Silly Cinderella Growing Up

Eliezer 2021-12-31 08:01:35

A little girl, a silly little girl, a silly little girl who is about to marry, what she wants in her heart is not the beautiful life of the past few months, or the tenderness and consideration of a handsome husband. . . . Just go to Paris once.

As the fiance of a weather forecaster (the weather forecast is always fickle and inaccurate, does the director mean it specifically...) said, we have a better place to go, because there I can be a newscaster! No Paris, no romance, but the little girl still gave a hug and said "amazing"! Because she feels stupidly that her husband is more important than herself.

At the moment when "i do" was about to be said, a miracle happened (or disaster?). The little girl suddenly grew up, her stretched thighs swept across the chair, her enlarged eyes scanned in horror, and her huge body directly collapsed the church. It was such a huge change and such a panic, but at the last moment, she still rescued the weather forecaster with her own hands.

But this was only physical. When she saw Dr. Cockroach for the first time in the monster prison, she would scream loudly in fright, and would flee like a dinosaur when she touched her body, even if she was already a giant.

She banged hard on the steel wall, and could even endure the high-voltage electric shock of Dr. Cockroach, with only one purpose: to return to normal, so that she could go out and reunite with the weather forecaster.

The opportunity came, the alien octopus sent an advance robot to the earth in order to regain a certain energy element absorbed by the little girl. The lovely President of the United States did not win a handshake with a piece of dance music, and the well-equipped army also dropped his helmet and armor in front of the old-fashioned protective shield. At the meeting of the presidents to study how to surrender, the appearance of the monster colonel and his pull wind won the monsters a fair performance opportunity.

Facing the clumsy steel one-eyed monster, the little girl finally learned how to use her giant body in practice and used the Golden Gate Bridge to behead the robot. They succeeded, they were free, and they chose to go home with the little girl because only she had family.

The three little monsters really frightened the little girl’s family, and the little girl herself, leaving her family behind, ran to the TV station and caught the weather forecaster who was still narcissistic with her assistant, because he was supporting her to defeat Robots, the greatest power to gain freedom.

The result is of course tragic. How can a prosperous and suave announcer (although still a weather forecaster) be with a "monster"?

The little girl was sad, but she also grew up, both physically and mentally.

When thinking about what to do with the same sad partners, the alien octopus came to the earth in person and successfully sucked the little girl into the spaceship. The little girl now doesn't want to catch it, hitting open N doors continuously, and when she was about to catch the monster octopus, she was caught by the absorber, and the energy was sucked away, and she regained her original body.

In order to rescue the little girl, the three monster brothers led an airborne operation under the leadership of the colonel. (The line before the departure is a copy of the classic...) They inexplicably destroyed the power compartment of the spacecraft by mistake, and Dr. Cockroach's gorgeous dance action made the spacecraft enter the self-destruction program.

But only the little girl ran out of the spaceship that was about to destroy herself. In order to save her partner, she actually chose to eat energy again and regain the body of a giant. In the end, the colonel lived up to his promise and flew to rescue them by riding the worm and dinosaur that had turned into a butterfly.

They became heroes, the insects and dinosaurs broke their cocoons into butterflies, the lizard heads were toppled directly by the little girl, the snot monster found the jelly, and the little girl, really grew up, and would never return to the past. Of course, to be naughty at the end is to give the weather forecaster a finger! Finally flew to her dream place: Paris!


If you are a little girl, you must watch this film!
If you are accompanied by a little girl, be sure to watch this film!
If you have a little girl, you must watch this movie!
If you are alone like me, please choose carefully to watch, because your surroundings will be filled with the warmth of family laughter. . .

View more about Monsters vs. Aliens reviews

Extended Reading

Monsters vs. Aliens quotes

  • Derek Dietl: Wow, you really are big.

    Susan Murphy: Yeah, but I'm still me. I'm still the same girl you fell in love with.

    Derek Dietl: Except you did just destroy the Golden Gate Bridge.

    Susan Murphy: Well, but that was the only way I was gonna stop that giant robot. Did you ever think I could do something like that?

    Derek Dietl: No, I didn't. I can honestly say that it never, ever, ever, ever, ever, ever, ever, ever, ever, ever, ever occurred to me.

  • Susan Murphy: Look, I-I know this is a little weird. Okay - it's a lot weird. But we'll figure it out. I know that together, we can find a way to get me back to normal.

    Derek Dietl: Susan, try and look at this from my perspective. I have an audience that depends on me for news, weather, sports and heart-warming fluff pieces. So you expect me to put all that on hold while you try to undo this thing that happened to you, that I had absolutely nothing to do with?

    Susan Murphy: Yes. That's exactly what I expect. What-what about the life that we always talked about? Don't you still want that?

    Derek Dietl: Of course. I just... don't see how I can have that with you.

    Susan Murphy: [on the verge of tears] Derek, please. Don't do this.

    Derek Dietl: Oh, y-you have to faced facts, Susan. And don't crush me for saying this, but I'm not looking to get married and spend the rest of my life in someone else's shadow. And you're casting a pretty big shadow. I'm sorry. It's over. Good luck, Susan.