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Ella Enchanted
Ella Enchanted
Starring: Anne Hathaway, Hugh Dancy, Cary Elwes, Joanna Lumley, Steve Coogan, Eric Idle
Directed by: Tommy O'Haver
Screenplay: Karen McCullah Lutz, Kirsten Smith, Laurie Craig
Release Date: April 9th, 2004
Running Time: 95 minutes
MPAA Rating: PG for some crude humor and language.
Box Office: $22,918,387 (US total)
Studio: Miramax Films

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 Anne Hathaway and Hugh Dancy in Ella Enchanted.
Ella Enchanted Production Notes
Get enchanted.
A comic-fantasy-adventure filled with magic and music, ogres and elves, giants and wicked stepsisters, Ella Enchanted revisits a classic fairy-tale world with a distinctly 21st century twist. The film, directed by Tommy O’ Haver (“Get Over It”) is based on the best-selling, Newbery Honor-winning novel by Gail Carson Levine.
It all begins when Ella of Frell (Anne Hathaway of “The Princess Diaries”) is given a fairy’s “gift” at birth – the gift of perfect obedience. Forced to do anything she is commanded – no matter how silly or dangerous – Ella’s life hardly seems to be in her own control.
Things only get worse when Ella’s father (Patrick Bergin) remarries, bringing into her life a stepmother, the dastardly Dame Olga (Joanna Lumley of “Absolutely Fabulous”), and two sinister stepsisters, Hattie (Lucy Punch) and Olive (Jennifer Higham), who get a kick out of watching Ella obey their every request at the “Frell Galleria.” Now, Ella is newly determined to gain her independence and break free of the spell that binds her once and for all.
She sets off on a quest of discovery that will take her through the Kingdom’s most dangerous and darkest forests – where she finds a fellow traveler in a go-getting Elf (Aidan McArdle) -- to the King’s spectacular castle.
Along the way she crosses paths with the idolized Prince Char (Hugh Dancy), who so often graces the cover of Medieval Teen, only to turn the tables on fairy tale history and rescue him with true love. But most of all, Ella will discover her own power to fight for what’s in her heart.
Ella Enchanted is directed by Tommy O’Haver from a screenplay by Laurie Craig, Karen McCullah Lutz & Kirsten Smith, and Jennifer Heath & Michele J. Wolff. The producer is Jane Startz and the executive producers are Su Armstrong, Bob Weinstein, Harvey Weinstein and Julie Goldstein.
Cinematographer John de Borman, production designer Norman Garwood (a threetime Oscar nominee for “Brazil,” “Hook” and “Glory”) and costume designer Ruth Myers (two-time Oscar nominee for “The Addams Family” and “Emma”) bring to life a fantasy world with the brilliant, screen-drenching colors and joyful textures of a dream.
Gail Carson Levine’s novel Ella Enchanted cast its spell not only on children and young adult readers, but parents and literary critics alike, being dubbed “a modern classic.” A life-long fan of fairy tales, Levine felt the form was crying out to be reinvented for today’s hipper and savvier readers. For Ella Enchanted, Levine started with the “Cinderella” legend. Deciding that the traditional Cinderella was too much of a Goody Two- Shoes for today’s world, she gave the character a whole new style, a fresh new name, and an inspiring new adventure in a kingdom filled with surprising twists on other fairy-tale characters. The concept worked, becoming a huge best-seller -- with Publisher’s Weekly calling it “a winning combination of memorable characters and an alluring fantasy realm” -- and garnering the highest awards.
 Anne Hathaway, Hugh Dancy, Aidan McArdle in Ella Enchanted.
When director Tommy O’Haver was given Ella Enchanted to read, he immediately fell head over heels for its heroine. “I loved the story because I saw the potential for it to be about more than just a girl who breaks her own curse. To me, it came to be about a young woman whose spirit of adventure liberates an entire kingdom. It’s a girl power story, but it’s also a story for everyone. We mixed in romance, adventure, thrills, comedy, even musical numbers – something to have fun with no matter who you are.”
He continues: “It was exactly the kind of story I had been looking for. I’ve always loved fantasy films, as well as cartoons and fairy tales and it’s what I’ve most wanted to direct. I was thrilled by the chance to take this enchanted world and make it my own, give it a real personality, a strong sense of spirit and irreverence. We all know fairy tales end happily ever after, but I wanted to make the ride getting there fresh, fun and unexpected.”
O’Haver’s first inspiration was to tweak the medieval setting and give it a completely contemporary overhaul. “I wanted to merge the old-fashioned sensibilities, settings and values of traditional fairy tales with the kind of a rocking comedy-adventure kids today love so much, and hopefully make something new,” says O’Haver. “I started out by thinking of the story as a John Hughes comedy unfolding in a medieval suburban world.”
With O’Haver’s new ideas, the script went through a period of extensive development and creative brainstorming as the writers went wild with playful anachronisms. Explains producer Jane Startz (“The Mighty,” “Tuck Everlasting”): “We started out with a pretty faithful adaptation of the book, but once Tommy came on board, he challenged us to really raise the ante: to ratchet up the humor, the color and the conflict. We started adding all these wonderful layers on top of the story – like the medieval mall with hand-cranked escalators and fast-food restaurants that sell squirrel on a stick and that sort of thing.
Tommy came up with one twist after another and we kept pushing it further and further.” Startz continues: “In the end, Gail Levine was delighted with the wit and invention the writers and Tommy brought to it. She was involved the whole way and I think she really enjoyed seeing the spirit of her story stay alive even as it took on elements of a contemporary fantasy adventure.”
While Tommy O’Haver had a blast with re-jiggering medieval reality, he still kept his focus on where he believes the story’s heart lies. “The best part for me about Ella Enchanted is that you’re immersed in this fantastical world filled with all sorts of imaginary creatures and rainbow colors and magical happenings, but at the core of the story is a very real, very true-to-life human relationship that makes it meaningful,” he says. “That combination of fun fantasy and moving emotional reality is what Ella Enchanted is all about for me.”
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