It’s Film Strip
Friday!
Tangled
Disney's 50th Animated Film
Release Date November
24th, 2010
SYNOPSIS:
Take one
captive princess with magical hair, one handsome thief on the run, a horse with
a strong sense of duty, and a chameleon with attitude -- and you get a magical
adventure in the great Disney tradition.
FUN FACTS:
Tangled is a 2010 American computer animated musical
fantasy-comedy film produced by Walt Disney Animation Studios. It is the 50th
animated feature in the Walt Disney Animated Classics series. The film features
the voices of Mandy Moore, Zachary Levi and Donna Murphy and is loosely based
on the German fairy tale "Rapunzel" in the collection of folk tales
published by the Brothers Grimm. The film tells the story of a lost princess
with long magical hair who yearns to leave her secluded tower. Against her
mother's wishes, she enlists the aid of a bandit thief to take her out into the
world which she has never seen.
The film was originally titled and marketed as Rapunzel
until it was changed to Tangled shortly before its release. Tangled
spent six years in production at a cost that has been estimated at $260 million
which, if accurate (and adjusted for inflation), would make it the most
expensive animated film ever made and the second most expensive movie of all
time. The film employed a unique artistic style by blending features of both computer-generated
imagery (CGI) and traditional animation together, while utilizing non-photorealistic
rendering to create the impression of a painting. Composer Alan Menken, who had
worked on prior Disney animated features, returned to score Tangled.
Tangled premiered at the El Capitan Theatre on November 14,
2010, and went into general release on November 24. Distributed by Walt Disney
Pictures, Tangled earned $590 million in
worldwide box-office revenue, $200 million of which
was earned in the United States and Canada. The film was well received by
critics and audiences alike. Tangled was nominated for a number of
awards, including Best Original Song at the 83rd Academy Awards. The film was
released on Blu-ray and DVD on March 29, 2011; an animated short sequel, Tangled
Ever After, was released in 2012.
Plot
A drop of sunlight falls to the ground and grows into a
magical flower with healing powers. A woman named Gothel uses it to keep
herself young by singing to it. Centuries later, a queen becomes ill while
pregnant, and the king orders a search for the legendary flower. The queen is
healed after being fed the flower, and gives birth to a daughter, Rapunzel,
whose golden hair has absorbed the abilities of the flower. Gothel tries to
steal a lock of Rapunzel's hair, but, once cut, the hair turns brown and loses
its power. So she kidnaps Rapunzel to raise as her own child in a high tower,
telling her it is for her own safety.
Every year, on Rapunzel's birthday, her parents and their
subjects release thousands of sky lanterns, in the hope that the lost princess
will return. For her 18th birthday, Rapunzel asks Gothel for permission to go outside
the tower to see the source of the annual floating lights, but Gothel refuses.
Meanwhile, Flynn Rider and the Stabbington brothers steal the tiara of the lost
princess. During the ensuing chase, Maximus, horse of the Captain of the
Guards, is separated from his rider but continues on his own. Flynn outwits his
accomplices, takes the tiara, and stumbles upon Rapunzel's tower. He climbs up
into the tower, but is knocked unconscious with a frying pan by Rapunzel who
puts him in a wardrobe. When Gothel returns, Rapunzel tries to show her the
captive Flynn to prove she is capable of handling the outside world, but Gothel
cuts her off by saying she is never leaving the tower. So Rapunzel instead asks
Gothel for a special paint, the ingredients for which require three days' of
round-trip travel. Gothel leaves, and Rapunzel tells Flynn that she will give
him the tiara back if he takes her to see the lights. Flynn agrees. While en
route, he takes her to the Snuggly Duckling Inn, which is full of Gaul thugs, in
hopes of scaring her into giving up her quest. The thugs, however, are charmed
by Rapunzel, who encourages them to follow their dreams.
Mother Gothel returns early to the tower to find Rapunzel
gone but finds the tiara. She then teams up with the Stabbington brothers so
she can get Rapunzel back and the brothers can get revenge on Flynn. Meanwhile,
the guards invade the tavern, and chase Rapunzel and Flynn to a dam which
collapses. Flynn and Rapunzel become trapped in a flooding cave. Believing he
is about to die, Flynn admits his true name: Eugene Fitzherbert. Rapunzel
admits her hair glows when she sings, then realizes they can use her hairlight
to find a way out. Rapunzel later uses her hair to heal Flynn's injured hand.
