No, I'm not particularly sporty
order retrovir Kristen: Again one of the reasons I am so proud of this particular story of being a part of this particular Disney animation movie because I think this is another turning point. This is the embracement of a modern day female that isn???t striving for perfection that???s embracing uniqueness because first of all the protagonist is also the antagonist. Elsa is not the evil one but she kind of is, I mean you watch the trailer and you think that she is, so there is that blurred kind of line. The love is between the siblings and it is celebrating this sort of Anti-1950???s dynamic where the girl isn???t just opening the front door and looking for her true love anymore, she wants the world, but she also wants to love the world around her and as opposed to Ariel who wanted to just explore, Anna wants to explore, but she also wants to nurture the relationships around her and a foundation of nurturing your relationships in life, is nurturing your relationship with your support group, which is your family, whether it is blood or not and you can identify family however you want, but that???s the relationship between Anna and Elsa is it???s a non-romantic love. It???s nurturing the non-romantic love and I think it is really special. It???s very non-traditional for a Disney movie and that???s the reason it took us so long. I don???t know if Jen and Chris told you how long to make this but this had a much bumpier road than a lot of them because "Anna and the Snow Queen," the Hans Christian Andersen tale is a little bit different than this and we didn???t know if they were going to be sisters, a mother and daughter, or if she was really going to be evil and her ice represented her fear and how do you bring your antagonist back around to the audience at the end because you can???t have Anna hate Elsa, you cannot. The whole movie she has got to be rooting for Elsa.