4
Fairy Tale and Film
collection of essays,
published by the BFI, including films ranging from
early silent cinema, European cineastes such as Renoir and Vigo, the
1940s
Cat People
films produced by Val Lewton, to Tim Burton’s
Edward
Scissorhands
(1990) and
Batman Returns
(1992). Although slim,
the vol-
ume marks an important attempt to consider the breadth of examples
we might view as fairy tale-inspired films. This is partly attributable
to the significant contribution made by historian and mythographer
Marina Warner, whose approach to identifying fairy tale motifs is
refreshingly inclusive. Although she admits to the potential hazard of
being too keen to find connections, ‘stretching fairy
tale as a genre to fit
anything ... finding Cinderellas and Bluebeards here, there and every-
where’ (1993a: 27), she also argues that our usual associations need to
alter, pointing out that ‘the never-never land, bright as sweet wrappers
and crowned with towers or castles, long ago and far away’ is by no
means the only way to define ‘the territory of the fairy tale’ (1993a: 27).
They do not have to have
a medieval storybook setting, in other words,
much less conform to cheery family entertainment – an admission that
requires us to despatch with any prior assumptions and focus instead
on discerning conspicuous plot features.
This necessitates a widening of our critical faculties and an engage-
ment with films on the basis of the stories they are telling, enabling us
to identify points of reference with older tales
in order to understand
mutual concerns and desires – as well as equally significant points of
departure and difference. In this sense, the fairy tale becomes ‘a tool
for thought’, as Warner puts it, and also a way to rethink reality, rather
than escape from it (1993a: 17). The inclusion of fantastic elements is
not necessarily a given. Fairy tales may routinely
involve supernatural
features and extraordinary figures (such as the fairy godmother or genie
able to conjure miracles, or an apparently dead princess brought back
to life) yet this is not the case with many modern updates. Hence,
Pretty
Woman
(Garry Marshall, 1990) is clearly a ‘Cinderella’ tale, although
‘the Fairy Godmother’s magic wand is replaced by a businessman’s
credit card’ (Butler, 2009: 49), just as many variations of this perennially
popular tale ditch
the supernatural features, knowing that audiences will
get the reference without seeing a pumpkin coach. By contrast, magi-
cal transformations in films like
Shallow Hal
(Peter and Bobby Farrelly,
2001),
17 Again
(Burr Steers, 2009) or
Groundhog Day
(Harold Ramis,
1993) may not immediately bring ‘Beauty and the Beast’ to mind, yet in
featuring a flawed male character who is tested via an enchantment and
redeemed by love they all rework a common fairy tale trope. These com-
edies mine their humour from a central moment of whimsy (magically