It’s a Disney film, so it’s cheesy. I was
fully expecting that going in, and was not at all disappointed. I don’t mind a
cheesy film as long as it doesn’t pretend to not be cheesy, and I don’t think
any Disney film markets itself as ‘not a cheesy Disney film’, so we’re all good
there.
There was a lot of hubbub about this film
even before it came out, as Cinderella’s (portrayed by Lily James) waist was
allegedly photoshopped in the posters, and since this film is marketed at a
young audience with its main constituents being female, a lot of people had
concerns (and valid ones, too). To be honest, I’d assumed it was photoshopped
since nearly every woman on a screen is, so the shock wasn’t there for me. I
didn’t really want to instantly write off the film simply because of the
poster, though I understand why people did. I hoped the film might have a
different message, and the photoshopping of Cinderella’s waist was
circumstantial rather than something the film called for.
Anyway, Cinderella is now on Netflix. And I
loved every minute of it. As I said earlier, it’s cheesy. Cheddar cheesy. The
renamed Ella is an elegant young lady who is the epitome of a Hufflepuff
student. Her kindness almost radiates off her, as she elegantly floats her way
through the film.
Early in the film, we see an around 10-year-old
Ella, witness her mother dying. As her mother is on her deathbed, she tells
Ella that courage and kindness are the keys to surviving all life’s struggles. Little
Ella is told that she possesses more kindness in her little finger than most do
in their entire bodies, and that it has power. She promises her mother that she
will “have courage, and be kind”, and this buoys her throughout the rest of the
story.
Soon after, we’re presented with a teenage
Ella, who’s giving her blessing to her father to welcome in a widow and her two
daughters, as Ella’s father believes this will be another chance at happiness.
Needless to say, he was pitifully wrong and they cause them a ridiculous amount
of trouble. Ella’s new stepmother (played by Cate Blanchett) has more depth in
this film. In the original, the stepmother is evil for seemingly no reason, but
this version of the stepmother allows for a little backstory. We’re told by the
narrator (who is also the fairy godmother played by Helena Bonham-Carter) that
the stepmother has known grief and heartache, and “wears it wonderfully”.
Blanchett’s costumes are very dark, and use a palette of ivy greens, black, and
burgundy.
Ella’s father leaves for a trip shortly
after welcoming three new people into his home, which unbeknown to all the
characters will be his last. The moment where Ella finds out her father has
died is incredibly poignant; we know that Ella’s only ray of light in her life
has been the promise of her father’s return, and with that gone, she has little
left. But, she carries on, and stays with her stepmother and sisters in order
to preserve the house that she and her parents were once so happy in.
On one particularly horrible day, she is
bestowed the name Cinderella, as whilst she’s serving breakfast her stepmother
notices ash and cinders on her face from sleeping by the fire. There’s a Love
Actually esque scene where she makes her way to the kitchen and makes sure she’s
alone before bursting into tears. She flees into to the woods on a horse, and
who should she find there? The Prince, of course. She doesn’t know it’s him
though. Neither tell each other who they really are, for fear of judgement – he
doesn’t want her to know how rich he is, and she doesn’t want to know how poor
she is. The Prince, who calls himself Kit (played charmingly by Richard
Madden), is instantly captivated and delighted by Ella. He introduces himself
as an apprentice, but she doesn’t tell him her name so he’s left wondering and wanting more, hence why he throws a ball where every maiden in the kingdom is invited in the hopes of seeing her again.
Ella cracks in the well-known part of the
story where she presents herself in a dress to go to the ball in, and her
stepfamily rips it apart. She’s had enough at this point, and in proper Disney
fashion, she runs to a fountain then to the balcony for a good cry. And then,
the fairy godmother appears. Helena Bonham-Carter plays the perfect fairy
godmother. She mixes just the right amount of bonkers with intrigue. When they
meet, a CGI almost aardvark looking Helena asks a tearful Ella for a bowl of
milk. Ella obliges, and we are once again reminded that Ella’s superpower is
her kindness. Ella is in disbelief to find she has a fairy godmother, but comes
round when the fairy herself says, “I don’t go round transforming pumpkins for
just anyone”. Watching the transformation of Ella's dress gave me goosebumps. It's just sooo pretty!
The ball scene is as magnificent as you
could expect it to be. Sandy Powell’s costumes throughout the whole film but
particularly in this scene really are something else. Ella’s bright blue
ballgown is fantastically enchanting, and is adorned with butterflies and Swarovsky
crystals. Cate Blanchett said in an interview that it was particularly
difficult for her to pretend to be annoyed and upset upon seeing Cinderella
dance with the prince, since she looked so magical, and it’s easy to understand
why. The extras in the ballroom ooh and ah as Ella and the prince twirl across
the dance floor. It really plays like something from a dream.
The ending we all know – she tries on the
slipper, it fits, they live happily ever after. But as Ella, wearing the same
dirty blue dress she’d worn since near the beginning of the film, walks into
the room to meet her prince, the narrator/fairy godmother tells us that “this is
perhaps the greatest risk any of us will take; to be seen as we truly are”.
It’s full of metaphors and morals like most
Disney films but doesn’t leave a bad taste in the mouth. The only thing that
really got criticised in this film (in terms of representation) was its lack of
racial diversity, and the fact that all the women are very tightly corseted. Patrick
Doyle (Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, Thor) delivers a romantic and
magical score that fits the film perfectly, and left me humming certain riffs
for days afterwards. It’s a true Romantic fairy tale, and leaves you wanting a
little more than what you get but that’s why YouTube exists so you can find all
the deleted scenes!
I really enjoyed it, and I know some people
hated it, but it’s delightful and dazzling, and features a goose that can’t
drive, and Rob Brydon basically reprising
his role as Bryn. And I really want to watch it again.
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