Flynn tells Rapunzel that he was an orphan who dreamed of being like the
storybook hero that inspired his alias, but Rapunzel tells him she likes Eugene
better than Flynn. When Flynn goes to gather firewood, Gothel meets Rapunzel
insisting that Flynn does not care for her and gives Rapunzel the tiara,
suggesting that she test Flynn by giving it to him.
The next morning, Maximus confronts Flynn but Rapunzel
befriends the horse and convinces him to help them instead. Arriving at the
kingdom, Flynn takes Rapunzel to see the lanterns. There, Rapunzel gives Flynn
back the tiara. Flynn spies his old accomplices and leaves Rapunzel to give
them the tiara, realizing that he cares more for Rapunzel. However, the
brothers tie him up on a boat and sail him across the lake. They claim Flynn
betrayed Rapunzel as they attempt to kidnap her for her hair's power, but
Gothel rescues her and takes her back to the tower. Later, reflecting on what
she had seen during her adventure in the kingdom, Rapunzel realizes she is the
lost princess and attempts to flee the tower.
Meanwhile, Flynn is arrested and sentenced to death, but
he is rescued by Maximus and the Gaul thugs from the inn. Flynn races back to
the tower and climbs up Rapunzel's hair only to find her chained to the wall
and gagged. Gothel stabs Flynn from behind and prepares to take a struggling
Rapunzel to a new hiding place. Rapunzel tells Gothel that she will stop
resisting if she can heal Flynn. Gothel agrees, but before Rapunzel can heal
him, Flynn cuts her hair which subsequently turns brown and loses its power.
Gothel begins to age rapidly, falls out of the tower, and turns into dust.
With his last breath, Flynn declares his love for
Rapunzel. She cries, and the healing power of her tear revives him. Returning
to the kingdom, Rapunzel is reunited with the King and Queen. Flynn then closes
the film, telling the audience that he readopted his original name, and he and
Rapunzel eventually get engaged and married.
Cast and characters
- Mandy
Moore as Rapunzel
- Zachary
Levi as Eugene "Flynn Rider" Fitzherbert
- Donna
Murphy as Mother Gothel
- Brad
Garrett as Hook-Hand Thug
- Ron
Perlman as the Stabbington Brothers
- Jeffrey
Tambor as Big Nose Thug
- Richard
Kiel as Vladamir
- M. C.
Gainey as Captain of the Guard
- Paul F.
Tompkins as Short Thug
- Tom Kenny
as Guard
- Tim
Brooke-Taylor as Old Man
- Maurice
Dean Wint as Paulo
- Frank
Welker as Pascal and Maximus
- Delaney
Rose Stein as Young Rapunzel
Non-speaking animal characters include Pascal, Rapunzel's
pet chameleon, and Maximus, the horse of the head of the palace guard who are
voiced by Frank Welker. Also featured in non-speaking roles are Rapunzel's
parents, the King and Queen, and Ulf, the Mime Thug.
Moore,
Levi and Murphy respectively replaced the originally-announced voice actors Kristin
Chenoweth, Dan Fogler and Grey DeLisle.
Production
Tangled was in development for six years and cost more than $260
million to produce. It had originally been announced in April 2007 that Annie-nominated
animator and story artist Dean Wellins would be co-directing the film alongside
Glen Keane. On October 9, 2008, it was reported that Keane and Wellins had
stepped down as directors, and were replaced by the team of Byron Howard and
Nathan Greno, director and storyboard director, respectively, of Disney's 2008
animated feature Bolt. Keane stayed on as an executive producer and
animation supervisor, while Wellins moved on to developing other short and
feature films.
Title change
When first put into production, the film was promoted as
having the title Rapunzel Unbraided, which was later changed to Rapunzel.
