How Does Rodmilla Characterize In The Movie Ever After

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The movie “Ever After,” features Drew Barrymore as “the little cinder girl” Danielle de Barbarac. Her father marries Rodmilla, a Baroness, who brings her two daughters Jacqueline and Marguerite to live on their farm. Soon after the marriage, Danielle’s father dies and Rodmilla begins to make Danielle’s life miserable, her daughter Marguerite joins in to. Danielle is put to work doing hard labor for Rodmilla and her daughters, while Marguerite is prepped for marriage in the highest social class available. While out picking apples one day, Danielle spots someone who is stealing one of her father’s horses. She throws an apple at him, and then it is revealed that he is Prince Henry. On their next encounter, she pretends to be a countess in order …show more content…

His father compromises and suggests a few days to come to a decision and Ball to celebrate his choice. Prince Henry makes Nicole de Lancret (Danielle) his decision, but learns from his mother that she was already married to a Belgian. Danielle, who was locked in a cellar at her home by Rodmilla, arrives at the Ball with the help of Leonardo DiVinci. Dressed in her mother’s silver gown with matching slippers, Henry is amazed by her beauty. Rodmilla reveals that Danielle is a servant and Henry scorns her. Running away from being shame and embarrassment, she leaves a show behind. DiVinci convinces Henry that Danielle is his match; they marry, live happily ever, and leave Rodmilla and Marguerite to the same labors they made Danielle face for several …show more content…

Her body sprouts gold and the eldest daughter marries and has a son with the Prince. The witch believed it was her daughter the Prince married and went to give a gift to the child. She bumped into her daughter, the bridge, and cut off the gold and turned the Princess into a reindeer. The child cries then begins to cry, and the Prince sends a woman out with the child to sooth him. She finds the reindeer and lets the child feed from her. The woman continues to do this two more times with the child. The last time she went there, the Prince came with her. Once the reindeer shed her skin to feed the child, the Prince burned it. He kept burning her skins until she was in human form. They all returned to the castle, where the witch and her daughter run away forever.
Each story can be seen as individually creative and unique because of their differences; like the use of witchcraft in “A Wonderful Birch,” and the witch's intent with her daughter was to gain the title of royalty. There are also several similarities within these two stories because the step sisters, step mother, witch’s daughter, and witch, are punished for their misdeeds towards the girls, also both are transformed in order to go to the ball and win the heart of the

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