her hair off with a shard of the broken mirror from earlier.

Her hair instantly "dies" and turns brown, and Gothel screams and tries to gather the rest of the hair, but it loses all its power. She begins to age rapidly and pulls her hood down over her face so no one will see her without her youthful beauty. She can't see where she's going, though, and stumbles blindly around the room; Pascal uses Rapunzel's cut-off hair to trip her and send her tumbling out the window, where she dissolves into dust on the way down.

Meanwhile, Rapunzel is trying to heal Eugene anyway, although the magic won't work since her hair was cut. He stops her and tells her that she was his new dream, and she tells him that he was hers.

As she sings, she weeps onto Eugene's face; her tear is absorbed into his skin and begins to glow. Light shoots out from where she cried onto him, and he wakes up again, healed. He tells her he's "got a thing for brunettes", and they finally kiss each other. At the palace, a guard runs into the room where the king and queen are to tell them that the lost princess has finally been found.

They run out to the balcony, where a short-haired Rapunzel and Eugene are waiting. Rapunzel and her parents share a tearful hug, and as Eugene watches, they drag him into it, too. Eugene narrates the ending, explaining how Rapunzel ruled the kingdom as wisely and benevolently as her parents had, and after years and years of asking, he finally agreed to marry her. Rapunzel's voice cuts in and corrects him, and Eugene admits that it was he who actually asked her.

The movie ends with a shot of floating lanterns surrounding the palace and everyone living happily ever after.

The story of Tangled began in , under the guidance of Glen Keane who was, at the time, in the process of developing Tarzan. He continued developing the film until , when suffered from a heart attack. On October 9, , it was reported Glen Keane and Dean Wellins would be stepping down as directors, and were replaced by a new team of Byron Howard and Nathan Greno , director and storyboard director of 's Bolt.

Keane would stay on as the Executive Producer, and Wellins moved on to developing other short films and feature films. On April 12, , it was revealed Annie-nominated animator and story artist Dean Wellins will be co-directing the film alongside Glen Keane. Disney expressed the belief that the film's emphasis on princesses may have deterred young boys from seeing the film. In order to market the film to both boys and girls, Disney changed the film's name from Rapunzel to Tangled , while also emphasizing Flynn Rider, the film's prominent male character.

Disney was criticized for altering the classic title and story as a marketing strategy. Floyd Norman , a former Disney and Pixar animator, said, "The idea of changing the title of a classic like Rapunzel to Tangled is beyond stupid.

I'm convinced they'll gain nothing from this except the public seeing Disney as desperately trying to find an audience. A concept rendering of Rapunzel, demonstrating the "luscious golden hair" Glen Keane wanted. Because Glen Keane wanted this to be an animated movie that looked and felt like a traditional hand-drawn Disney Classic in 3D, he first had a seminar called "The Best of Both Worlds," where he, with fifty Disney animators both CGI and traditional artists , focused on the pluses and minuses of each style.

Because of advancements in computer technology, many basic principles of animation used in traditional animated movies but which have been absent in CGI films due to technical limitations became possible in this field of animation, where they will be used together with the potential offered by CGI. Keane has stated numerous times that he is trying to make the computer "bend its knee to the artist" instead of having the computer dictate the artistic style and look of the film.

By making the computer become as "pliable as the pencil," Keane's vision of a "three-dimensional drawing" seems within reach, with the artist controlling the technology. Because many of the techniques and tools required to give the film the quality Keane demanded didn't exist when the project was started, WDFA had to make them on their own. To create the impression of a drawing, non-photorealistic rendering was used, making the surface look like it is painted but still containing depth and dimensions.

Glen Keane's daughter, visual development artist Claire Keane sought to capture Rapunzel's world view: "Rapunzel's walls are really a reflection of what she could see from her window as well as what she was thinking about. There was a definite plan with specific choices made in choosing the colors of Rapunzel's walls. It was important to create how Rapunzel would create, not how I would create, so I had to try a variety of different things that would express her world.

Original music was composed for the movie by Alan Menken with original songs Music by Menken and lyrics by Glenn Slater. Menken said he attempted to blend medieval music with s folk rock to create the new songs. Tangled received critical acclaim. The site's consensus is: "While far from Disney's greatest film, Tangled is a visually stunning, thoroughly entertaining addition to the studio's classic animated canon.

On IMDB, the film has a 7. Bonus features for the Blu-ray include deleted scenes, two alternate opening sequences, two extended songs, and an inside look at how the film was made. Rapunzel is now a teenager and her hair has grown to a length of feet. The beautiful Rapunzel has been in the tower her entire life, and she is curious of the outside world. One day, the bandit Flynn Ryder scales the tower and is taken captive by Rapunzel. Rapunzel strikes a deal with the charming thief to act as her guide to travel to the place where the floating lights come from that she has seen every year on her birthday.

Rapunzel is about to have the most exciting and magnificent journey of her life. They have been crammed into tiny flats and house-shares with less personal space than a prison cell. They have lost their jobs and seen what financial security they had evaporate. Some have been in near-total isolation for 10 months, others shut up inside with abusive partners.

Couples have been separated, parents have had to balance work with childcare and homeschooling, pregnant women have been forced to give birth or miscarry alone, students have at times been put under virtual house arrest, and key workers have faced unimaginable stress,.

And throughout it all, over 72, people have died with Covid, with their loved ones often denied the chance to say goodbye or grieve properly. Against that backdrop, those for whom the predominant theme of has been boredom should count themselves fortunate — but only comparatively. It was a cliche pre to remark how nice it would be if life slowed down a bit, to long for more time for ourselves or with our families, to be free of the commute and office life and able focus on what we enjoyed.



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