Frozen 3 has the chance to tell Arendelle’s most ambitious story to date with the adjustment of another classical fairy tale by Hans Christian Andersen, the author of the story that Disney based Frozen on. Frozen is loosely on the basis of the classic narration of The Snow Queen by Andersen, notorious for runs such as The Little Mermaid and The Ugly Duckling. Disney’s modification tells the story of Elsa( Idina Menzel ), a princes cursed to a life of permanent winter due to her precarious power to create ice and snow. The sequel Frozen 2 expanded the franchise’s world beyond the kingdom of Arendelle, introducing the Enchanted Forest and the Northuldra people. Frozen 3 could give further worldbuilding — by incorporating elements of Andersen’s story The Wild Swans.

Frozen has become the most successful 3D-animated designation of all time, with its two installments is in conformity with the top 15 all-time highest-grossing films; it’s won two Oscars, two Grammys, and an immense loyal following. The first film, released in 2013, triggered a artistic phenomenon that had children all around the world singing the Frozen soundtrack for hours on end, and all media besieged with word, song cross, themed occasions, parodies, and all kinds of homages. Six years later, Frozen 2 built on top of the success of its predecessor and became the highest-growing invigorated film of all time. Now, the prospect for a third movie is bigger than ever.

Related: Frozen 2 Referenced The Little Mermaid( But The Disney Classic Isn’t Canon Yet )

The Wild Swans has a similarly named princess — Elisa — as the exponent. She lives merrily with her parent and her eleven friends until the emperor marries an evil sorceres who turns the princes into swans. A fairy seems and tells Elisa to perform each of her friends a shirt out of nettles so the sorcery can be broken, but she must remain absolutely silent. The archbishop of the sphere mistakes Elisa for a voodoo while she’s gathering the nettles and, because she’s unable to deny it without break-dance her dedicate of silence, she’s appointed for execution. However, she finishes the shirts and hurls them on the swans, reverting them to princes.

The two fairytales share thematic elements of sisterly affection, vulnerability, and relinquish. Either as collaborators or antagonists, Queen Elsa and Princess Elisa offer an interesting parallel that could be exploited in many different ways. Of direction, as is the case with all of the previous adjustments, Disney needs to modify the fib to make it appropriate for young contemporaries, and those deepens will dictate whether Elsa’s mission is to help Elisa turn her brothers back to normal or whether Elisa somehow becomes Elsa’s dark reflection. Whatever route Disney opts, the clank between two fairytales could infuse the Frozen trilogy with an epic sense of magnitude.

The Wild Swans has been adapted many times before, including an animated abruptly film narrated by Alien perform Sigourney Weaver and a Soviet animated piece. But despite its vogue, the storey has yet to be adapted as a major Hollywood production. This doesn’t mean it’s less worthy of being a feature film, though, since Frozen suffered the same issue for decades. As opposed to other notorious Disney adaptations like Snow White and Cinderella, it made a long time for Disney to adapt The Snow Queen as Frozen, but the wait was well worth it. That is something that further connects the two storeys, permitting the feasibility of establishing turning the two most overlooked classical fairytales into the biggest possible Disney adaptation — or perhaps even a shared world of sorts.

In the first Frozen movie, Elsa profess her identity and opens up to be loved the acces she is. In Frozen 2, Princess Anna and Queen Elsa amend the mistakes from the past and make peace with its own history. Now, with their tale already established, Frozen 3 needs to raise the ventures for the sisters and the kingdom of Arendelle to their maximum degree. What better option than generating another classical fairytale to the big screen for the first time? Andersen’s The Wild Swans is a perfect candidate.

More: When Disney Could Release Frozen 3

Read more: screenrant.com