Director René Clément brings an entertainingly eccentric David Goodis crime story to the screen in high style. A big score is being prepped by an odd gang, played by a terrific lineup of talent: Jean-Louis Trintignant, Robert Ryan, Aldo Ray, Lea Massari and the elusive Tisa Farrow. Only partly an action thriller, this one is weird but good — lovers of hardboiled crime stories can’t go wrong. Studiocanal has restored the original version, a full forty minutes longer than what was briefly shown here.
And Hope to Die
Blu-ray
Kl Studio Classics
1972 / Color / 1:66 widescreen / 141 min. / Street Date February 25, 2020 / La course du lièvre à travers les champs / available through Kino Lorber / 29.95
Starring: Jean-Louis Trintignant, Robert Ryan, Aldo Ray, Lea Massari, Tisa Farrow, Jean Gaven, André Lawrence, Nadine Nabokov, Jean Coutu, Daniel Breton, Emmanuelle Béart.
Cinematography: Edmond Richard
Film Editor: Roger Dwyre
Original Music: Francis Lai
Written by Sébastien Japrisot from...
And Hope to Die
Blu-ray
Kl Studio Classics
1972 / Color / 1:66 widescreen / 141 min. / Street Date February 25, 2020 / La course du lièvre à travers les champs / available through Kino Lorber / 29.95
Starring: Jean-Louis Trintignant, Robert Ryan, Aldo Ray, Lea Massari, Tisa Farrow, Jean Gaven, André Lawrence, Nadine Nabokov, Jean Coutu, Daniel Breton, Emmanuelle Béart.
Cinematography: Edmond Richard
Film Editor: Roger Dwyre
Original Music: Francis Lai
Written by Sébastien Japrisot from...
- 1/12/2021
- by Glenn Erickson
- Trailers from Hell
Read More: Watch: 'The Lady in the Car With Glasses and a Gun' Trailer Previews Stunning Neo-Noir Thriller After adapting his own comics in his previous two feature films ("Gainsbourg: A Heroic Life," "The Rabbi's Cat"), filmmaker Joann Sfar turns to Sébastien Japrisot's noir-thriller "The Lady in the Car With Glasses and a Gun" for his latest outing. The novel was previously adapted into a 1970 film directed by Anatole Litvak, though Sfar has a style far more sexy and thrilling up his sleeve. "The Lady in the Car With Glasses and a Gun" centers on Dany Doremus (Mavor) as she drives her boss' car to a town where everyone seems to know her, although she claims she's never been in the town before. Matters become worse when she discovers a body in her trunk, which the clip above teases in full. The film hits theaters and On Demand today,...
- 12/18/2015
- by Zack Sharf
- Indiewire
‘Nymphomaniac’ Star Stacy Martin Leads U.S. Trailer for ‘The Lady in the Car with Glasses and a Gun’
After leaving a big impression in both volumes of Lars von Trier‘s Nymphomaniac, we were hoping to soon see more from up-and-comer Stacy Martin. Before Brady Corbet’s The Childhood of a Leader and Ben Wheatley’s High Rise hit theaters, we’ll see her in The Lady in the Car with Glasses and a Gun, a ’70s-influenced thriller with more than a bit of style to spare. (That period influence isn’t only aesthetic: this film is the second adaptation of Sébastien Japrisot’s novel, which was previously brought to the screen in 1970.)
The true lead, however, is Freya Mavor, as will be showcased in this preview — and that’s also the most this preview will tell you. It’s almost exclusively a collection of stylish, “propulsive” shots — set to the antiquated sounds of Wendy Rene’s “After Laughter (Comes Tears)” — which one of the only available reviews confirms is a key component.
The true lead, however, is Freya Mavor, as will be showcased in this preview — and that’s also the most this preview will tell you. It’s almost exclusively a collection of stylish, “propulsive” shots — set to the antiquated sounds of Wendy Rene’s “After Laughter (Comes Tears)” — which one of the only available reviews confirms is a key component.
- 11/11/2015
- by Nick Newman
- The Film Stage
After a successful career as an illustrator and as a writer, Joann Sfar tackled the medium of cinema in 2010 when he directed Gainsbourg (Vie héroïque), a beautiful and surprisingly oneiric biopic about the famous French singer. He then followed up with two animated films, one he adapted from his own work (The Rabbi's Cat, 2011) and a second one for which he directed one segment (Kahlil Gibran's The Prophet, 2014). With La Dame dans l'Auto avec des Lunettes et un Fusil (The Lady in the Car with Glasses and a Gun), Sfar comes back to live cinema with this adaptation of Sébastien Japrisot's homonymous novel, which was already transposed once in 1970 by Anatole Litvak. Sfar himself stated that he wanted to make a...
