The movie “Ever After,” features Drew Barrymore as “the little cinder girl” Danielle de Barbarac. Her father marries Rodmilla, a Baroness, who brings her two daughters Jacqueline and Marguerite to live on their farm. Soon after the marriage, Danielle’s father dies and Rodmilla begins to make Danielle’s life miserable, her daughter Marguerite joins in to. Danielle is put to work doing hard labor for Rodmilla and her daughters, while Marguerite is prepped for marriage in the highest social class available. While out picking apples one day, Danielle spots someone who is stealing one of her father’s horses. She throws an apple at him, and then it is revealed that he is Prince Henry. On their next encounter, she pretends to be a countess in order …show more content…
His father compromises and suggests a few days to come to a decision and Ball to celebrate his choice. Prince Henry makes Nicole de Lancret (Danielle) his decision, but learns from his mother that she was already married to a Belgian. Danielle, who was locked in a cellar at her home by Rodmilla, arrives at the Ball with the help of Leonardo DiVinci. Dressed in her mother’s silver gown with matching slippers, Henry is amazed by her beauty. Rodmilla reveals that Danielle is a servant and Henry scorns her. Running away from being shame and embarrassment, she leaves a show behind. DiVinci convinces Henry that Danielle is his match; they marry, live happily ever, and leave Rodmilla and Marguerite to the same labors they made Danielle face for several …show more content…
Her body sprouts gold and the eldest daughter marries and has a son with the Prince. The witch believed it was her daughter the Prince married and went to give a gift to the child. She bumped into her daughter, the bridge, and cut off the gold and turned the Princess into a reindeer. The child cries then begins to cry, and the Prince sends a woman out with the child to sooth him. She finds the reindeer and lets the child feed from her. The woman continues to do this two more times with the child. The last time she went there, the Prince came with her. Once the reindeer shed her skin to feed the child, the Prince burned it. He kept burning her skins until she was in human form. They all returned to the castle, where the witch and her daughter run away forever.
Each story can be seen as individually creative and unique because of their differences; like the use of witchcraft in “A Wonderful Birch,” and the witch's intent with her daughter was to gain the title of royalty. There are also several similarities within these two stories because the step sisters, step mother, witch’s daughter, and witch, are punished for their misdeeds towards the girls, also both are transformed in order to go to the ball and win the heart of the
The fairy tale begins with a miller betrothing his daughter to the first suitable man who comes along. The man choosen happens to live deep in the forest, and fills the daughter with dread everytime that she sees him. One day, the suitor demands that his bride come visit him at home. When she tells him she does not know the way, he says he with spread the path to his house with ashes. Nodoubt this fictional element is meant to invoke sadistic images of Nazi Germany and the use of ashes of cremated concentration camp inmates for road construction. The daughter does follow the path with great unease, however, as she follows the path she marks it with peas. She finally comes to the house, and is promptly warned by a bird that she is entering a house of murderers. The girl enters and house and finds it almost entirerly deserted. However, in the basement she finds an old women who repeats the bird’s warning. The crone then prphesizes that the girl will marry death and her bridegroom only seeks to kill her, cut her pieces up, and eat her. As the two prepare to escape, the bridegroom and his band of theives return with maiden [virgin]. The old woman hides the girl behind a large barrel. From her hiding place, she whitnesses the thieves give the maiden three glasses of wine to stop her heart. They then rip her clothes off, and hack the body into pieces with axes. On of the murders notices the girl wears a gold band, but cannot pull it off her finger. He cuts off thefinger which flies from the table and lands in the girls lap. Before the thieve can look for it, the crone offers them some wine, which she has laced with a sleeping potion. The thieves fall prey to the potion and sleep deeply. The g...
Once she got to the frogs, they ate her, but spit her back up wearing bangles and rings, and a pair of shoes. One was silver, the other gold. She was instructed to go to the festival, but before she left, she was to leave the gold slipper. At the festival, she sang and danced with the chief’s son. When it was time to go home, she told him to stay. The maiden felts sick, but the stepmother only called her names and was allowed nothing to eat. The next day, the chief’s son took the gold shoe and had all available ladies to try on the shoe, none of them could get the shoe to fit. A person had mention the maiden should try it on. So the chief’s son sent his men to get her. She gold slipper fit and he claimed her as his wife. She moved into one of his houses. The frogs came to visit her, bearing gifts of different types of beds for different occasions. The stepmother made the two sisters switch. The chief’s son had the step sister cut up into pieces and retrieved his
Living in Maryland, the narrator and her little brother Joey lived a very simple life. There mother had job that required many hours, and her father was unemployed and still in the process of trying to find a job. They lived in a very run down house in a very small poor community. One summer day, the narrator , Joey, and a group of kids from the community were bored and wanted to do something different. So,the narrator and the kids went down to one of the elders home, Miss Lottie. Miss Lottie was the old woman that everyone made stories about and for the kids they knew her as the witch. In the summer time Miss Lottie would always be in her front yard planting marigolds, which were an easy target to destroy. The kids all took part in throwing rock at Miss Lottie's marigolds, and the narrator was the coordinator. After they sprinted back to the oak tree, the narrator started to feel guilt for what she
To begin with, I will begin with a brief summary of both stories in order to better
Through fresh writing, the character of Witch is allowed to have the most contradictions, therefore blurring the rigid binary of good vs bad, an idea ingrained in popular culture for eons, in effect making her the play’s most human character. This is key to de mystifying the Grimm Brother’s fairy tale “Rapunzel”, as she is no longer placed in a 2 dimensional mold of evil figure. While her defining moments in the text are marked by unexplained rage, jealousy and retribution lensed with zero objective perspective within into the Woods she is given opportunity to be viewed in a more well rounded light as she is central in everyone else’s story allowing the audiences to experience more of her. Through this there is chance to
She met the witch at the end of the village borders. When the witch saw Paisley she immediately said “Hurry up now give me back the crown!” she then saw that Paisley was not carrying the bejeweled crown that was given to her the day before.
