hi all. in this entry, i wanna share about a film, inspired by the fairy tale Cinderella.
The movie begins with the Grimm Brothers visiting an elderly woman, the Grande Dame of France, who while thoroughly enjoying their tales questions their story of the little cinder girl.  The Grimm Brothers reply that there was no way for them to verify the  authenticity of their story as there were so many different versions.  After one of the brothers expressed curiosity about a portrait showing a  young woman, the Grande Dame replies that the woman was Danielle de  Barbarac , reveals a jewel-encrusted glass slipper, and proceeds to tell her story - beginning with "Once upon a time..." 
In 16th century France, Danielle de Barbarac's father, Auguste, marries a baroness with two young daughters, but dies shortly afterward. The Baroness Rodmilla de Ghent  was already jealous and resentful of Danielle, and ensures her life is  miserable. By the time Danielle is eighteen, the estate has fallen into  decline, as the Baroness has no interest in farming and wishes to get  back to court as soon as possible. The elder daughter Marguerite  has grown to be as cruel and arrogant as her mother, who favors her for  her cunning and calculating personality. The younger daughter,  Jacqueline,  neglected by her mother, is sweet-tempered and forgiving but powerless.  Danielle has been reduced to a servant in her own house; she sleeps  near the kitchen fireplace and her most prized and virtually only  possession is the last present her father gave her, a paperback copy of Thomas more's Utopia.
While collecting apples, Danielle hears the thunder of hooves, and  runs to find a strange man attempting to steal her father's horse.  Enraged, she calls him a thief, and proceeds to throw an apple and hit  him squarely on the forehead. The man, stumbling and bleeding slightly  from the apple's blow, is revealed to be the local Prince. Danielle  falls to the ground in a low bow, embarrassed, and fearing for her life  because of her rash action. The Prince, Henry, hurredly explains that he  was stealing her horse to flee from the royal guard and escape his  'gilded cage'. He takes the horse and pays her 20 gold francs for her  silence on the matter. Astonished by the amount of money, Danielle hides  the gold from her step-mother and conceives of a plan to rescue one of  the maidservant's husbands, and long time servant friend, Maurice.
Prince Henry, who continues to run and elude the castle guards that  pursue him, comes across a small caravan of gypsies who are sacking an  old man's carriage. The man wails and flags down Henry, claiming that  one of the gypsies has stolen his painting. Henry pauses for a moment,  and nervously recognizes that the guards are hot on his trail. He tries  to shake off the man and race away, but the elderly fellow claims that  "it's a matter of life and death." Henry grudgingly agrees to chase the  bandits, and after an elaborate flight and fight, recovers the painting.  Henry returns the prized painting (later shown to be the Mona Lisa) to  the elderly man, who reveals himself to be Leonardo da Vinci,  the famed painter who is paying a visit to the King and Queen (Henry's  parents). Sadly, the castle guards catch up with the Prince, and he is  escorted back to the castle followed by Da Vinci.
Meanwhile, deciding to dress in disguise and use her mother's name -  Comtesse Nicole de Lancret - Danielle goes to the royal prison to buy  back Maurice, and save him from being sent to the New World Colonies, since he had been sold by the Baroness because of her past due taxes. After meeting Prince Henry   during an argument with the prison guard, (luckily he does not  recognize her as the commoner who threw the apples at him previously) he  is impressed with her forthrightness and strong personality. They have a  series of secretive encounters, with Henry becoming intrigued with her  wit and intelligence but is unaware of her true identity as well as the  fact that it is her stepmother and stepsister that are openly trying to  court his favour for marriage. Unbeknown to Danielle, Henry feels just  as trapped by circumstance as she does: his only real companion being  Laurent, captain of the royal guard, with many courtiers and nobles  wooing him in exchange for favours because of his position, not his  personal identity. With some aid from a traveling Leonardo da Vinci,  who is in fact on his way to the palace, Henry is able to find the  confidence to act naturally with Danielle.