[Read the whole post on twitchfilm.com...]...
[Read the whole post on twitchfilm.com...]...
- 8/4/2015
- Screen Anarchy
Joann Sfar has taken his acclaim as a comics artist and used that momentum to bring his particular visual flair to the world of filmmaking, making his directorial debut with 2010 biopic "Gainsbourg." While narratively uneven, the film undoubtedly boasts strong imagery which renders his foray into genre movies via the upcoming "The Lady In The Car With Glasses And A Gun" all the more intriguing. Read More: Review: 'Gainsbourg: A Heroic Life' Is An Ambitious Biopic That's Disappointingly Incomplete Starring Freya Mavor, Elio Germano, Benjamin Biolay and "Nymphomaniac" star Stacy Martin, and based on the book by Sébastien Japrisot, the story kicks off when an enigmatic woman takes her employer's car for a joyride. Along the way, she encounters a variety of people who claim to have seen her before, and things become even more twisted when a dead body is discovered in the trunk. My curiosity is certainly piqued.
- 6/30/2015
- by Kevin Jagernauth
- The Playlist
Sales company unveils new films by Donzelli, Sfar, Odoul and Garrel at Paris Rendez-vous.
Wild Bunch will kick off sales on nine new French titles at this year’s Rendez-vous with French Cinema in Paris (Jan 15-19), many of which will be completed in time for a potential Cannes slot, including an incestuous love story by Valérie Donzelli and First World War drama by Damien Odoul.
The company will also show first images of several previously announced productions including Jacques Audiard’s untitled drama revolving around Sri Lankan immigrants in Paris, which it is co-selling with Celluloid Dreams, and Julie Delpy’s France-set romance Lolo, in which she stars as a chic Parisian sophisticate who falls for a geeky It expert played by Dany Boon.
There will also be a promo-reel for Arnaud Desplechin’s My Golden Years (aka Three Memories of Childhood), revisiting the childhood of Paul Dédalus, the protagonist in his 1997 film My Sex Lifewho...
Wild Bunch will kick off sales on nine new French titles at this year’s Rendez-vous with French Cinema in Paris (Jan 15-19), many of which will be completed in time for a potential Cannes slot, including an incestuous love story by Valérie Donzelli and First World War drama by Damien Odoul.
The company will also show first images of several previously announced productions including Jacques Audiard’s untitled drama revolving around Sri Lankan immigrants in Paris, which it is co-selling with Celluloid Dreams, and Julie Delpy’s France-set romance Lolo, in which she stars as a chic Parisian sophisticate who falls for a geeky It expert played by Dany Boon.
There will also be a promo-reel for Arnaud Desplechin’s My Golden Years (aka Three Memories of Childhood), revisiting the childhood of Paul Dédalus, the protagonist in his 1997 film My Sex Lifewho...
- 1/14/2015
- ScreenDaily
Some movies just vanish.
While Costa-Gavras continues to enjoy a high reputation for his sixties and seventies political thrillers (perhaps more respected than watched, which is a shame) and to some extent for his later American movies (more watched than respected, also a shame), The Sleeping Car Murders (1965), one of his earliest works, is so hard to see that I wound up watching a pan-and-scanned off-air recording taped on VHS from Scottish Television sometime in the eighties, and dubbed into English. At least Simone Signoret seems to have done her own re-voicing, but her erring husband Yves Montand has that strained Amurrican tone I associate with Robert Rietty doing Orson Welles.
So Costa-Gavras' movie, formerly a missing person, turns up as a homicide victim, mutilated to prevent identification. With the performances defaced, the compositions utterly ruined, and the editing patterns minced in this copy (because a cut doesn't mean the...
While Costa-Gavras continues to enjoy a high reputation for his sixties and seventies political thrillers (perhaps more respected than watched, which is a shame) and to some extent for his later American movies (more watched than respected, also a shame), The Sleeping Car Murders (1965), one of his earliest works, is so hard to see that I wound up watching a pan-and-scanned off-air recording taped on VHS from Scottish Television sometime in the eighties, and dubbed into English. At least Simone Signoret seems to have done her own re-voicing, but her erring husband Yves Montand has that strained Amurrican tone I associate with Robert Rietty doing Orson Welles.
