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4[[quoteright:275:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rsz_1127632.png]]
5[[caption-width-right:275:[[{{Tagline}} For all the world to love!]]]]
6
7->''"A dream is a wish your heart makes\
8When you're fast asleep\
9In dreams you lose your heartaches\
10Whatever you wish for, you keep\
11Have faith in your dreams and someday\
12Your rainbow will come smiling through\
13No matter how your heart is grieving\
14If you keep on believing\
15the dream that you wish will come true."''
16
17Entry #12 in the Franchise/DisneyAnimatedCanon, ''Cinderella'' was based on [[Creator/CharlesPerrault Charles Perrault's]] 1697 telling of the FairyTale "Literature/{{Cinderella}}", and marked Disney's return to single-story feature-length films in [[UsefulNotes/TheGoldenAgeOfAnimation 1950]], after the UsefulNotes/WorldWarII years where Disney was limited to making collections of shorts (e.g. ''WesternAnimation/MakeMineMusic'', ''WesternAnimation/FunAndFancyFree'') while many of their staff were drafted to the war effort. Advertisement posters touted ''Cinderella'' as the studio's best since ''WesternAnimation/{{Snow White|AndTheSevenDwarfs}}'' and for the time it definitely marked a return to the unified fantasy narratives that had popularized the studio's feature output, though the painstaking (and high-cost) animation and atmospheric techniques of the earlier films were scaled back in favor of more straightforward (if nonetheless expertly-crafted) visuals, marking a shift from the experimentalism of the early 1940s to a more populist mode of filmmaking that would (mostly) define the Mouse's ensuing midcentury output.
18
19Over [[SequelGap half a century]] after the film's release, it received ''two'' DirectToVideo sequels: the poorly-regarded ''WesternAnimation/CinderellaIIDreamsComeTrue'' (technically [[ThreeShorts three episodes]] from a cancelled TV spinoff linked by a framing device) in 2002 and the significantly more positively-received ''WesternAnimation/CinderellaIIIATwistInTime'' (in which Cinderella's stepmother Lady Tremaine acquires the Fairy Godmother's wand and harnesses its powers to travel back in time, initiate an in-universe {{Retcon}} of the original film's events and thus exact revenge on the title character...[[QuirkyWork yes, really]]) in 2007.
20
21It is also one of the movies featured in ''Franchise/KingdomHearts''. Cinderella herself has a minor (but important) role as one of the seven Princesses of Heart driving the plot of the first game. Nothing from the series appears again until ''VideoGame/KingdomHeartsBirthBySleep'', where it gets an entire world called ''Castle of Dreams''. The film has a [[{{Film/Cinderella 2015}} 2015 live-action remake]], with Creator/LilyJames, Creator/CateBlanchett, Creator/RichardMadden, and Creator/HelenaBonhamCarter.
22
23(See the Cinderella category under [[FanWorks/AnimatedFilms Fanworks: Animated Films]] for various fanworks of all 3 films)
24----
25!! "A Trope Is A Wish Your Heart Makes":
26[[foldercontrol]]
27
28[[folder:A-F]]
29* AbsurdlyLongStairway: While it's not too long for a human, the stairway to Cinderella's room is this trope for Gus and Jaq (who are realistically-sized mice) when they have to [[PetGetsTheKeys carry the key up the stairs to her]] to let her out of the room when she was locked in by the wicked stepmother. Gus actually faints when, after climbing up one set of stairs, he and Jaq have to navigate around ''another''.
30* AbusiveParents: Lady Tremaine is overbearing, manipulative, and cruel to Cinderella and seems to do so purely out of spite and jealousy. She's only a few notches better to her own daughters.
31* AccidentalVentriloquism: In a [[WhatCouldHaveBeen deleted sequence]], a music professor is given the unenviable task of teaching the stepsisters, and Drizella's [[DreadfulMusician terrible singing]] causes the farm animals out back to go mad. The professor keeps hearing the animals' sounds and believes Drizella was making them.
32* ActuallyIAmHim: Cinderella didn't realize that the man she was dancing with all night and consequently fell in love with was the prince himself until Lady Tremaine mentioned that the prince was in love with the girl who lost her slipper.
33* AdaptationDyeJob: In most of the tie-in merchandise. Cinderella has [[https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/cinderella-disneyscreencaps_com-5347_4091.jpg strawberry-blonde hair and a silver dress]] in the film, but in the Franchise/DisneyPrincess Merchandise, she has [[http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-mvMgSR-iO_I/URTvthqOwdI/AAAAAAAAj20/C2fBnMqrXg8/s1600/bluecinderella.jpg light blonde hair and a blue dress.]]
34* AdaptationExpansion:
35** Cinderella is given a collection of mice and bird friends she has made who occasionally help her with her chores [[spoiler:and help facilitate the happy ending]].
36** There's a HopeSpot where Cinderella's animal friends sew her a dress to wear to the ball out of the stepsisters' old cast-offs. But the sisters rip the dress up, and Cinderella's despair at that is what calls the Fairy Godmother.
37** Attention is drawn to Cinderella still keeping the glass slippers after the spell wears off. [[spoiler:-Lady Tremaine breaks the one the Grand Duke brought to prevent her from trying it on, but Cinderella then reveals she has the other slipper]].
38** Cinderella losing her slipper as she runs from the ball is turned into one of her CharacterTics -- she loses a shoe on the stairs earlier in the film.
39* AdiposeRex: The King has quite the belly on him.
40* AirQuotes: Cinderella does one with a subtle pause after hearing Drizella's terrible singing, along with a knowing gaze to Jaq and Gus:
41-->'''Cinderella:''' Maybe I should interrupt the, uh, "music lesson"! ''(Jaq and Gus stifle laughs)''
42* AllThereInTheManual: Cinderella's horse is named Major, but the only official material that states it is the Platinum Edition's companion book.
43* AlmostKiss: Cinderella and the prince are leaning towards each other and then GONG!
44* AntiInterferenceLockUp: Cinderella getting locked in her room by her WickedStepmother just as the Grand Duke arrives to check the glass slipper, as she's aware Cinderella was the girl from the ball and doesn't want her to be with the prince. With the help of Gus and Jacques, Cinderella manages to escape just in time to prove she's the girl they're looking for, to [[OhCrap her stepmother's horror]].
45* AristocratsAreEvil: ''Lady'' Tremaine and her schemes.
46* AttackAttackRetreatRetreat: When Cinderella is fleeing because the clock is striking midnight.
47-->'''Duke:''' Stop that coach! Close those gates!\
48''(Then, when the coach barely makes it through as the gates close)''\
49'''Duke:''' Follow that coach! Open those gates!
50* BadassAdorable: Jaq and Gus; little mice on a grand adventure to retrieve materials for Cinderella's dress.
51* BeautyEqualsGoodness:
52** Cinderella is prettier and much nicer than her cartoonish and mean stepsisters. In fact, look at the way the Grand Duke reacted to the stepsisters and Cinderella. With the stepsisters, he grimaced at the sight of them and was generally repulsed by their attitude, impatient to leave. When Cinderella asked to try on the shoe, his face lit up (as well as noticing her petite feet) and helped her down the stairs.
53* BewareTheNiceOnes: Cinderella treats Lucifer with disdain but protects him from Bruno, more so for her dog's sake so he won't get put on the street. She also tries to find good in Lucifer, as she does in her friends. In the climax, when Lucifer is holding Gus and the key to her room hostage while she's locked up, Cinderella realizes the mice and birds don't stand a chance against the cat. She shouts at them to get Bruno, who has been raring for this chance for years. Considering that Bruno scares Lucifer into falling out the tower window, Cinderella was not playing around.