After much deliberation The King and Queen of France give their son  an ultimatum: either he announce his engagement to a woman of his  choosing at the upcoming masquerade ball,  or he will wed the Princess of Spain. Thinking of Danielle, Henry  agrees. Danielle, her stepmother, and stepsisters all receive  invitations to the ball. Marguerite is unsatisfied with any of the  dresses to wear to the ball, so Rodmilla pulls out Danielle's mother's  dress and the matching slippers that were to be given to Danielle when  she got married. Marguerite immediately likes it, and decides to wear it  to the masque. When Danielle catches Marguerite trying on the dress,  Marguerite makes a callous comment about Danielle's mother being dead  and having no use for the fine vestments. Danielle, infuriated, punches  her in the face and chases her around the manor, but Marguerite  retaliates by seizing and threatening to burn Danielle's copy of Utopia.  Although Danielle gives in and allows Marguerite to take the dress and  the glass shoes which come with it, Marguerite, out of simple spite,  burns the book anyway. Under orders from her stepmother, Danielle is  beaten and whipped. Jacqueline attempts to comfort her and heal her  wounds.
Danielle, deciding that she must tell the Prince the truth about her  commoner status, finds him in the forest and attempts to tell him the  truth. Henry, now love-sick, fails to hear what she says and pours his  heart out to her, claiming that he loves her. Danielle is on the verge  of tears, knowing that their love cannot last. The couple kiss, and  Henry moves to pull Danielle into an embrace, but she cries out in pain,  as he has pressed against the deep lash-marks upon her back. Danielle  makes a quick exit, and bids him farewell.
On the evening of the ball, Danielle's stepmother discovers the  interludes between Danielle and Henry, and locks her in the manor's  larder as punishment. Leonardo da Vinci,  who figured out from the first meeting between Henry and Danielle she  was not a noble, frees her and the manor's servants give her the dress  and slippers, which they had hidden. Danielle goes to the ball, where  her stepmother humiliates her by exposing her true identity. Henry  publicly rejects Danielle, labelling her a hypocrite like everyone else  around him. Devastated she runs away, leaving one slipper behind which  is discovered by Leonardo da Vinci. Leonardo reprimands Henry for  abandoning Danielle when she had risked everything for him.
Danielle is sold to a vile landowner, Pierre Le Pieu ,  in exchange for all the missing household goods, that Rodmilla had  accused Danielle and the servants of stealing but in reality had been  sold to him to pay off the debt. Henry is about to go through with his  arranged marriage to the Spanish princess, who is so distraught she  comes to the altar sobbing. Realizing that he could not in good  conscience marry someone so obviously unhappy with the arrangement -  just as he is - Henry calls off the wedding in mid-ceremony, encouraging  her to be with her true love, another Spanish nobleman attending the  wedding. He leaves the church with renewed resolve and encounters  Jacqueline, who tells him Danielle is the prisoner of Le Pieu. As Henry  sets off to save her, Danielle is shown to be Le Pieu's house servant in  shackles; he tries to make a sexual advance towards her, but instead  finds himself held by Danielle at sword-point, and gives her the literal  key to her freedom. She walks out of the castle just as Henry arrives.  He begs for her forgiveness and using her real name asks for her hand in  marriage, presenting to her the slipper she left on the night of the  ball.
The Baroness and her daughters are summoned to visit the royal court,  assuming that Henry plans to propose to Marguerite based on a lie  Jacqueline tells them. Instead, they are told that they are guilty of  treason for lying to the Queen about Danielle's identity and marital  status among other things-an offense punishable by death. Upon hearing  this, Margurite tries to cover up her part in her mother's schemes by  pinning the whole blame on Rodmilla, leading to a argument between them  that is soon stopped by the King. It's then that Jacqueline reveals her  deception to her mother and sister. The Queen then strips the Baroness  and Marguerite of their titles and tells them that they will be deported  to the colonies, unless someone asks for mercy on their behalf. When no  one speaks up for her, Rodmilla realizes just how alone she truly is.  Danielle, whom Henry introduces as his wife, steps forward to ask the  King and Queen to be as kind to her stepmother and stepsister as they  were to her. Rodmilla and Marguerite are sent to work in the royal  laundry for the rest of their days. Jacqueline, who had always been kind  to Danielle, is spared punishment. She falls in love with Captain  Laurent, whom she met at the ball. As the story ends, the elderly lady  reveals to the Brothers Grimm that she is Danielle's  great-great-granddaughter, and still has her glass slipper and Da  Vinci's portrait, leaving the Brothers Grimm with the real lesson of the  fairy tale - not merely that they lived happily ever after, but that  they really did live and the story is true.
info: - a 1998 film
       - directed by Andy Tennant
source : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ever_After
p/s : there is no fairy godmother in this movie  c(=