Cinderella (1950 film)

"A dream is a wish your heart makes

When you're fast asleep

In dreams you lose your heartaches

Whatever you wish for, you keep

Have faith in your dreams and someday

Your rainbow will come smiling thru

No matter how your heart is grieving

If you keep on believing

the dream that you wish will come true"

Entry #12 in the Disney Animated Canon, Cinderella, based on the Fairy Tale "Cinderella", and marked Disney's return to single-story feature-length films in 1950, after the WWII years where Disney was limited to making collections of shorts (e.g. Make Mine Music) while many of their staff were drafted to the war effort. Advertisement posters touted Cinderella as the best since Snow White and for the time it definitely marked a return to form, though the painstaking (and extremely expensive) animation techniques of the earlier films were scaled back.

Cinderella got not one, but two Direct to Video sequels: Cinderella II: Dreams Come True (2002) and Cinderella III: A Twist In Time (2007). The former is a Compilation Movie of three stories loosely tied together: Cinderella tries to put on a grand party; one of the mice, Jaq, gets transformed into a human by the Fairy Godmother; and Anastasia (one of the stepsisters from the original) comes at odds with her family when she falls in love with a baker and starts on a path to redemption. In the latter, things happen that result in the Stepmother getting hold of the Fairy Godmother's wand and trying to undo Cinderella's fortune by messing with the timeline.

It is also one of the movies featured in Kingdom Hearts. Cinderella herself has a minor (but important) role as one of the seven Princesses of Heart driving the plot of the first game. Nothing from the series appears again until Kingdom Hearts Birth By Sleep, where it gets an entire world called Castle Of Dreams.

Disney's original film includes examples of:
"King: I hereby dub you, Sir... Hmm... Oh, by the way, what title would you like?
 * Actually I Am Him: Cinderella didn't realize that the man she was dancing with all night and consequently fell in love with was the prince himself.
 * Adaptation Dye Job: She might actually have in the film, but the Disney Princess Merchandise would like you to remember her as perfectly platinum in blue.
 * Some DVDs "touch up" the film to make her hair and clothes look more like the merchandise.
 * Adipose Rex
 * Almost Kiss
 * Aristocrats Are Evil: Lady Tremaine. She probably got the title from marrying Cinderella's father, however.
 * Beauty Equals Goodness: Cinderella is prettier and much nicer than her cartoonish and mean stepsisters.
 * In fact, look at the way the Grand Duke reacted to the stepsisters and Cinderella. With the stepsisters, he grimaced at the sight of them and was generally repulsed by their attitude, impatient to leave. When Cinderella asked to try on the shoe, his face lit up (as well as noticing her petite feet) and helped her down the stairs.
 * Anastasia is even made a bit cuter in the sequels, where she's not so evil.
 * Though that might be partly because her original design was harder to draw, and Disney sequels are not known for having good animation.
 * Big What: Spoken by the King after the Grand Duke explains that the beautiful woman who captured the Prince's heart at the ball has gone:

Duke: Sire, she got away.

King: "She Got Away"? A peculiar title, but if that's what you... She what?! Why, you... you traitor!"