54* BigBad: Lady Tremaine is the cause of all of the protagonist's woes and the one she must overcome to reach HappilyEverAfter.
55* BigDamnHeroes: Thanks to Cinderella, the birds and Bruno the Dog are ultimately what save the mice from Lucifer, when he comes close to sabotaging their attempt to free Cinderella. This is made even more triumphant by the fact that a first-time viewer might be wondering out loud during Jaq and Gus's long climb, just where the other animals are (especially the mice) and why they're not helping.
56* BigGood: The Fairy Godmother is a powerful and benevolent aid to our leading lady.
57* BigShutUp: Three in a row delivered by Lady Tremaine to Cinderella as she is ushering loads of demands to her in her bedroom after Anastasia got frightened by Gus.
58-->'''Cinderella:''' Oh please, you don't think that I would-\
59'''Lady Tremaine:''' Hold your tongue! ...Now, it seems we have time on our hands.\
60'''Cinderella:''' But I was only trying to-\
61'''Lady Tremaine:''' SILENCE! ...Time for vicious practical jokes. Perhaps we can put it to better use. Now let me see... There's the large carpet in the main hall; clean it! And the windows, upstairs and down; wash them! Oh yes, and the tapestries and the draperies.\
62'''Cinderella:''' But I just finished-\
63'''Lady Tremaine:''' ''DO THEM AGAIN!!''\
64''(Cinderella goes silent and [[DeathGlare glares at Lady Tremaine hatefully]].)''
65* BigWhat: Spoken by the King after the Grand Duke explains that the beautiful woman who captured the Prince's heart at the ball has gone:
66-->'''King:''' I hereby dub you, Sir... Hmm... Oh, by the way, what title would you like?\
67'''Duke:''' Sire, she got away.\
68'''King:''' "Sir Shegotaway"? A peculiar title, but if that's what you... [[DelayedReaction She]] ''[[BurningWithAnger what]]''?! Why, you... you traitor!
69* BiggerIsBetter: Everything in the King's palace is bigger than he is. His hallways are huge, his room is huge, his bed is huge, and his portraits are ''enormous''.
70* BitchInSheepsClothing: Lady Tremaine was like this when she married Cinderella's father; after her father died, the facade dropped and Tremaine started treating Cinderella poorly out of spite.
71* BlondeBrunetteRedhead: The three daughters, Cinderella being the blonde, Drizella the brunette, and Anastasia the redhead.
72* BraggingThemeTune: ''"Cinderella, you're as lovely as your name. Cinderella, you're a sunset in a frame..."'' It sounds pretty classy in comparison to most examples.
73* BreakoutCharacter: Jaq and Gus went on to star in many Disney comics after the movie had been released, with and without the rest of the cast. They were even brought into the ComicBook/DisneyDucksComicUniverse, and for decades they kept appearing in stories where they were house-mice on Grandma Duck's farm. Plus, Gus also appears in ''Series/OnceUponATime''.
74* BreakTheCutie: Cinderella tries to stay positive and graceful despite witnessing her father's death at a young age, having to work day and night for family that won't even give her a morning greeting, and seeing her desires crushed. Case in point: she merely wants to go to the ball for a night out, and her stepfamily racks up the abuse up to eleven with ExactWords and LoopholeAbuse to ensure that she won't go. It says a lot that what finally makes her cry is not being overworked so that she has no time to make a dress, but having a dress to wear to the ball... and getting it ripped to shreds while she's wearing it.
75* BrokenAesop: Downplayed. The film tries to emphasize the importance of having faith, but the fairy godmother appears to help Cinderella when she's at the edge of the DespairEventHorizon. It's worth noting, though, that shortly after manifesting herself, when Cinderella is at her lowest point, the fairy godmother points out the importance of having even the smallest speck of faith.
76-->'''Fairy Godmother:''' If you'd lost ''all'' your faith, I couldn't be here... and here I am!
77* ButtMonkey: The Grand Duke due to all the comic mishaps involving the slipper.
78* TheCaligula: The king is a violent maelstrom of emotion. It's a wonder he hasn't killed the Grand Duke by the time of the movie.
79* CatsAreMean: Lucifer, whose [[{{Satan}} name]] should speak for itself.
80* CatsHateWater: An ImpliedTrope. Lucifer is happy to hear Lady Tremaine listing off chores for Cinderella... until she finishes with, "see that Lucifer gets his bath."
81* CatStereotype: Lucifer is dark grey and grey with a black head and off-white muzzle, and fits both black and grey cat stereotypes by being evil, fat and lazy. Though he does get up when Cinderella orders him to, for breakfast; most cats are not ''that'' obedient.
82* ChaseScene: While Cinderella is escaping the ball on her carriage, the Grand Duke orders some evil-looking troops after the mysterious girl that caught the prince's eyes - and heart.
83* ChekhovsGag:
84** Cinderella's RunningGag of losing her shoes leads her to leaving one behind at the ball.
85** Lucifer trapping Gus under a tea cup nearly stops Cinderella from [[spoiler: being able to try on the slipper.]]
86* ChekhovsGun:
87** The Duke's monocle. It allows him to identify Cinderella when she comes down the stairs, since he uses the monocle to examine her feet.
88** [[spoiler:The second glass slipper left to Cinderella after the spell breaks comes in handy later on.]]
89* ChekhovsGunman: Bruno becomes important in the climax.
90* ChekhovsHobby: A variation: when one first sees Bruno, he is sleeping and dreaming of chasing Lucifer, which Cinderella warns him against, lest he lose his nice warm bed. Later, when Cinderella is locked in her chamber and the mice have the key to unlock it but are stopped by Lucifer, she calls on her bird friends to retrieve Bruno, who chases off Lucifer for real, thus allowing the mice to [[PetGetsTheKeys bring Cinderella the key]].
91* ChekhovsSkill: Cinderella having to walk up and down several flights of stairs a day, usually with breakfast items and laundry, allows her to outrun the Duke and the prince despite wearing a heavy ballgown and glass slippers that come off her feet.
92* ChildrenAsPawns: BigBad Lady Tremaine wants one of her daughters to marry the Prince so that she can gain more power and climb up the social ladder in one fell swoop. Downplayed, as both of them care more about getting her attention and mistreating their stepsister Cinderella.
93* ClarkKenting: Nothing hides Cinderella's identity when she's in the gown, but it's both justified and averted; Lady Tremaine and the sisters believe there is something familiar about her but can't get a close look. Lady Tremaine did leave her behind with a torn dress and she's wearing a whole new 'do and a gown fit for a princess - "A fairy helped her out" is not going to be her first conclusion.
94** The Duke realizes who Cinderella is when she comes down the stairs, since her face and gait are identical to the girl who ran away from him and the prince.
95* ColorCodedEyes: Lady Tremaine and Lucifer, the two main villains for Cinderella and the mice, both have very bright green eyes.
96* ColorCodedWizardry: While "wizardry" is a misnomer, the results of the Fairy Godmother's magic create a unique, yet homogeneous look for Cinderella: Bruno and Major's human forms wear blue and gray and have white hair; the mice turn into horses of a grayish colour, and Cinderella's dress and carriage are of a silver colour.
97* CrashingDreams: At one point, the King dreams about playing piggyback with his future grandchildren. It ends when the grandson hits him over the head with his scepter, which is actually the Grand Duke knocking on his bedroom door.
