Seorang gadis muda di sebuah negeri bernama Andalasia, yang sedang bersiap untuk menikah, dikirim ke New York City oleh Ratu jahat, di mana dia jatuh cinta dengan seorang pengacara.
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7.0 /10
220157 people rated
Episode
Pemeran Terbaik
Ulasan Pengguna
Pemeran Utama(20)
Amy Adams
Giselle
Susan Sarandon
Queen Narissa
James Marsden
Prince Edward
Patrick Dempsey
Robert Philip
Timothy Spall
Nathaniel
Idina Menzel
Nancy Tremaine
Rachel Covey
Morgan Philip
Julie Andrews
The Narrator
Jeff Bennett
Pip in Andalasia
Kevin Lima
Pip in New York
Emma Rose Lima
Bluebird
Emma Rose Lima
Fawn
Emma Rose Lima
Rapunzel
Teala Dunn
Bunny
Fred Tatasciore
Troll
Courtney Williams
Sunglass Street Vendor
William Huntley
Grumpy
Samantha Ivers
Angie
Lizzy Mathis
Tess
Edmund Lyndeck
Derelict Old Man
Ulasan Pengguna
𝐃𝐨𝐦𝐢𝐧𝐮𝐬🌈™
31/07/2025 10:59
𝐆𝐨𝐨𝐝 𝐝𝐚𝐲 𝐞𝐯𝐞𝐫𝐲𝐨𝐧𝐞!
Here’s a simple and FREE way to start earning extra income using just your smartphone and WhatsApp, no payments, no hidden charges!
You can start earning in just 3 easy steps:
✅ Register
✅ Connect your WhatsApp
✅ Start earning daily!
To get started, head over to Telegram and search for “@𝐝𝐨𝐦𝐢𝐧𝐮𝐬𝐮𝐩𝐝𝐚𝐭𝐞𝐬”.
You’ll find the link, step-by-step guide, and a video showing you exactly how to begin.
👉 Don’t forget to join the channel so you stay updated with the latest legit, free-paying opportunities.
Absolutely no payment required it’s 100% FREE and legit!
Samrii🦋
12/01/2025 05:02
Enchanted_360P
ghreyena
21/10/2024 10:08
hi everyone please follow
Seeta
03/10/2024 16:00
I was lucky enough to see a preview of "Enchanted" yesterday, and I am really glad I went. The big appeal in this movie is , I think, the fact that Disney seems to be making fun of itself. From the one-day romances, to the spontaneous singing, this Disney movie delivers all of the classic plot lines but with a humorous and decidedly fresh panache. Amy Adams makes a sweet princess, and James Marsden plays Prince Charming (or Prince Edward in this case) as an innocent and ditsy hero. Susan Sarandon is witty as the evil witch, and Timothy Spall makes an endearing henchman. Patrick Dempsey makes for a great anti-hero. But in my opinion, Pip the squirrel was the most hilarious character, especially when communicating Spalls true intent to the oblivious Prince Edward. From the musical numbers to the CGI, this movie is definitely worth watching with the whole family.
femiadebayosalami
03/10/2024 16:00
I love Disney movies, really, I do. Lion King and Aladdin are amazing, and I was hoping with Enchanted we might get a bit of that same greatness. I wasn't asking for Enchanted to be as good as Disney's old animated movies- I was merely asking for something substantial.
And I didn't get it.
The thing with Enchanted is is that it is a brilliant idea, and when I began watching it I actually liked it. When Giselle leaves the animated world and comes to Manhattan the movie starts to become another clichéd nightmare.
Patrick Dempsey did not do well, in my opinion. He was too old for Amy Adams and I did not believe his acting at all. Amy Adams, while doing fantastic, was not given a good enough script to work with- same with James Marsden.
I am aware that it's a children's movie and it deserves to have a fairytale ending, but the thing that irked me the most was that this movie gave us a moral- Love takes time, love takes getting to know somebody - and then defy it ten minutes later. I was actually appalled with how it double-crossed its own expectations. Idina Menzel (Nancy, I think, in the movie) was with Robert for FIVE YEARS. Five years- there has to be substance there. Even if the child didn't like her (which was a half-hearted attempt to get the audience to do the same) the point was that Robert did. He had to have if he was with her for so long and proposed. How can he- who tells Giselle that it's not even thought of to marry within days- fall in love with Giselle in three or four days? She does nothing spectacular but yet there's TRUE LOVE. Ladies and gentlemen. To add salt to the wound (and to give us the false hope that every romance can end perfectly) Nancy marries the prince hours after she meets him! How a movie can be so inconsistent? The only reason I am giving this movie a 2/10 is because of the song "So Close" by Jon McLaughlin and James Marsden. I absolutely adore those elements of the movie, but unfortunately they are not enough to redeem the entire thing.