"Lady Tremaine: Girls! Girls! Above all, self-control!
 * Blonde Brunette Redhead: The three daughters.
 * The Caligula: Don't let his main motivations and the sequels fool you -- the King is scary.
 * Cats Are Mean: Lucifer, whose name should speak for itself.
 * Cat Stereotype: Lucifer is dark grey and grey with a black head and off-white muzzle, and fits both black and grey cat stereotypes by being evil, fat and lazy.
 * Common Sense: The Grand Duke approaches Fairy Tale tropes, such as Love At First Sight and The Girl Who Fits This Slipper, with Real Life common sense.
 * Though, really, the king has this too. He just doesn't care. So what if the slipper fits other girls, the prince gave his word and he's going to hold him to it.
 * Dance of Romance: With Cinderella and the Prince.
 * Dangerously Genre Savvy: Lady Tremaine. When she realized that Cinderella was the girl the Prince fell in love with, she locked Cinderella in her room up in the tower where her cries wouldn't be heard and kept the key on hand. When that failed (thanks to Cinderella's mice friends), she tripped the footman carrying the glass slipper so Cinderella wouldn't have proof that she was the right girl. Of course that backfired on her when Cinderella revealed she had the other half of the pair of slippers.
 * Deadpan Snarker: The Grand Duke.
 * Description Cut: The Grand Duke's rather sarcastic narration of the King's hopes for the ball ("Suddenly he stops! He looks up! Alone, there she stands!") plays out with perfect sincerity as the Prince meets Cinderella.
 * Despair Event Horizon: Cinderella teeters on the edge when Lady Tremaine and her daughters destroy her dress and her hopes of attending the ball. Fortunately her Fairy Godmother arrives and makes everything right.
 * Disappeared Dad: His death is part of the film's prologue.
 * Disney Princess
 * Disney Villain Death: Lucifer falls from the tower at the end, although comic stories produced shortly after the film as well as the even later sequels show that he survived. Must have something to do with being a cat (be it landing on their feet, having nine lives, or their fatal velocity being higher than their terminal velocity).
 * Does This Remind You of Anything: Cinderella's stepsisters viciously ripping apart the dress she's wearing (because they recognized a lot of the fabric and jewels on the dress as belonging to them) can be interpreted as sexual assault.
 * Doomed New Clothes: The dress Cinderella had on before her Fairy Godmother gave her a new one.
 * Drop What You Are Doing: Cinderella drops the breakfast tray when she hears from Lady Tremaine that the Prince will marry the girl who can fit the glass slipper.
 * Everythings Better With Sparkles: The dress is actually made by magic sparkles. And the heart on the glass slippers glitters with sparkles.
 * Evil Eyebrows: Lady Tremaine.
 * Evil Matriarch: Lady Tremaine.
 * Exact Words
 * Lady Tremaine promises Cinderella that she can go to the ball if she finishes her work and can find something to wear. She and her daughters then arrange things so that Cinderella can't fulfill the conditions.
 * The Prince swears to marry the girl who could wear the glass slipper. The King decides to hold him to his word.
 * Excessive Evil Eyeshadow: Lady Tremaine.
 * Fairy Godmother
 * Falling in Love Montage: Invoked by the king. Also Discussed and Double Subverted.
 * Faux Affably Evil: Lady Tremaine.
 * Fat Bastard: Lucifer, the cat.
 * Flipping the Bird: After politely greeting girl after girl at the ball, he aims a yawn towards where his father sits when he wasn't greeting anyone. It may not seem much to a modern viewer, but at the time presented in the film it was like the prince gave his father the finger.
 * Foot Focus
 * Fourth Date Marriage: Literally one date marriage. Though in the sequel, it's justified that holding a woman's hand tells the prince she's the one. He doesn't feel it when he was made to think he danced with Anastasia or when Anastasia magically looks like Cinderella.
 * Friend to All Living Things: Aside from the cat, Lucifer, Cinderella is friends with all the animals. She even tries to find some good in Lucifer, although she fails.
 * The Girl Who Fits This Slipper: The Trope Namer, although it's actually subverted. Not only do both the Grand Duke and the King acknowledge that the slipper could fit any number of girls, Cinderella doesn't even get to try it on; she proves her identity instead by producing its match, which is more conclusive.
 * Gorgeous Garment Generation
 * Green Eyes: Lady Tremaine and Lucifer.
 * Hand Wave: Both the original movie and Cinderella III hang a lampshade on how it's ridiculous to expect just one girl to fit the slipper, but they both justify it differently. In Cinderella it's implied the prince said he'd marry The Girl Who Fits This Slipper as a shorthand for "that girl I fell in love with", but the king is so fed up with his son and lack of grandchildren that he makes it a literal royal order. In Cinderella III on the other hand it's the king himself who points out the absurdity of the quest, and indeed when the person who fits the slipper the prince
 * Have a Gay Old Time: Almost word-for-word: Right before Cinderella leaves for the ball, the Fairy Godmother tells her to "Have a good time! Dance! Be gay!"
 * Heir Club for Men: Averted. The king dreams about doing typical "grandfatherly" things with a grandson and a granddaughter instead of simply wanting heirs.
 * Heroic BSOD: Cinderella gets an ever-so-brief one when she learns the Prince is in love with the girl who lost her glass slipper at the ball causing her to drop a tray of food in mild shock.
 * High Class Glass: The Duke.
 * Horrible Judge of Character: Cinderella's dad.
 * Hypocritical Humour:
 * From Lady Tremaine, accompanying her daughters on piano.


 * Cinderalla knocks, interrupting the lesson*

Lady Tremaine: *slams her hands on the piano* YES?!?!"

"Grand Duke: Perhaps if we just let him alone-
 * The King who scoffs at the Duke's much more sensible ideas about letting the Prince fall in love:

The King: Let him alone?! With his silly romantic ideas?

Grand Duke: B-But, sire, in matters of love...

The King: Love. Bah! Just a boy meeting a girl under the right conditions. [pushes books off the table and puts together the male and female figurines together] So, we're arranging the conditions."

"King: I can't understand it ! There must be at least one who would make a suitable mother !
 * I Gave My Word: Her exact word.
 * I Kiss Your Hand: The prince does this when he first meets Cinderella.
 * Innocent Blue Eyes: Cinderella.
 * I Want Grandkids: The king. Oh so much.

Grand Duke: Shhhh ! Sire...

King: Ahem... A suitable wife!"

