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Photographing Fairies

  • 1997
  • R
  • 1h 46m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
3K
YOUR RATING
Toby Stephens in Photographing Fairies (1997)
DramaFantasyMystery

Photographer Charles Castle is dazed with grief after the death of his bride. He goes off to war and works in the trenches as photographer. After the war, still grieving, Charles receives so... Read allPhotographer Charles Castle is dazed with grief after the death of his bride. He goes off to war and works in the trenches as photographer. After the war, still grieving, Charles receives some photographs that claim to be of fairies.Photographer Charles Castle is dazed with grief after the death of his bride. He goes off to war and works in the trenches as photographer. After the war, still grieving, Charles receives some photographs that claim to be of fairies.

  • Director
    • Nick Willing
  • Writers
    • Chris Harrald
    • Steve Szilagyi
    • Nick Willing
  • Stars
    • Toby Stephens
    • Emily Woof
    • Ben Kingsley
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Nick Willing
    • Writers
      • Chris Harrald
      • Steve Szilagyi
      • Nick Willing
    • Stars
      • Toby Stephens
      • Emily Woof
      • Ben Kingsley
    • 45User reviews
    • 9Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 5 wins & 3 nominations total

    Photos7

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    Top cast27

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    Toby Stephens
    Toby Stephens
    • Charles Castle
    Emily Woof
    Emily Woof
    • Linda
    Ben Kingsley
    Ben Kingsley
    • Reverend Templeton
    Frances Barber
    Frances Barber
    • Beatrice Templeton
    Phil Davis
    Phil Davis
    • Roy
    Hannah Bould
    • Clara Templeton
    Miriam Grant
    • Ana Templeton
    Rachel Shelley
    Rachel Shelley
    • Mrs. Anne-Marie Castle
    Edward Hardwicke
    Edward Hardwicke
    • Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
    Clive Merrison
    Clive Merrison
    • Gardner
    Stephen Churchett
    Stephen Churchett
    • Mr. Dawson
    Mary Healey
    Mary Healey
    • Mrs. Dawson
    Maggie Wells
    • Mrs. Hoopdriver
    Richenda Carey
    Richenda Carey
    • Fierce Woman
    Jeremy Young
    Jeremy Young
    • Des
    Michael Culkin
    Michael Culkin
    • Cole
    Donald Douglas
    Donald Douglas
    • Judge
    James Greene
    James Greene
    • Minister
    • Director
      • Nick Willing
    • Writers
      • Chris Harrald
      • Steve Szilagyi
      • Nick Willing
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews45

    6.72.9K
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    Featured reviews

    8FilmFlaneur

    A superb British Fantasy

    Along with other great English fantasy films like The Company of Wolves, Things to Come, The Devil Rides Out and Jonathan Millers's BBC-filmed production of Alice in Wonderland, this is an intelligent and complex production, miles away in mood and concern from the typical American product. In a film that reminds one of his father Robert's The Asphyx, (as it also involves the attempt to film the supernatural by nineteenth century photographers) Toby Stephens is ideal as the intense, mourning photographer Castle, haunted by the abrupt death of his wife.

    The central concern of the film, that of seeing, or not seeing (or perhaps more perhaps *comprehending*, or not - is established in the opening shot of the film: the blurred face of Castle alone in the group photograph he takes of his wife and others. In an image which anticipates those of the fairies later on, he is the one blurred, here the 'ghost' on his film. Appropriately, in a film full of echoes and symbols, this long shot out from Castle's wife's iris recalls his later, obsessive, photographic enlargement of another eye: that of one of the girls photographed with fairies.

    The death of his wife then reduces Castle further, through grief and shock, to a state almost like that of a somnambulist. He walks through life, hovering between the shades, oblivious to fear and the concerns of the real world - as evidenced by the unexploded bomb he encounters without any sense of danger, ticking like the time piece he keeps to remember his wife. Castle doesn't care. He wants to die - a sense of foreboding which stays with the viewer from the beginning to the end of the film. He even 'photographs the dead' in his studio, witnessed by his work for the soldier's parents. Even when a new sexual relationship becomes a possibility, later in the film, he cannot rejoin this aspect of life though spiritual malaise.

