Legends of the screen, Barrymore and Huston, together for the first timeÖ
no, not the great Johns -- Barrymore and Huston -- not even Lionel Barrymore or Walter
Huston. We're talking Drew and Anjelica, descendants of Hollywood legends, majesty
in their own right. How appropriate it is that these two tackle another legend: the
story of Cinderella. And not only do they revisit the centuries-old tale, their approach
is nothing less than a re-animation of the story which turns the passive servant
girl into a proactive heroine: She becomes a lowly charwoman who takes care of business
instead of waiting for Prince Charming to supply the happy ending. And wonder of
all wonders, the shoe fits -- not perfectly, mind you, there are some ungainly bunions
and calluses that chafe against the glass slipper, but the fit is sufficiently graceful
and reinvigorating to attract a new audience to keep company with it during this
fresh stroll around the old stomping grounds. The tale is set in the 16th century
and if there were any doubt as to the film's targeting of the same adolescent crowd
that made William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet such a galloping success, just check
out the diaphanous wings attached to the gown our Cinderella wears to the big ball
and see if they don't remind you at all of the costume worn by Juliet to her big
ball. In Ever After, Cinderella is cast as a French maiden by the name of Danielle
(Barrymore), and we're introduced to her through a lagniappe of a wraparound story
that stars Jeanne Moreau as the several-generations-removed descendant of Danielle,
who has called the Grimm Brothers to her castle to set their storymaking straight.
Realism supplants magic in this new version; gone are the pumpkins that turn into
coaches and the mice that bippety-boppety-boo into coachmen. Indeed, the role of
the fairy godmother is played here by Leonardo da Vinci (Godfrey) who, in a bit of
a stretch, plays an enlightened third-party protagonist who uses logic instead of
magic to help bring these two star-crossed kids together. Danielle, though circumstances
have made her a servant in her own home, is a self-possessed lass -- articulate,
well-read, and independent in thought and action. Her stepmother (played with delicious
hauteur by Huston) is depicted less as an evil archetype than a venal woman of her
times. The two stepsisters as well are played with delightful verve by Dodds and
Lynskey (best known as Kate Winslet's sister in crime in Heavenly Creatures), and
other charming characterizations are rendered by West and Parfitt as the king and
queen and O'Brien as Danielle's scoundrelly suitor. Barrymore seems at heart too
much of a "modern gal" to pull off the role of a 16th-century maiden with
genuine believability, yet the whole of the piece also suffers frequent historical
lapses. Still, the playful and well-meaning spirit of the film carries it through
its shakier moments of awkward narration and inscrutably busy camerawork. Despite
the unfortunately enfeebling, desaturated, excessively romantic, and downright cheesy
look of its trailers, Ever After turns out to be a potent and imaginative retelling
that proves Cinderella's timelessness defies carbon-dating.
--Marjorie Baumgarten
Interviews
Ever After: A Cinderella Story 
Full Length Reviews
Ever After: A Cinderella Story 
Ever After: A Cinderella Story 
Capsule Reviews
Ever After: A Cinderella Story 
Ever After: A Cinderella Story 
Other Films by Andy Tennant
Anna and the King 
Film Vault Suggested Links
Sunday 
The Object of My Affection 
What Dreams May Come 
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