Fairy Tales: Cinematic enchantments – QAGOMA Blog

The free film program — ‘Fairy Tales Cinema: Truth, Power and Enchantment’ — accompanying the ticketed ‘Fairy Tales‘ exhibition at the Gallery of Modern Art (GOMA) in Brisbane (2 December 2023 until 28 April 2024) examines how cinema shapes our understanding of fairy tales, and how their structure in turn changes how cinema tells stories.

Buy Tickets to ‘Fairy Tales’ Exhibition
Opens 2 December 2023, GOMA

The program examines five thematic strands: how fairy tales are used to interrogate societal expectations about age and gender, in which women progress through the stages of ‘maiden’, ‘mother’ and ‘crone’; what makes a ‘happy ending’, and how our desires are shaped by societal and economic circumstances; how landscapes have been framed, constructed and edited to express the porous line between being lost and finding oneself; how archetypal tropes of transformation in fairy tales are used by filmmakers to connect with questions of identity; and how film, as a relatively new narrative medium, has engaged with older oral and literary forms of storytelling, making the wondrous and impossible visible.

‘The Wizard of Oz‘ screens at the Australian Cinémathèque, GOMA

Victor Fleming, United States 1889–1949 / Production still from The Wizard of Oz 1939 / 35mm, colour, mono, 102 minutes, United States, English / Director: Victor Fleming / Producer: Mervyn LeRoy / Script: Noel Langley, Florence Ryerson, Edgar Allan Woolf / Cinematographer: Harold Rosson / Editor: Blanche Sewell / Cast: Judy Garland, Frank Morgan, Ray Bolger, Bert Lahr, Jack Haley, Billie Burke, Margaret Hamilton / © Roadshow Films / Screening at the Australian Cinémathèque, GOMA

In the 1890s, when German producer and director Oskar Messter first used the nascent technology of the cinematograph to record performances of ‘Rapunzel’ and ‘Hansel and Gretel’ and George Méliès’s experimentation with film brought enchantment to life on screen, the fairy tale found a new mass medium through which to proliferate.1 Today, a century and a quarter later, The International Fairy-Tale Filmography lists almost 5000 titles.2 Some films, such as Jean Cocteau’s La Belle et la Bête (Beauty and the Beast) 1946 or Victor Fleming’s The Wizard of Oz 1939, have become touchstones for the global imagination of older stories and literary texts. Many others, including those presented in QAGOMA’s Australian Cinémathèque for ‘Fairy Tales’, extend beyond the familiar literary canon to explore how fairy tales help make sense of the world in different sociopolitical contexts. There is a tension between the schematic quality of fairy tales, which are constantly being retold in new ways, and the unchangeable concrete detail of filmic images, which threatens to fix how we imagine stories in perpetuity.3 However, it is in the expanded field of fairy-tale films, and how cinema fractures, recontextualises or blends these stories with other traditions, that the power and mutability of fairy-tale images, and the possibilities they offer cinema to challenge social norms, becomes clear.4

‘Mirror Mirror‘ screens at the Australian Cinémathèque, GOMA

Tarsem Singh, India/United States b.1961 / Production still from Mirror Mirror 2012 / 35mm, colour, Dolby Digital, 106 minutes, United States/Canada, English / Director: Tarsem Singh / Producers: Bernie Goldmann, Ryan Kavanaugh, Brett Ratner / Script: Marc Klein, Jason Keller, Melisa Wallack / Cinematographer: Brendan Galvin / Editors: Robert Duffy, Nick Moore / Cast: Julia Roberts, Lily Collins, Armie Hammer, Nathan Lane, Jordan Prentice, Mark Povinelli, Joe Gnoffo, Danny Woodburn, Sebastian Saraceno, Martin Klebba, Ronald Lee Clark / © UV RML NL Assets LLC. / Screening at the Australian Cinémathèque, GOMA

The continuation and reinvention of fairy tales as a living form relies on the imagination of both the teller and the receiver. The ‘folk’ tradition of oral storytelling is ‘of the people’, dependent on the individuals who repeat stories over time and across space. Unlike more elaborate, rigid and detailed forms of storytelling, such as legend or religious lore, the fairy-tale form is sparse and fluid. Characters are defined simply, in terms of their social roles (woodcutter or stepmother) or appearance (giant, crone, or Little Red Riding Hood). These elemental tropes leave room for the audience to project their own reality or fantasy into the story. Every telling or hearing relies on us to extrapolate outwards, building complete and unique worlds from the breadcrumbs provided by the fairy tale. As such, every iteration of the story will be different.5

‘Alice‘ screens at the Australian Cinémathèque, GOMA

Jan Švankmajer, Former Czechoslovakia b.1934 / Production still from Něco z Alenky (Alice) 1988 / 35mm, colour, mono, 86 minutes, Czechoslovakia/Switzerland/United Kingdom/West Germany, Czech (English subtitles) / Director/script: Jan Švankmajer / Producer: Peter-Christian Fueter / Cinematographer: Svatopluk Maly / Editor: Marie Zemanova / Cast: Kristyna Kohoutova / © Park Circus/Channel 4 / Screening at the Australian Cinémathèque, GOMA

