It's been claimed there are only seven basic plots in all of literature: The Heroic Quest; Destroying The Monster; and Blue Character Strops Off To Build Transparent Palace In Inaccessible Wilderness.

Don't believe us? Look at the evidence that joins the dots between Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons's Watchmen and Disney's Frozen. It goes like this:

1. Take one extraordinarily gifted and decidedly blue character (that's Doctor Manhattan and Elsa, FYI).

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2. They live among friends and family but struggle to control their powers.

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3. The public turns against them after becoming terrified of the danger they pose.

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4. They flee into a desolate wasteland and magic up an elegant, transparent fairytale castle.

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5. The person closest to them risks their life to convince them back to the world.

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6. Everyone lives happily ever after.

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On top of all that, Ozymandias is as poor a prince as Hans, Nite Owl is almost as loveable as Kristoff, and though we haven't quite worked out the parallels between Rorschach and Olaf, we have absolutely no doubt that they're only waiting to be discovered.

Whatever you do, don't tell Alan Moore.

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