Since its Nov. 27, 2013 release, the Disney film Frozen has enchanted audiences with its tale of sisterly love and a fight to save the kingdom, but could the film be about more? According to a couple of outspoken religious bloggers and radio hosts, the film is also about getting children to accept homosexuality and bestiality.

Steven D. Greydanus was one of the first to publicly point out Frozen's supposed gay themes.

"All of this seems to me a) clearly if subtly expressive of a pro-gay culture at Disney..." he wrote for the National Catholic Register.

Kathryn Skaggs intensified the argument.

"The gay agenda to normalize homosexuality is woven into Disney's movie Frozen not just as an underlying message -- it is the movie," she wrote in a very long post on her blog, A Well-Behaved Mormon. "In a liberal culture tenacious at normalizing immorality, stripping those of faith from their ability to speak out in opposition, this needs to be taken seriously."

Skaggs is not alone in her theory. Recently Kevin Swanson, a pastor and host of Generations Radio, publicly questioned the movie's themes and association with the devil. According to Swanson, who cites Greydanus, Elsa lacks male suitors and is different from others. Plus, a gay family may have made a cameo.

"I'm not a tinfoil hat conspiratorialist, but you wonder sometimes if maybe there's something very evil happening here," Swanson argued on his show on March 5. "If I was the devil, what would I do to really foul up an entire social system and do something really, really, really evil to 5- and 6- and 7-year-olds in Christian families around America? ... I would buy Disney. If I was the devil, I would buy Disney in 1984. That's what I would have done."

Swanson and his co-host Steve Vaughn think Frozen has a "progressive" agenda.

"Then you would start making all these nice little movies that throw little things in there that make sin look enticing, in fact some of the worst of sins, make it look enticing or at least to start to indoctrinate slowly, turn the heat up on the frog in the pan," Vaughn added.

According to Swanson, parents who have taken their children to the movie are "oblivious."

"Friends, this is evil, just evil," he said. "I wonder if people are thinking: 'You know I think this cute little movie is going to indoctrinate my 5-year-old to be a lesbian or treat homosexuality or bestiality in a light sort of way.'"

The same day of Generation Radio's attack, co-director Jennifer Lee addressed the theory.

"We know what we made, but at the same time I feel like once we hand the film over it belongs to the world so I don't like to say anything, and let the fans talk," she told The Big Issue. "I think it's up to them. Disney films were made in different eras, different times, and we celebrate them all for different reasons but this one was made in 2013 and it’s going to have a 2013 point of view.”

Neither Swanson nor Vaughn have seen Frozen, which according to Swanson, was "produced by an organization that is probably one of the most pro-homosexual organizations in the country." Listen to their discussion below:


Frozen can reportedly be seen online here at viewers' own risk.

Follow Scharon Harding on Twitter: @SH____4.