Tags
Blackheath Wood, Ciaran Foy, Fae, Faeries, Fairies, short films

The Victorian ideal of a fairy as scantily clad nymphet, still a popular image for the fae today. Luis Ricardo Falero 1888.
Just a short post this week…having managed to put my back out doing DIY I don’t know if I want to stand up, lie down or pace around because doing anything is just toooooo painful :0( Anyway, enough of this moaning – on with the post.
In a desperate attempt to take my mind of my back I re-watched a fabulous short film about faeries on You Tube. I recall first coming across this particularly dark tale of the little folk on the excellent Angry Scholar Blog (but I can’t find the link to the actual post itself).
I grew up reading a musty collection of Edwardian children’s books handed down from my grandparents, my parents and then to me. Hence I grew up thinking that fairies were all rather elegant ‘gels’ who fluttered around flower petals in rather chic if not risqué 1920’s flapper dresses. As soon as I began reading folk-tales about the wee folk and their less pleasant habits I soon adjusted my view of faeries…nevertheless the harmless flower fairy image has persisted well into the twenty-first century.
For anyone still clinging to this twee Tinkerbell view of faeries, Ciaran Foy’s dark little masterpiece The Faeries of Blackheath Woods may make you think twice about following those dainty little flappers into the deep dark woods…
ENJOY….