Like an obsessed Anne Harrington in All About Eve, New York Times columnist Maureen Dowd has been writing about Hillary Clinton for more than two decades, comparing her to characters from Scarlett O'Hara to the Terminator.

Dowd has written 195 columns about Hillary Clinton since 1993, according to an analysis by the liberal group Media Matters, released on Wednesday. An advance copy of the review was provided to BuzzFeed by the organization.

The study found that most were negative toward the former first lady (141 columns). Some were neutral (39 columns). Fewer were positive (15 columns). The pieces, printed opposite the editorial page of the Times, explain Clinton through cultural figures who also include Godzilla, "Mommie Dearest," and the Flying Dutchman, a fictional ghost ship cursed to sail for eternity without making port.

The organization, which tracks conservative media, is run by David Brock, a Clinton ally who founded American Bridge, a Democratic PAC. Brock also runs Correct the Record, a group dedicated to defending Clinton from partisan attacks.

Dowd's latest column inspired the Media Matters review. The piece, published in last Sunday's paper, riffed on Clinton's book tour through a curious frame: the Snow Queen, Elsa, from the popular animated Disney movie Frozen.

"Those close to them think that the queen of Hillaryland and the Snow Queen from Disney's 'Frozen' have special magical powers," Dowd wrote in her column, "but worry about whether they can control those powers, show their humanity and stir real warmth in the public heart."

During her first week on book tour, promoting her second memoir, Hard Choices, Clinton was criticized as "out of practice" and "rusty." She got confrontational with NPR's Terry Gross during an interview that focused on her marriage equality record. She said in another interview that when she and Bill Clinton left the White House in 2001, they started their new life "dead broke" — a comment she spent the week clarifying during various other appearances.

Four days into her tour, Clinton announced to an audience in Washington that she was "truly done, you know, being really careful about what to say."

Dowd heard in Clinton's words the title song of Frozen: "Let It Go."

"After feeling stifled at times and misunderstood, after suffering painful setbacks, the powerful and polarizing Elsa and Hillary proclaim from their lofty height that they're going to 'let it go' ...'I don't care what they're going to say,' Elsa sings at the climactic moment when she decides to let down her hair, ratchet up her star power and create her glittering ice palace. 'Let the storm rage on. The cold never bothered me anyway!'"