98* CutLexLuthorACheck: Subverted. Lady Tremaine doesn't see that presenting ''three'' girls eligible for marriage to the prince would be more sensible than merely presenting two, GoldDigger as she is, especially when as Cinderella and the Duke point out, ''all'' the eligible girls in the Kingdom were ordered to attend.[[note]]Then again, she knows Cindy is far more charming than Anastasia and Drizella and she doesn't want it publicly acknowledged that her own daughters weren't up to snuff[[/note]]
99** Playing the long game would have been a riskier bet for Lady Tremaine. Even if she thought ahead and recognised that the Prince would want to marry in about 10 years and that the three girls would be the right age, she would have known that no matter how charming her stepdaughter was, that wouldn't guarantee that she'd be able to marry the family into royalty. Whereas making her into the family slave provided free labour (along with being a convenient way to degrade her stepdaughter.) But that also made it likely that if Cindy did get to marry the prince, she'd tell Lady Tremaine and the stepsisters to eff off, leaving them with no royal perks AND no free labour. So she had a vested interest in keeping Cindy from getting near the Prince.
100* DanceOfRomance: With Cinderella and the Prince. This is where they fall in love.
101* DarkReprise: Subverted. After the dress-ripping scene, a more somber instrumental of "A Dream Is a Wish Your Heart Makes" starts playing, symbolizing the DespairEventHorizon staring Cinderella right in the face. However, it's during that instrumental that the Fairy Godmother starts to manifest herself before Cinderella's faith could be totally extinguished.
102* DeadpanSnarker:
103** The Grand Duke has a few witty words to say about "true love" and such.
104** Cinderella when she decides that the summons from the King is worth breaking the rules and interrupting the "music lesson". You could practically "see" the air quotes around that phrase.
105* DeathByAdaptation: Also doubles as AdaptationalHeroism to a degree. Cinderella's father was alive in the original tale and in most retellings, merely being too much of a HenpeckedHusband to object to the abuse his daughter received at the hands of his new wife.
106* DeathGlare:
107** Cinderella gives three of them to Lady Tremaine as she is being issued a series of chores after Gus frightened Anastasia.
108** Lady Tremaine has one when she realizes Cinderella was at the ball and got the prince. The glare even included shadows darkening over her face.
109* DescriptionCut: The Grand Duke's rather sarcastic narration of the King's hopes for the ball ("Suddenly he stops! He looks up! Alone, there she stands!") plays out with perfect sincerity as the Prince meets Cinderella.
110* DespairEventHorizon: Cinderella teeters on the edge when Lady Tremaine and her daughters destroy her dress and her hopes of attending the ball. Fortunately her Fairy Godmother arrives and makes everything right.
111* {{Determinator}}: Cinderella is always optimistic and remains positive despite her negative situation, and she never gives up on her dreams to one day have an ideal life and enjoy living. When her stepsisters ruin her dress, the Fairy Godmother explains that if she'd lost ''all'' her faith she couldn't be here to help her dreams come true.
112* DidntThinkThisThrough:
113** The mice swiping the stepsisters' discarded apparel for use on Cinderella's dress ended up backfiring bigtime when Lady Tremaine shows this to her furious daughters.
114** When Cinderella comes downstairs dressed up for the ball right in front of her stepmother and stepsisters. This results in a SurprisinglyRealisticOutcome when her jealous stepsisters tear her dress to shreds.
115** Lady Tremaine trips the footman, resulting in the glass slipper getting broken. Cinderella couldn't try it on and prove that she's the girl the Prince danced with. She did ''not'' expect her stepdaughter to have kept the second glass slipper.
116* DigitalDestruction: The 2005 DVD [[http://forum.blu-ray.com/showpost.php?p=6399775&postcount=1 restoration]] removed outlines, altered all of the colors and even backgrounds (in some cases out of carelessness, in others to match with the marketing), and erased a lot of the magic dust. Later releases still had this problem, until the 2023 Ultra HD Ultimate Collector's Edition (the first physical 4K release for any of Walt Disney's animated movies) finally fixed it.
117* TheDinnermobile: ''Cinderella'' has the Fairy Godmother turn a pumpkin into a horse-drawn coach... but despite the transformation, it still looks exactly like a ginormous blinged-out white pumpkin sitting on a chassis.
118* DisappearedDad: His death is part of the film's prologue.
119* DisneyVillainDeath: Lucifer falls from the tower at the end, although comic stories produced shortly after the film as well as the even later sequels show that he survived. Must have something to do with being a cat (be it landing on their feet, having nine lives, or their fatal velocity being higher than their [[{{Pun}} terminal velocity]]).
120* DisproportionateRetribution: The King threatens the Grand Duke with execution by decapitation should the prince fail to find the girl who ran out on him.
121* DoesThisRemindYouOfAnything: Cinderella's stepsisters viciously ripping apart the dress she's wearing (because they recognize the sash and beads incorporated into it as their own castoffs) can be interpreted as sexual assault.
122* DomesticAbuse: Lady Tremaine treats her stepdaughter as a slave and constantly belittles and mistreats her, a vice she encourages in her biological daughters. Moreso than [[WesternAnimation/TheHunchbackOfNotreDameDisney Frollo]], the Evil Stepmother is arguably Disney's most chillingly realistic villain, the one who lives behind closed doors and commits [[EvilIsPetty petty]] abuses against a hard-working and innocent victim on a daily basis.
123* DoomedNewClothes: The dress Cinderella had on, before her Fairy Godmother gave her a new one, gets torn apart by the stepsisters, as they used items belonging to them (that they seemed to not care about until that point).
124* DoubleTake:
125** Lucifer does one when trying to identify a teacup holding Gus, and realizing that he picked up the correct one a second too late.
126** The Duke does one when Cinderella waves "Goodbye!" to him and he waves back before realizing that she's leaving the prince without a bride, and the Duke to his doom.
127* DramaticDrop: Cinderella drops the breakfast tray when she hears from Lady Tremaine that the Prince was in love with the girl who lost her slipper.
128* DramaticShattering: Right before the servant can bring the glass slipper to Cinderella to try it on, Lady Tremaine attempts to prevent it from happening by tripping the servant and causing the slipper to dramatically smash on the floor. But just as the Grand Duke [[HeroicBSOD is starting to break down in despair over the broken slipper]], [[spoiler:Cinderella reveals that she saved the other slipper, [[DidntThinkThisThrough much to Lady Tremaine's horror]].]]
129* DreadfulMusician: When Lady Tremaine is practicing music with Drizella and Anastasia, Drizella is shown to be a rather unpleasant singer, but not for lack of trying--she's on key and everything--but her voice is just so nasally, that it makes an otherwise pleasant song rather grating sounding, especially compared to how Cinderella is shown singing it not a few moments later. Lucifer is so revolted at the singing, that he covers his head under a pillow and then leaves the room altogether.
130* EarnYourHappyEnding:
131** After spending life as a servant, with any chance at happiness squandered by her step-family, Cinderella finally escapes her abusive home, regains her social status as an upper-class lady, marries a man for his kindness, finds true happiness, and lives HappilyEverAfter. Her animal friends also come to live at the palace, mice and all.
132** For the Duke, being a BeleagueredAssistant to the King and his head at stake for finding the prince a wife, he [[ThrowTheDogABone finally gets a bone]] after finding the right girl, and being able to prove it [[spoiler:with the slipper she saved]].
133* EekAMouse: Unlike Cinderella, Anastasia and Drizella seem to really hate mice, and will scream in terror at the sight of one.
134* EverythingsBetterWithSparkles: The first Disney film to use this trope. The dress is made by magic sparkles, and the heart on the glass slippers glitters with sparkles.
135* EvilEyebrows: Lady Tremaine, especially when she has something up her sleeve.
