FairyTale: A True Story

FairyTale: A True Story

Movie |

Fairy | Fairy Tale

  • Duration: 1h 39min
  • Music: Zbigniew Preisner
  • Award(s): Chlotrudis 1998 (Nominated) Awards List
  • Similar To: The Secret of NIMH, The Batman vs. Dracula
  • Story:
    Two children in 1917 take a photograph, believed by some to be the first scientific evidence of the existence of fairies. Based on a true story
    Full Story
6.5/10
IMDb

FairyTale: A True Story - Where to Stream?

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FairyTale: A True Story - Stream Online

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Videos: Trailers, Teasers, Featurettes

Fairytale: A True Story - Cast

Fairytale: A True Story - Crew

FairyTale: A True Story - IMAGE GALLERY

STORY AND RATINGS

Story
Two children in 1917 take a photograph, believed by some to be the first scientific evidence of the existence of fairies. Based on a true story
Ratings

6.5/10

IMDb

AWARDS

Nominations
Chlotrudis Award

Best Cinematography | 1998 | Michael

Young Artist Award

Best Performance in a Feature Film Young Actress Age Ten or Under | 1998 | Elizabeth

Best Performance in a Feature Film Leading Young Actress | 1998 | Florence

BOX OFFICE

Box Office Collection 14,059,077 USD

TRIVIA AND POPULAR DIALOGUES

Trivia

The film is based on the true story of the Cottingley Fairies. In the summer of 1917, Frances Griffiths (then ten years old) and her cousin Elsie Wright (then sixteen years old) were living with Elsie's parents in the town of Cottingley in West Yorkshire. Using Arthur Wright's camera, the girls took a series of pictures of themselves with fairies in the nearby woodland brook of Cottingley Beck. (The woodland scenes in "FairyTale: A True Story" are filmed in Cottingley Beck, the actual location where Frances and Elsie supposedly encountered the fairies in 1917.) The photographs became public in 1919 (not during World War I, as depicted in the film), when Elsie's mother gave the photos to Edward Gardner, President of the Theosophical Society of Bradford. Sir Arthur Conan Doyle published the photos with an article on spiritualism in "The Strand" Magazine in December 1920. Opinions over the authenticity of the photos were divided. Several photographic experts examined them and pronounced them "genuine," while other photo experts found "evidence of fakery." (A few experts who examined the photos noted that the "fairies" had "Parisienne-style haircuts," which were popular in the day.) In the end, no real harm came from the photos. The two girls never accepted any money for them, or tried to swindle anyone with their claims of fairy encounters. Years later, as adults, the girls admitted they had faked the photos using cardboard cutouts of fairies taken from a children's book. Elsie explained that they were too embarrassed to admit the truth about the photos after Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, the legendary creator of Sherlock Holmes, accepted them as genuine. However, Frances insisted until her death that at least one of the "fairy photos" was real. Frances died in 1986, and Elsie died in 1988. The original photos, and the cameras the girls used to take them, are now in the National Media Museum in Bradford, England.

The last film of Don Henderson.

Peter O'Toole played Arthur Conan Doyle in the film. He previously played his most famous creation, Sherlock Holmes, in Sherlock Holmes and the Sign of Four (1983), Sherlock Holmes and the Valley of Fear (1983) and Sherlock Holmes and a Study in Scarlet (1983).

Anna-Louise Plowman and Ali Bastian's debut.

Won a BAFTA Childrens Award for Best Childrens Film,

Popular Dialogues

"Harry Houdini: Cover your ass! Sir Arthur Conan Doyle: Cover my what?"

"Harry Houdini: Anything can be faked by anyone."