    This thread is continued later in the scene later where Castle enters the church to hear a sermon by the bereaved Kingsley. Earlier that morning he has taken the flower-drug and has 'died' watching the fairies. Now he appears, bloodied like a victim in Macbeth, as the pale ghost at the ceremony..

    Castle's attempt to photograph fairies, spirits who hover between life and death, is obviously an attempt to capture something back from the spirit world that has captured his wife. Such is the delicacy and subtlety of the films structure and symbolism, however, that at the end one could feasibly argue that Castle actually died with his wife on the mountain and - rather like in The Occurrence At Owl Bridge Creek - what has happened since the opening scenes has just been the dream of a dying man!

    Performances are generally excellent (although Ben Kingsley's wig and stare are slightly disconcerting). Those who found the actual fairies disappointing in effect were perhaps expecting something grander. Some of Castle's hallucinations reminded me of Jacob's Ladder and Kingsley's demise of the killer's suicide in Peeping Tom.

    As a last instance of the film's care with presentation and sophistication, one may take the music. The chief elements that reoccur are a sombre dirge like bass-motif and a light waltz. Only at the end of the film does recognise that the bass-motif is an altered element of the famous Beethoven slow movement which plays throughout the last few scenes. Like Castle himself, it is transfigured - or 'completed' by events.
    d_sakaki

    Fantastic and Beautiful

    If you have cable and the SciFi Channel, you may have had the

    pleasure of catching this little gem. I kept seeing it in parts and

    even in the little snippets, it drew me in and had such a haunting

    quality. It was on the other night and I just sat and watched it all the

    way through and despite the fact that I'd seen some scenes

    before, it still held such a wonderful presence. It's hard to really

    describe the movie -- part love story, part fantasy, with a little bit of

    the Big Question over exactly what the afterlife is. The

    cinematography is absolutely picturesque, almost like watching a

    Merchant Ivory production, but with a bit of fairy magic thrown in.

    Ben Kingsley is an interesting addition to the cast. I wish there

    was more characterization done on all the main roles. You get a

    sense of where everyone comes from in terms of motivation, but

    more background would have made for a richer film. The pace is

    sometimes inconsistent, moving quickly in the beginning, then

    slowing, then speeding up again. But the film's dry English wit

    makes for enjoyable moments of irreverence. It's still just an

    overall beautiful film. Very bittersweet and heartbreaking in

    moments. The end is shot with such care and emotion. As

    fantastic as the premise is, the heart of the movie is something

    everyone can understand -- the loss of a loved one and the chance

    to rekindle a spirit burdened with sorrow. A funny bit of irony -- the

    actor who played Watson in the BBC Sherlock Holmes series is in

    this movie and he plays (har har har) Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.
    7sutcal

    A thinking man's fairy movie

    Occasionaly I am pleasantly suprised by the quality of a movie that I had never heard of prior to watching it. Photographing Fairies (or Apparition as it was tagged by our local Pay TV provider) is on such movie.

    Toby Stephens plays Charles Castle (Stephens to me has some strikingly similar traits to Hugh Grant), who tragically lost his wife on the Swiss Alps. The movie chronicles his struggles to come to grips with her death and how the possibility of an afterlife (I don't wish to give the story away)makes him obsessed to prove that there is such an afterlife.

    I was impressed by Stephens in this movie and am sure that bigger things will come his way. I was also impressed with Emily Woof who plays the romantic (if that can be said) support to Stephens. Woof was very good in the Woodlanders and continues her fine form here.

    Ben Kingsley is also commanding in the movie and his counternance to Stephens desire to prove the existence of the fairies is the keystone of the movie's conclusion.

    I tend to like movies that have story lines that I have not come across before. This is one such movie. The pleasing aspect is that the acting supports the plot which leads to a pleasant viewing experience.

    This movie gets my thumbs up 7/10
    9Signet

    Impressive

    Far better than I expected and wrongfully neglected. A dark and profound examination of agnosticism and faith that is quite remarkable, with unexpected twists and shocks. I very much recommend this film, particularly the performance by Toby Stephens who is, in a word, amazing.
    tinker99

    Wonderful, Magical, Spiritual!