Disney's previous animated feature The Princess and the Frog in 2009,
while being well-received by various critics and taking in nearly $270 million
worldwide, was not as successful as Disney had hoped. Disney expressed the belief
that the film's emphasis on princesses may have discouraged young boys from
seeing the film. In order to market the film to both sexes, 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 as a marketing strategy. Floyd Norman, a former Disney and Pixar
animator and story artist, 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." Justin Chang of Variety compared it to
changing the title of The Little Mermaid to Beached. Writing for
the San Francisco Chronicle's blog, Margot Magowan accused Disney of sexism,
writing "Can you imagine if Disney . . . switched a movie title so it
wouldn’t risk highlighting a male star? It’s awful that this kind of radical
gender discrimination exists for our smallest people– little kids who come into
this world with huge imaginations and aspirations, big dreams that get squashed
by a bunch of billionaire guys who run massive entertainment franchises."
On November 24, 2010, the day of the film's release,
directors Nathan Greno and Byron Howard disputed reports that the title change
was a marketing decision. They said they changed the title from Rapunzel
to Tangled because Rapunzel is not the only main character in the film.
They went on to say that you can't call Toy Story "Buzz
Lightyear," and they really needed a title that represented what the
film is, and that it’s a duo, and it stars Rapunzel and Flynn Rider.
Animation
The film was made using computer-generated imagery (CGI),
although Tangled was modeled on the traditional look of oil paintings on
canvas. The Rococo paintings of French artist Jean-Honoré Fragonard,
particularly The Swing, were used as references for the film's artistic
style, a style described by Keane as "romantic and lush." To create
the impression of a painting, non-photorealistic rendering has been used.
Glen Keane wanted the film to look and feel like a
traditional hand-drawn Disney film in 3D, and held a seminar called "The
Best of Both Worlds", where he, with 50 Disney CGI artists and traditional
artists, focused on the pros and cons of each style. Due to limitations in
computer technology, many basic principles of animation used in traditionally
animated movies had been absent from earlier CGI films; but technological
advancements have made it easier to blend the two, combining the strengths of
each style. Keane stated repeatedly he was 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" seemed within reach, with the artist controlling the technology.
Many of the techniques and tools that were required to give the film the
quality Keane demanded did not exist when the project was started, and Disney
Animation Studios had to create them on their own. Keane said, "There’s no
photoreal hair. I want luscious hair, and we are inventing new ways of doing
that. I want to bring the warmth and intuitive feel of hand-drawn to CGI."
One of the main goals of the animators was to create
movement that mimicked the soft fluidity of the hand-drawn art found in older
Disney animated films. Keane credited Disney 3D animator Kyle Strawitz with
helping to combine CGI with the traditional hand-drawn style. "He took the
house from Snow White and built it and painted it so it looked like a
flat painting that suddenly started to move, and it had dimension and kept all
of the soft, round curves of the brushstrokes of watercolor. Kyle helped us get
that Fragonard look of that girl on the swing… We are using subsurface
scattering and global illumination and all of the latest techniques to pull off
convincing human characters and rich environments."
Existing CGI technology continued to present
difficulties: in particular, animating hair turned out to be a challenge.
Senior software engineer Kelly Ward spent six years writing programs to make it
move the way they wanted. As late as January 2010, the directors were still not
sure if the Rapunzel character's length of hair was going to work. These
problems were finally solved in March: An improved version of a hair simulation
program named Dynamic Wires, originally developed for Bolt, was
eventually used. To make hair float believably in water, and to surmount other
similar challenges, discrete differential geometry was used to produce the
desired effects, freeing the animators from executing these specific tasks
directly, which would have taken days instead of minutes.
Rather than focusing on realism, the 3D team used an
aesthetic approach. Robert Newman, the film’s stereoscopic supervisor said that
"We’re using depth more artistically than ever before, and we’re not as
concerned with the literal transcription of depth between camera and projector
as we are the interpretation of it." To do this, they used a new technique
called multi-rigging, which is made up by multiple pairs of virtual cameras.
Each pair is used individually on each separate element that adds depth to a
scene, like background, foreground and characters, without adjusting for the
relation with the other pairs. When sandwiched together later in production,
the result was something that would be visually impossible in the real world,
but which created an appealing look to the movie.
Soundtrack
The original score was composed for the movie by 8-time Academy Award
winner Composer Alan Menken with lyrics written by Glenn Slater. Menken said he
attempted to blend medieval music with 1960s folk rock to create the new songs.
