Home | Movies By Year | Movies from 1903


The Kingdom of the Fairies

Buy The Kingdom of the Fairies now from Amazon

First, read the Wikipedia article. Then, scroll down to see what other TopShelfReviews readers thought about the movie. And once you've experienced the movie, tell everyone what you thought about it.

Wikipedia article




'The Kingdom of the Fairies' , initially released in the United States as 'Fairyland, or the Kingdom of the Fairies' and in Great Britain as 'The Wonders of the Deep, or Kingdom of the Fairies', is a 1903 French silent film directed by Georges Mlis.

Production



The film historian Georges Sadoul suggested that the film was freely adapted from 'La Biche au Bois', a popular 'ferie' by the brothers Goignard, which had been first produced in March 1845 at the Thtre de la Porte Saint-Martin and which was frequently revived throughout the nineteenth century. A publication on Mlis's films by the Centre national du cinma cites Charles Perrault's story "Sleeping Beauty" as the most direct inspiration for the film, with the seven fairies in that tale reduced to four.

The film's cast includes Georges Mlis as Prince Bel-Azor, Marguerite Thvenard as Princess Azurine, and Bleuette Bernon as the fairy Aurora. Sadoul, examining a production still from the film, identified the actor Durafour as a supporting player.

While most of the film was shot indoors, the nuptial cortege scene near the end was filmed outdoors in Mlis's garden, with a real horse. Special effects in the film were created with stage machinery, rolling panoramas, miniature models, pyrotechnics, substitution splices, superimpositions, and dissolves.

Release



'The Kingdom of the Fairies' was released by Mlis's Star Film Company and is numbered 483498 in its catalogues. (In Mlis's numbering system, films were listed and numbered according to their order of production, and each catalogue number denotes about 20 meters of film.) The film was registered for American copyright at the Library of Congress on 3 September 1903.

According to the Mlis scholar John Frazer, the film was "the most ambitious Star Film production to date" and "was widely distributed and heavily promoted." An original film score was prepared for the film's projection in larger cities. As with at least 4% of Mlis's entire output (including such films as 'A Trip to the Moon', 'The Impossible Voyage', 'The Rajah's Dream', and 'The Barber of Seville'), some prints were individually hand-colored and sold at a higher price.

Reception



'The Kingdom of the Fairies', like Mlis's similarly spectacular films 'A Trip to the Moon' (1902) and 'The Impossible Voyage' (1904), was one of the most popular films of the first few years of the twentieth century. When Thomas L. Tally debuted the film at his Lyric Theater in Los Angeles in 1903 (billing it as "Better than 'A Trip to the Moon'"), the 'Los Angeles Times' called the film "an interesting exhibit of the limits to which moving picture making can be carried in the hands of experts equipped with time and money to carry out their devices."

The film theorist Jean Mitry called it "undoubtedly Mlis's best film, and in any case the most intensely poetic."

Prints of the film survive in the film archives of the British Film Institute and the Library of Congress.

References




Buy The Kingdom of the Fairies now from Amazon

<-- Return to movies from 1903



This work is released under CC-BY-SA. Some or all of this content attributed to http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=1110008038.