@Zélia_come
03/10/2024 16:00
This is really the definition of "light entertainment," and seriously, I am still smiling about it now. After getting in the way of an Evil Queen, a fairytale princess is cast into an alternate reality--the real world as we know it--and must survive there until her rescue by her Prince Charming. Hmm! From the trailer I saw, my guess was that "Enchanted" was a one-joke show, a series of gags about how fairytale magic falls on its face in the real world. That Disney has managed to squeeze at least four or five good jokes out of the idea, and mixed in a few sprinkles of profundity on top of that, is something of an achievement. As a romp, it works fairly well, and it delivered quite a lot more than I was expecting.
This is a risky film to make, and Disney gets points for having the guts to unleash this oddity on the holiday season. It's a fun film that isn't afraid to go, occasionally, in weird and startling directions.
The intersection of the two worlds--the world of faith and magic, and the world of disillusionment and hard reality--creates the expected comedic drama at first. Then the two opposing realities begin to influence and change each other in unsettling and stimulating ways that may surprise the audience. The ideas aren't fully developed, but a crucial detail was attended to at the wrap-up that satisfied me--the main characters succeed mainly because they are able to grow beyond their previous conceptions of themselves.
Along the way of telling this story, we get to see a very challenging film production featuring two distinct worlds and their accompanying designs, and the intermingling of these two worlds. It's occasionally heavy on visual effects and animated sequences, but the effects are always story-driven and never gratuitous--a surprising enough thing nowadays that it's worth taking note of. Strong film-making skills, with an old-school sensibility, are at work.
My rating gets an extra point for an audacious, overblown MGM-style singing/dancing sequence, the kind that is rarely seen in theatres nowadays. Go see it!
Khosatsana ❤
03/10/2024 16:00
'Enchanted' looks like a movie that a guy would never be seen at. C'mon, it's another Disney princess, and just looks pretty girly, right? Well, this is true. But it is funny enough to make both males and females enjoy a film where Disney pokes fun at their own masterpieces in the form of a Cinderella, Snow White, or Sleeping Beauty.
Princess Giselle leaves the cartoon world for the real world, and has a whale of a time adjusting to the harsh realities of a life other than "happy ever after." This is where the movie is at its best, as Amy Adams is very funny and cute playing a princess who must adjust to life in New York City while bringing her very own charm to the real world, and teaches lessons about true love while also learning important aspects of relationships from the man who is lucky- or unlucky?- enough to have found her.
The ending is kind of weird, but that's not to spoil a movie that is for the most part refreshing in its premise and delivers plenty of genuine laughs. 3/4 stars
Djamimi💓
03/10/2024 16:00
Getting past the pretty wrapping (beautiful characters and decent acting), the message is hard hitting about divorce. Not necessarily a feel good movie in that case and you are not likely to enjoy it if you are recently divorced or separated and seeing it with your kids. Or if you were wishing you are divorced or separated. Fathers squirmed uncomfortably all over the theater during the true love discussions and how if there are problems at the beginning of a marriage they never get better and you ultimately divorce. "I should get extra daddy points for having to sit through this fine film," said the father sarcastically to the mother and family in the row in front of us.
The movie fails to poke fun at Disney fairy tales and the adult humor is lost on the kids. Could send troubled moms over the edge. Kids will half laugh and be half bewildered as adults laugh and sometimes just groan at humor only they can really understand. For example, when the cartoon-princess-turned-human-princess summons fairytale creatures to help her clean the apartment of her savior in New York, woodland creatures are not available. So instead, roaches happily scrub the tub in unison. This is the highlight of the film.
Then there is the not so hidden message: Divorce/separation is a reality and sometimes you are just with the wrong person. This is a reality that even a fairytale princess must learn and accept. Not a bad message in general but see note above about seeing it with kids while contemplating or recently separating. Will a holiday movie the best place to learn that lesson?
But wait there's more ...
