Due May 2014.
Allow me to give you the synopsis from the Disney home page:
She cares about peace and redemption apparently.
The writers of the screenplay were Paul Dini and Linda Woolverton. I don't think they're bad but . . . I don't know.
The Wicked treatment isn't something I'm terribly fond of. Not because I mind further development of the character, but because it seems to have a habit of turning them into sob stories.
Why can't my villains ever just stay evil?
Allow me to give you the synopsis from the Disney home page:
This is our mistress of all evil.From Disney comes “Maleficent”—the untold story of Disney’s most iconic villain from the 1959 classic “Sleeping Beauty.” A beautiful, pure-hearted young woman, Maleficent has an idyllic life growing up in a peaceable forest kingdom, until one day when an invading army threatens the harmony of the land. Maleficent rises to be the land’s fiercest protector, but she ultimately suffers a ruthless betrayal—an act that begins to turn her pure heart to stone. Bent on revenge, Maleficent faces an epic battle with the invading king’s successor and, as a result, places a curse upon his newborn infant Aurora. As the child grows, Maleficent realizes that Aurora holds the key to peace in the kingdom—and perhaps to Maleficent’s true happiness as well.
She cares about peace and redemption apparently.
The writers of the screenplay were Paul Dini and Linda Woolverton. I don't think they're bad but . . . I don't know.
The Wicked treatment isn't something I'm terribly fond of. Not because I mind further development of the character, but because it seems to have a habit of turning them into sob stories.
Why can't my villains ever just stay evil?
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