The upcoming series, co-produced by Miramax and Paramount, will shift away from the 2004 movie’s whimsical tone toward a coming-of-age fantasy drama.
DUBAI — Disney+ is revisiting one of its most beloved early-2000s fantasy properties, and it is bringing back the original star who helped define it. Academy Award-winning actress Anne Hathaway is officially attached as an executive producer for a new Ella Enchanted television series currently in early development. The project marks a full-circle return for Hathaway, whose lead role in the 2004 cult-fantasy film launched her into international stardom.
The announcement has sharply divided the global audience, illuminating a growing debate among fans regarding Hollywood’s current creative direction. While some viewers view the project as an ideal candidate for a modern reimagining—expressing excitement at introducing a nostalgic favorite to a new generation—others have voiced strong reboot fatigue. Critics argue that the entertainment industry’s ongoing wave of remakes has gone too far, urging major studios to invest in original stories rather than continuously recycling established intellectual properties.
A Fresh Creative Shift Rooted in Literature
Unlike the 2004 Miramax film, which leaned heavily into whimsical musical comedy, royal romance, and fairy-tale satire, this new Disney+ adaptation is being structured as a grounded, coming-of-age fantasy drama. According to industry reports from Deadline, the series will pivot toward a more detailed exploration of the protagonist’s formative years.
The narrative will lean significantly into a boarding school environment, focusing on Ella of Frell as she navigates complex friendships, personal identity, and the severe emotional boundaries imposed by her curse. This setting and tone draw more directly from Gail Carson Levine’s original 1997 award-winning novel, capturing the book’s darker undertones of isolation, systemic bullying, and internal resilience.
Behind the Scenes and Industry Trends
The creative team driving the adaptation includes screenwriter Ilana Wolpert, known for her recent work on the box-office hit Anyone But You. The series is being developed as a high-profile co-production between Miramax Television and Paramount Television Studios. Hathaway will executive produce the venture alongside her production partners, including her husband, Adam Shulman.
This project aligns with a broader, systemic trend across major streaming platforms—particularly Disney+—of adapting legacy film titles into long-form streaming narratives. By transitioning from a two-hour theatrical format to an episodic television series, the showrunners aim to substitute condensed cinematic storytelling with expanded world-building and complex, character-driven story arcs.
The project remains in the early stages of script development, and Disney+ has not yet finalized a production timeline or an official release date.












































