If there was an underrated movie in Disney's movie catalog, it's Tangled. While no one is saying it's bad, it's rarely talked about as one of the best. We aren't here to debate what movie is better than which, however.

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What we are here to do is look at fantastic concept art set in the world of Tangled. While the animation brought to us in the film was incredible, some of it might even pale in comparison to some of these renderings. Disney, without a doubt, hires some of the best artists money can buy, and that's on full display here.

10 Flower Power

Art By: Claire Keane

Here we see a piece with Rapunzel where she's at her highest point, in the middle of a song about how great it would be to explore the world. Birds and butterflies alike are fluttering through her window, chirping away with her musical number. It's a Disney cliché at this point to not only have a song like this but to also have animals present in it.

The flowers adorning the length of her hair are both beautiful and symbolic at the same time. In many ways Rapunzel is a flower throughout the film, needing Flynn to help her bloom as she should. Once she did, we got one of the most likable protagonists in a Disney film.

9 Dedication

Art By: Claire Keane

This piece has Rapunzel in the middle of what looks like cleaning, given the clothes packed in her laundry basket. She's trying to reach something from above her fireplace, the item being painfully in the middle, just out of her grasp.

The image depicts a pain any short person has felt, being so close to getting to something, yet being so far away from it all the same. The way her legs are kicking through the air, desperately trying to make contact with something, is strangely kind of cute. Reminds you a little of a baby who's legs are kicking back and forth in a booster seat.

8 Rapunzel

Art By: Claire Keane

This is a glimpse of the varying versions of Rapunzel and her dress that the art team had. The dress itself remains mostly the same, always being a shade of green, the only thing that differs is the flowers on the bottom. Judging from this color scheme, they made a great decision in making it pink and purple, both colors fitting her upbeat personality.

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The furthest to the left on the top row is a stance that perfectly fit her when she was pouting. She was grumpy, but not in the least bit intimidating. Her inherent whimsicalness shines through in the other pieces, aside from the furthest to the left. That one makes her look like a blond Elsa.

7 Dresses

Art By: Claire Keane

This is another lineup of Rapunzel, this time focusing completely on the dresses rather than her. By now, they've come to a design that they liked. Some of these don't look bad, the top two going from left to right look like what a housemaid would wear. Considering she was more a prisoner than a guest, it would have worked.

The two exceptions are the two furthest to the right, both the top and the bottom. The top one is way too gaudy looking, more out of a victorian era, something she might wear while still in the castle. The bottom one has far too much going on with it. Either way, you slice it, they came to the right decision on a dress.

6 Reflection In A Mirror

Art By: Claire Keane

This one doesn't tie into the movie at all, aside from the fact it has Rapunzel in it. The setting is far more modern looking, having both a purse filled with beauty supplies and a pair of jeans in it. There's even a laptop in the far back, open to what you could only assume was a fashion website.

The entire picture shows how obsessed she'd become with fashion, products seen all over the place. It's a strange image to look at when you take into account how she acted in the movie. This makes her come off insecure and vain, two things she never really was in the film.

5 The Tower

Art By: Glen Keane

Depicted here is the tower that became Rapunzel's home for so many years. The artist did a fantastic job at showing scale, making the tower the size of Godzilla in comparison to the figure below it. It makes you realize why Mother Gothel always wanted to be pulled up. Walking up all those steps would not be a work out anyone should have to go through.

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Forest surrounding the tower is beautiful, untouched by man's hands, able to grow in peace. The design of the house is a lot like the homes hobbits have in Lord of the Rings, small and compacted, never wasting any space.

4 Open World

Art By: Bill Perkins

This art depicts when Rapunzel is first free of the tower, in that stage where she can't decide if she should go back or go see the festival. You can see the indecisiveness from how she's standing and pointing. You can almost hear Rider's sighs from here.

Scaling here is also amazingly done, trees looming over them like skyscrapers, blocking out much of the sun. In that way, it's very symbolic, forest from which they are coming from being darkness that Rapunzel needs to escape. Beaming sunlight beyond being the new life she needs to push herself towards.

3 Free At Last

Art By: Lisa Keene

There's a purity in this, the absolute joy Rapunzel has swinging here is very childlike. Since this is her first time outside the tower, it's also her first time doing many mundane tasks, such as swinging out over a lake. Something so simple can prove to be the greatest joy to those forced into a hermit lifestyle. 

As with many of these pictures, it's symbolic of her swinging away from her mother's clutches. She's a bird sprouting her wings, ready to fly far from her nest. It makes you remember the scene where she finally stood up to her mother, using the backbone that she always had.

2 Welcome Home

Art By: Craig Mullins

Rapunzel first arriving at the city is a big deal for several reasons, chief among them being that she's the missing princess. It's also important because it's the apex of her sense of wonderment. This image captures that amazingly well, buildings towering overhead and a bustling market for her to explore.

While you can't see her face, you can imagine the wide eyes and slack jaw, expression of shock written all over it. It's a testament to an artist's quality of work when they can make you visualize things you can't actually see with your eyes.

1 The Original Mother Gothel

Art By: Lisa Keene

Gothel was never shown in her truly grotesque form all that often, only in the beginning and when she met her end. Here we see her looking like an old crone, a wicked witch that you'd expect her to be, given her personality.

With the way the hair is glowing, she will very soon be reverting to the form we are all accustomed to from the movie soon. It's a shame something like this wasn't shown in the movie, really driving home the ugliness of the character, however, her lies to Rapunzel may have fallen on deaf ears if the girl saw Gothel's true self.

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