"Grand Duke: But Sire, this slipper may fit any number of girls!
 * I Want Song: "A Dream is a Wish Your Heart Makes".
 * Karma Houdini: In the Disney version and its sequels, Lady Tremaine never really gets much punishment for making poor Cinderella's life Hell.
 * The
 * Lampshade Hanging: The Duke points out how ridiculous it is to think that the glass slipper will only fit the girl who left it behind.

King: That's his problem. He's given his word, we'll hold him to it."

"King: I FORBID YOU TO TAKE ANOTHER STEP DOWN THESE STAIRS!
 * Leave the Two Lovebirds Alone: Lady Tremaine wants to get a closer look at Cinderella, who was dancing with the Prince, only for the Grand Duke to close the curtains on her by orders of the King to let no one disrupt them.
 * Limited Wardrobe: You have to wonder where Anastasia and Drizella get all those differently colored clothes for Cinderella to wash considering all the clothes they are ever actually seen wearing are, respectively, hot pink and green. Even their nightgowns match the color scheme.
 * Love At First Sight: Mocked by the Grand Duke.
 * Though it did actually happen when the Prince first saw Cinderella.
 * Lyrical Dissonance: When Cinderella is sobbing in the garden that there's nothing to believe in anymore, a chorus sings a Dark Reprise of her I Want Song, "A Dream Is a Wish Your Heart Makes", with the same upbeat lyrics. This, of course, leads up to the appearance of the Fairy Godmother.
 * Magic Wand
 * The Makeover: A magically enabled one.
 * The Matchmaker: The king.
 * Memento MacGuffin: The remaining glass slipper, which Cinderella assumes will be nothing more than a keepsake from one magical evening.
 * Missing Mom: The Prince's mom is never mentioned.
 * Cinderella's mom gets a couple tiny nods; the prologue makes it clear that she was Dead to Begin With and the main reason her dad married again was because he thought she needed a mother. The dress that Cinderella originally plans to modify to wear to the ball was, as she specifically states, her mother's.
 * The Musical
 * Musical Chores: "The Work Song" and "Sing Sweet Nightingale".
 * Naive Everygirl: Cinderella.
 * Names to Run Away From Really Fast: Let's just say "Lucifer" was an appropriate name for the cat.
 * Nice Mice
 * Nice Shoes: The glass slippers were certainly drawn to look nice.
 * Oh Crap: Lady Tremaine when Cinderella reveals the other glass slipper to the Duke.
 * Opening Chorus
 * Opera Gloves
 * Our Fairies Are Different: The fairy godmother.
 * Parental Favoritism: The Stepmother favours her daughters over Cinderella any day.
 * Pimped Out Dress: Complete with the glass slippers.
 * The Pollyanna: Cinderella.
 * Prince Charming: Literally. He doesn't even have a first name.
 * Princess Classic
 * Rags to Riches
 * Rebel Prince: If the King's word is to be trusted, Prince Charming is a bit like this; this is best seen at the beginning of the ball where after bowing to greet a guest the Prince looks up to his father in the balcony and yawns; as noted above, that might not seem like much today but at the time depicted in the film it was like giving his old man the finger.
 * This comes across a bit more in Twist in Time.

Prince: Okay. (leaps out of the window)"

"Grand Duke: (playing with his monacle like a yo-yo) He looks up, and lo! There she stands - the girl of his dreams. Who she is or whence she came, he knows not, nor does he care, for his heart tells him that here is the maiden pre-destined to be his bride... Oh, a pretty plot for fairy tales, sire, but in real life, it was foredoomed to failure!"
 * Right Hand Cat: Lucifer to the evil stepmother, the first time we see them together.
 * Royal Decree: The Duke gives one of these to start the search for Cinderella using the glass slipper.
 * Sealed With a Kiss
 * Servile Snarker: The Genre Savvy Grand Duke. The king does not appreciate his humor.
 * She Cleans Up Nicely
 * Smug Snake: Lady Tremaine's patronzing arrogance makes her that much more hateable.
 * Storybook Opening
 * This Is Reality


 * And this is also kind of a Funny Moments, because even as he casually narrates all this, that's exactly what's happening.
 * True Blue Femininity: Her iconic dress was mostly silver, but the shoes are blue. And material outside this film make it outright blue.
 * Uptown Girl
 * When the Clock Strikes Twelve
 * Wicked Stepmother

