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A Cinderella Story (2004) Movie Information:
A Cinderella Story (2004) Directed by:
Mark Rosman
A Cinderella Story (2004) Written by:
Leigh Dunlap, Alyson Fouse
A Cinderella Story (2004) Cast:
Hilary Duff, Chad Murray, Brenda Song, Brad Bufanda, Jennifer Coolidge, Julie Gonzalo, Regina King, Dan Byrd, Madeline Zima, Lin Shaye
A Cinderella Story (2004) U.S. Distributor:
Warner Bros. Pictures
A Cinderella Story (2004) U.K. Distributor:
Warner Bros. Pictures
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A Cinderella Story (2004) Synopsis:

High school senior, Sam Montgomery, lives at the beck and call of her self-obsessed step-mother, Fiona, and her sinfully wicked step-sisters, who treat her more like a servant than a member of the family. With her sights set on attending Princeton, Sam finds her less-than-sparkling social life wonderfully complicated when she meets her prince charming online. However, when her anonymous cyber soul mate turns out to be her high school's über-popular quarterback Austin Ames, Sam makes a mad dash back to reality, leaving her cell phone behind just before the clock strikes midnight. Fearing rejection if her secret is revealed, Sam dodges Austin's relentless efforts to discover the identity of his princess. Will Sam let fear hold her back, or will she find the courage to be herself and claim the life she's always wanted? Her chance at "happily ever after" depends on it.

A Cinderella Story (2004) Movie Review:

Adapting a fairy tale to a modern-day high school isn't terribly original, so when you go there you'd better have something ingenious up your sleeve. Alas, this won't strain your imagination at all.

After her father died, Sam (Duff) was raised by her vain stepmother (Coolidge), who treats her like a slave while pampering her moronic daughters (Zima and Avery). Sam has a plan to escape to a university far, far away, but first she must survive one more year of high school. When she discovers that her soulful text-pal is actually the Big Man On Campus (Murray), her nerdy best friend (Byrd) and protective godmother (King) help make her romantic dreams come true at the school Halloween dance. Then midnight strikes and her fantasy crumbles.

The idea is a good one, and the writer obviously enjoys applying the story elements to 21st century teen life. But the film is directed like a zany slapstick remake of Pretty In Pink (mixed with You've Got Mail), and all the goofy antics undermine any potential for actual comedy or romance. Even the gifted cast seem defeated by the material.

The normally perky Duff adds depth to Sam, but is sabotaged by silly stereotypes invading every scene. The stepsisters are too ugly (on the inside of course), the best friend is too wacky, the evil stepmother just too much (it should be a crime to waste the divine Coolidge this badly). The charming, handsome Murray is actually the most interesting character--his personal struggle is the most engaging, simply because the people around him are more realistically awful (mean girlfriend Gonzalo and demanding dad Kilner).

But the real pity is that the film's sunny and bright style masks a dull, lifeless centre. With a few hilarious exceptions, the jokes are bland and unfunny, and the fairy tale reinventions aren't creative or witty enough. And even if Duff and Murray do pull a couple of lovely romantic moments out of the hat, the director is quick to either oversell them or throw them away with an uninspired bit of shtick. Watch Ever After again to see how it's done.

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A Cinderella Story (2004) review written by: Rich Cline

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