Several songs were written but eventually cut from the
final film; "When Will My Life Begin?" replaced an earlier version
called "What More Could I Ever Need?". Menken reported that that
opening number went through five or six different versions.
Elsewhere,
Menken reported that there was originally a love song called "You Are My
Forever" that Mother Gothel sang to Rapunzel in a motherly way but was
reprised later in the film by Flynn in a romantic way. This idea was apparently
replaced with the two songs "Mother Knows Best" and "I See the
Light".
The song "Something That I Want" performed by
Grace Potter from Grace Potter and the Nocturnals is featured in the closing
credits. This version features some of the lyrics that were re-written and sung
by Potter herself. The Latin American Spanish version of the song, titled "Algo
quiero querer", was recorded by Colombian pop-singer, Fanny LĂș.
The album has peaked at No. 44 on the Billboard
200, No. 7 on the Soundtrack chart, and No. 3 on the Top Kids Albums chart.
Track listing
All songs written and composed by Alan
Menken and Glenn Slater except track 20 which is written and composed by Grace
Potter. All original scores composed by Menken.
No.
|
Title
|
Performer(s)
|
Length
|
|
1.
|
"When Will
My Life Begin?"
|
Mandy Moore
|
2:32
|
|
2.
|
"When Will
My Life Begin? (Reprise 1)" (1)
|
Moore
|
1:03
|
|
3.
|
"Mother
Knows Best" (1,2)
|
Donna Murphy
|
3:10
|
|
4.
|
"When Will
My Life Begin? (Reprise 2)"
|
Moore
|
2:06
|
|
5.
|
"I've Got a
Dream"
|
Brad Garrett, Jeffrey
Tambor, Moore, Zachary Levi, Company
|
3:11
|
|
6.
|
"Mother
Knows Best (Reprise)"
|
Murphy
|
1:38
|
|
7.
|
"I See the
Light"
|
Moore, Levi
|
3:44
|
|
8.
|
"Healing
Incantation"
|
Moore
|
0:54
|
|
9.
|
"Flynn
Wanted" (Score)
|
Alan Menken
|
2:51
|
|
10.
|
"Prologue"
(Score
& Song)
|
Menken, Murphy,
Delaney Stein
|
2:02
|
|
11.
|
"Horse with
No Rider" (Score)
|
Menken
|
1:57
|
|
12.
|
"Escape
Route" (Score)
|
Menken
|
1:57
|
|
13.
|
"Campfire"
(Score)
|
Menken
|
3:21
|
|
14.
|
"Kingdom
Dance" (Score)
|
Menken
|
2:20
|
|
15.
|
"Waiting
For the Lights" (Score)
|
Menken
|
2:47
|
|
16.
|
"Return to
Mother" (Score)
|
Menken
|
2:06
|
|
17.
|
"Realization
and Escape" (Score)
|
Menken
|
5:50
|
|
18.
|
"The Tear
Heals" (Score & Song)
|
Menken, Moore
|
7:37
|
|
19.
|
"Kingdom
Celebration" (Score)
|
Menken
|
1:50
|
|
20.
|
"Something
That I Want"
|
Grace Potter
|
2:43
|
|
Denotes
- 1^
Not featured in film.
- 2^This
is an extended version of the song.
Release
Merchandising
Like other recent Disney animated features, Tangled
is supported in retail stores by a line of toys and other merchandise. Many of
the Rapunzel dolls emphasize her hair, while some also include sound clips from
the film. Toys based on other characters, including Flynn Rider, Pascal and
Maximus, have also been released. Rapunzel became an official Disney Princess
on October 2, 2011.
A video game based on the film was released on November
23, 2010 for the two Nintendo consoles Nintendo DS and Wii as well as for the PC
platform by Disney Interactive Studios.
Home media
Tangled was released by Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainment
as a four-disc combo pack on March 29, 2011. The combo pack includes a Blu-ray
3D, standard Blu-ray, DVD, and digital copy. A two-disc Blu-ray/DVD combo pack
and single DVD are also available. 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. The DVD includes only the two Original
Storybook Openings and the 50th Animated Feature Countdown.