The sequels include examples of:
"Walt Disney: [Cinderella] believed in dreams, all right, but she also believed in doing something about them. So, when Prince Charming didn't come along, she went over to the palace and got him!"
 * Abusive Mom: Lady Tremaine, not only with her stepdaughter but her own biological daughters as well.
 * Anachronism Stew: Cinderella II: Dreams Come True
 * Ascended Extra: In the first film, the prince is on screen for barely five minutes and has less than ten lines in the film (most of which are during his song with Cinderella). The sequels greatly expand his part and make him very much deserving of the name Prince Charming, perhaps to make up for this.
 * Award Bait Song: "I Still Believe", sung by Hayden Panettiere.
 * Big Beautiful Man: The baker is seen as this by some fangirls.
 * Chekhov's Gun: Metal reflecting the wand's magic.
 * Chekhov's Gunman: The baker who eventually becomes Anastasia's boyfriend first appears as one of several peasants trying to greet Cinderella from outside the castle gate.
 * Clothing Damage: In the third movie. Somehow, Cinderella's dress gets torn up when she is transported inside the pumpkin carriage.
 * Conspicuous CG: Examples include a Ferris Wheel in Dreams Come True, some wedding bells in A Twist in Time, and the pumpkin carriage in A Twist in Time.
 * Cool Crown: Cinderella is given a glass tiara in movie #2.
 * Creative Closing Credits: The credits for Cinderella III show paintings of the characters in different styles (eg, the Grand Duke in the style of The Scream, Cinderella and Prince Charming as silhouetted profiles). This occasionally doubles as a Where Are They Now Epilogue.
 * Deadpan Snarker: The Prince gains a rather cheeky and playful sense of humor. The weird part is that it ALSO ties into his Hey Its That Voice and Took a Level In Badass.
 * Everyone is a Deadpan Snarker in the third movie. Besides the Prince, Drizella is a particularly noteworthy example, gaining almost Eustace Scrubb-like levels of commentary.
 * Earn Your Happy Ending
 * Evil Redhead: Inverted -, who was a Rich Bitch in the original movie, is now less evil and more like a Well Done Daughter Girl.
 * Fairytale Wedding Dress
 * Foot Focus: Anastasia's big feet in A Twist in Time.
 * The movie even opens with a shot of Cinderella's bare feet running down a staircase.
 * Girl Friday: Prudence.
 * Heel Face Turn / Took a Level In Kindness:
 * Hot Librarian: Prudence, in the eyes of the Grand Duke and her fans.
 * Humiliation Conga:
 * I Broke a Nail: Drizella sings a line about this when cleaning dishes during the third film.
 * Ironic Echo Cut: The second movie includes one scene cutting from Prudence informing the King that Cinderella might not know how to plan a royal banquet, to Cinderella admitting to Prince Charming that she still needs to learn how to plan a royal banquet.
 * Jabba Table Manners: Drizella "sampling" the party food in A Twist in Time.
 * Naive Everygirl: gets retconned into one of these.
 * Names the Same: The baker's name is Dmitri.
 * Ojou: Prudence.
 * Remember the New Guy: The introduction of Jaq's girlfriend, Mary, as one of Cinderella's closest animal friends can feel a little abrupt, since the first movie referred to none of the female mice by name. (Books about Cinderella characters refer to two of them as Suzy and Perla, but still don't mention a Mary.)
 * Spoiled Sweet: Cinderella, in the Dreams Come True sequel. As she gets more Character Development, becomes one of these, too.
 * Star Crossed Lovers: In Cinderella II, one of the triggers behind 's Heel Face Turn is her love for a commoner. More exactly, the local baker boy Dimitri.
 * Cinderella and the Prince are this in the third movie.
 * Wait, Anastasia ends up with Dimitri? Wonder if that was intentional.
 * Take a Third Option: Parodied. When the King tries to keep the Prince from leaving the castle without authorization, the Prince either has to push his dad aside or stay put. What he chooses is... jumping off a balcony and escaping. The scene has reached Memetic Mutation levels on Tumblr.
 * The Stinger: A clip interrupting the end credits of Cinderella III shows
 * Took a Level In Badass: The Prince, in Cinderella III. Guess he's been taking lessons from both Prince Eric of The Little Mermaid and Spiderman, huh. The three are voiced by the same guy, after all...
 * In the third movie Cinderella did a backflip out of a demonic carriage, and rode horseback to crash her own wedding. That is quite a level up in baddassery considering the coolest thing she did in the first movie was go to a party.
 * And Cinderella is voiced in that movie by Jennifer Hale, who voiced the Black Cat opposite Chris Barnes' Spider Man in that show. Ironic, eh?
 * Tremaine spent decades as the exception to the rule of Disney villains; being the only one to not wield any kind of evil sorcery, curses, poisons, etc until Scar and Frollo came around. So of course the third movie gave her the nigh-omnipotent power of the Fairy Godmother.
 * Took a Level In Jerkass: Lady Treimaine. She is worse than the original movie.
 * Totally Radical: Cinderella II briefly has Cinderella exclaim, "Ew!" in a Valley Girl tone.
 * Xenafication: Cinderella in A Twist In Time. It's actually more true to what she was originally meant to be.