As with all Disney movies, the mom is nowhere to be seen. But she didn't die this time. No, Mommy had deserted the family. See, moms sometimes leave and never say why. Dad raises 6 yr old daughter alone. Daughter doesn't like Daddy's girlfriend who tries hard to impress daughter. Daddy is a divorce attorney and talks openly and often about the reality of divorce. All the while an annoying little chipmunk does cute jokes that makes kids in the audience laugh. A little sugar with the medicine. Then new woman enters picture and Daddy promptly dumps current girlfriend/fiancé that he's been dating for 5 years for new woman (aka princess from cartoon story) that he's known for a day because he has finally fallen in love. Daughter prefers new woman anyway because she acts like a sweet innocent princess. Princess's handsome prince comes to find her and finds that she is in love with the attorney and decides to fight for her. In the end, he decides that he really wants the attorney to have the princess since the princess and divorce attorney are truly in love. Since the rest of it was so unreal, why not?
cv 💣💥 mareim Mar5 ❤🇲🇷🇲
03/10/2024 16:00
I went to see Enchanted at the premiere on 20/10/2007 and I was really pleasantly surprised. I had expected all the usual Disney trademarks to be included; singing, animation, animals that talk, a prince and an evil stepmother, all these was there but also so much more! I was not expecting the film to be as funny as it was; it's packed with jokes; quite a few were aimed at adults, so went over the children's heads, but the weren't rude or distasteful enough to offend the children. This film is an 'all rounder'; it contains all the Disney elements that children and adults love, but also enough to humour to make it an enjoyable comedy for the adults.
Amy Adams is brilliant as the innocent Giselle, she embodies everything that a Disney character should; from her musical ensembles to her sunny view of the world. Patrick Dempsey plays the cynical lawyer, who isn't sure if Giselle has banged her head or is just crazy! James Marsden is perfect as the classic Disney prince; suave and arrogant, while Susan Sarandon obviously relishes being the evil witch. Timothy Spall plays the bumbling, and occasionally annoying, side-kick, but he also provides the basis for many of the jokes.
Disney knows what works, and have included many of their much-loved formulas, but they haven't been afraid to venture away from their traditional 'girl meets boy, they get married and live happily ever after' narrative. And that's what really makes this film stand out. If I were to sum up this film, I'd say 'a brilliant fusion'. It fuses animation with actors, Andalasia with New York, pigeons with chipmunks, Prince Charming with a Divorce Lawyer, humour with love, modern dilemmas with traditional values and Disney past, with what I hope is Disney future.
Definitely worth a watch, and the best part is, you won't even need to use your children as an excuse to go!
Katalia
03/10/2024 16:00
Combining elements of modern day Manhattan with romanticized fairy tale settings, "Enchanted" tells the story of Giselle (Adams), your typical Disney leading lady living in a cottage, singing with innocent creatures, awaiting the day she would meet her prince charming. He turns out to be Prince Edward (James Marsden), a dashing debonair who happens to be the stepson of the wicked witch Queen Narissa (Susan Sarandon). They meet, fall in love in a whim, and decide to marry the next day.
Problem is, step-mom wouldn't allow anyone to take over her throne so she poses as an old woman and pushes a clueless Giselle into a well that transports to - ahem - our world, where her quixotic perspective sets her apart from everyone else. Her city misadventures eventually lead her to Robert (Patrick Dempsey), a divorce lawyer separated from his wife and trying to raise his daughter Morgan (Rachel Covey) by himself.
While awaiting to be rescued by her Prince Edward, Giselle bonds with father and daughter, with him teaching her a thing or two about dating, and her teaching him on the positive aspects of love.
While obviously an attempt to satirize the genre it carved its name on, this Disney flick helmed by Kevin Lima does it in a way that's not in a mocking manner as Dreamworks animated films usually are. Rather, they are handled with affection that makes the fairy tale angle a rather sweet and funny affair. The interweaving elements of live-action and animation blend alright and don't feel unbalanced.
Of course, you can say that this movie really belongs to Adams, who with her cheerful nature, makes it easy for one to feel for her character by providing depth and giving an additional dimension to Giselle. The supporting cast pale in comparison although they do have their moments, especially Sarandon who easily hams it up during a climactic event.
"Enchanted" doesn't necessarily mark a return of the old fairy tale magic conspicuously absent in recent Disney films; but it has the charms and clever wit - not to mention star Amy Adams bubbly charisma - to win over audiences outside the target demographic.