In "Ever After';, Danielle repeatedly bumps into the prince. Whenever she does meet up with him, she makes sure she is dressed like a courtier, so he doesn't think that she is a servant. They start to fall for each other and they spend more and more time together.
Many people may find it odd that two stories that follow the same concept can be so different. “Aschenputtel” shows the horror of a story that we are so used to hearing, told in a different matter being told in a way that makes you completely forget about the modern version. You can also say that both stories are being told differently because of the time period and the location. So in a way the writers used the time period, and personal battles to tell these stories. Maid of Manhattan was told in New York in 2002, and they used a rich politician as modern version of a prince. It can be said that the time period impacted the choice to do so. One story shows happiness and joy of a mother who despite her troubles uplifts herself throughout the whole movie the other shows the dark story of a girl abused by her stepsister and her stepmother that would give anyone nightmares just reading right off the bat you notice the difference of two stories that are supposed to be the same going in two completely different directions. This goes to show that every happy and uplifting story has a dark side to it no matter the way we are used to hearing it every story can be interpreted differently in many different ways. Not just for Cinderella but for all fairy tales. People can see the concept of the stories in different ways which makes them interpret them differently it just goes to show every fairy tale has it’s downfall but it’s the ones that are told differently that shows that not every fairy tales has it’s happy endings. Even the most uplifting story can show darkness. It really goes to show how different two stories can be even if they have the same concept to them. “Aschenputtel” and “Maid of Manhattan” are great example of two extremely different interpretation but also contain the same concept. It may sound strange or odd but that’s the power of
resolves her problems and anger towards charles, and she also forgives him by the end of this movie. After all that has happened she chose to sign the divorce papers of her and Charles McCarters divorce, and ran off to Orlando who will be next to marriage. Her choice towards the end of the movie was a great one, because she was able to find happiness in all she has chose, she was able to find love, and also forgive for her past and her pain. What she chose to do with her life was to move on and become a happy woman she deserves to be which is the greatest choice anyone can ever make.
“Cinderella� and “Tam and Cam� are so much alike especially using the workings of magic throughout these tales and also differ in the way that these stories use violence to represent their cultures. Their hope comes from these characters that help them on their paths for Cinderella it was her fairy godmother who created magic and for Tam it was a Buddha who hinted her to create magic reincarnation.
The witch told her she was wrong but Coraline threw her cat of Wybee to her head. Suddenly this dimension started to disappear. The floors turned into a spider web were they both fell. The witch had no eyes now since the cat taked them off. Coraline climbed to the door and the witch followed her. When she got to the door she closed the door locked, disappeared the key and looked for her parents. When her parents came back she talked to them about the garden they had and if they could plant some tulips in it. They invited everyone they knew and had a happily ever after.
It is more obvious in this tale than others, but some of these aspects are the nickname of Cinderella, the evil stepfamily, the three balls, and the beautiful slipper. However, Perrault and the brothers Grimm made some parts of the story very different. In the Grimm’s version, Cinderella’s mother was very important to her and she was very important to her father, while in Perrault’s her mother is not even mentioned and her father is more attached to his new wife than he is to his daughter. Perrault described the stepsister’s as less beautiful than Cinderella, while the brothers Grimm described them as just as beautiful but with bad personalities. Another major difference was Cinderella’s magic helper. In Perrault’s story Cinderella had a fairy godmother that gave her horses, a carriage, footmen to escort her, and new beautiful clothes, and in Grimm’s story her magic helper was birds that only provided clothes. A main difference that a lot of people would notice is the fact that in the Grimm’s tale Cinderella’s slipper was made of gold, and in Perrault’s it was glass which is what most people are familiar with. The endings of the stories also differed. The Grimm’s version ended in a much darker way. Both stepsisters got their eyes pecked out and were doomed to live a life of blindness, which was clearly not a very child friendly way to end a story. In
Henry¹s failure to remember his appointment with Catherine because he was drunk shows that he did not regard Catherine too seriously. However, his surprising sorrow when she is unable to see him shows tha...
The common elements in the two stories are the wolf, Little Red (Riding Hood/Cap), her grandmother, and her mother. The beginnings of the stories are also similar: Little Red?s mother sends her to grandmother?s house because the grandmother is ill. Both stories mention that Little Red is personable, cute, and sweet. This is something that, on initial inspection, seems irrelevant but holds a deeper meaning for the symbolism behind the story. In both stories, the wolf, wandering through the woods, comes on Little Red and asks where she is going. When Little Red responds that she is going to visit her sick grandmother, the wolf distracts her with the suggestion that she should pick some flowers so that he can get to her grandmother?s house first. The wolf arrives at Little Red?s grandmother?s house before Little Red and disguises his voice in order to be let in. When he is let into the house, he promptly devours the grandmother and disguises himself in her clothes in order to eat Little Red as well. At this point, the two narratives diverge.
The state of affairs and the grim reality of the war lead Henry towards an ardent desire for a peaceful life, and as a result Henry repudiates his fellow soldiers at the warfront. Henry’s desertion of the war is also related to his passionate love for Catherine. Henry’s love for Catherine is progressive and ironic. This love develops gradually in “stages”: Henry’s attempt at pretending love for Catherine towards the beginning of the novel, his gradually developing love for her, and finally, Henry’s impas... ...