136* EvilIsPetty: Lady Tremaine abuses Cinderella and uses her as a servant for no given reason, even though having three {{Gold Digger}}s would be more profitable than having two and Cinderella would also have an obligation to help her after marrying up. This is shown most prominently in the moments when Cinderella points out she has a right to go to the ball, and when Lady Tremaine realizes Cinderella was the girl the prince loved: instead of either outright telling her "yes" or "no", on the first occasion Tremaine creates a HopeSpot by invoking ExactWords to make Cinderella think she has a chance to go, while planning for the opposite. This leads to Cinderella going on her own later, in fact stealing the spotlight from Anastasia and Drizella by accident when they present themselves to the prince. As for the second scenario, Lady Tremaine has a girl that the prince wants to marry, who is related to her by marriage... and locks her up, despite having a potential golden ticket to the royal family, because she wants the prince to marry one of her girls. She also breaks the slipper in ''view'' of the Duke despite being caught violating a royal decree, and having lost at that point.
137** She had a very obvious reason for using Cinderella as a slave -- it provided free labour. This is why slavery has been so rampant throughout history and continues to be today. Lady Tremaine likely did want to degrade Cinderella due to her own vendetta, but her method also resulted in a cushy deal for her and her daughters for about 10 years. This also means that she had a logical reason for not wanting Cindy to have a chance with the Prince -- most people aren't going to want to share their shiny perks with people who have treated them like garbage for 10 years, so Lady Tremaine knew that if the Prince married Cindy, she and her daughters could kiss both their social climbing opportunity and their free labour goodbye.
138* EvilMatriarch: Lady Tremaine exploits her daughters as social ladders and her step-daughter as a servant.
139* ExactWords:
140** Pointed out by Cinderella, that she has the right to go to the ball since by the King's decree all "eligible girls" have to go. It becomes a MeaningfulEcho when the Duke says it to Tremaine after seeing Cinderella come down in a rush to try on the slipper and Tremaine dismisses Cinderella as an "imaginative child".
141** Lady Tremaine promises Cinderella that she can go to the ball if she finishes her work and can find something to wear. She and her daughters then arrange things so that Cinderella can't fulfill the conditions.
142** The Prince swears to marry the girl who can wear the glass slipper. The King decides to hold him to his word, not caring if the slipper winds up fitting a completely different girl, and issues a royal decree to that effect.
143* ExcessiveEvilEyeshadow: Lady Tremaine's heavy eye shadow helps bring out her bright green eyes.
144* ExtremelyShortTimespan: Excluding how Lady Tremaine came into Cinderella's life and Cinderella's wedding, the main story takes place in 24 hours.
145* FadeAroundTheEyes: Not exactly a fadeout, but when Lady Tremaine figures out that Cinderella was the mystery girl at the ball, there is a closeup of her face where the screen gets darker while her squinting eyes remain lit.
146* FailedASpotCheck: Cinderella doesn't realize Gus is hiding on one of the breakfast trays as she takes them upstairs to her stepfamily; by the time Anastasia freaks out at the sight of him, it's too late.
147* FairyGodmother: A SpiritAdvisor shaped like a grandmother appears to Cinderella in her hour of need.
148* FairytaleWeddingDress: Cindy wears one in the movie's conclusion for her own royal wedding.
149* FallingInLoveMontage: {{Invoked|Trope}} by the king, then {{Discussed|Trope}} while such a thing is demonstrated.
150* FantasyKeepsake: Cinderella's magically-generated finery goes back to its mundane equivalent after midnight -- except for the glass slippers. She is grateful to keep one as proof that she got to enjoy a magical evening at the palace; the audience, of course, knows what [[TheGirlWhoFitsThisSlipper the slipper will mean]] for her future.
151* FatAndSkinny: Two comical duos here.
152** Jaq and Gus.
153** The King and the Grand Duke.
154* FatBastard: Lucifer, the cat, has quite the well-fed belly and the mean attitude.
155* FauxAffablyEvil: Lady Tremaine, judging by the tone of her voice, acts cordially to Cinderella on the surface. Her words are abusive, however.
156* FlippingTheBird: After politely greeting girl after girl at the ball, the prince aims a yawn towards where his father sits when he isn't greeting anyone. It may not seem much to a modern viewer, but at the time presented in the film, it was like the prince gave his father the finger.
157* FollowYourHeart: "A Dream is a Wish Your Heart Makes".
158* ForciblyFormedPhysique: While Jaq and Gus are gathering materials in the stepsisters' bedroom, Lucifer chases them into a square hole in the wall moulding and gets his snout stuck in it. When he pulls himself out, his snout is briefly cube-shaped.
159* {{Foreshadowing}}:
160** Cinderella loses a shoe while doing her duties early in the film.
161** Cinderella calls the giant clock in town a "killjoy" when its bells disrupt her IWantSong. Later on, it stops Cinderella and the Prince [[AlmostKiss from kissing]] when it begins striking twelve, meaning the spell is about to break.
162* FourthDateMarriage: One date marriage. Though in the third movie, it's justified that holding a woman's hand tells the prince she's the one. He doesn't feel it when he was made to think he danced with Anastasia or when Anastasia magically looks like Cinderella. (And there's at least something of a TimeSkip implied between the ball and the wedding).
163* FriendToAllLivingThings: Cinderella is gentle with all the animals, and all but Lucifer love her back. She even tries to find some good in Lucifer, although she fails.
164[[/folder]]
165
166[[folder:G-L]]
167* GenreDeconstruction: The King wants his son to get married, despite the prince not being interested in any noblewomen or girls for that matter and wanting to stay single for a bit. He thinks that inviting a ball with all the eligible ladies in the kingdom will solve the problem, using his porcelain bookends to demonstrate. The Duke advises him to no avail that love doesn't work like it does in fairy tales, and the Prince will cotton on and refuse to play along. Sure enough, the Duke is initially proven right; while the Prince bows to all of the women at the ball, he's bored and rolling his eyes. In fact, he even shoots a DeathGlare at his father while yawning. It takes Cinderella, wandering in and getting lost, to catch the Prince's eye; chivalry takes over boredom and he goes to greet her. What's more, she didn't know he was the prince, mistaking him for one of the nobles, and he's astonished that she didn't realize who he was when she has to leave at midnight. The prince fell for Cinderella because she liked him for who he was, and that she had no ulterior GoldDigger motive.
168* TheGirlWhoFitsThisSlipper: The {{Trope Namer|s}}, although it's {{subverted|Trope}}. Not only do both the Grand Duke and the King acknowledge that the slipper could fit any number of girls, Cinderella doesn't even get to try it on; she proves her identity instead by producing its match, which is more conclusive. If some form of explanation is needed for why the slipper ''didn't'' fit any number of girls aside from Cinderella herself, the easiest one would be that it was created specifically for her, by magic, and might even become just a little too small (or large) for anyone else who tried to wear it.
169* GlassSlipper: Cinderella's glass slipper is the UrExample. The Duke gets hold of the slipper Cinderella loses on her way out and starts a journey to find its owner.
170* GoldDigger:
171** This is why Tremaine married Cinderella's father, since soon after his death, she and her daughters squandered the family fortune. She's encouraging her girls to marry royalty so as to keep up those spending habits.
172** The prince treats all of the girls at the ball like this, when they come to bow to him, knowing that his father wants him to marry and have grandkids and the girls would be marrying up in social status by settling down with him. In fact, the main reason he goes to Cinderella is that he sees her wandering around in the shadows, lost, and goes to help her. During the time they spent dancing, she didn't even know he was the prince, which contributed to why he fell "madly in love with her".
173* GorgeousGarmentGeneration: Creating the blue-silver ballgown for Cinderella is part of the fairy godmother's song.
174* GrandStaircaseEntrance: Twice: first when Cinderella meets the Prince at the ball (though this slightly differs from the traditional entrance by having her walk ''up'' the stairs rather than ''down'' the stairs), and, later, at the end when she comes down the stairs of her home to prove the slipper is hers.
