

I viewed it a second time with my parents and grandmother…and they all absolutely loved it...
I completely agree! Thanks for sharing the news, Escapay!Escapay wrote:"Frozen Fever" has been passed by BBFC for inclusion among the Cinderella bonus features
Granted, I'd rather "Frozen Fever" also get included in a Frozen: Special Edition re-issue, but I'm glad it's preserved on the Cinderella disc to recreate the theatrical screening.
- FROZEN FEVER [Additional Material,CINDERELLA]
TYPE VAM
APPROVED RUNNING TIME 7m 34s
BBFCINSIGHT no material likely to offend or harm
GENRE(S) Animation, Children
DIRECTOR(S) Chris Buck,Jennifer Lee
CAST INCLUDES Kristen Bell (voice), Idina Menzel (voice), Josh Gad (voice), Jonathan Groff (voice), Chris Williams (voice), Paul Briggs (voice)
CUT This work was passed uncut.
Albert
It won't be. Disney's Blu-rays for Wreck-It Ralph and Frozen included their theatrically-attached animated shorts ("Paperman" and "Get a Horse!", respectively) on the disc, but as a supplement, and not part of the films. And even if it were attached, the chapter-skip button exists for a reason.jPod wrote:I hope Frozen Fever won't be attached to Cinderella as I want to enjoy the movie on its own.
I think the exact wording was "Based on Disney's Cinderella Properties and the Fairytale Written by Charles Perrault". I think they worded it this was because this film also drew inspiration from Cinderella III: A Twist in Time, not just the 1950 animated film. Otherwise, I'm sure they would've written "Walt Disney's Cinderella" instead.Wonderlicious wrote:One thing that really grated me, though, was how the source material was credited; I can't remember the exact wording, but it was something like "based on Charles Perrault's story and Disney's Cinderella property". The latter part sounded so clinical; even "Walt Disney's Cinderella" would have been a better way of wording it.
It did?tsom wrote: I think they worded it this was because this film also drew inspiration from Cinderella III: A Twist in Time, not just the 1950 animated film.
Wonderlicious wrote: (such as the charming - from what I saw, anyway - Czech/East German film Three Hazelnuts for Cinderella).
I thought they did as well. Especially the last scene with the paintings on the blue wall. that's quite similar to the beginning scene of Cinderella III: A Twist in Time. kinda sad how they didn't put grimm brothers in there though. after all, they used the branch aspect and the fairy godmother had a very old tree-looking costume.Old Fish Tale wrote:It did?tsom wrote: I think they worded it this was because this film also drew inspiration from Cinderella III: A Twist in Time, not just the 1950 animated film.
Additionally, there was the fencing scene, which Cinderella III had, the conversation between King Frederick and Kit about the late queen, and Lady Tremaine breaking the other slipper. In addition to the branch, they also took from the Brothers Grimm Ella's mother's deathbed scene and the fact that the stepsisters were beautiful and fair on the outside, but ugly on the inside. To a small extent, the recurring theme with the bluebirds and Ella crying to a tree were also from Grimm. I think those were the only things taken from that version though. The rest was, more or less, taken from Perrault, the Disney animated film, and some partial ideas from other Cinderella movies and stories.WonderNeverOz wrote:I thought they did as well. Especially the last scene with the paintings on the blue wall. that's quite similar to the beginning scene of Cinderella III: A Twist in Time. kinda sad how they didn't put grimm brothers in there though. after all, they used the branch aspect and the fairy godmother had a very old tree-looking costume.Old Fish Tale wrote: It did?
Nope, but it has made more money than Oz, the Great and Powerful. I don't think it will beat Maleficent, but that's because Cinderella didn't have Angelina Jolie and wasn't released in 3D. Considering those factors, Cinderella has done extremely well.Old Fish Tale wrote:Has it made more money than 'Maleficent'?