![]() Now, we’re just waiting for a full multilingual version of the movie’s other triumphant Elsa solo. Granted, yes, different voice actresses belted each version of the “WOOOOOOO-OOOOOOOHHH-OHHHH-OOOHHHHHH,” but there isn’t actually anything.said in another language.īut never mind that, because even if we disqualify those three, “Into the Unknown”’s multilingual version clocks in at 26 languages - one more than “Let it Go”’s. “WOOOOOOOH-OOOOOOOHHH-OHHHH-OOOHHHHHH!” This time it’s Hindi. ![]() ![]() “WOOOOOOOH-OOOOOOOHHH-OHHHH-OOOHHHHHH,” she belts again in Kazakh. “WOOOOOOOH-OOOOOOOHHH-OHHHH-OOOHHHHHH,” belts Elsa in Latin Spanish. It’s around the bridge where things get a bit iffy.įor about 20 seconds, the song is mostly just Elsa going “WOOOOOOOH-OOOOOOOHHH-OHHHH-OOOHHHHHH,” which counts as three languages in this multilingual version. The song pretty much alternates languages per line which is all fine and dandy. The new version of the song starts off in English before switching languages about nine seconds after Elsa sings the first line. But upon closer examination “Into the Unknown” may be shortchanging the multilingual-single fans out there. ![]() If there’s a featured song in an animated movie, chances are there is a multilingual version of it floating around on YouTube.Īfter four weeks at the top of the box office, Disney has released a multilingual version of Frozen 2’s “Into the Unknown.” The video touts 29 languages - four more than the multilingual version of “Let It Go.” from 2014.
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