So Costa-Gavras' movie, formerly a missing person, turns up as a homicide victim, mutilated to prevent identification. With the performances defaced, the compositions utterly ruined, and the editing patterns minced in this copy (because a cut doesn't mean the...
- 11/6/2014
- by David Cairns
- MUBI
As a fan of more ambitious filmmaking, it’s always exciting to see what project British filmmaker Iain Softley is going to take on next. From a cyberpunk cult classic to a sci-fi piece set in a psychiatric institute to a hoodoo thriller set in Louisiana, it’s hard to predict the subject matter and setting of his films. For his most recent project, Trap For Cinderella, Softley took on the task of adapting Sébastien Japrisot’s novel of the same name, bringing it to his home country and providing his own spin on the dark thriller.
Recently, I had the opportunity to sit down with Iain for an exclusive 1 on 1 chat in honor of the film’s release. We discussed the process of adapting a novel, the use of identity as a theme in cinema, what drew him to the project and more!
Check out the full interview below,...
Recently, I had the opportunity to sit down with Iain for an exclusive 1 on 1 chat in honor of the film’s release. We discussed the process of adapting a novel, the use of identity as a theme in cinema, what drew him to the project and more!
Check out the full interview below,...
- 12/19/2013
- by Alexander Lowe
- We Got This Covered
Identity is a curious thing. Many people spend their entire lives trying to figure out what they want to occupy their time with, who their real friends are and why they do anything all. And that’s what people do under normal circumstances, so obviously things get a lot more complicated when you have no memory, have had reconstructive plastic surgery and now have no real idea of who you actually are.
That’s where Iain Softley’s Trap For Cinderella picks up. It begins with Micky (Tuppence Middleton) waking up in a hospital bed covered in third degree burns. She remembers almost nothing of her past life or her accident, which means she’s at the mercy of her Aunt’s assistant (Kerry Fox) to figure out which of her memories are real and which are fabricated. As the story goes on, more and more is leaked to Micky...
That’s where Iain Softley’s Trap For Cinderella picks up. It begins with Micky (Tuppence Middleton) waking up in a hospital bed covered in third degree burns. She remembers almost nothing of her past life or her accident, which means she’s at the mercy of her Aunt’s assistant (Kerry Fox) to figure out which of her memories are real and which are fabricated. As the story goes on, more and more is leaked to Micky...
- 12/13/2013
- by Alexander Lowe
- We Got This Covered
IFC Midnight's latest thriller, Trap for Cinderella, opens in select theaters and will also be available to watch on cable VOD and digital outlets beginning December 13th. We have your opportunity to catch it via SundanceNOW!
Trap for Cinderella stars Tuppence Middleton, Alexandra Roach, Kerry Fox, Aneurin Barnard, Stanley Weber, Emilia Fox, Alex Jennings, and Frances De La Tour. It's written and directed by Iain Softley (The Skeleton Key) based on a novel by Sébastien Japrisot.
To enter for your chance to win, just send us an E-mail Here including your Full Name and birth date. We’ll take care of the rest. Note: Winners must be at least 18 years of age!
Synopsis:
Micky is a fun-loving photographer, living a party lifestyle in London until a chance encounter with a childhood friend changes her world forever. The opposite to life-and-soul Micky, Do is a quiet bank clerk, with little by way of a social life.
Trap for Cinderella stars Tuppence Middleton, Alexandra Roach, Kerry Fox, Aneurin Barnard, Stanley Weber, Emilia Fox, Alex Jennings, and Frances De La Tour. It's written and directed by Iain Softley (The Skeleton Key) based on a novel by Sébastien Japrisot.
To enter for your chance to win, just send us an E-mail Here including your Full Name and birth date. We’ll take care of the rest. Note: Winners must be at least 18 years of age!
Synopsis:
Micky is a fun-loving photographer, living a party lifestyle in London until a chance encounter with a childhood friend changes her world forever. The opposite to life-and-soul Micky, Do is a quiet bank clerk, with little by way of a social life.
