Once Upon a Time, in a Land of Botched Plastic Surgery
Some horror movies are scary. Some are funny. And some, like Cinderella (2006), are horrifying only because you realize you spent nearly two hours watching a plot about haunted plastic surgery masks and family trauma that even the Brothers Grimm would’ve tossed in the trash. Loosely based on the Cinderella fairy tale, this South Korean supernatural horror flick tries to splice together folklore, body horror, and psychological melodrama, and ends up looking like it had its face stitched together in the dark with dental floss.
Instead of “Bibbidi-Bobbidi-Boo,” what we get is “Snippity-Sloppity-Ew.”
The Plot: Mother Knows Best, and By “Best” I Mean Cutting Faces Off Children
The movie follows Hyeon-su, your typical high school girl, except for the part where her mom is a famous plastic surgeon with enough skeletons in her basement to qualify as a Halloween attraction. Hyeon-su’s friends all line up to get their eyelids tucked, their noses sharpened, and their bodies snipped into cookie-cutter dolls. You’d think they were prepping for K-pop auditions, but no—it’s just this town’s casual after-school activity.
The problem begins when a vengeful ghost girl in a blue dress starts showing up like a fashion-challenged Ring cosplayer, whispering, “I want my face back.” And that’s basically the entire premise: ghost girl wants her face. Honestly, at this point, I wanted mine back too, because I’d been rubbing my forehead in disbelief for so long I was worried it was leaving permanent lines.
Ghost Girl: A Spirit With One Trick
Now, horror villains are supposed to be memorable. Freddy Krueger had claws. Jason had a machete. Ghostface had, well, a ghost face. Ghost Girl in Cinderella? She’s got… neediness. That’s it. Her whole deal is wandering around repeating her same catchphrase, “I want my face back,” like a supernatural parrot with unresolved self-esteem issues.
By the halfway point, she stopped being scary and started sounding like a bitter aunt at Christmas: “I want my face back.” Yes, Susan, we all want our youth back, but some of us just buy better moisturizer and move on.
Plastic Surgery PSA: Sponsored by Nightmare Fuel
The film tries to double as a critique of South Korea’s obsession with cosmetic surgery, but it’s about as subtle as a chainsaw facelift. Every other scene is either a girl going under the knife, or a ghost punishing them for daring to want double eyelids. Somewhere in there is a message about vanity, but it gets drowned under melodrama, surgical instruments, and enough melodramatic wailing to qualify as an opera.
I half expected the ghost to team up with Dr. Pimple Popper and start a YouTube channel: Extreme Hauntings and Dermatology Failures.
Characters You’ll Want to Strangle With a Scalpel
Let’s talk about the living cast, though calling them “characters” might be generous.
-
Hyeon-su spends the movie crying, wandering into forbidden basements, and being shocked that her mother has secrets. She has all the agency of a used bandage.
-
Yoon-hee, the mother, is a plastic surgeon who treats morality like she treats scalpel hygiene—optional. Her parenting method consists of gaslighting, surgery, and the occasional kidnapping. By the end, she’s less a mother and more a low-budget Dr. Frankenstein with a Dior scarf.
-
The Friends are basically tissue paper cutouts labeled “Eyelid Surgery Victim #1” and “Possessed Teen #3.” They exist to scream, get mutilated, and teach us that high school girls really should stick to eyeliner.
The only character I sympathized with was the poor janitor who probably had to mop up after all these ghost-induced nosebleeds.
Family Secrets, Served Cold (And Faceless)
The big “twist” reveals that Hyeon-su’s face actually belongs to an orphan girl whom her mother mutilated in a back-alley swap job. Yes, the orphan grew up locked in a basement, wearing masks of Hyeon-su’s face like some grotesque Hannibal Lecter fashion show. It’s one of those twists that thinks it’s genius but actually feels like it was brainstormed on a cocktail napkin after three too many soju shots.
And the reveal is delivered with so much overwrought flashback footage that by the time the truth hit, I was more exhausted than shocked. You know a twist is bad when you’re rooting for the ghost to just get her face back already so the credits can roll.
Horror or Hallmark?
One of the film’s biggest crimes is that it’s boring. Yes, faces get sliced, friends stab each other in art class, and ghosts show up dripping wet from bathtubs. But the pacing is so slow that you could perform an actual facelift in the time it takes for the ghost to make her move.
The scares are predictable, the ghost design is uninspired, and the tension is about as tight as melted plastic surgery stitches. At times, it feels less like a horror movie and more like a Hallmark drama about mother-daughter relationships, except with more blood and fewer cozy sweaters.
Deaths by Dumbness
The kills themselves are ridiculous. One girl hallucinates her face shredding in the mirror. Another stabs her own cheeks in class like she’s auditioning for Hellraiser: The High School Years. These aren’t so much horrifying as they are unintentionally hilarious. If the film wanted me to feel dread, it failed. If it wanted me to laugh at how teenagers apparently can’t resist sharp objects, mission accomplished.
I’ll put it this way: I’ve seen scarier moments in a Sephora makeup tutorial gone wrong.
The Moral of the Story: Beauty Is Skin Deep, but Dumb Is Eternal
By the time the credits roll, you’re left with two lessons:
-
Don’t let your mom perform your plastic surgery.
-
If a ghost girl ever says she wants her face back, just give it to her. It’s not worth the drama.
The movie tries to hammer home the idea that obsession with beauty leads to destruction. But instead of being profound, it feels like a lecture from your weird aunt who thinks Botox is witchcraft.
Final Thoughts: Not the Belle of the Ball
Cinderella (2006) is proof that just because you can graft social commentary onto a horror movie doesn’t mean you should. What could have been a chilling critique of vanity and identity becomes a melodramatic, disjointed mess filled with screaming teenagers, faceless corpses, and a ghost with the personality of a damp sponge.
It’s not scary. It’s not clever. It’s not even campy enough to be fun. It’s the cinematic equivalent of a bad nose job: expensive, painful, and somehow worse than before.
