Who are Rapunzel and Remy?
Rapunzel is the princess of Disney's animated film Tangled. She is the princess of Corona, which is either a kingdom or a really exclusive neighborhood depending on how you interpret the architecture and she is instantly recognizable by her impossibly long, magical golden hair—an evolutionary marvel and nightmare for anyone in charge of hair care. Abducted as a child by a wicked crone with a fondness for immortality and questionable parenting skills, Rapunzel spends eighteen years in a tower so remote that even Google Maps would shrug. Her fascination with the mysterious "floating lights" that appear on her birthday becomes the thread that pulls her into the outside world, aided by Flynn Rider, a thief whose charm is rivaled only by his eyebrow game. Together, they navigate adventures involving palace intrigue, sinister schemes and an alarming number of frying pans, proving that the best way to find yourself is to break a few rules—and maybe a tower window.
Remy is the rat in Disney's animated film Ratatouille, though calling him "just a rat" is like calling the Mona Lisa "just a doodle." A bluish-gray Parisian rodent with culinary aspirations, Remy possesses a palate so refined it could bring a Michelin inspector to tears and a nose so discerning it borders on clairvoyant. While his fellow rats are content with scavenging dubious leftovers, Remy dreams of haute cuisine, a goal that understandably baffles his family. His talent for sniffing out poisons earns him the role of food inspector for his clan, which is both noble and ironic given his eventual foray into the human culinary world. Guided by a spectral version of his hero, the late Chef Auguste Gusteau and driven by an unshakable belief that "anyone can cook," Remy somehow manages to turn a literal rat race into a gastronomic revolution, all while dodging health inspectors and the occasional frying pan.
Rapunzel is the princess of Disney's animated film Tangled. She is the princess of Corona, which is either a kingdom or a really exclusive neighborhood depending on how you interpret the architecture and she is instantly recognizable by her impossibly long, magical golden hair—an evolutionary marvel and nightmare for anyone in charge of hair care. Abducted as a child by a wicked crone with a fondness for immortality and questionable parenting skills, Rapunzel spends eighteen years in a tower so remote that even Google Maps would shrug. Her fascination with the mysterious "floating lights" that appear on her birthday becomes the thread that pulls her into the outside world, aided by Flynn Rider, a thief whose charm is rivaled only by his eyebrow game. Together, they navigate adventures involving palace intrigue, sinister schemes and an alarming number of frying pans, proving that the best way to find yourself is to break a few rules—and maybe a tower window.
Remy is the rat in Disney's animated film Ratatouille, though calling him "just a rat" is like calling the Mona Lisa "just a doodle." A bluish-gray Parisian rodent with culinary aspirations, Remy possesses a palate so refined it could bring a Michelin inspector to tears and a nose so discerning it borders on clairvoyant. While his fellow rats are content with scavenging dubious leftovers, Remy dreams of haute cuisine, a goal that understandably baffles his family. His talent for sniffing out poisons earns him the role of food inspector for his clan, which is both noble and ironic given his eventual foray into the human culinary world. Guided by a spectral version of his hero, the late Chef Auguste Gusteau and driven by an unshakable belief that "anyone can cook," Remy somehow manages to turn a literal rat race into a gastronomic revolution, all while dodging health inspectors and the occasional frying pan.
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