you can watch it at you tube or at movie6.net i think
online.. :)
Cinderella (1997) with Brandy and Whitney Houston
You have to be 17 or older to buy a tickets for a rated R movie.
There is no movie in existence that is rated A. There is only G, PG, PG-13, and R. You can watch PG-13 movies as long as you are 12 yrs. old, or older. G and PG movies can be seen by anyone, no matter how old you are. For example, Bambi, The Lion King, and Cinderella are all G movies. Kung Fu Panda is rated PG, along with the new movie, Rango. R movies are for people 18 or older. The movies may contain inapropriate violence, or others of that sort.
Online, Ebay. Or you could try the local coin shop, dealers often buy coins.
The luggage was made - believe or not - by Roxy (Quicksilver). Unfortunately, it was already a season old when they filmed the movie in 2008-ish so it may be difficult to find a firsthand set now.
Jstin bieber was 16 when he preformd the movie cindrella movie
Cinderella (1997) with Brandy and Whitney Houston
I totally remember that!! But unfortunately, i cant remember the name! I wish i could!!! I loved that movie! :) That movie would be Aschenputtel, a 1966 ( I think) German filmed dubbed into English.
18
who was the magic fairy in the old story of cinderella
Brandy Norwood was 18 when Cinderella was released in 1997.
19 years old
No. The story is an old, old folktale found in many variations in many cultures. There was no real Cinderella.
Well, she is 16 in the first one and 17 in the second one. They made her so young because of the fact that the movie was made in the 50s and the movie taking place in a much more distant era where 16 was considered the right age to marry-lucky her!
He is her dog, an old bloodhound.
In real life,Selena Gomez (Mary) was 15 during filming , and Drew Seeley (Joey) was 26. But in the movie, they were both in high school.
No. Walt Disney's animated film, "Cinderella", is based on an age-old fairy tale that dates all the way back to 9th-century China! Walt based his movie on a specific version of the tale, composed by Frenchman Charles Perrault in the late 1600s.