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| Ever After: a Cinderella Story is a 1998 film adaptation of the romantic fairy tale Cinderella, directed by Andy Tennant and starring Drew Barrymore in the title role. The usual pantomime and comic elements are removed and the story is instead treated as historical fiction, rife with anachronisms. It is often seen as a modern, post-feminism interpretation of the Cinderella myth. Danielle de Barbarac is a tomboyish eight-year-old raised by her father, Auguste, on a small manor in rural Renaissance France. Her mother died early in Danielle's life, perhaps in childbirth. Danielle's father makes a habit of bringing her books from his travels, and she devours them. Her father remarries, to a beautiful Baroness with two young daughters near Danielle's age. Shortly after bringing them home, however, he dies, leaving Danielle with a stepmother and stepsisters she barely knows. The Baroness Rodmilla de Ghent (played by Anjelica Huston) resents Danielle from the very beginning, because Auguste de Babaroc loved his daughter more than he loved his new wife. She assumes control of the household and, by the time Danielle is eighteen, has forced the girl into servitude and driven the home into financial difficulty. Danielle has very few possessions to call her own; she has only her father's copy of Utopia, by Thomas More, and a few of her mother's fine clothes and a pair of glass slippers, and the loyalty of the manor's three servants. The Baroness' two daughters, Marguerite (Megan Dodds) and Jacqueline (Melanie Lynskey), are very different: Marguerite is as cruel and superior as her mother, while Jacqueline is extremely sweet-tempered, but too weak to stand up to her fearsome mother and sister. In the meantime, Danielle has grown to be an intelligent, resourceful, and strong-willed young woman. Meanwhile, a young, hot-headed Henry, the Crown Prince of France (Dougray Scott), rebels against his upcoming arranged marriage to a Spanish princess and runs away from home, as it is implied he's done several times before. His parents, King Francis (Timothy West) and Queen Marie (Judy Parfitt), fed up with his immature habits, send the Royal Guard after him. During the Prince's flight, his horse slips a shoe and he is forced to steal a fresh horse from the de Barbarac manor. At work in the fields, Danielle spots him and, failing to recognize the young man as the Prince, confronts him as a thief and nearly concusses him with hurled apples. He reveals himself, to her great embarrassment, but is made uncomfortable by her repeated apologies. He bribes her for her silence and rides off. Coming across an artist's caravan waylaid by Gypsies, the Prince stops to chase one of them down and recover a stolen painting, which turns out to be the Mona Lisa--the aged artist who asked for his help was in fact Leonardo da Vinci, (Patrick Godfrey). Danielle decides to use her bribe money to ensure the return of Maurice, an aged servant whom the Baroness has sold off to pay her growing debts. She borrows a courtier's gown from the painter's studio of her childhood friend Gustav, and poses as a Countess in order to buy back Maurice. As she is arguing with the driver of the cart containing Maurice, Prince Henry stumbles upon her again, unaware that the self-possessed, articulate courtier is the same person as the servant he earlier encountered. Charmed by her passionate, contrary, fierce nature, he orders Maurice to be set free and sets about getting the girl's name. Flustered, Danielle gives the Prince her mother's name as a countess, Nicole de Lencré, and hurriedly returns home with Maurice. The King, frustrated with his son's refusal to go through with his marriage, gives the Prince a chance to choose his own bride, if he can do so in five days. At the end of five days, the King will announce his engagement at a great masked Ball, whether to a girl of the Prince's choice or to the Spanish Princess to whom he was initially betrothed. Eventually, a ball is planned for the Prince to choose a bride and invitations are sent out to eligible ladies, including Danielle, her stepmother and her two stepsisters, although the Baroness then orders Danielle to stay home. [ Visit the complete Wikipedia entry for Ever After ] Some related entries: The War Game | Pass the Gravy | Atlantis: The Lost Empire | 1995 in film | Vincenzo Natali | Desperate Living | Dentist in the Chair | It's Arbor Day, Charlie Brown | Bhumika | Jefferson in Paris | Underwater videography This page is based on the copyrighted Wikipedia article Ever After; it is used under the GNU Free Documentation License. You may redistribute it, verbatim or modified, providing that you comply with the terms of the GFDL. | Searches on eBay |
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