175* {{Hammerspace}}: After the Fairy Godmother offers to help Cinderella get ready for the ball, she searches around for her magic wand, then remembers that she "put it away". She uses a special hand motion to summon the wand from thin air.
176* HandWave: Both the original movie and ''Cinderella III'' [[LampshadeHanging hang a lampshade]] on how it's ridiculous to expect just one girl to fit the slipper, but they both {{justif|iedTrope}}y it differently. In ''Cinderella'' it's implied the prince said he'd marry TheGirlWhoFitsThisSlipper as a shorthand for "that girl I fell in love with", but the king is so fed up with his son and lack of grandchildren that he makes it a literal royal order. In ''Cinderella III'', [[CanonDiscontinuity on the other hand]], it's the king himself who points out the absurdity of the quest, and indeed when the person who fits the slipper [[spoiler:turns out to be Anastasia]] the prince [[spoiler:apologizes and refuses to marry her. [[{{Brainwashed}} At first]].]]
177* HardTruthAesop:
178** Sometimes you need a dream in your life to cope with terrible things happening because dreams are the one thing that you can control. When Cinderella tries to simply attempt to have a night out and enjoy herself, her stepfamily sabotages every step out of spite and jealousy. It takes the help of the Fairy Godmother and her animal friends for her dream to come true.
179** As Cinderella tells Bruno, sometimes you have to get along with people (or cats) that you dislike for the sake of your safety and comfort. Lady Tremaine would kick out Bruno if she ever caught him chasing Lucifer, so Cinderella has to be the bad guy and send him outside to doze in the sun when the two are fighting, while apologizing to Bruno that it has to be this way.
180* HateSink: [[WickedStepmother Lady Tremaine]] is a despicable {{Abusive Parent|s}} and SocialClimber who is cruel and petty in ''every'' scene she's in. It says a lot that a lady with no magical powers, evil henchmen, servants, or ambitions beyond social-climbing manages to be one of the vilest characters in the entire Disney canon based on her personality alone.
181* HatsOffToTheDead: The mice draw straws (actually, their own tails) to see who has to distract Lucifer while the others get breakfast. Jaq gets picked, and the others take off their hats to show they think it's a guaranteed death sentence.
182* HaveAGayOldTime: Almost word-for-word: Right before Cinderella leaves for the ball, the Fairy Godmother tells her to "Have a good time! Dance! Be gay!"
183* HealTheCutie: One of the most iconic examples. After [[BreakTheCutie all Cinderella has to go through]], her Fairy Godmother finally gives her the chance to meet her Prince Charming and live HappilyEverAfter.
184* HellYesMoment: The Duke is ''about'' to leave the Tremaine household when a young lady appears at the top of the stairs, begging to try on the slipper. He takes a look and gives a giant grin, especially when confirming with his monocle that she is the same girl that danced with the prince. Her change of outfit and hairstyle did not fool the Duke at all, especially when examining her feet. He gets another one when Lady Tremaine smashes the slipper he has, and Cinderella reveals she has the other one--proving both that it fits her and that she was the girl that night.
185* HeirClubForMen: {{Averted|Trope}}. The king dreams about doing typical "grandfatherly" things with a grandson and a granddaughter instead of simply wanting heirs.
186* HeroicBSOD: Cinderella gets an ever-so-brief one when she learns the Prince is in love with the girl who lost her glass slipper at the ball causing her to drop a tray of food in mild shock.
187* HeroicCaninesVillainousFelines: Bruno the dog is loyal and on the side of good and Lucifer (the name should speak for itself) the cat is mean and on the side of evil, being Lady Tremaine's RightHandCat. This movie also features NiceMice, most notably Jaq and Gus, who help Cinderella out and whom the cat likes to chase.
188* HiddenDepths: Cinderella knows how to make over clothes, or at least keeps several books on the subject out of her relatives' reach. She also has enough material in her small living quarters to makeover a gown, as the mice learn when they finish it.
189* HighClassGlass: The Duke wears one and it makes him look quite sophisticated. It falls out when he loses his composure or is subjected to comedy.
190* HollywoodCostuming: [[EnforcedTrope A deliberate example.]] While other characters' style is fairly accurate for roughly the mid-19th Century, Cinderella's outfits reflect the changes that were occurring in fashion in the 1940s. Her initial look has her with a shorter dress and hair worn down but with some body, as was in style during World War II. When she puts on her mother's dress, it is pink and has a bow in front like designs of UsefulNotes/ElsaSchiaparelli, whose style gave way to the "New Look" of UsefulNotes/ChristianDior; the latter is reflected in the long, full, wasp-waisted gown that the Fairy Godmother gives Cinderella, the "Dior" look being completed by Cinderella having her hair up.
191* HollywoodToneDeaf: Drizella cannot hold a tune to save her life. Cinderella, on the other hand...
192* HonorBeforeReason: Even though the Duke did get a close look at the girl who danced with the prince, he follows the king's orders to try it on every woman who was at the ball. He's visibly relieved on seeing Cinderella and recognizing her.
193* HorribleJudgeOfCharacter: One must wonder what Cinderella's dad saw in Lady Tremaine.
194* HypocriticalHumor:
195** From Lady Tremaine, accompanying her daughters on piano.
196--->'''Lady Tremaine:''' Girls! Girls! Above all, self-control!\
197''(Cinderella knocks, interrupting the lesson)''\
198'''Lady Tremaine:''' ''(slams her hands on the piano)'' '''YES?!?!'''
199** The King who scoffs at the Duke's much more sensible ideas about letting the Prince fall in love:
200--->'''Grand Duke:''' Perhaps if we just let him alone-\
201'''The King:''' Let him alone?! With his silly romantic ideas?\
202'''Grand Duke:''' B-But, sire, in matters of love...\
203'''The King:''' Love. Bah! Just a boy meeting a girl under the right conditions. ''(pushes books off the table and puts together the male and female figurines)'' So, we're arranging the conditions.
204* IGaveMyWord: Her ''exact'' word. The word in this case is "if".
205* IJustWantToBeNormal: Why Cinderella wants to go to the ball; she spends all her time working and slaving, and wants one night out of fun, to be able to dress up and dance like a girl of her class ought to do. Meeting the prince was an added bonus, since she didn't even know she had danced with a prince.
206* IKissYourHand: The prince does this when he first meets Cinderella. Quite charming, isn't it?
207* IntentionalMessMaking: Cinderella is downstairs washing the floors while her step-sisters practice their singing, leading to the song "Sing Sweet Nightingale". Unfortunately, the song ends when she notices [[CatsAreMean Lucifer]] intentionally tracking more dirt around.
208* IResembleThatRemark: This exchange:
209-->'''The King:''' ''(after throwing his crown out of the window)'' My son has been avoiding his responsibilities long enough. It's high time he married and settled down.\
210'''Grand Duke:''' ''(as he rises out of the wreckage of furniture the King threw at him, including an axe wedged in the wall)'' Of course, your Majesty, but we must be patient...\
211'''The King:''' I AM PATIENT!!!! ''(throws an inkwell)''
212* IWantGrandkids: The king's whole motivation for throwing the ball is so he can find a suitable wife for the prince, which will hopefully lead to grandchildren. While having more heirs to the throne is obviously important, it seems like the king really just wants to be a grandfather, since he's later shown dreaming about playing horsey with a granddaughter and grandson.
213-->'''King:''' I can't understand it! There must be at least ''one'' who would make a suitable [[FreudianSlip mother]]!\
214'''Grand Duke:''' Shhhh! Sire...\
215'''King:''' Ahem... A suitable ''wife''!
