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Post by Butterscotch on Oct 10, 2015 20:40:01 GMT -5
What people tend to overlook with Cinderella is that she's actually in an abusive situation and it can be VERY hard for someone to get out of a situation like that. It's also likely that Cinderella's formal education ended when her father died, which limits the already small pool of jobs she could get. For what it's worth in the third movie, after time is turned back, she decides to leave her house and gets a job... as a maid.
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Post by Silver on Oct 10, 2015 20:50:40 GMT -5
What people tend to overlook with Cinderella is that she's actually in an abusive situation and it can be VERY hard for someone to get out of a situation like that. It's also likely that Cinderella's formal education ended when her father died, which limits the already small pool of jobs she could get. For what it's worth in the third movie, after time is turned back, she decides to leave her house and gets a job... as a maid. Sent from my GT-P3113 using proboards Absolutely on the first set. And as the decades passed. The trilogy's creative team took note of how the mainstream public has "called out" Cinderella's passive traits. They updated her attitude to one who takes action. But Cinderella is not someone who is abrasive. She's genteel by nature. I am to. Confrontation and drama are not my thing. Not every woman (or person for that matter) is verbally aggressive. Nor does she have to be. That is often misunderstood as we are pushovers. Not true. Nobody said standing up for yourself had to be with screaming and cursing. If anything it's the soft-spoken who really prove their worth without making a spectacle. And what is often misinterpreted. Cinderella did not go to the ball to snag the prince and fortune. She just wanted a fun night out. Yes it is a fairy tale but just play along. Two kind people meet. They feel fulfilled in one another and fight for it. More development in the trilogy as to why.
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