Caring Anna Anna is very caring because, she went through a lot just to get her sister back who keeps harming her and putting her endanger. Elsa also, pushes Anna away and Anna still goes after her. Anna is dying and Olaf is with her and he keeps a fire going so, she does freeze and Anna tells Olaf to go or her will melt. Anna really cares about her sister and Elsa claims she didn’t want to hurt her, Anna almost dies multiple times because of Elsa, luckily the trolls save her the first time. Any other person in Anna’s case wouldn’t have done what she did, she is truly an amazing character. Anna went to get her sister after Elsa has harmed her. Elsa has hurt Anna or put her in harm’s way three times. First when they were little she accidently hits Anna in the head with an ice blast and then later on she hits her in the heart. Anna is able to defeat the odds and still get her sister to come back with her to the castle. She has gone through a lot and then only to be put down by her sister. Anna also went through a lot to get her sister back after, she has constantly pushed her away. Elsa should have learned a long time ago to control her powers. She went into a depression and was always in her room, she probably felt safe in there. As we see throughout the book and the movie that Elsa is becoming just as caring as Anna. In the …show more content…
Elsa also, pushes Anna away and Anna still goes after her, Anna is dying and Olaf is with her and he keeps a fire going so, she does freeze and Anna tells Olaf to go or her will melt. Anna really cares about her sister and Elsa claims she didn’t want to hurt her, Anna almost dies multiple times because of Elsa, luckily the trolls save her the first time. Any other person in Anna’s case wouldn’t have done what she did, she is truly an amazing character. Anna may be careless but, she defiantly doesn’t have a frozen
"Having her clothes cut in such a way that one could see her naked body" (Pg 17). She was also rumored to have been stealing from her father, and spending large amounts of time with various boyfriends at night at her father's home, and forcing the family steward to fetch them wine, and when the steward refused Anna "put a knife to her heart when she hesitated, once forcing her to flee in fear for her life" (Pg 19). It seems that Anna's adverse behavior may have been in part to her father's inability, or unwillingness to provide her with a suitable husband.
Anna was created through pre-implantation genetic diagnosis. This process allowed for Anna to be a perfect match in order to save her sister. As Anna grew older she did not want to go through the procedures in order to help Kate because Kate wanted to die. Throughout the movie Kate began to get better but then would have a spell causing more treatments. She was not afraid to die, but was afraid of her mom not letting her go.
As the youngest among the Fitzgerald children, she is well known as funny and cute. Despite her young age, Anna is quite smart and an observant little girl. Anna’s actions drive most of the plot in this novel. This is because she is having some inner conflicts and struggling with herself whether she has to be her sick sister’s savior or to follow her natural desire to live like other thirteen years old girl without having to faced such burden. While the rest of the family has often been left to sit idly by in Kate’s fight against cancer, Anna, because her genes match Kate’s, has been an active participant. Anna’s role in Kate’s survival has been a blessing and a curse for her, as it has made her Kate’s savior but has also made Anna unable to be herself and having her control towards her own body. Anna stands out as the book’s most conflicted character and what makes her so complicated is her connection with Kate and her struggle to exist independently of that connection, both define her. She tells Campbell, for example, about all the things she might want to be and what she wants to do in her future. Although the main purpose of her living consists in keeping her sister alive, At the same time, Anna desperately wants to live her life and exist independently from Kate. These mixed feelings make up the tragic core of Anna’s character. She feels a tremendous sense of guilt for wanting to live separate
The Film Theorists speculate that Anna does not have special abilities like Elsa’s winter power because she is adopted. They believe that Rapunzel from “Tangled” is Elsa’s real sibling, BREATHEcast reports.