216* IWantSong: "A Dream is a Wish Your Heart Makes" is Cinderella's, where she expresses a desire for her dreams to come true.
217* ImpactSilhouette: When the King throws his crown out the window, it leaves a shape of the crown in the glass.
218* ImpossiblyTackyClothes: Downplayed, but Cinderella admits that her mother's gown is a few years out of date. She wants to make it over for the ball based on a drawing in her sewing book.
219* InnocentBlueEyes: Cinderella's eyes represent her hopeful, optimistic nature and genuine kindness.
220* JawDrop: A humongous one done by Lady Tremaine when Cinderella reveals she has the other glass slipper.
221* {{Jerkass}}: Lady Tremaine and her two daughters are thoroughly unpleasant people, and the former is manipulative to boot.
222* JerkassHasAPoint: The stepsisters become enraged when they see Cinderella wearing Drizella's beads and Anastasia's sash. It doesn't excuse them from tearing the dress apart, but they did have a right to accuse Cinderella of stealing.
223* KarmaHoudini: Lady Tremaine doesn't get any onscreen comeuppance in this film, though she fairly obviously misses out on the rewards that could have been hers if she'd treated her stepdaughter kindly (''and'' she'll have to hire a new servant). The Duke certainly will remember her as someone who tried to violate a royal decree in his presence and broke the glass slipper that would identify the prince's mystery girl.
224* KickTheDog: Anastasia and Drizella destroying Cinderella's dress. That was just spiteful.
225* LampshadeHanging: The Duke points out how ridiculous it is to think that the glass slipper will ''only'' fit the girl who left it behind.
226-->'''Grand Duke:''' But Sire, this slipper may fit any number of girls!\
227'''King:''' [[HandWave That's his problem]]. He's given his word, we'll hold him to it.
228* LeaveTheTwoLovebirdsAlone: Lady Tremaine wants to get a closer look at Cinderella, who was dancing with the Prince, only for the Grand Duke to close the curtains on her by orders of the King to let no one disturb them.
229* LetsGetDangerous:
230** A tiny one for the Duke: when Cinderella manages to leave the ball at midnight, he mobilizes a batallion of riders to get after the coach to fetch her back. He only fails because the magic wears off, and Cinderella in her torn dress has the sense to get off the road and hide in the darkness.
231** When Bruno is first summoned to help Cinderella, he's very groggy and a bit dopey-looking. But after some avian assistance, he tears up those stairs with a vengeance and scares the living daylights out of Lucifer even ''before'' he growls at the cat.
232* LimitedWardrobe: You have to wonder where Anastasia and Drizella get all those differently colored clothes for Cinderella to wash considering all the clothes they are ever actually seen wearing are, respectively, hot pink and green. Even their nightgowns match the color scheme. The opening narration does refer to the family fortunes being "squandered" by them. It's not entirely unreasonable they insisted on buying them but never wore them or wore them very little.
233* LookingAMiffedAnimalInTheMouth: The mice have to gather corn quickly before Lucifer goes after them. But Gus gets too greedy and gathers more kernels than he can carry, which not only delays him, but attracts Lucifer's attention. By the time he has found a way to carry his haul safely, he walks right into Lucifer's face; the cat growls, his throat completely filling up the screen.
234* LoopholeAbuse: This gem when Lady Tremaine promises Cinderella permission to attend the ball ''if'' she finishes all the work (and ''if'' she can find something to wear).
235-->'''Drizella:''' Mother! Do you realize what you just said!?\
236'''Lady Tremaine:''' Of course. I said "''if''".
237* LostInImitation: Many a Cinderella shout-outs will feature the heroine donning a ballgown and hairstyle inspired by this version. And many of them will often involve a blue dress, which actually comes from the merchandise rather than the actual film. The dress is white in the film, but is usually colored blue in associated artwork.
238* LoveAtFirstSight: Mocked by the Grand Duke -- at the very point the Prince falls victim to it upon setting eyes upon Cinderella.
239* LovesMyAlterEgo: A variant; Lady Tremaine starts to say that the girl dancing with the prince is "very lovely..." up until she gets a glimpse and has a sneaking suspicion. Before she can verify it, though, the Duke closes the curtains on Cinderella and the prince so they can get some alone time.
240* LoveTheme: "So This is Love", heard during Cinderella and the Prince's [[DanceOfRomance dance together]].
241* LyricalDissonance: When Cinderella is sobbing in the garden that there's nothing to believe in anymore, a chorus sings a DarkReprise of her IWantSong, "A Dream Is a Wish Your Heart Makes", with the same upbeat lyrics. This leads up to the appearance of the Fairy Godmother.
242[[/folder]]
243
244[[folder:M-R]]
245* MagicWand: Fairy Godmother pulls it out of thin air and uses it to transmogrify things.
246* TheMakeover: A magically enabled one involving a gown, shoes, and hair styling.
247* MassOhCrap: Lady Tremaine and her daughters when Cinderella comes down the stairs right before the Duke leaves.
248* TheMatchmaker: The king plans to use the ball to "arrange the conditions" for his son to marry ''someone''. It doesn't matter who, just so long as he gets grandkids.
249* MementoMacGuffin: The remaining glass slipper, which Cinderella assumes will be nothing more than a keepsake from one magical evening.
250* MicroMonarchy: The narration refers to the setting as "a tiny kingdom, peaceful, prosperous, and rich in romance and tradition." This kingdom seems to have a French vibe, so it's probably a (presumably fictional) Francophone country. Also, the entire country seems to consist of the city where Cinderella lives. That's about all we can say for sure about the country where this takes place.
251* AMinorKidroduction: Cinderella, Anastasia, and Drizella are seen as children in the prologue. Bruno is also seen as a puppy.
252* MissingMom:
253** The Prince's mom is never mentioned. Some storybooks strangely enough mention her as if she is still alive, [[https://html2-f.scribdassets.com/1oz07zga0wabuge/images/16-4843c9bf5d.jpg and she makes one appearance in illustration.]]
254** Cinderella's mom gets a couple tiny nods; the prologue makes it clear that she died and that the main reason her dad married again was because [[RemarryingForYourKids he thought she needed a mother]]. The dress that Cinderella originally plans to modify to wear to the ball was, as she specifically states, her mother's.
255* MistakenForName: When the Grand Duke tries to break it to the King that Cinderella had fled the ball, the King assumes that she'd already proposed to the Prince and attempts to knight the Duke for his work.
256-->'''King:''' I hereby dub you Sir... Um, er, by the way, what title ''would'' you like?
257-->'''Duke:''' Sire... she got away!
258-->'''King:''' Sir Shegotaway? A peculiar title, but if that's what you... ''[[DelayedReaction She]] [[BigWhat WHAT?!]]''
259* MorphicResonance: Cinderella's ensemble for the ball still somewhat resemble the mice, horse, and dog they originally were. Even the carriage looks unmistakably like a pumpkin.
260* MouthFullOfSmokes: When the King is celebrating that the Prince has found a maiden he loves and smoking a cigar, he invites the Grand Duke to join in the celebration by stuffing a whole bunch of cigars in his mouth!
261* MundaneLuxury: For Cinderella, a few extra minutes in bed because it allows her to dream, and "they can't order me to stop dreaming".
262* TheMusical: Lots of songs here, but oddly enough, they're only sung by heroes. There's no VillainSong.
263* MusicalChores: "The Work Song" and "Sing Sweet Nightingale".
264* MusicalisInterruptus: Both renditions of "Sing Sweet Nightingale". Cinderella's is cut short when she notices Lucifer dirtying the floors she just washed. Drizella's ends when she accuses Anastasia of ruining the music lesson.
