For decades, Cruella de Vil has been known as one of Disney’s most evil characters. “Cruel” and “devil” are literally in her name. She’s on the American Film Institute’s list of the 100 Greatest ...
PHILADELPHIA (WPVI) -- She's brilliant, bad, and a little bit mad. It's finally time to find out just how Cruella de Vil came to be one of Disney's most storied villains. "Cruella" hits theaters and ...
Cruella is getting her very own origin story, aptly named Cruella, starring Emma Stone. However, what stands out about this 1970s set, two-hour-plus epic is that it's not really an origin story after ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Warning: There are spoilers ahead for "Cruella," currently in theaters and streaming on Disney Plus. "Cruella" has a lot of ...
“Born brilliant, born bad, and a little bit mad,” Cruella is back for Halloween. Now, Disney fans are fashionably conflicted: should they sport the traditional Cruella de Vil costume or the all-new ...
Just shy of its second weekend in theaters, the Emma Stone-led Cruella has already earned itself a sequel Digital News Writer, PEOPLE Disney isn't finished telling Cruella de Vil's story just yet.
Hey there, fans of villainy and wardrobe choices so sharp they could cut glass, get ready for an issue that's sure to have more twists than Cruella's hairdo. The chic femme fatale of the fashion world ...
Ah yes, another week, another comic making its way to stores whether we want it or not. Today, we've got Disney Villains: Cruella De Vil #4 from Dynamite, hitting the shelves on Thursday, June 13th.
Disney tried to do away with Cruella de Vil as we knew her. She was a deranged and unhinged character who (at least for me) sometimes made 101 Dalmatians too scary to watch as a kid. WARNING: we're ...
It is cliché to say that playing the villain is vastly more interesting than the hero — which goes double for Disney stories in which, by and large, the princesses (especially in the older films) are ...
When Dodie Smith first introduced Cruella de Vil in her novel The One Hundred and One Dalmatians, she called immediate attention to the villain’s outfit. The book’s human protagonists, Mr. and Mrs.