Snowflakes on the nursery ceiling make the case first. Elsa’s power obeys a strict emotional circuit: joy fuels creative ice constructs, panic triggers lethal spikes, and memory literally freezes into the palace, into the dress, into that recurring motif of fractal patterns locked to specific feelings.
The oddity is genetic silence around Anna. If magic in Arendelle tracks bloodline, the opening injury and the troll intervention read less like random accident and more like an emergency firewall, a kind of narrative CRISPR editing the sisters’ shared potential and isolating expression in the elder child alone.
Yet the film never proves exclusivity. Anna’s resilience to cold, repeatedly foregrounded and only partially explained by a troll blessing, looks suspiciously like a phenotype, not just a charm. Her near‑instant thaw from an act of self‑sacrifice also behaves like endogenous magic, a one‑off but internally coherent power event.
So the stronger claim is not that Anna lacks power, but that her arc externalizes it. Elsa weaponizes affect into visible ice; Anna channels affect into improbable survival, into catalytic change in others, into a kind of emotional conductivity that the script refuses to name yet quietly builds into its frozen architecture.