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Summary: The magically long-haired Rapunzel has spent her entire life in a tower, but now that a runaway thief has stumbled upon her, she is about to discover the world for the first time, and who she really is.
It feels classic and modern at the same time. If not for the CGI, it would fit right in with Disney's traditionally animated canon. The songs are great, the humor is mostly clever, and it has loads of heart.
Oh my god Rapunzel is *adorable*. Also, a disturbingly true-to-life villain, some excellent action scenes, and an overall good story. (The music is generally generic, but not so much so that it's a detriment to the film.)
They don't write musical songs like they used to. Hitting people with a frying pan isn't funny, why would Disney teach that is is to children? Real kids don't bounce back.
An interesting Rapunzel adaptation from Disney. With a lot of the animated crap they've been putting out recently, this film was actually entertaining.
It doesn't have quite the charm of The Princess and the Frog, but Disney is definitely back on top form here. The story is sweet, the comedy is laid on thick but never feels overbearing, and the cast is engaging (especially Levi) -- but the real victory here was always going to be the sumptuous imagery and look of the piece. Expensive, perhaps, but worth every penny.
Feels like something of a return to form for Disney. "Tangled" is the first Disney production for sometime that's recaptured anything like that Disney charm of old. Yet impressively "Tangled" still feels modern & relevant, & has buckets of impressive animation. Refreshingly for Disney, even the songs are pretty good, humourous & effective. This was the first time in a long time I have watched a Disney pic & the songs haven't been a total chore to sit through! Fun characters, well voiced & funny.
Tangled delivers its saccharine payload in a castrated vernacular that makes the film less immersive, and therefore less satisfying. Given that this is a movie for children it was probably a conscious choice by the filmmaker, but that doesn't make it any less grating. Dialogue aside the film delivers exactly what you would expect, although the songs are somewhat disappointing, they don't need to be staggering works of genius but it would be nice if they were catchy.
Let's get this out of the way; this movie is incredibly good-looking and the sky lantern bit is holyshitbeautiful. Other than that, it's just...okay. There's nothing really wrong with it, but it's kind of trite and the songs aren't the best Disney have ever come up with. Script-wise it treads a worn path and none of the characters, minus Rapunzel and maybe that horse, are all that interesting. I liked the running joke about the frying pans, though.