Another Cinderella Story Full May 2026
Let’s be honest: The soundtrack to Another Cinderella Story is better than it has any right to be. The climactic dance-off features the infectious "Tell Me Something I Don’t Know" (later re-recorded by Gomez for her band’s debut album). The ballroom sequence set to "New Classic" is a genuine earworm. This is not high art, but it is high-energy bubblegum synth-pop that perfectly encapsulates the 2008 era of Lady Gaga-lite electro beats.
In the pantheon of mid-2000s direct-to-video musicals, Another Cinderella Story occupies a strange, glitter-strewn purgatory. Overshadowed by the cultural juggernaut of A Cinderella Story (2004) with Hilary Duff and the chaotic camp of A Cinderella Story: Once Upon a Song (2011), this 2008 entry—starring a post- Degrassi Selena Gomez—is often dismissed as a lazy carbon copy. But revisiting it reveals a surprisingly sharp, if utterly absurd, time capsule of late-2000s pop culture. another cinderella story full
Director Damon Santostefano (who also helmed the Duff original) knows exactly what formula he is working with: orphaned dancer (Mary, played by Gomez) meets pop-star heartthrob (Joey, played by Andrew Seeley). The twist? The glass slipper is a Zune (yes, a Microsoft Zune) loaded with dance tracks, and the royal ball is a masquerade-themed high school dance where the main goal is not to find a husband, but to stop a lip-syncing diva. Let’s be honest: The soundtrack to Another Cinderella
But here is the argument for its legacy: It is the most honest of the Cinderella remakes. It admits that the fairy tale is a lie. Mary doesn’t want the prince; she wants a dance scholarship. Joey doesn’t want to rule; he wants to produce beats. The final scene is not a royal wedding, but the two of them kissing while watching their viral video hit one million views. This is not high art, but it is
Gomez, then 16, was in her "sweet but sarcastic" transitional phase. Unlike Duff’s naïve Sam, Gomez’s Mary is a cynic. She wears a track jacket, listens to hip-hop, and has zero interest in fame. When Joey reveals he is a pop star, she scoffs: “You’re a puppet. You don’t write your songs, you don’t produce your beats, you just show up and look pretty.” It is a surprisingly meta critique of the Disney machinery that Gomez herself was a part of.