Lily James, Cate Blanchett star in 'Cinderella' – check out the first trailer

Lily James and Helena Bonham-Carter star in the upcoming 2015 live-action adaptation of 'Cinderella.' Lily James is best known for starring on the TV series 'Downton Abbey.'

Lily James stars in 'Cinderella.'

John Phillips/Invision/AP

May 16, 2014

"Cinderella" will be the 2015 installment in Walt Disney Pictures’ contemporary series of live-action features that re-imagine iconic fairy tales. The trend began with Tim Burton’s Alice in Wonderland, followed by Sam Raimi’s Oz the Great and Powerful, and continues this month with Maleficent, directed by Robert Stromberg (two time Oscar-winning producer designer on Alice and Oz). In keeping with that practice, Cinderella also features an accomplished filmmaker at the helm, in the shape of five-time Oscar-nominated actor/director, Kenneth Branagh.

Branagh’s Cinderella features a cast of accomplished screen veterans and young stars on the rise alike, similar to the aforementioned Disney films. We have Downton Abbey‘s Lily James as “Ella”, Richard Madden (Game of Thrones) as Prince “Charming” Kit, Oscar-winner Cate Blanchett (The Hobbit trilogy) as Ella’s cruel stepmother, and Helena Bonham Carter (a costar in both Disney’s Alice in Wonderlandand The Lone Ranger) as Ella’s fairy godmother in disguise as a“kindly beggar woman.”

However, if you’re hoping to get your first look at these cast members in Branagh’s latest fantasy world, you’re out of luck. Seeing how the film has a March 2015 release date, the reason we’re getting a teaser this early is because Disney – almost certainly – intends to start building awareness by attaching the clip to this month’s theatrical releases: underdog sports drama Million Dollar Arm (opening tomorrow) and Maleficent in a couple weeks. Still, you can enjoy the teasiest-of-teaser trailers.

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These live-action Disney fairy tale movies have strived to modernize their respective source material – by adding shades of complexities to the original stories’ widely-known characters and “updating” their themes. The results up to this point – Alice‘s coming of age/empowerment message, Oz‘s examination of power vs. the illusion of power – have yet to feel truly ground-breaking, and that probably won’t change with Maleficent‘s Wicked-style deconstruction of the eponymous villain.

Still, these films all have decent entertainment value; given the talent involved on Cinderella – which includes screenwriter Chris Weitz (About a BoyThe Golden Compass) – we expect this new Disney live-action fairy tale vision to offer as much, if not more. The recognizability factor alone should ensure that Branagh’s third recent dip in the pool of studio-backed genre fare (following Thor andJack Ryan: Shadow Recruit) ought to find an audience willing to give it the time of day.

Sandy Schaefer blogs at Screen Rant.