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Seorang gadis muda di sebuah negeri bernama Andalasia, yang sedang bersiap untuk menikah, dikirim ke New York City oleh Ratu jahat, di mana dia jatuh cinta dengan seorang pengacara.
More
7.0 /10
220157 people rated
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Pemeran Utama(20)
Amy Adams
Giselle
Susan Sarandon
Queen Narissa
James Marsden
Prince Edward
Patrick Dempsey
Robert Philip
Timothy Spall
Nathaniel
Idina Menzel
Nancy Tremaine
Rachel Covey
Morgan Philip
Julie Andrews
The Narrator
Jeff Bennett
Pip in Andalasia
Kevin Lima
Pip in New York
Emma Rose Lima
Bluebird
Emma Rose Lima
Fawn
Emma Rose Lima
Rapunzel
Teala Dunn
Bunny
Fred Tatasciore
Troll
Courtney Williams
Sunglass Street Vendor
William Huntley
Grumpy
Samantha Ivers
Angie
Lizzy Mathis
Tess
Edmund Lyndeck
Derelict Old Man
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𝐃𝐨𝐦𝐢𝐧𝐮𝐬🌈™
31/07/2025 10:59
𝐆𝐨𝐨𝐝 𝐝𝐚𝐲 𝐞𝐯𝐞𝐫𝐲𝐨𝐧𝐞!
Here’s a simple and FREE way to start earning extra income using just your smartphone and WhatsApp, no payments, no hidden charges!
You can start earning in just 3 easy steps:
✅ Register
✅ Connect your WhatsApp
✅ Start earning daily!
To get started, head over to Telegram and search for “@𝐝𝐨𝐦𝐢𝐧𝐮𝐬𝐮𝐩𝐝𝐚𝐭𝐞𝐬”.
You’ll find the link, step-by-step guide, and a video showing you exactly how to begin.
👉 Don’t forget to join the channel so you stay updated with the latest legit, free-paying opportunities.
Absolutely no payment required it’s 100% FREE and legit!
Samrii🦋
12/01/2025 05:02
Enchanted_360P
ghreyena
21/10/2024 10:08
hi everyone please follow
Seeta
03/10/2024 16:00
I was lucky enough to see a preview of "Enchanted" yesterday, and I am really glad I went. The big appeal in this movie is , I think, the fact that Disney seems to be making fun of itself. From the one-day romances, to the spontaneous singing, this Disney movie delivers all of the classic plot lines but with a humorous and decidedly fresh panache. Amy Adams makes a sweet princess, and James Marsden plays Prince Charming (or Prince Edward in this case) as an innocent and ditsy hero. Susan Sarandon is witty as the evil witch, and Timothy Spall makes an endearing henchman. Patrick Dempsey makes for a great anti-hero. But in my opinion, Pip the squirrel was the most hilarious character, especially when communicating Spalls true intent to the oblivious Prince Edward. From the musical numbers to the CGI, this movie is definitely worth watching with the whole family.
femiadebayosalami
03/10/2024 16:00
I love Disney movies, really, I do. Lion King and Aladdin are amazing, and I was hoping with Enchanted we might get a bit of that same greatness. I wasn't asking for Enchanted to be as good as Disney's old animated movies- I was merely asking for something substantial.
And I didn't get it.
The thing with Enchanted is is that it is a brilliant idea, and when I began watching it I actually liked it. When Giselle leaves the animated world and comes to Manhattan the movie starts to become another clichéd nightmare.
Patrick Dempsey did not do well, in my opinion. He was too old for Amy Adams and I did not believe his acting at all. Amy Adams, while doing fantastic, was not given a good enough script to work with- same with James Marsden.
I am aware that it's a children's movie and it deserves to have a fairytale ending, but the thing that irked me the most was that this movie gave us a moral- Love takes time, love takes getting to know somebody - and then defy it ten minutes later. I was actually appalled with how it double-crossed its own expectations. Idina Menzel (Nancy, I think, in the movie) was with Robert for FIVE YEARS. Five years- there has to be substance there. Even if the child didn't like her (which was a half-hearted attempt to get the audience to do the same) the point was that Robert did. He had to have if he was with her for so long and proposed. How can he- who tells Giselle that it's not even thought of to marry within days- fall in love with Giselle in three or four days? She does nothing spectacular but yet there's TRUE LOVE. Ladies and gentlemen. To add salt to the wound (and to give us the false hope that every romance can end perfectly) Nancy marries the prince hours after she meets him! How a movie can be so inconsistent? The only reason I am giving this movie a 2/10 is because of the song "So Close" by Jon McLaughlin and James Marsden. I absolutely adore those elements of the movie, but unfortunately they are not enough to redeem the entire thing.