- 12/11/2013
- by Uncle Creepy
- DreadCentral.com
Betrayal burns deep in IFC Midnight's latest thriller, Trap for Cinderella, which opens in select theaters and will also be available to watch on cable VOD and digital outlets beginning December 13th. Check out the artwork, trailer, and more for the film here.
Trap for Cinderella stars Tuppence Middleton, Alexandra Roach, Kerry Fox, Aneurin Barnard, Stanley Weber, Emilia Fox, Alex Jennings, and Frances De La Tour. It's written and directed by Iain Softley (The Skeleton Key) based on a novel by Sébastien Japrisot.
Synopsis:
Micky is a fun-loving photographer, living a party lifestyle in London until a chance encounter with a childhood friend changes her world forever. The opposite to life-and-soul Micky, Do is a quiet bank clerk, with little by way of a social life. Yet, much to the annoyance of her DJ boyfriend Jake, Micky is all too delighted to reacquaint herself with Do, embracing her old friend with typical gusto.
Trap for Cinderella stars Tuppence Middleton, Alexandra Roach, Kerry Fox, Aneurin Barnard, Stanley Weber, Emilia Fox, Alex Jennings, and Frances De La Tour. It's written and directed by Iain Softley (The Skeleton Key) based on a novel by Sébastien Japrisot.
Synopsis:
Micky is a fun-loving photographer, living a party lifestyle in London until a chance encounter with a childhood friend changes her world forever. The opposite to life-and-soul Micky, Do is a quiet bank clerk, with little by way of a social life. Yet, much to the annoyance of her DJ boyfriend Jake, Micky is all too delighted to reacquaint herself with Do, embracing her old friend with typical gusto.
- 11/21/2013
- by Debi Moore
- DreadCentral.com
This overblown melodrama mistakes sensationalism for story, and is yet another repulsive tale of women’s friendships as toxic. I’m “biast” (pro): nothing
I’m “biast” (con): nothing
I have not read the source material
(what is this about? see my critic’s minifesto)
Traumatized Micky (Tuppence Middleton: Trance) has survived a terrible fire that took her memory and killed her bestest childhood friend, Do (Alexandra Roach: Anna Karenina). As she struggles to overcome her amnesia, flashes from the past begin to hint at something darker in the cause of the fire than an accident and something nefarious in her recent reconnection with Do, whom she hadn’t seen in years. Aaaannnnd… then it becomes clear that this is gonna be yet another example of the genre Bitches Be Crazy, subgenre Women’s Relationships Are Actually Terrifying Toxic Nightmares Of Psychotic Lesbian Obsession. Based on the novel...
I’m “biast” (con): nothing
I have not read the source material
(what is this about? see my critic’s minifesto)
Traumatized Micky (Tuppence Middleton: Trance) has survived a terrible fire that took her memory and killed her bestest childhood friend, Do (Alexandra Roach: Anna Karenina). As she struggles to overcome her amnesia, flashes from the past begin to hint at something darker in the cause of the fire than an accident and something nefarious in her recent reconnection with Do, whom she hadn’t seen in years. Aaaannnnd… then it becomes clear that this is gonna be yet another example of the genre Bitches Be Crazy, subgenre Women’s Relationships Are Actually Terrifying Toxic Nightmares Of Psychotic Lesbian Obsession. Based on the novel...
- 11/6/2013
- by MaryAnn Johanson
- www.flickfilosopher.com
★★★☆☆British director Iain Softley is something of a curio, having made films as diverse as Henry James adaptation The Wings of the Dove (1997) and the Angelina Jolie-starring cyberpunk thriller Hackers (1995). His latest film (another literary adaptation), Trap for Cinderella (2013), is awash with style and yet at the same time pays homage to the French New Wave with its over-boiled, but enjoyable, mystery-thriller narrative. Based on the novel by Sébastien Japrisot - dubbed the Graham Greene of French literature - the plot concerns a young, affluent fashionista, Micky (Tuppence Middleton), living in London's happening East End.
Read more »...
Read more »...
- 11/4/2013
- by CineVue UK
- CineVue
Reading this on mobile? Click here to view video
This mildly entertaining British thriller by Ian Softley (accomplished director of the Beatles film Backbeat and The Wings of the Dove) is based on a novel by Sébastien Japrisot, French translator of Jd Salinger and author of a number of ingenious policiers, most famously The Sleeping Car Murders. It was originally adapted by Jean Anouilh in 1965 and directed by André Cayatte as Piège pour Cendrillon, and has been partially transposed to Britain with the opening and closing scenes in France. The familiar noir plot has a young woman (Tuppence Middleton, an actor born to star in Half a Sixpence) survive a terrible country house explosion suffering from amnesia and needing a total facial reconstruction in an operation that leaves not a scar. Is she a rich heiress, as her former guardian (Kerry Fox) says, or the victim of some elaborate hoax?...
