The Fairy King
The Fairy King
| 26 July 2002 (USA)
The Fairy King Trailers

When Kyle and Evie Preston start exploring the grounds of their late grandmother's house they discover an old, abandoned mine shaft and soon find that the old lady's stories about fairies trapped underground were true.

Reviews
Amy Adler

Rob (Corbin Bernsen), an American, and his British-born wife, Nancy (Glynis Barber) make a trip to the Isle of Man, with their two children, Kyle and Evey. This is because the family has inherited a beautiful old house from Nancy's grandmother. Yet, from the minute they arrive and announce their intent to stay, the village is aghast. This property has a legend of demons, stuck in a mine, and no one should consider making it a home. Nonsense, says Rob, even though a nearby gardener (Malcolm McDowell) warns him to pack his bags and go. Yet, the children love the place, especially the huge amount of large fireflies that flicker her and there, day and night. Its Evey who discovers they are not insects, but beautiful fairies and they confide their secrets to her alone. Rather than demons being stuck in the mine, its their fairy king and other small magical beings. Since the mine was a gold one, Rob and company start to dig into it. Alas, things do go wrong and Rob gets a strange illness. Yet, how can they stop when the fairies need their king? This minor but lovely film has the most gorgeous setting on the Isle. In addition, the fairies are the star attraction, imagined with the very fine special effects. The cast is nice and the story a crowd pleasing gem. So, sit like a king, queen, prince, or princess on your favorite sofa and watch the magic unfold.

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sarah-hulme

I watched 'The Fairy King Of Ar' and thought it was a good movie to be watched by all the family!I like the idea of the story line and the special effects were very good!All in all it was a well Directed family movie!

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kitsa

I thought that I would enjoy the movie because it featured Malcolm McDowell, one of my favorite actors. I was quite wrong. I would never believe that so good an actor could be so tainted by the surrounding cast.Aside from the horrible production quality (boom mic dipping down in the opening scene, BAMBOO AND PALM TREES in the "english forest"), the plot is subtle as a mack truck and the whole thing is stupid beyond words. Some of the characters even drift in and out of their accents.I kept hoping that at some point, McDowell's character would kill and eat the family to liven things up. Never happened. Oh, Malcolm, how could you?

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DrGrood

This absolutely dreadful film is released on videotape as THE FAIRY KING OF AR. A textbook example of how not to tell a story, the script suffers from a complete lack of direction or central conflict, and was obviously written by people who believe a "film for children" should not be damaged by the inclusion of a plot. There is absolutely no problem in this story to be solved, so the characters wander about as directed by the scriptwriters, occasionally expressing concern over the immediate situation they're in, then relief when whatever they're supposed to be worried about has quickly removed itself from the scene, so as not to perpetuate any sort of problem which might result in interest by the viewer.Malcolm McDowell is a relative of Dad, Mom, and their two kids who have inherited a gold mine in Ireland. McDowell is supposed to be scary, because the scriptwriter says so, but since his character doesn't do anything, he isn't. The family immediately and without any effort finds the lost gold mine, which is supposed to contain fairies, who have been introduced in a coompletely unintelligible introductory story told by Grandma, and indeed a young girl with funny hair painted blue does fly onto the scene to represent one of these magical creatures. She, however, doesn't do anything either, after she arrives, so the result of her appearance is that we don't give a flying fig about fairies at all. At this point, since no one else is doing anything, Dad decides to come down with an fatal illness which apparently has no name or symptoms. We don't care about this either, despite histrionics by the children, as encouraged by the director ("Why?? Why??"). After the family digs in the mine for a while, the fairies, big guys with blue latex faces and plastic eyes (?) are released, and one of them, apparently the story's title character, cures Dad's mystery illness, then promptly walks away without interacting with anyone else at all. And at this point, anyone who is still watching this will want to throw something at the TV because they've paid whatever they've paid for this video and gotten absolutely nothing in return.At no time is this film's amazing deadness intruded upon by anything even remotely interesting. It is an amazing exercise in missing or even deliberately ducking away from any sort of point, a true dirty trick on anyone who has the ill luck to watch it. It is beyond bad; it's nonexistent, and so is not recommended for adults, children, or elves.

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