265* NaiveEverygirl: Cinderella. Despite her suffering at the hands of her stepmother and stepsisters, she keeps up a positive attitude, daydreams often, and longs for a happier, more romantic life.
266* NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast: Let's just say "Lucifer" was an appropriate name for [[CatsAreMean the cat]].
267* NiceMice: Jaq and Gus. The former leads the "The Work Song" and Gus is happy to help any way he can.
268* NiceToTheWaiter: Inverted; "servant" Cinderella waves goodbye to the "noble" Duke before leaving the ball at midnight. He returns the favor by allowing her to try on the slipper in the climax.
269* OhCrap:
270** Jaq gets this when he inadvertently picks himself to distract Lucifer so that the mice can get breakfast.
271** Gus has this reaction when Lucifer catches him in the open; Jaq has it at the same time.
272** Gus has this reaction when he sees how tall the stairs to Cinderella's room are, just after he and Jaq finished moving the key up a previous flight of stairs.
273** Cinderella when she sees Lady Tremaine in the mirror locking her door from the inside.
274** The Duke when Lady Tremaine trips his servant, which leads to the slipper shattering.
275** Lady Tremaine when Cinderella reveals the other glass slipper to the Duke.
276* OnlyKnownByTheirNickname: Upon finding a new mouse in the trap and giving him clothes, Cinderella decides to name him "Octavius", but for short, everyone calls him "Gus".
277* OnlySaneMan:
278** In the Tremaine household, Cinderella is most definitely the only person who can see the absurdity in being ordered around day and night.
279** With the royalty, the Duke tries his best to be reasonable, but he has to cater to the king's whims.
280* OnlySixFaces: All the "eligible girls" at the ball (besides Cinderella, Drizella and Anastasia) look exactly the same minus the dress.
281* OpeningChorus: The movie starts with a chorus of people singing a song.
282* OOCIsSeriousBusiness:
283** Anastasia and Drizella are ''shocked'' when their mother gives permission for Cinderella to attend the ball, "if" she finishes her chores and has a dress to wear. They go to her, asking if she's all right and knows what she said. Lady Tremaine chuckles and said she also said "if", telling them in no uncertain terms that she has plans to not honor the agreement.
284** Cinderella is normally attentive to her chores and does them diligently. Lady Tremaine is shocked when Cinderella drops a breakfast tray. It was because Cinderella realized she had danced with the prince the night before.
285* OurFairiesAreDifferent: The fairy godmother looks completely human but appears out of magic dust.
286* ParentalFavoritism: Lady Tremaine favours her own daughters over Cinderella any day.
287* PetGetsTheKeys: When Lady Tremaine locks Cinderella in her room during the Duke's visit, Gus and Jaq steal the key from Tremaine's pocket and bring it to Cinderella to get her out.
288* PimpedOutDress: Layered skirts, sparkles and complete with [[HighClassGloves opera-length gloves]] and glass slippers. The silhouette itself would make Christian Dior proud.
289* ThePollyanna: Cinderella's attitude is to remain positive in spite of the hardship she suffers. It's shown that she's still bothered by how her stepfamily treat her, but she does her best to remain cheerful.
290* PrinceCharming: It's implied that the prince has a rebellious streak, but with Cinderella, he is nothing if not charming. For bonus points, supplementary material reveals his given name is ''actually'' [[MeaningfulName 'Charming']].
291* PrincessClassic: One of Disney's oldest examples: kind, forgiving, idealistic, the princess deal, etc.
292* ProudPapaPassesOutTheCigars: When the Grand Duke tries to inform the King that Cinderella ran away from the ball, the King believes that his son has made the decision to wed her already and, [[IWantGrandkids unable to wait for his grandchildren to come]], stuffs the Duke's face with cigars ("Got to practice passing these out"!).
293* RaceAgainstTheClock: After her dreamy dance with the prince, the metallic chime of the clock snaps her back to reality, and Cinderella flees the palace before the twelfth stroke unmakes the Fairy Godmother's magic.
294* RagsToRiches: Cinderella works like a slave or indentured servant, thus no spending money. Then she marries the prince.
295* RebelPrince: If the King's word is to be trusted, Prince Charming is a bit like this. This is best seen at the beginning of the ball, where after bowing to greet a guest, the Prince looks up to his father in the balcony and yawns; that might not seem like much today, but at the time depicted in the film, it was like giving his old man the finger.
296* RhymesOnADime: The FairyGodmother has many effortless rhymes in her song.
297* RightHandCat: Lucifer to Lady Tremaine, the first time we see them together.
298* RippingOffTheStringOfPearls: The sequence where the ugly stepsisters ruin Cinderella's first gown is kicked off when Drizella wrenches a string of blue beads off Cinderella's neck. Not quite ''pearls'', but the overall effect is similar -- Anastasia and Drizella proceed to rip the terrified Cinderella's dress to shreds just as their coach is arriving. They exit, and a wide shot shows Cinderella in aftermath of their attack: clutching the remains of her ragged dress, staring in disbelief at the scraps of torn fabric and loose beads at her feet.
299* RoyalDecree: The Duke gives one of these to start the search for Cinderella using the glass slipper. This means that the Prince will have to marry ''someone'' soon.
300* RunningGag:
301** Cinderella losing her shoe is turned into one. In addition to the famous one, she loses one of her shoes while delivering breakfast to her stepfamily and again [[spoiler:at her wedding]].
302** Also, every time the stepsisters do some kind of harm to Cinderella, Gus Gus attempts to give them a piece of his mind, but Jaq holds him back each time.
303[[/folder]]
304
305[[folder:S-Y]]
306* ScareEmStraight: When Gus first sees Lucifer, he's in a scrapping mood. Jaq ''immediately'' tells him that this is not a joke. Lucifer is mean and nasty and will ''hurt'' you, and you must ''not'' confront him. Gus finds this out the hard way when Lucifer catches him out in the open without breaking a sweat. Ultimately, the animals have to collectively get past this to free Cinderella.
307* SealedWithAKiss: Final scene--a kiss in a carriage after a wedding.
308* ServileSnarker: The Grand Duke. The king does not appreciate his humor.
309* SheCleansUpNicely: Cinderella gets two moments like this. The first is a disapproving one from her stepfamily when she shows up with the modified pink dress. The second time is of course when the Prince sees her in the ballgown Fairy Godmother gives her.
310* SidekickSong: "The Work Song", the song the mice sing as they design Cinderella's new dress. Although, the sheet music indicates it was initially written for Cinderella to sing:
311-->''"Cinderella, Cinderella"\
312All I hear is "Cinderella"\
313From the moment that I get up\
314Till shades of night are calling\
315There isn't any letup\
316They're always calling, calling\
317"Go up into the attic\
318Then go down into the cellar\
319You can do them both together, Cinderella!"''
320* SilentSnarker:
321** Lucifer makes a few priceless expressions when Cinderella admits she can't think of anything good about him, and when the stepsisters get Cinderella in trouble after Drizella finds Gus in her teapot.
322** The Prince also does the same when bowing to all the girls who attend the ball, at one point shooting a YouHaveGotToBeKiddingMe expression at his father while yawning. He rolls his eyes when Anastasia and Drizella present themselves.
323* SilkHidingSteel: Cinderella was born of the upper class, and she loses none of her noble grace and maturity when facing the movie's events. She reminds Anastasia and Drizella that she has the right to go to the ball because the King decreed that "all eligible girls" must attend, despite having a mountain of chores and no gown to wear.
324* SimpletonVoice: Gus. You can tell Jaq is the brains of the duo simply by his voice, long before he shows his lack of stealth.
325* SimpleYetOpulent: Cinderella's magic-made dress is quite impressive, but not that lavish. It's a similar case with her wedding dress.