She expects to receive a letter from her husband regarding her return from her lustful vacation. “They were expecting her husband to come, but a letter came from him, saying that there was something wrong with his eyes, and he entreated his wife to come home as quickly as possible Anna Sergeyevna made haste of this.” (Chekhov 171). The reader can assume that when the letter was received a the obstacle of her spouse finding out ceased. Shortly after receiving the news, Anna decides to go back to her
The exceptional moment in Frozen occurs when Anna first thinks that her act of true love, needed to thaw her frozen heart, is going to come from true loves first kiss with Hans and she is wrong, then again wrong with true loves kiss from Kristoff. Her act of true love, and the example of love that is magical and transformational, is her sisterly love for Elsa. She sacrifices herself to save Elsa’s life, and this is thaws her
The question of whether Anna’s desires were fulfilled seems crystal clear but even though the court ruled in Anna’s favor, the waters are still extremely murky. The court’s ruling in Anna’s favor was just another means of signing Kate’s death certificate. Even though many may argue that Anna’s desire was to be medically emancipated from her parents, I believe that her main desire in fact, was for her sister to be happy. She wanted the best for her sister and she wanted her to be free from the endless suffering that her illness brought upon her. I think that Anna’s desires were partly fulfilled because she, until her untimely death, believed she had freed her sister from the claws of an eternal struggle. Unfortunately, while Anna’s desires were partly fulfilled, her sister was, momentarily, freed, she had to acknowledge that her own suffering, a life without her best friend, was going to soon
Anna has had control over her own life taken away from her, due to the societal limitations on her choices as a woman. She becomes resentful of the society she lives in, and turns that frustration on the unsympathetic Vronsky, who retains his own freedom as well as control over her own happiness. She is too proud and passionate to
Anna is the youngest sibling in the Fitzgerald family. She has gone through many sacrifices in order to save her older sister’s life:
Anna was still married and even had a child.She first comes into the story to mediate between her brother Stiva and his wife Dolly after Dolly found out he had cheated. As _____ puts it, “Anna enters the novel as a Victorian stereotype of the ‘Angel in the house’ making peace in the in the Oblonsky household, surrounded by a bevy of children.” She was considered a respectable woman.But Anna, unlike Dido or even Dolly, actually hated her husband. Karenin was 20 years older than her and seemed cold and distant. He was too busy doing important government things and didn’t like to show any type of feeling. While on the other hand Anna was desperate for real love. Her child, Seryozha, was the only source she had for a long time. But like Dido, Anna had a deep hole in her from years of emotional neglect on her husband’s part, and it was only with Vronsky that the hole was finally getting filled which made him that more interesting to her. The side effect was also her extreme need to be around him at all time. She was afraid of being lonely again and that fear is what led to her losing the life she had
Anna: (Sees her boyfriend Jeremy walking down the street talking on the phone looking shocked.) Who he talking to looking like that. He knows not to talk to any other girl because if he is he gonna regret being born. (Starts walking towards Jeremy)
In the movie Frozen, directed by Jennifer Lee and Chris Buck, the main character, Anna, learns what the true meaning of love really is. On her journey through an eternal winter storm, she goes through challenges that help her blossom to a mature young lady. Following the hero and journey archetype, with the help of her companions, Anna develops from a young and naive girl to returning home as a hero that saved the kingdom of Arendelle. The first scenes that appear in the movie show the strong bond that the two sisters had.
The film “Frozen” shows Anna as being emotional when she falls in-love with a man with whom she just met. Then, she forgets about him and falls for a man with who she has only known two days.
She loved her mother and her father she gave them hell but she loved them. Truly she didn't mind giving her sister what she needed but instead she tried to give her what she wanted, her sister didn't want to live any longer she was sick of it all. So Anna was just trying to help her sister, her blood, her family she was doing something that you know barely anyone could bear to do. If anyone in your family told you that they didn't want to live any more. What would you do, would you do as Anna did and help them because you love them, or would you send them to counseling and therapy because you “love” them. Anna loves her sister enough to do something that you don't ask people for, that's blood, that's family. “Anyone can deal with victory, only the mighty can bear defeat” Adolf
The useable organs in her body are donated to Kate so she can live. In the movie Kate says to Anna that is okay if she doesn't want to donate her kidney because Kate didn't want to live anymore, she wanted to die. Anna sued her parents for the right to her own body, for Kate and for herself. She eventually won the case and didn't have to give Kate the kidney. Kate slowly started to get sicker and eventually died.