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Tangled was far from the first CG animated film produced by Walt Disney Animation Studios, but it was the first Disney Princess film to be released in such a format. 15 years ago today, on November 24, 2010, Tangled kicked off a whole new era for the Princesses. Moving forward each of these films would be released in CG animation (and live-action films later down the line), and officially put an end to their 2D animated releases. It was a huge shift for the company that fans are still seeing the results from to this day.
Tangled Released 15 Years Ago Today

Tangled was the first Disney Princess film to be produced with CG animation, and it really set Disney on a whole new trajectory that they continue to enjoy to this day. It’s kind of the perfect marriage of both classic sensibilities with a more modernized look for the 2010s. Adapting the classic Rapunzel fairy tale helped the film return to the more familiar Disney roots that the studio hadn’t been exploring since the late 1990s. Though there was an attempt with The Princess and the Frog to do the same, Tangled was the one to break through.
The studio had been in the midst of releasing CG animated films with unique stories like Bolt or Meet the Robinsons in the years before, but Tangled brought the studio back to the grandiose Broadway style that fans had loved about the earlier films. Starring Mandy Moore as Rapunzel, the film introduced fans to a much more plucky version of the princess from the original story as she wanted to escape from the tower that she had been locked in for the majority of her life. And when she was finally able to do so, Rapunzel realized the magic that she was truly capable of.
It was a movie that helped Disney in a way that we’re only still figuring out in retrospect. It allowed Disney to enter into a whole new period of relevance. Because without the success of Tangled to help mark the start of this new era, we wouldn’t have had as successful future hits modeled in the same kind of form like Tangled, Encanto, and Moana. All while still leaving room for experimentation with films like Zootopia, Wreck-It Ralph and more than have since continued with sequels.









