It’s hard to believe there was a time when you had to leave the house, buy a ticket, and sit with strangers to watch something naughty. Long before OnlyFans, streaming tabs, and the infinite scroll of regret, erotic films were a legit theatrical business. 1977’s Cinderella is a leftover artifact from that era, when soft-core smut – or even hard-core porn- tried very hard to be a movie and sometimes accidentally succeeded.
We are quickly introduced to the lovely Cinderella (Cheryl Smith), who lives a life of nonstop humiliation at the hands of her two deeply unpleasant stepsisters, Drucella (Yana Nirvana) and Marbella (Marilyn Corwin), and her aggressively lusty stepmother (Jennifer Stace), a household where cruelty is a hobby and personal boundaries are treated as optional suggestions. She scrubs, sighs, and sings her way through misery, dreaming of escape and clinging to optimism like it’s a flotation device in a sewer. This is less “once upon a time” and more “once upon a prolonged bad decision.”
Wardrobe malfunction?
Elsewhere in the kingdom, there is the Prince (Brett Smiley), who is rich, bored, and emotionally dead inside, having discovered that excess has dulled all sensation. His parents, the perpetually sniping King (Buckley Norris) and Queen (Pamela Stonebrook), decide the solution to this is obvious: throw a giant ball and hope novelty fixes everything. The Royal Chamberlain (Kirk Scott), is tasked with inviting women to this event, but spends most of his time prioritizing personal gratification over basic job competence, turning a simple errand into a series of delays and detours. The Queen also orders the King to explain the birds and the bees to their son.
“He is twenty-one, after all.”
News of the ball sends Cinderella’s stepsisters into competitive overdrive, convinced they’ll be the ones to conquer the Prince’s famously unmoved heart and treat the event less like a royal gathering and more like an athletic competition. They mark the occasion by tormenting Cinderella one last time, dumping filth on her and reminding her exactly where she ranks in the household hierarchy before strutting off in triumph. Left alone, filthy, and emotionally wrecked, Cinderella collapses into sleep, and the film promptly rewards her with a nightmare that trades metaphor for blunt force.
Is this symbolism or just plain weird?
Salvation arrives in the form of a wanted cat burglar and self-proclaimed transvestite “fairy godmother” (Sy Richardson), who discovers Cinderella’s plight while fleeing the law. What starts as opportunistic theft becomes genuine assistance once Cinderella is cleaned up and revealed to be, shockingly, gorgeous. Armed with a mysteriously functional magic wand and a midnight deadline, the Fairy Godmother sends Cinderella to the ball with an enchanted pussy to make her unforgettable. At the ball, the Prince finally feels something; chaos ensues, midnight strikes, and what follows is an endurance test masquerading as romance, culminating in recognition, pardons, and a surprisingly communal idea of a happy ending.
And they lived hornily ever after.
Stray Observations:
• The film treats musical numbers like commercial jingles for bad ideas, and they work far more often than they should.
•
The movie was only rated “R” in North America, thus we were allowed to
see full frontal nudity of women but not men, because the penis is evil.
• Drucella and Marbella get pleasured by pedal-powered vibrators made from corn cobs, and all I can say is “That’s one way to pop your corn.”
•
The Royal Chamberlain stumbles across two maidens having a lesbian
tryst, because it’s not a proper sex film without some girl-on-girl
action.
• While this film has more than its requisite lesbian
moments, most of it is of an incestuous nature, which adds to the kink
factor…I guess?
• The “recognition test” plot device is equal parts hilarious and horrifying, the longer you think about it.
• The Fairy Godmother is somehow the most ethical character in the movie, which says more than intended.
This film also has the weirdest magic wand.
Michael Pataki’s direction walks a careful line between parody and participation, and that balance ends up being the film’s greatest strength. He understands the premise is ridiculous and leans into it without turning the whole thing into a sneer, staging scenes with cheerful efficiency and playing the comedy straight even when the situations are anything but. That approach is supported by Joseph Mangine’s cinematography, which does far more work than strictly necessary, with warm lighting, clean compositions, and a genuine effort to make the film visually pleasant rather than merely functional. This isn’t shot like something meant to be hidden under a mattress; there’s colour, movement, and the occasional flourish that suggests someone behind the camera actually cared how this particular strain of nonsense looked. I’d also be remiss if I didn’t point out Christine Boyar’s wonderfully period costumes, which blend whimsy and eroticism perfectly.
17th-century France never looked lovelier.
Cheryl Smith is the real secret weapon, grounding the film with an open-faced sincerity that gives the chaos something human to cling to. She plays Cinderella without irony or apology, committing fully to charm and vulnerability, and without that conviction, the movie would disintegrate into a pile of half-related gags. Her performance is sharpened by the stepsisters, played wonderfully by Yana Nirvana and Marilyn Corwin, who gleefully lean into cruelty and stupidity with zero interest in nuance. Nirvana is venomous and calculating, Corwin smug and dim, and neither softens the edge to chase sympathy. Together, the three create a clean, effective dynamic: one genuinely decent soul trapped between two unapologetic monsters, giving the film a surprisingly sturdy emotional spine under all the musical smut and fairy-tale filth.
These two aren’t your typical “ugly” stepsisters.
As an erotic film of its era, Cinderella sits comfortably alongside oddities like Alice in Wonderland: An X-Rated Musical Fantasy and Flesh Gordon, films less concerned with shocking audiences than with amusing, titillating, and mildly embarrassing them for buying a ticket. The comedy is uneven but mostly effective, and the songs are catchier than they have any right to be, the kind that linger long after the film has ended, whether you invited them to or not. The sex itself occupies an awkward middle ground: explicit enough to repeatedly stall the momentum as characters pause to perform or spectate, but too restrained to feel fully committed. A harder lean into an R-rating might have allowed the musical comedy to flow, while a full plunge into triple-X territory could have justified the interruptions. Instead, the film keeps tripping over its own intentions, never quite deciding whether it wants to be playful smut or smut that occasionally remembers it’s supposed to be funny.
Keep your Eyes Wide Shut.
In conclusion, Cinderella is a bizarre, catchy, frequently funny relic from a time when erotic cinema still pretended to care about plot, music, and character. It’s silly, oddly sweet, and far more memorable than it has any right to be, even when it sabotages itself with pacing issues and indulgence. This is absolutely not the version parents should accidentally grab off the shelf, expecting talking mice and a glass slipper.



















