Whereas oral traditions persist through varied repetition, cinema replicates the stories it tells the same way, wherever it is viewed. Like print before it, cinema’s power as an egalitarian mass media lies in its mechanical, and now digital, reproducibility.6 People around the world, and from different socioeconomic backgrounds, can share an identical experience of an image reproduced in a book or film, which is neither singular nor ‘unique’, but which connects individuals to communal narratives. Unlike oral and even literary fairy tales, stories told on screen render every image in dizzying detail.7 This, too, presents a shift in the way we engage with stories. We are provided with a full banquet of descriptive information, rather than only a breadcrumb, becoming consumers of an existing mise‑en-scène, instead of active creators. The dominance of the Euro-American film industry and its global distribution systems simultaneously creates identification with a community of other viewers (present or imagined), while ensuring that most of the fairy tales told on screen are drawn from a hegemonic set of popular Western stories.8 For the fairy-tale film, this is not only a challenge, but also a source of power.

‘Pans Labyrinth‘ screens at the Australian Cinémathèque, GOMA

Guillermo del Toro, Mexico b.1964 / Production still from El laberinto del fauno (Pan’s Labyrinth) 2006 / 35mm, colour, Dolby Digital, 118 minutes, Mexico/Spain, Spanish (English subtitles) / Director/script: Guillermo del Toro / Producers: Alvaro Augustin, Alfonso Cuaron, Guillermo del Toro, Bertha Navarro, Frida Torresblanco / Cinematographer: Guillermo Navarro / Editor: Bernat Vilaplana / Cast: Ivana Baquero, Sergi Lopez, Maribel Verdu, Doug Jones / © Umbrella Entertainment / Screening at the Australian Cinémathèque, GOMA

While cinematic reproduction and distribution threatens to stifle something of the living nature of the fairy tale, it also galvanises an increasingly shared set of fairy-tale references and images, which filmmakers can mobilise to subvert the status quo. The iconic quality of fairy tales, coupled with our hardwired pleasure in making connections between crisp but shallow tropes, mean that filmmakers only need to provide us with the most cursory of fragments — woods, mirrors, apples, a rise from rags to riches, jealous stepmothers — to evoke an expectation of well-trodden narratives.9 Many films in the exhibition’s screening program do not simply enact older tales, but rather harness our associations with them, and capacity to extrapolate the whole from the part, in order to challenge our expectations, speak truth to power or point towards possible futures.

Dr Sophie Hopmeier is ‘Fairy Tales’ Assistant Curator and Assistant Curator, Australian Cinémathèque, QAGOMA
This edited extract from ‘Fairy-Tale Films: From Breadcrumb to Banquet, and Back Again’ was originally published in Fairy Tales in Art and Film, Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art, 2023

Endnotes
1 Katharina Loew, ‘The spirit of technology: Early German thinking about film’, New German Critique, no. 122, summer 2014, p.134; Jack Zipes, The Enchanted Screen: The Unknown History of Fairy-Tale Films, Routledge, New York, 2011, p.33.
2 The University of Winnipeg, The International Fairy-Tale Filmography, <iftf.uwinnipeg.ca/>, viewed May 2023.
3 Jessica Tiffin, Marvelous Geometry: Narrative and Metafiction in Modern Fairy Tale, Wayne State University Press, Detroit,
Mich., 2009, p.23.
4 I draw on Rosalind Krauss’s idea of ‘the expanded field’, whereby a recognised form, such as fairy tales or sculpture, can be seen as part of a larger domain of related, but differently structured, possibilities. Rosalind Krauss, ‘Sculpture in the expanded field’, October, vol. 8, spring 1979, p.38.
5 Gregory Bateson, Steps to an Ecology of Mind, University of Chicago Press, Chicago and London, 2000, p.131.
6 Walter Benjamin, Illuminations, trans. H Zohn, Schocken Books, New York, 2007, pp.223–4.
7 Marina Warner, Once Upon a Time: A Short History of Fairy Tale, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2014, p.165.
8 Benedict Anderson, Imagined Communities, Verso, London, 2006, p.44.
9 Terence Cave, Thinking with Literature: Towards a Cognitive Criticism, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2016, p.79.

Watch | Venture into the woods this summer

The ‘Fairy Tales’ exhibition is across the entire ground floor of the Gallery of Modern Art (GOMA) in Brisbane, Australia from 2 December 2023 until 28 April 2024. ‘Fairy Tales Cinema: Truth, Power and Enchantment‘ screens at the Australian Cinémathèque, GOMA.

The major publication ‘Fairy Tales in Art and Film’ available at the QAGOMA Store and online explores how fairy tales have held our fascination for centuries through art and culture.

Featured image: Production still from The Company of Wolves 1984 / Director: Neil Jordan / Image courtesy: Park Circus/ITV Studios / Photograph: Chris Brown/Stephen Wooley

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