[quote=Shy] I find this to be the case with basically every movie or book in the world. Yes it is okay to make connections yourself on a personal level but you CANNOT claim that the movie itself is a planned metaphor for something unless the writer himself says so. I totally agree with how the movie is about not being afraid to be who you are, as Disney has said, that that is what the movie is about. Whether it affects you as an in the closet gay, just an odd person or some other reason isn't really relevant, because it is a positive message designed to help you. Taking the movie and saying "Frozen has such a pro-lgbt" message is not the same. Their message is pro-bewhoyouwannabe. Period. [/quote] It's an oversimplified picture. But not necessarily untrue. I can agree there are certain things we can overanalyze. However, a lot of classic writers put a lot of intricacies into their writing and it would be overly-simplistic to dismiss it. I didn't say Frozen has such a pro-LGBT message, I suggested that the dialogue and overarching themes lend evidence to there being certain positive attitudes toward LGBT. And not being afraid to be who you are is relevant because that does affect gays, women who have been repressed, and others. I CAN claim a movie or book has any meaning that I believe it to have, and I can bring up what I believe is evidence of that fact. Whether that evidence is poor or strong is up to interpretation and analysis. It is well-known that when writing, an author's subconscious seeps into there writing without them knowing it and it reflects inner beliefs and other subconscious archetypes. And a pro-bewhoyouwannabe message covers being LGBT, no?