Disney’s newly revealed Tangled casting may signal more than just another live-action remake—it may point to a quiet but meaningful recalibration after several costly missteps.
Australian actress Teagan Croft has been cast as Rapunzel in the live action adaptation of Disney’s ‘TANGLED’ pic.twitter.com/9G7as8Enfm
— Geeks + Gamers (@GeeksGamersCom) January 7, 2026
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According to The Hollywood Reporter, Disney has cast Teagan Croft as Rapunzel and Milo Manheim as Flynn Rider in its upcoming live-action adaptation of Tangled. While the announcement was largely met with relief rather than controversy, that reaction itself is telling.
Unlike recent Disney remakes that ignited debate long before release, Tangled has drawn attention for how closely its casting mirrors the animated original.
That contrast is difficult to ignore—especially when viewed against Disney’s recent live-action track record.
A Pattern Disney Can No Longer Dismiss
Over the past decade, Disney’s live-action remakes have produced wildly different financial outcomes. Films that stayed visually and tonally close to their animated predecessors consistently delivered enormous box office returns.

Lilo and Stitch with Nani in the Live Action Lilo & Stitch movie – YouTube, IGN
- Beauty and the Beast crossed $1.26 billion worldwide.
- Aladdin followed with over $1 billion.
- The Lion King soared past $1.6 billion globally.
More recently, the live-action Lilo & Stitch emerged as one of Disney’s strongest theatrical performers, crossing the billion dollar mark while further reinforcing this trend.
By contrast, Disney’s most aggressively reinterpreted princess projects have struggled badly.

Rachel Zegler singing the original song “Waiting on a Wish” from Disney’s Snow White live action remake – YouTube, Disney
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The Little Mermaid underperformed relative to its reported budget and marketing spend and Snow White became a high-profile commercial failure, widely viewed as one of the studio’s biggest box office disappointments in years.
The numbers speak clearly—even if Disney executives have not.
From “Reimagining” to Reassessment
Disney has never publicly stated that it’s reversing course. There has been no press release, no executive quote, no official admission. But corporate strategy is often revealed through behavior, not statements.
When examined through that lens, the Tangled casting looks less like coincidence and more like recalibration.

Rapunzel in Disney’s Tangled – YouTube, Walt Disney Animation Studios
Rather than framing the adaptation as a bold reinterpretation, Disney appears to be emphasizing familiarity—casting actors who visually and tonally align with the characters audiences already embraced in animation. The approach contrasts sharply with recent projects where reinterpretation itself became the dominant narrative.
Why Tangled Matters More Than It Seems
Tangled occupies a unique place in Disney’s modern canon. Released in 2010, it is widely regarded as the start of Disney Animation’s second renaissance—a film praised for its humor, heart, music, and character chemistry. It grossed $591 million worldwide and spawned a successful Disney Channel series.
That legacy makes Tangled a dangerous property to experiment with. After the financial and reputational damage caused by Snow White, Disney has little incentive to provoke another backlash tied to a beloved title.
From that perspective, faithful casting is not conservative—it’s strategic.
An Ideological Lesson Learned?
Disney’s recent box office history suggests that audiences are not rejecting live-action remakes outright. They’re rejecting remakes that feel disconnected from the originals they love.

Halle Bailey as Ariel in Disney’s live-action THE LITTLE MERMAID. Photo courtesy of Disney. © 2023 Disney Enterprises, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
The success of films that preserved character identity and visual continuity, paired with the failure of those that foregrounded reinterpretation, appears to have delivered a clear message. Whether Disney chooses to describe this as an “ideological shift” or a “creative realignment” is beside the point.
The outcome is the same: familiarity sells, controversy doesn’t.
Casting as a Signal, Not a Statement
The Tangled casting does not come with speeches about change or messaging. Instead, it does something far more effective—it quietly restores trust.
By selecting leads who resemble the animated characters audiences already know, Disney is signaling restraint. And in the current climate, restraint may be the boldest move the studio can make.
Rapunzel and Flynn Rider have been cast for Tangled!
They’re not ugly and not race swapped?
This is a good start! pic.twitter.com/ytSngrTENZ
— mrphillipchan 🥚🇺🇲 (@mrphillipchan) January 7, 2026
Whether this represents a lasting course correction or a one-off adjustment remains to be seen. But if Tangled succeeds where other recent remakes failed, the lesson will be difficult for Disney to ignore.
Sometimes, the smartest evolution is remembering what worked in the first place.
Do you think this Tangled casting proves Disney has learned a lesson? Sound off in the comments to let us know!
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It’s going to be Woke Trash.
Why are you people falling for it?
I bet there will even be a Song about either “tHe pAtRiaRcHY” or “sWoNg WhAMen” in it. Also I see a Trănny mixed in, or at least one Gay.
Remember. The retărded Activists who have been ruining Disney are not going anywhere until they retire at 20+ years. So Disney is dead unto at least 2040………
Always screen a high seas copy first before getting your wallet out.
It’s still a mixed race story. And, it’s a “remake”. There is every chance they will make this an anti-family, THE MESSAGE movie. Disney makes disgusting propaganda, which varies only in how in-your-face it is.