Sales of Tangled in the US and Canada exceeded $95
million in DVD and Blu-ray sales, the highest grossing DVD of the year to date;
its home video sales exceeded the film's earnings in its first week in
theaters. The film sold a record 2,970,052 units (the equivalent of
$44,521,079) in its first week in North America, the largest opening for a 2011
DVD. It dominated for two weeks on the DVD sales chart and sold 6,208,573 units
($95,280,386) as of October 23, 2011. It has also sold 2,518,522 Blu-ray units
($59,220,275) by May 29, 2011.
Reception
Critical reception
Tangled received positive reviews from critics. Rotten Tomatoes
reports that 90% of critics have given Tangled a positive review based
on 181 reviews, with an average score of 7.5/10. Among Rotten Tomatoes Top
Critics, which consists of popular and notable critics from the top
newspapers, websites, television and radio programs, the film holds an overall
approval rating of 93%, based on a sample of 29 reviews. 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." Another review aggregator Metacritic, which assigns a weighted
average score from 0–100 out of reviews from mainstream film critics,
calculated a score of 71 based on 33 reviews. CinemaScore polls conducted during the
opening weekend revealed the average grade cinemagoers gave Tangled was
an A+ on an A+ to F scale.
A. O.
Scott of The New York Times positively reviewed the film as "the
50th animated feature from Disney, and its look and spirit convey a modified,
updated but nonetheless sincere and unmistakable quality of old-fashioned
Disneyness." Time film critic Richard Corliss noted that the film
"wades into the DreamWorks style of sitcom gags and anachronistic
sass" while praising the film for achieving "the complex mix of romance,
comedy, adventure and heart that defines the best Disney features." Kenneth
Turan from The Los Angeles Times awarded the film four stars out of
five; he described the film as a "gorgeous computer-animated look that
features rich landscapes and characters that look fuller and more lifelike than
they have in the past."
James
Berardinelli commented on his review website ReelViews that the film is
"entertaining and enjoyable, but not groundbreaking."
Berardinelli also stated Rapunzel is "not as memorable as Snow White, Princess
Ariel, or Belle" as well as stating "the songs are neither catchy nor
memorable." Todd McCarthy, film reviewer for The Hollywood Reporter
opened his review with, "It would have been nice if Disney's self-touted
50th animated feature were one of its best, a film that could stand with the
studio's classics, but the world will have to make do with Tangled, a
passably entertaining hodgepodge of old and new animation techniques, mixed
sensibilities and hedged commercial calculations." Sandie Angulo Chen of Common
Sense Media gave the film five out of five stars, writing, "Fantastic
princess adventure is fun, with great messages".
Box office
Tangled earned $200,821,936 in North America and $389,900,000 in
other countries for a worldwide total of $590,721,936. Worldwide, it is the 15th
highest-grossing animated feature ever released, the eighth highest-grossing
film of 2010 and the third largest animated title on that list behind Toy
Story 3 and Shrek Forever After. It is also the third Disney film
appearing in 2010's Top Ten. Finally, it is the second highest-grossing film
worldwide produced by Walt Disney Animation Studios, trailing only The Lion
King.
It premiered in Paris on November 17, exclusively
screening at the Grand Rex theatre two weeks in advance of its French wide
release. With over 3,800 tickets sold on its opening day, it set a new record
for films showing in a single theatre. It had a worldwide opening weekend of
$86.1 million. It reached the summit of the worldwide box office once, on its
eleventh weekend (Feb 4-6, 2011), with $24.9 million.
North America
Tangled earned $11.9 million on its opening Wednesday, breaking
the record for the largest pre-Thanksgiving Wednesday opening of all time, a
record previously held by Disney Pixar's Toy Story 2. In its first
weekend of release, it earned $48.8 million, placing second for the period
behind Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 1, which earned $49.1
million. Tangled had the fifth highest opening weekend for a film that
did not debut at #1. Over the traditional Wednesday-Sunday Thanksgiving holiday
period, it tallied $68.7 million, again finishing in second place. Tangled
also marked the second-largest 3-day and 5-day Thanksgiving opening after Toy
Story 2. During its second weekend (post-Thanksgiving), Tangled
declined 56% to $21.6 million, although it jumped to first place at the box
office, ahead of the new release The Warrior's Way and Deathly
Hallows: Part 1, the previous weekend's #1 film. With a final gross of $200.8 million, it is
the 10th highest-grossing film of 2010 and the 10th 2010 film to pass the
$200-million-mark. However, it was the fourth slowest film of all time to pass
this mark behind Back to the Future, My Big Fat Greek Wedding,
and Saving Private Ryan. Unadjusted for inflation, it is the fourth
highest-grossing film produced by Walt Disney Animation Studios, behind The
Lion King ($422.8 million), Beauty and the Beast ($218.9 million)
and Aladdin ($217.4 million).
