There’s an iconic moment in Disney’s Beauty and the Beast
 in which Belle, frustrated by the constraints placed upon her in a tiny
 town whose residents don’t understand her, runs out under an expansive 
sky, flinging herself in the grass and sending a shower of dandelion 
seeds dancing on the breeze. “I want adventure in the great wide 
somewhere,” she confesses. In Tangled, Disney’s brand-new 
animated musical starring Mandy Moore and Zachary Levi as the confined 
Rapunzel and the golden-hearted bandit who rescues her, we see the 
innocent beauty with the magnificent tresses experience a precise echo 
of that moment. She has just touched actual ground for the first time 
since she can remember and is ready to embrace the world. 
 
 Tangled
 is the story of a sedentary girl who is kept in check by the woman she 
believes is her mother, a girl who has learned to squelch any 
adventurous stirrings, which can only lead to trouble. Like LOST’s
 ultimate bad mother, the ancient woman who kidnapped the infant 
Rapunzel insists that she is protecting her, as well as the miraculous 
gift of her gleaming, healing hair, which she would rather hoard than 
share. The sweet young woman with the enormous emerald eyes mostly 
complies uncomplainingly, but it hasn’t escaped her notice that every 
year on her birthday, a parade of lanterns dominates the night sky. 
Could they have a connection to her? Might they serve as a bridge that 
will lead her to that indefinable something whose absence has always 
gnawed away at her? 
 
 Enter Flynn Ryder, a rough-and-tumble 
rogue who really isn’t. Rapunzel shows off her skill with a skillet, and
 not in the cooking sense, when he comes calling; this unconventional 
weapon proves very handy throughout the course of the film, and poor 
Flynn becomes quite intimately acquainted with it. The “Flynn” seems to 
recall Errol, the definitive Robin Hood and ultimate dashing hero. But 
in the wake of their disastrous meeting that recalls Shannon and 
Joseph’s introduction to each other in Ron Howard’s Far and Away,
 we come to understand that he is actually rather bumbling and 
unassuming when he lets his guard down. Of all the characters, he is the
 most expressive - with the possible exception of tiny chirping 
chameleon Pascal, who has the advantage of shifting colors to better 
broadcast his mood. 
 
 After he agrees to free Rapunzel so she 
can go follow the lanterns to their source on the night of her birthday,
 both begin a process of self-discovery as she learns to let go of fear 
and embrace new experiences and he searches inside himself for an aspect
 of his personality long buried. All the while, they draw ever closer to
 each other, culminating in a gorgeous duet, the film’s most luminous 
segment, during which it seems that all of their dreams are coming true,
 even ones that they had no idea that they had in the first place. “And 
at last I see the light, and it's like the fog has lifted. And at last I
 see the light, and it's like the sky is new. And it's warm and real and
 bright, and the world has somehow shifted...” A stunning scene. And who
 knew Zach Levi was such a fantastic singer? 
 
 Alan Menken is the creative genius behind so many great Disney musicals, most notably Beauty and the Beast; here, along with lyricist Glenn Slater, he shows that he’s still got the magic songwriting touch. The aforementioned I See the Light
 has instantly taken its place near the top of my list of favorite 
romantic Disney songs. Others make a big impression as well. I love the 
poppy, guitar-heavy When Will My Life Begin, which shows us just 
how busy Rapunzel manages to stay during her perpetual house arrest but 
conveys her yearning for more, recalling Part of Your World from The Little Mermaid.
 Moore’s exuberant performance of the reprise is especially affecting. 
Donna Murphy sounds appropriately villainous in the saucy Mother Knows Best, which reminded me of the raucous Master of the House from Les Miserables. 
 
 Meanwhile, the zany but inspirational I’ve Got a Dream is a rousing group number which starts off with Everybody Loves Raymond’s
 Brad Garrett showing off his surprising singing talent. A bunch of 
misunderstood misfits confess their innermost desires, allowing Flynn 
and Rapunzel to chime in as well, and it’s nice to know that the classic
 rowdy extended barroom song-and-dance number is not a thing of the 
past. The accordion-heavy tune and quirky lyrics are right in line with 
such Disney classics as I Swear I Saw a Dragon, Gaston and the slightly less well-known Let’s Have a Drink On It. 
 
 The movie, written by Dan Fogelman and directed by Nathan Greno and 
Byron Howard, is adventurous and romantic and funny all at once, with 
humor coming from all angles. We’ve got the purely visual humor of tiny 
Pascal and proud horse Maximus, whose changing relationship with Flynn 
is one of my favorite aspects of the movie. We’ve got plenty of 
pratfalls and nifty tricks with Rapunzel’s fantastic hair. There’s witty
 banter to spare, and all of the voice cast does an outstanding job. I 
was especially tickled to realize that the gruff captain of the guard is
 played by M. C. Gainey, known by LOST fans as the scruffy Tom 
Friendly. Other familiar voices included Jeffrey Tambor as one of the 
other soft-hearted hooligans Rapunzel and Flynn meet and Ron Perlman as 
Flynn’s nefarious ex-partner. 
 
 I watched this in 3D, and while 
there weren’t too many moments when I felt like it made a major 
difference, the movie on the whole is so lush and gorgeous that I’d 
probably say it’s worth it to spring for the glasses that give you just 
that much more of an immersive experience. There were many moments in 
the movie that I found genuinely breathtaking on purely a visual basis, 
and I definitely think that the attempt to marry the classic fairy tale 
feeling with more modern graphic techniques worked. I was never 
distracted by the method of animation; it just made me marvel. 
 
 Tangled
 is an exhilarating movie that takes viewers along for an epic quest as 
two characters seek a deeper understanding of who they really are. Hints
 of several previous Disney movies, along with Don Bluth’s Anastasia,
 linger, but this is a wholly original work with a lot of resonance for 
anyone who’s ever felt torn between the familiar and the novel. Rapunzel
 can now proudly stand amongst the previous Disney princesses, and I can
 breathe a sigh of relief as Disney demonstrates how successfully it can
 continue to mine fairy tales for compelling material. Contemporary but 
timeless, Tangled has classic written all over it.
 
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