Cinderella (2000 film)

Cinderella is a TV film released on January 1, 2000 in the UK,[4] directed by Beeban Kidron. The cast is led by Kathleen Turner, who plays the Wicked Stepmother Claudette.[4] The film follows the original idea of the fairytale classic but is based in a modern world full of fashion and technology.

Cinderella
Based onvarious versions of Cinderella
Written byNick Dear
Directed byBeeban Kidron
StarringKathleen Turner
Marcella Plunkett
Gideon Turner
Jane Birkin
David Warner
Leslie Philips
Lucy Punch
Katrin Cartlidge
Sharon Maughan
Nickolas Grace
Jenny Tomasin
Theme music composerYouth
Jaz Coleman
Original languageEnglish
Production
ProducersTrevor Eve
Simon Johnson
CinematographyAleksei Rodionov
EditorColin Monie
Running time90 minutes[1]
Production companyProjector Pictures[2]
Budget£2 million[3]
Release
Original networkChannel 4 (UK)
Bravo (US)
Original release1 January 2000 (UK)

Plot

Cinderella (named Zezolla) and her family live mid 20th century, where fashion is practically everything. As her father is won over by a selfish woman named Claudette, Cinderella must keep her new step-mother from murdering the only family she has left. Add in an anti-social mermaid literally living in a cave, a bored prince with an ear for rock n' roll, and the glamour of the 1950s and one'll find that this story can't grow old.

Cast

Media releases

Cinderella has been released on several formats. In 2000, Cinderella was released in the UK on videocassette by 4Learning.[5] 4Learning's video comprised the film in three parts, followed by a documentary The Many Cinderellas, in a total of four 30 minute programmes.[6] The film on videocassette was viewed in schools for educational purposes and activities.[7] In 2002, Educational Media Australia also released the film on videocassette.[8] In 2005, Cinderella was officially released in Taiwan on VCD and DVD by Gull Multimedia International.[9][10] The DVD has audio in English with removable Chinese subtitles and is packaged with an accompanying booklet in Chinese. In 2006, the film was released in Japan on VHS and DVD (rental only and retail versions) by Transformer,[11][12][13] and in Australia on DVD by educational resources distributor VEA Group (including Classroom Video).[14][15] Of these physical media, all releases by Transformer currently remains available for consumer purchase (under the translated Japanese title, ジェーン・バーキン in シンデレラ).[12] In 2018, the film was released in the United States and U.S. territories as a streaming online video by Amazon Prime,[16] and in the United Kingdom on DVD by Simply Media.[17]

Reception

In 2000, Cinderella was one of Channel Four International's top selling programmes of the year.[1] The film has received positive reviews. Television critic Kevin McDonough described the film as "a smashing new adaptation of Cinderella," in which he praised Kathleen Turner's performance as "wickedly good" and concluded, "Cinderella features stunning cinematography, fabulous costumes, and the best role for Ms. Turner in years."[18] Julie Salamon of The New York Times described the film as an "amusing, overheated pop version of the fairy tale" that "combines the romantic overtones of gothic thrillers...with fanciful music-video imagery. The evil stepmother (Kathleen Turner) wears fabulous neon clothes with exaggerated shapes..." Salamon also said, "This film has many virtues."[19] Authors Elizabeth Ford and Deborah Mitchell of The Makeover in Movies called the film "visually exciting" and that "natural images dominate the tale...The expressionistic use of fantastic color, light and plenty of watery distortion create a magical mood. Its setting suggests a cross between Finland and Disney-world".[20] Mike Davies of Birmingham Post called the film "ambitious" and stated, "Best of all, though, was the re-emergence of Kathleen Turner, chewing the scenery as gold-digging Claudette..." [21] USA Today described Cinderella as "a true pleasure that's filmed with visual style and verbal wit."[22]

Releases

Cinderella has been released on UK DVD by Simply Media.

References

  1. "Channel Four International" (PDF). Channel Four Television Corporation. p. 36.
  2. Cinderella at Projector Pictures
  3. "Projector Productions has been commissioned by Channel 4 to make a £2 million feature-length TV adaptation of Cinderella". broadcastnow.co.uk. 23 July 1999. Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  4. "IMDB: Cinderella". Retrieved 15 July 2010.
  5. Cinderella (Videocassette). Wetherby: 4Learning. 2000. ISBN 1-86215-641-7. OCLC 308640787.
  6. Middle English: Cinderella (1862156417) Channel4.com/learning (2003-2004 brochure).
  7. Programmes 1, 2, 3 - Teacher Notes & Activities Archived 2015-12-22 at the Wayback Machine Channel4Learning.com
  8. Cinderella (VHS). Melbourne: Educational Media Australia. c. 2002. OCLC 223530191.
  9. Gull Multimedia International Co. Archived 2018-06-20 at the Wayback Machine Gull.com.tw
  10. Cinderella DVD (Kathleen Turner, Jane Birkin, Marcella Plunkett) Taiwan version at yesasia.com. Released 24 November 2005.
  11. Press Release (2006): Cinderella Transformer.co.jp
  12. Cinderella Retail DVD version (ASIN: B000JVSYJE) (JAN: 4522178005107). Amazon.co.jp
  13. Cinderella Rental only DVD version global.rakuten.com
  14. "Cinderella (DVD)". Wheelers Books. ISBN CH052. Released 14 November 2006.
  15. Cinderella : middle english. Bendigo, Victoria, Australia: Channel 4. 2011. OCLC 767534681.
  16. "Cinderella 2000". ASIN: B078V2PP1C
  17. "Cinderella - Starring Kathleen Turner - Channel 4 Drama [DVD]". Amazon.co.uk. ASIN: B07B14J3T1
  18. McDonough, Kevin (December 17, 2001). "Turner wickedly good in 'Cinderella'". Lawrence.com.
  19. Salamon, Julie (December 17, 2001). "TELEVISION REVIEW; Cinderella's Convertible, The Prince On a Cycle". The New York Times.
  20. Ford, Elizabeth A.; Mitchell, Deborah C. (2004). The Makeover in Movies: Before and After in Hollywood Films, 1941-2002. McFarland. pp. 47–48. ISBN 0-7864-1721-8.
  21. Davies, Mike (January 3, 2000). "Television: Stars come out for two pantos". Birmingham Post.
  22. "TV Best". USA Today. Arlington, VA. December 13, 2001. Archived from NewsLibrary.com
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