    Photographing Fairies was loosely based on the book of the same name by Steven Szylagi. It deals with a fictional fairy incident of two girls, in post World War 1 England, who claimed to have photographed fairies; as seen through the cynical eyes of a photographer bent on proving the girls false. Charles Castle, a British photographer who specializes in trick photography. He is a man haunted by the death of his wife. Following a visit to a Philosophical Society meeting where he debunks the mystical by explaining tricks of the camera along side Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, he is approached by a woman who has taken a photograph of her daughter with a fairy standing in her hand and is asked to try and disprove the pictures using empirical logic and the modern camera obscura. This begins his adventure into a world he has never believed in and has gone out of his way to disprove. What he finds is unexpected and spiritually magical. Photographing Fairies is as surprising and touching a movie as it is haunting. High-quality cinema at its best - great acting, a clever story, superb special effects, spell binding soundtrack, and an intriguing examination of the religious and philosophical questions we all face. Love, death, grief, spirituality, and rebirth / redemption; these are the critical elements that weave throughout this movie. Toby Stephens gives a stunning performance as a character, Charles Castle who radiates Humanity and feeling, portraying the personal conflict of a man grasping for understanding years after the tragic accidental death of his wife on their honeymoon. Ben Kingsley offers a ruggedly convincing yet disturbing performance as the country preacher (and father of the girls) ministering to his flock amidst the spiritual void of his times in a post WWI English village. He masks the feelings of pride, avarice, rage, homicide, jealousy, infidelity, gluttony, nearly all the seven deadly sins and more. His is the perfect counter to the fantasy elements and brings a convincing sense of realism to the storyline. The girls in this movie are surprisingly innocent in their well-scripted dialogue and action scenes. They are pivotal characters to the childlike view that pits adult sensibilities and reason to the spiritual test.

    The music was a subtle treasure throughout the movie. Its main theme is played as everything from a dance tune to a funeral dirge, and it will stay with you far after the movie. It is that `haunting' quality of the tune that adds that extra ethereal touch to the total effect of the movie. The 'death song' is a part of Beethoven's Seventh Symphony, and has been recorded by Sarah Brightman as Figlio Perduto. The movie has definite religious undertones. Photographing Fairies makes no distinctions about beliefs. The preacher-father character is the pastor for a small church, and the heaven ideas can be adapted to suit almost any taste. Its challenge is to the basis of belief itself, and begs to ask a single daunting question "What if heaven were as real as a place?" Much of the magic that makes Photographing Fairies such a resounding success is the elements of love / death / and the longing to recapture ones state of personal grace. A feeling of redemption as real and achievable as the magic of a child's innocence. No matter what your philosophical/religious beliefs are, you will be moved by what you feel in this movie. Its touching message will compel you to view this movie over-and-over again.

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    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Elijah Wood in The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring (2001)
    Fantasy
    Jack Nicholson and Faye Dunaway in Chinatown (1974)
    Mystery

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Edward Hardwicke (Sir Arthur Conan Doyle) has played Doyle's Dr. Watson many times.
    • Goofs
      When discussing the original photograph with Beatrice Templeton (Frances Barber), Charles Castle (Toby Stephens) says that the supposed fairy in the image could just be a 'glitch in the emulsion'. The use of the word 'glitch' is anachronistic. Glitch, meaning a small fault, didn't come in to common parlance till the 1960s some 40+ years after the setting of this film.
    • Quotes

      Gardner: Everyone of you here, ladies and gentlemen, has something in common, something that links you to your neighbor. We are all of us searching for a clue that shows us what life truly promises us, for a way of seeing what lies under the simple surface of things. Now recently, we've had continued messages at seances, messages indicating that a visible sign was coming through. Ladies and gentlemen, that sign is here. People talk about the miracle of photography. I'm going to show you a photograph of a miracle.

    • Connections
      Version of BBC2 Play of the Week: Fairies (1978)
    • Soundtracks
      Symphony No. 7 Op. 92 II. Allegretto
      Written by Ludwig van Beethoven

      Performed by The Philharmonia Orchestra

      Conducted and orchestrated by Terry Davies

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    FAQ18

    • How long is Photographing Fairies?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 19, 1997 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Der Elfengarten
    • Filming locations
      • Switzerland
    • Production companies
      • Arts Council of England
      • British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC)
      • British Screen Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 46m(106 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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