This mildly entertaining British thriller by Ian Softley (accomplished director of the Beatles film Backbeat and The Wings of the Dove) is based on a novel by Sébastien Japrisot, French translator of Jd Salinger and author of a number of ingenious policiers, most famously The Sleeping Car Murders. It was originally adapted by Jean Anouilh in 1965 and directed by André Cayatte as Piège pour Cendrillon, and has been partially transposed to Britain with the opening and closing scenes in France. The familiar noir plot has a young woman (Tuppence Middleton, an actor born to star in Half a Sixpence) survive a terrible country house explosion suffering from amnesia and needing a total facial reconstruction in an operation that leaves not a scar. Is she a rich heiress, as her former guardian (Kerry Fox) says, or the victim of some elaborate hoax?...
- 7/13/2013
- by Philip French
- The Guardian - Film News
This psychological suspense thriller about one friend's envy of another looks dated and clunky
Iain Softley's new film is a psychological suspense thriller adapted from a 1963 novel by the French author Sébastien Japrisot (in fact filmed in French by André Cayette in 1965). This looks dated and clunky, like a drawn-out episode of Roald Dahl's Tales of the Unexpected on TV, and the direction doesn't have Softley's usual drive. Tuppence Middleton plays Micky, a sexy girl-about-town who one day is accosted by Domenica, or Do (Alexandra Roach) a shy, homely bank employee. Recognition dawns: the two were best friends when they were seven but lost touch after a shared childhood trauma that they have tacitly agreed not to mention. Soon they are inseparable, but Do develops an envious obsession with Micky and her gilded life, and it leads to a tangled and preposterous drama. There's a very classy cast in supporting roles (Kerry Fox,...
Iain Softley's new film is a psychological suspense thriller adapted from a 1963 novel by the French author Sébastien Japrisot (in fact filmed in French by André Cayette in 1965). This looks dated and clunky, like a drawn-out episode of Roald Dahl's Tales of the Unexpected on TV, and the direction doesn't have Softley's usual drive. Tuppence Middleton plays Micky, a sexy girl-about-town who one day is accosted by Domenica, or Do (Alexandra Roach) a shy, homely bank employee. Recognition dawns: the two were best friends when they were seven but lost touch after a shared childhood trauma that they have tacitly agreed not to mention. Soon they are inseparable, but Do develops an envious obsession with Micky and her gilded life, and it leads to a tangled and preposterous drama. There's a very classy cast in supporting roles (Kerry Fox,...
- 7/11/2013
- by Peter Bradshaw
- The Guardian - Film News
Director: Iain Softley; Screenwriter: Iain Softley; Starring: Aneurin Barnard, Tuppence Middleton, Frances de la Tour, Alexandra Roach, Kerry Fox; Running time: 100 mins; Certificate: 15
There are faint echoes of Single White Female and Heavenly Creatures in this oestrogen-fuelled thriller, an update of a French film based on Sébastien Japrisot's cult '60s novel. Tuppence Middleton and Alexandra Roach play childhood friends who reconnect in their 20s and become unhealthily entwined in each other's lives, but so many twists and turns lead to nowhere.
A fiery explosion at the start belies the deeply somnolent mood that follows when Micky (Middleton) wakes up in the burns unit and fails to recognise herself. She has incurred a head injury after throwing herself from the window of the French farmhouse where she used to spend summers with her aunt (an underused Frances de la Tour) and a little girl called Do.
Micky struggles to...
There are faint echoes of Single White Female and Heavenly Creatures in this oestrogen-fuelled thriller, an update of a French film based on Sébastien Japrisot's cult '60s novel. Tuppence Middleton and Alexandra Roach play childhood friends who reconnect in their 20s and become unhealthily entwined in each other's lives, but so many twists and turns lead to nowhere.
A fiery explosion at the start belies the deeply somnolent mood that follows when Micky (Middleton) wakes up in the burns unit and fails to recognise herself. She has incurred a head injury after throwing herself from the window of the French farmhouse where she used to spend summers with her aunt (an underused Frances de la Tour) and a little girl called Do.