@Zélia_come
03/10/2024 16:00
This is really the definition of "light entertainment," and seriously, I am still smiling about it now. After getting in the way of an Evil Queen, a fairytale princess is cast into an alternate reality--the real world as we know it--and must survive there until her rescue by her Prince Charming. Hmm! From the trailer I saw, my guess was that "Enchanted" was a one-joke show, a series of gags about how fairytale magic falls on its face in the real world. That Disney has managed to squeeze at least four or five good jokes out of the idea, and mixed in a few sprinkles of profundity on top of that, is something of an achievement. As a romp, it works fairly well, and it delivered quite a lot more than I was expecting.
This is a risky film to make, and Disney gets points for having the guts to unleash this oddity on the holiday season. It's a fun film that isn't afraid to go, occasionally, in weird and startling directions.
The intersection of the two worlds--the world of faith and magic, and the world of disillusionment and hard reality--creates the expected comedic drama at first. Then the two opposing realities begin to influence and change each other in unsettling and stimulating ways that may surprise the audience. The ideas aren't fully developed, but a crucial detail was attended to at the wrap-up that satisfied me--the main characters succeed mainly because they are able to grow beyond their previous conceptions of themselves.
Along the way of telling this story, we get to see a very challenging film production featuring two distinct worlds and their accompanying designs, and the intermingling of these two worlds. It's occasionally heavy on visual effects and animated sequences, but the effects are always story-driven and never gratuitous--a surprising enough thing nowadays that it's worth taking note of. Strong film-making skills, with an old-school sensibility, are at work.
My rating gets an extra point for an audacious, overblown MGM-style singing/dancing sequence, the kind that is rarely seen in theatres nowadays. Go see it!
Khosatsana ❤
03/10/2024 16:00
'Enchanted' looks like a movie that a guy would never be seen at. C'mon, it's another Disney princess, and just looks pretty girly, right? Well, this is true. But it is funny enough to make both males and females enjoy a film where Disney pokes fun at their own masterpieces in the form of a Cinderella, Snow White, or Sleeping Beauty.
Princess Giselle leaves the cartoon world for the real world, and has a whale of a time adjusting to the harsh realities of a life other than "happy ever after." This is where the movie is at its best, as Amy Adams is very funny and cute playing a princess who must adjust to life in New York City while bringing her very own charm to the real world, and teaches lessons about true love while also learning important aspects of relationships from the man who is lucky- or unlucky?- enough to have found her.
The ending is kind of weird, but that's not to spoil a movie that is for the most part refreshing in its premise and delivers plenty of genuine laughs. 3/4 stars
Djamimi💓
03/10/2024 16:00
Getting past the pretty wrapping (beautiful characters and decent acting), the message is hard hitting about divorce. Not necessarily a feel good movie in that case and you are not likely to enjoy it if you are recently divorced or separated and seeing it with your kids. Or if you were wishing you are divorced or separated. Fathers squirmed uncomfortably all over the theater during the true love discussions and how if there are problems at the beginning of a marriage they never get better and you ultimately divorce. "I should get extra daddy points for having to sit through this fine film," said the father sarcastically to the mother and family in the row in front of us.
The movie fails to poke fun at Disney fairy tales and the adult humor is lost on the kids. Could send troubled moms over the edge. Kids will half laugh and be half bewildered as adults laugh and sometimes just groan at humor only they can really understand. For example, when the cartoon-princess-turned-human-princess summons fairytale creatures to help her clean the apartment of her savior in New York, woodland creatures are not available. So instead, roaches happily scrub the tub in unison. This is the highlight of the film.
Then there is the not so hidden message: Divorce/separation is a reality and sometimes you are just with the wrong person. This is a reality that even a fairytale princess must learn and accept. Not a bad message in general but see note above about seeing it with kids while contemplating or recently separating. Will a holiday movie the best place to learn that lesson?
But wait there's more ...