326* SlasherSmile: Downplayed, but Lady Tremaine has a smirk when she locks Cinderella in her room.
327* SmugSnake: Lady Tremaine's patronizing arrogance makes her that much more hateable.
328* SoMuchForStealth: This trope is the bane of Jaq's existence every time he goes anywhere with Gus. Gus is constitutionally ''incapable'' of keeping quiet. Which makes their [[PetGetsTheKeys stealing the key to free Cinderella]] all the more awesome, since Tremaine didn't notice two mice pickpocketing her or hiding in the tea set.
329* StayInTheKitchen: Inverted. Jaq and Gus are enthusiastic about helping make Cinderella's dress, but get told to leave the stitching to the girl mice and instead go off and fetch some accessories.
330* StockSoundEffects: The King and Duke falling off the chandelier uses Goofy's "Ya-hoo-hoo-hooey!" scream.
331* StorybookOpening: It sets the mood for the fairy tale to come.
332* SubvertedRhymeEveryOccasion: This occurs twice with the Fairy Godmother; most of her rhymes are genuine, but...
333** After making the coach:
334--->'''Fairy Godmother:''' Now, with an elegant coach like that, of course, we'll simply have to have...\
335''(Major, Cinderella's horse standing nearby, clears his throat)''\
336'''Fairy Godmother:''' Mice!\
337''(Major does a DoubleTake)''
338** After making the horses:
339--->'''Fairy Godmother:''' Now, um, where were we? Oh, goodness, yes. You can't go to the ball without, um...\
340''(Cinderella looks hopeful about her dress, for the third time)''\
341'''Fairy Godmother:''' A horse!\
342'''Cinderella:''' A-a-another one?
343* SuddenlyShouting: During the bedroom scene, Lady Tremaine goes from quietly listing off household items to loudly snapping orders to clean and wash them. It's the variation between her cold tone and shouts of anger that elevate the scene to horrifying.
344* SuddenSoundtrackStop: Except for a few stings for punctuation, most Lady Tremaine's introduction (where she gives Cinderella a list of chores for the day) is almost completely silent, emphasizing that [[KnightOfCerebus she's not a villain to be taken lightly]].
345* ThisIsReality:
346-->'''Grand Duke:''' ''(playing with his monocle like a yo-yo)'' He looks up, and lo! There she stands -- the girl of his dreams. Who she is or whence she came, he knows not, nor does he care, for his heart tells him that ''here'' is the maiden predestined to be his bride... Oh, a pretty plot for fairy tales, sire, but in real life, it was foredoomed to failure!
347* ThoseTwoGuys:
348** Jaq and Gus, the most prominent of the mice characters. Once Cinderella rescues Gus, they're always seen together and do everything together.
349** Also, the King and the Grand Duke. Both decide the prince's future together.
350* ThroatSlittingGesture: When the King gives the Grand Duke the task of making sure Cinderella doesn't leave the ball before the Prince has proposed to her, he uses this gesture to indicate the price of failure.
351* ToplessnessFromTheBack: Cinderella's bare back is briefly seen while she's bathing in the morning. Nothing else is visible, but she's quite clearly naked.
352* TragicKeepsake: Downplayed, but the pink dress that Cinderella wanted to make over belonged to her mother, and she spins around with it after taking it out of a chest. It's a few years out of fashion, but she merely wants to touch it up with some sewing ideas.
353* TranquilFury:
354** One of Cinderella's virtues. After Drizella accuses her of putting a mouse in the breakfast teacup, Cinderella doesn't care that Tremaine will burden her with punishment work; she merely forces Lucifer to free Gus, whom he's trapping, and lectures him. When the sisters mock her for wanting to go to the ball, she points out that she has the right to go, and in fact the king has ordered it.
355** The Duke on seeing that Lady Tremaine hid a girl from him in the house, whose manner, [[ClarkKenting face]] and [[FootFocus feet]] match the description of the girl he saw dancing with the prince, [[KirkSummation only has to say one sentence]] in response to her trying to dismiss Cinderella: "[[WithAllDueRespect Madame]], [[MeaningfulEcho my orders were]] ''[[ExactWords every]]'' [[MeaningfulEcho maiden]]".
356* TreatedWorseThanThePet: One of the many symbols of how badly the titular protagonist has it is that her slave duties include feeding and cleaning up after the spoiled, pampered and otherwise sadistic pet cat Lucifer. She, on the other hand, has to spend what little downtime she can get in a dingy room in a distant tower with only the resident talking NiceMice for company.
357* TrickDialogue: The Grand Duke seems to tell the king that the girl who the prince danced with has disappeared, then he is revealed to be practicing before a mirror.
358* TrueBlueFemininity: Cinderella is introduced wearing a blue nightgown, and is portrayed as having a blue dress in the merchandise (even though it was silver in this film). She is a kind and graceful lady. Her similarly heroic FairyGodmother wears a blue dress too.
359* UptownGirl: Cinderella the servant girl and the Prince, though in all fairness Cinderella comes from an upper-class family. Thank goodness the King wants grandchildren!
360* VicariousGoldDigger: After the king announces the prince is to marry the one girl that fits the glass slipper, news reaches the Tremaine household. Lady Tremaine abruptly enters her daughters' rooms and jostles them awake, telling that one of the two (Anastasia or Drizella) can be the prince's wife if they try out the slipper. When Lady Tremaine discovers Cinderella was at the ball the previous night, she locks her stepdaughter in her room and forces Drizella and Anastasia to try to fit the (dainty) slipper on their (large) feet.
361* ViewersAreGeniuses: ''"I'll name you Octavius, but for short we'll call you Gus."'' Octavius was the nephew of Julius Caesar and his heir by adoption. Upon becoming emperor he was renamed Augustus Caesar. "Gus" is shorter form of Augustus/Augustine.
362* VileVillainLaughableLackey: Lady Tremaine is never PlayedForLaughs, unlike her awkward daughters and slapstick-prone cat.
363* WeNeedADistraction: When Lucifer is blocking the door, Jaq comes up with the idea to have one of the mice get his attention while the others get breakfast. Unfortunately, when [[DrawingStraws using their tails to choose who would do it]], Jaq ends up picking ''his own tail''. [[ComicallyMissingThePoint While Gus shakes his hand in congratulations]], they other mice feel for Jaq.
364* WhenTheClockStrikesTwelve: "The spell will be broken." All of Cinderella's princess attire disappears.
365* WickedStepmother: Lady Tremaine is the archetypal cinematic example of a woman who abuses her step-children and favors her blood children.
366* WordSaladLyrics: "Bibbidi-Bobbidi-Boo" is 25% intelligible, and the rest of its lyrics are nonsensical gibberish. Justified, since most of it consists of magic words.
367-->Salagadoola mechicka boola\
368Bibbidi-bobbidi-boo\
369Put them together and what have you got\
370Bibbidi-bobbidi-boo\
371Salagadoola mechicka boola\
372Bibbidi-bobbidi-boo\
373It'll do magic, believe it or not\
374Bibbidi-bobbidi-boo\
375Yes, salagadoola means\
376Mechicka booleroo\
377But the thing mabob that does the job\
378Is bibbidi-bobbidi-boo\
379Salagadoola menchicka boola\
380Bibbidi-bobbidi-boo\
381Put them together and what have you got?\
382Bibbidi-bobbidi-boo!
383* YouHaveGotToBeKiddingMe: The Prince while bowing to the various girls at the ball makes SilentSnarker expressions that reflect this sentiment, including one directed to his father. The Prince knew very well what his father wanted him to do.
384* YoungestChildWins: Averted. It's stated that Anastasia and Drizella are "just Cinderella's age".
385[[/folder]]

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