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Into the Unknown: Making Frozen II Trailer (2020)

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Into the Unknown: Making Frozen 2 is a 2020 documentary series about the Walt Disney Animation Studios film Frozen II, which premiered in November 2019. Its six episodes follow the production crew and voice actors of Frozen II in the film's final year of development. This included the story development and reworking of the song "Show Yourself", the variety of different roles in the animation process, the songwriting and orchestral arrangements, and the post-production process. It was directed by Megan Harding, who was previously involved with a 2014 documentary on the making of the 2013 film Frozen and released on the streaming service Disney+ shortly after the platform's launch.

The documentary was produced by Lincoln Square Productions. Harding aimed to represent the production process honestly and the crew filmed for 115 days. They frequently flew between New York City, where they worked, and Los Angeles, where the main Frozen II offices were, with some filming at individual staff member's houses. The series received positive critical reception.

Production crew
Chris Buck, director
Jennifer Lee, screenwriter and director
Kristen Anderson-Lopez, songwriter
Robert "Bobby" Lopez, songwriter
Peter Del Vecho, producer
Michael Giaimo, production designer
Malerie Walters, animator

Voice actors
Kristen Bell, voice actor for Anna
Idina Menzel, voice actor for Elsa
Josh Gad, voice actor for Olaf
Jonathan Groff, voice actor for Kristoff
Sterling K. Brown, voice actor for Lieutenant Mattias, an Arendelle soldier
Evan Rachel Wood, voice actor for Queen Iduna, the mother of Anna and Elsa

In 2014, Australian filmmaker Megan Harding met the main production crew of the 2013 Disney film Frozen while working on a television special for American Broadcasting Company (ABC) a year after the film's release. Production on the sequel Frozen II began in 2014. In December 2018, working with Lincoln Square Productions, Harding began documenting its filmmaking process. She and most of the crew flew between New York City, where they worked, and Los Angeles for the majority of filming. Covering the last year of production, the crew recorded 1,300 hours of footage across 115 days of shooting. Local crew filmed the Lopezes from their New York City apartment, and footage of their meetings with other production crew was variously captured from one or both sides of the conversation or from the teleconferencing technology directly.

Harding aimed to represent the process honestly and detail "the personal investment and creative struggle", rather than making "a DVD extra". The crew had to select aspects of the production to focus on, such as the development of "Show Yourself". Harding did not plan to include mention of Buck's loss of his son Ryder, but Buck brought it up himself, unexpectedly, and the filming crew were in tears by the end of the conversation. Though there were meetings in which Buck suggested it was "not a good day for cameras", the camera crew only left the room once during the year, in a meeting following the film's first screening to a family audience. Peter Del Vecho later said that the crew of Frozen II wanted to "show the world" the size of the crew and "the hard work it takes to put these films together", though he found it a "tough process" to have the documentary crew filming for a year. Josh Gad experienced self-consciousness, as Olaf's dialogue and singing was developed with "experiment and play". Lee found it enjoyable to show the crew how animation worked; she said of the "very intense" story room that it was harder to be filmed, but that the crew "were very patient with us".

The documentary features the song "See the Sky", which was cut from the final film but not released in the soundtrack. Harding's favorite scene which was cut from the series was Giaimo discussing what he viewed as the crew's "passion, dedication, and specific OCD-like tendencies" while trimming his hedges to resemble the shape of trees in Frozen. The documentary omits mention of John Lasseter, the chief creative officer before Lee who left the role after reports of him perpetrating sexual misconduct against employees in his position at Disney.It also does not cover the production's consultations with the Sámi people over their representation in the film, which largely occurred prior to the final year of production.

WAYNE UNTEN
LEAH LATHAM
RON CLEMENTS
JOSIE TRINIDAD

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