Outside North America
On its opening weekend, it earned $17.4 million in 8
territories and ranked second for the weekend behind Harry Potter and the
Deathly Hallows: Part 1 ($117.3 million). It
reached first place at the weekendbox office outside North America three times
in 2011. Outside North America, it marked the seventh largest 2010 picture and
the third largest 2010 animated feature. Its highest-grossing markets outside
North America was Germany ($44.2 million) -where it is the highest-grossing
animated film of 2010-, followed by France and the Maghreb region ($39.4
million) and the UK, Ireland and Malta ($32.9 million).
Accolades
The film has been nominated for ten awards. Hollywood
Foreign Press Association nominated Tangled for two Golden Globe Awards,
for Best Animated Feature Film and Best Original Song for "I See the
Light", but lost to Toy Story 3 and Burlesque respectively.
The film also received two nominations for the Broadcast Film Critics
Association in the same categories, but lost to Toy Story 3 and 127
Hours, as well as nominations for two Annie Awards, for Best Animated
Feature Film and for Writing in a Feature Production.
Tangled was also nominated for two Phoenix Film Critics Society
Awards, Best Animated Film and Best Original Song for "I've Got a
Dream", which it lost to Toy Story 3 and Burlesque. "I
See the Light" has been nominated for Best Original Song at the 83rd
Academy Awards, but lost to "We Belong Together" from Toy Story 3.
It has also been nominated for 37th Saturn Award for Best Animated Film.
Tangled won best 3D scene of the year at the second annual
International 3D Society Creative Arts Awards.
Tangled was also nominated for favorite film in the British Academy
Children Awards for Favorite Film, competing against films like Harry Potter
and the Deathly Hallows – Parts 1 & 2, Transformers: Dark of
the Moon, Cars 2, and Kung Fu Panda 2.
Group
|
Category
|
Result
|
83rd Academy
Awards
|
Best Original
Song ("I See the Light")
|
Nominated
|
38th Annie
Awards
|
Best Animated
Feature Film
|
Writing in a
Feature Production (Dan Fogelman)
|
Broadcast Film
Critics Association Awards 2010
|
Best Animated
Feature Film
|
Best Song
("I See the Light")
|
68th Golden
Globe Awards
|
Best Animated
Feature Film
|
Best Song
("I See the Light")
|
National Movie
Awards
|
Animation
|
Won
|
Las Vegas Film
Critics Society
|
Best Song
("I See the Light")
|
Phoenix Film Critics
Society Awards
|
Best Animated
Film
|
Nominated
|
Best Original
Song ("I’ve Got a Dream")
|
37th Saturn
Awards
|
Best Animated
Film
|
2011 Teen Choice
Awards
|
Choice Animated
Movie Voice (Zachary Levi)
|
British Academy
Children's Awards (BAFTA)
|
Favorite Film
|
54th Grammy
Awards
|
Best Compilation
Soundtrack for Visual Media
|
Best Song
Written For Visual Media ("I See the Light")
|
Won
|
Tangled Ever After
Tangled Ever After is a 6:27 minute
animated short comedy film also directed by Nathan Greno and Byron Howard. The
film premiered before the 3D theatrical re-release of Beauty and the Beast
on January 13, 2012 and on March 23, 2012 at 9:15 p.m. on Disney Channel
following the broadcast premiere of The Princess and the Frog. It was
announced that the short will be included on the upcoming Diamond Edition of Cinderella,
scheduled for release in October 2012 on Blu-ray and DVD.
The story of the short immediately follows that of Tangled.
Rapunzel and Eugene Fitzherbert are getting married and exchanging their
wedding vows while Pascal and Maximus (who are the ring bearers) chase the lost
wedding rings around town. They eventually manage to retrieve the rings in time
for the ceremony, albeit causing an immense amount of collateral damage across
the kingdom, before losing the wedding cake.