You know the Cinderella
story. Everyone does. Across centuries and cultures, it has existed in
hundreds of versions, perhaps none more famous than Disney’s 1950 animated
musical. That iteration, of the magic words “Bibbidi-Bobbidi-Boo” and the
helpful talking mice, is lodged in the public imagination as something of the
definitive squeaky-clean, paper-thin telling of the orphaned girl mistreated by
her stepmother and stepsisters, prepped for a ball by her fairy godmother, and
eventually married happily ever after to a prince. It’s familiar. But now
Disney’s made a lush live-action adaptation of the story. They’ve resisted the
temptations to either exactly duplicate their iconic earlier work or load it up
with postmodern winks. In the process, they’ve created a movie of strong and
simple sincerity, earnest in its conviction that Cinderella has been a tale good enough to stand on its own for so
long, there’s no need to mess with it now.
We meet Ella (Lily James), whose memories of her long-dead
mother (Hayley Atwell) and recently dead father (Ben Chaplin) are all she has to
sustain her in her present circumstances. Her wicked stepmother (Cate
Blanchett) keeps her as a servant, hardly worth regarding on anything like an
equal level with two blathering stepsisters (Holliday Grainger and Sophie
McShera). Ella isn’t even allowed to go to the ball where the handsome prince
(Richard Madden) will pick his bride. With some help from the fairy godmother
(Helena Bonham Carter), she’s sure to make it there anyway. The set-up is
classically familiar, and elegantly efficient. In this telling, the story is
content to be a lovely experience of comfortable rhythms.
The result is a movie that’s never a surprise, but always
gloriously old-fashioned. Cinderella
is in style and form a throwback, serious about the human emotions flickering
in a thin archetypal tale, but light on its feet when it comes to incorporating
shimmering, glittering widescreen wonders. The occasional CGI assist aside, it
could be the best live action fairy tale of 1962. It’s a softly sturdy
CinemaScope spectacle, beautifully appointed and handsomely photographed, Dante
Ferretti’s lush pseudo-historical storybook production design flowing in warm
colors and fine fabrics. Director Kenneth Branagh marries the pop sensibilities
of his Thor with the grandeur of his
Shakespeare adaptations, finding a comfortable space of serious lightness. He
treats each expected development with sentimentality and gravitas, lightly
confident in the story’s ability to operate effectively.
And indeed it does. The frame is filled with gorgeous gowns,
lovely waltzing, and a smooth tone of pomp and pageantry. I’ve never much cared
for the love story, but the film sells it as a fantastical escape from a
horrible circumstance, a dramatic reward of riches for one who so patiently and
kindly deserves happiness. I found myself transported into the uncomplicated
fantasy of it all, dodgy (mercifully speechless) CG animals and all. In the
midst of the usual plot beats and the terrific design, the screenplay by Chris
Weitz (About a Boy) provides some
degree of shading to the characters’ standard types. The film fleshes in some
additional motivations. The prince finally seems not just a handsome man in tight pants, but an actual character too, and a nice,
humble, emotional one at that. But the film achieves its most humane nuance simply by
bringing in reliably excellent character actors like Derek Jacobi, Stellan
SkarsgÄrd, and Nonso Anozie to elevate small but crucial roles.
Best is Blanchett who plays the stepmother in a wonderfully regal
Joan Crawford-esque performance halfway between Mildred Pierce and Lady Macbeth.
The script provides sympathy for her evil, an understanding of how her heart
has hardened that makes her less a pure villain and more a pitiable person
lashing out in pain and jealousy. That Ella is able to meet this nastiness with
sadness, but ultimately grace and compassion is part of her eventual
happily-ever-after. It’s because she’s not a shameless schemer or a callous
revenge-seeker that we can appreciate this gentle fantasy. I most liked this
sumptuous version for pivoting the theme away from True Love wish fulfillment and
towards an emphasis on the importance of kindness and forgiveness. That’s nice.
Here there are no songs and no subversion, just a straightforward, irony free,
gauzy retelling of this fairy tale at its most family friendly and least overtly
sexist. It’s inessential, but sweet.
Note: Disney has
paired Cinderella with Frozen
Fever, a new short film sequel to their
mega-popular – and pretty good – Ice Queen musical you’re still humming. It’s a
harmless handful of minutes, with a so-so new song and an inconsequential fresh
magical wrinkle. It’s mostly useless. Regardless of their recently announced intention
for a feature-length Frozen sequel,
this short is dull enough to make me wonder if, creatively at least, the
company should just let it…oh, you know.
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