Micky struggles to...
- 7/8/2013
- Digital Spy
In case you’re not so familiar with the title, let me first inform you that Trap For Cinderella is an upcoming psychological thriller directed by Iain Softley. The trap is set, betrayal burns deep, a pretty good cast is on board… what else can you wish for? Head inside to take a better look at this stylish poster and find the very first trailer for the whole thing as well! Softley’s upcoming movie is based on Sébastien Japrisot‘s novel Piège pour Cendrillon, which revolves around a young girl who suffers from amnesia after surviving a terrible fire. Haunted by flashbacks, she begins a tormented road...
- 6/19/2013
- by Jeanne Standal
- Filmofilia
Filming is shortly to wrap on six weeks of filming on Trap for Cinderella, a contemporary pyschological thriller, directed by Iain Softley (Inkheart). The film has been adapted from the novel by thriller writer Sébastien Japrisot, and has been filming on location in London and the south of France.
Two young rising British actors Tuppence Middleton and Alexandra Roach (soon to be seen as the young Margaret Thatcher in The Iron Lady) headline the cast as two childhood friends, Micky and Do, reunited after 10 years.
When a beach house on the French Riviera is gutted by fire, the two young women are trapped inside. One is rich and the other poor. Only one of them survives, injured beyond recognition and in a state of total amnesia. Who is she, the heiress or her penniless friend? A killer, or an intended victim?
24 year old Tuppence Middleton (represented by Conway Van Gelder) is originally from Bristol,...
Two young rising British actors Tuppence Middleton and Alexandra Roach (soon to be seen as the young Margaret Thatcher in The Iron Lady) headline the cast as two childhood friends, Micky and Do, reunited after 10 years.
When a beach house on the French Riviera is gutted by fire, the two young women are trapped inside. One is rich and the other poor. Only one of them survives, injured beyond recognition and in a state of total amnesia. Who is she, the heiress or her penniless friend? A killer, or an intended victim?
24 year old Tuppence Middleton (represented by Conway Van Gelder) is originally from Bristol,...
- 6/16/2011
- by noreply@blogger.com (ScreenTerrier)
- ScreenTerrier
Imogen Poots and Felicity Jones have signed on for a film adaptation of Sébastien Japrisot's novel "Trap for Cinderella" says The Hollywood Reporter
The story centers on a rich woman and a poor woman trapped together inside a beach house in a French resort gutted by fire.
Only one of them survives, burnt beyond recognition and with total amnesia, resulting in all sorts of questions about her identity. Ed Westwick, Tamsin Egerton, Brooke Shields, Bill Bailey and Bill Nighy also star.
Ian Softley ("K-pax") directs from a script he adapted and shooting kicks off in London and France in February.
The story centers on a rich woman and a poor woman trapped together inside a beach house in a French resort gutted by fire.
Only one of them survives, burnt beyond recognition and with total amnesia, resulting in all sorts of questions about her identity. Ed Westwick, Tamsin Egerton, Brooke Shields, Bill Bailey and Bill Nighy also star.
Ian Softley ("K-pax") directs from a script he adapted and shooting kicks off in London and France in February.
- 11/3/2010
- by Garth Franklin
- Dark Horizons
Imogen Poots and Felicity Jones have been cast in Trap for Cinderella , directed and adapted by Ian Softley from the novel of the same name by Sébastien Japrisot. The duo joins a cast that includes Ed Westwick, Tamsin Egerton, Brooke Shields, Bill Bailey and Bill Nighy. According to The Hollywood Reporter , "the movie centers on two women . one rich, the other poor . who are trapped inside a beach house in a French resort when it is gutted by fire. Only one survives, burnt beyond recognition and in a state of total amnesia, leaving a slew of unanswered questions about her identity." Filming is scheduled for February in London and France.
- 11/3/2010
- Comingsoon.net
Imogen Poots and Felicity Jones will lead the cast of Iain Softley's latest film Trap For Cinderella, says The Hollywood Reporter. Based on Sébastien Japrisot's novel, Cinderella centres on two women from different class backgrounds who get trapped inside a house on a French resort when it's hit by fire. Only one girl emerges alive, but is disfigured and suffering from complete amnesia. (more)...
- 11/3/2010
- by By Simon Reynolds
- Digital Spy
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