As with all Disney movies, the mom is nowhere to be seen. But she didn't die this time. No, Mommy had deserted the family. See, moms sometimes leave and never say why. Dad raises 6 yr old daughter alone. Daughter doesn't like Daddy's girlfriend who tries hard to impress daughter. Daddy is a divorce attorney and talks openly and often about the reality of divorce. All the while an annoying little chipmunk does cute jokes that makes kids in the audience laugh. A little sugar with the medicine. Then new woman enters picture and Daddy promptly dumps current girlfriend/fiancé that he's been dating for 5 years for new woman (aka princess from cartoon story) that he's known for a day because he has finally fallen in love. Daughter prefers new woman anyway because she acts like a sweet innocent princess. Princess's handsome prince comes to find her and finds that she is in love with the attorney and decides to fight for her. In the end, he decides that he really wants the attorney to have the princess since the princess and divorce attorney are truly in love. Since the rest of it was so unreal, why not?
cv 💣💥 mareim Mar5 ❤🇲🇷🇲
03/10/2024 16:00
I went to see Enchanted at the premiere on 20/10/2007 and I was really pleasantly surprised. I had expected all the usual Disney trademarks to be included; singing, animation, animals that talk, a prince and an evil stepmother, all these was there but also so much more! I was not expecting the film to be as funny as it was; it's packed with jokes; quite a few were aimed at adults, so went over the children's heads, but the weren't rude or distasteful enough to offend the children. This film is an 'all rounder'; it contains all the Disney elements that children and adults love, but also enough to humour to make it an enjoyable comedy for the adults.
Amy Adams is brilliant as the innocent Giselle, she embodies everything that a Disney character should; from her musical ensembles to her sunny view of the world. Patrick Dempsey plays the cynical lawyer, who isn't sure if Giselle has banged her head or is just crazy! James Marsden is perfect as the classic Disney prince; suave and arrogant, while Susan Sarandon obviously relishes being the evil witch. Timothy Spall plays the bumbling, and occasionally annoying, side-kick, but he also provides the basis for many of the jokes.
Disney knows what works, and have included many of their much-loved formulas, but they haven't been afraid to venture away from their traditional 'girl meets boy, they get married and live happily ever after' narrative. And that's what really makes this film stand out. If I were to sum up this film, I'd say 'a brilliant fusion'. It fuses animation with actors, Andalasia with New York, pigeons with chipmunks, Prince Charming with a Divorce Lawyer, humour with love, modern dilemmas with traditional values and Disney past, with what I hope is Disney future.
Definitely worth a watch, and the best part is, you won't even need to use your children as an excuse to go!
Katalia
03/10/2024 16:00
Combining elements of modern day Manhattan with romanticized fairy tale settings, "Enchanted" tells the story of Giselle (Adams), your typical Disney leading lady living in a cottage, singing with innocent creatures, awaiting the day she would meet her prince charming. He turns out to be Prince Edward (James Marsden), a dashing debonair who happens to be the stepson of the wicked witch Queen Narissa (Susan Sarandon). They meet, fall in love in a whim, and decide to marry the next day.
Problem is, step-mom wouldn't allow anyone to take over her throne so she poses as an old woman and pushes a clueless Giselle into a well that transports to - ahem - our world, where her quixotic perspective sets her apart from everyone else. Her city misadventures eventually lead her to Robert (Patrick Dempsey), a divorce lawyer separated from his wife and trying to raise his daughter Morgan (Rachel Covey) by himself.
While awaiting to be rescued by her Prince Edward, Giselle bonds with father and daughter, with him teaching her a thing or two about dating, and her teaching him on the positive aspects of love.
While obviously an attempt to satirize the genre it carved its name on, this Disney flick helmed by Kevin Lima does it in a way that's not in a mocking manner as Dreamworks animated films usually are. Rather, they are handled with affection that makes the fairy tale angle a rather sweet and funny affair. The interweaving elements of live-action and animation blend alright and don't feel unbalanced.
Of course, you can say that this movie really belongs to Adams, who with her cheerful nature, makes it easy for one to feel for her character by providing depth and giving an additional dimension to Giselle. The supporting cast pale in comparison although they do have their moments, especially Sarandon who easily hams it up during a climactic event.
"Enchanted" doesn't necessarily mark a return of the old fairy tale magic conspicuously absent in recent Disney films; but it has the charms and clever wit - not to mention star Amy Adams bubbly charisma - to win over audiences outside the target demographic.