Los Angeles Times

How ‘Mistress of Evil’ found its origin stories

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the dark fey are a stark contrast to the various CGI fairies that populate the Moors. And they also look distinct from one another.

“As a civilizati­on, they are very, very diverse,” said costume designer Ellen Mirojnick, who explained that the dark fey’s backstory informed how their different looks were developed. Because one of the underlying themes of the “Maleficent” franchise is “man versus nature,” it was important for Rønning that the production’s team look to nature in crafting the dark fey and their civilizati­on. And they were struck by a surprising source of inspiratio­n while working at Jolie’s house.

“We were working on the script at her house together with the screenwrit­ers,” said Rønning. “We were trying to crack the code to the dark fey because we wanted to have different factions.

“And then, one of [Jolie’s] younger daughters came in the kitchen one day. She had done a school project about biomes that you find in nature,” explained the filmmaker. “She had made this board with pictures of the different biomes, and we all just looked at each other like, ‘Brilliant, we have the different factions of nature here.’ That was a huge breakthrou­gh for us.”

From there, the four kinds of dark fey that are shown in the movie were born: The tundra fey, the forest fey, the jungle fey and the desert fey. These four factions are as visually distinct as the environmen­ts they are based on.

The desert fey have wings with colors that evoke their environmen­t, and wear things that appear bleached and rough and cracked. The tundra fey are all ice, with a palette of white and blues and grays. Green and wood are what inspired the looks of the forest fey, while the jungle fey aesthetic was all about endless colors.

“What I really hoped to achieve in terms of the entirety of the dark fey and their costuming was that you not really notice the costuming that much,” said Mirojnick. “Because they’re a species that all have to look organic, and not ‘costume designed.’ ” Additional­ly, they had to consider the dark fey’s wings and their ability to fly with every design.

“You would look at something and say, ‘Do you believe that will go up in the air? Will that fly?’ ” said Mirojnick.

Production designer Patrick Tatopoulos explained that they had actually developed a full backstory for the dark fey to help explain their different looks as well as why they are all living in exile on an island. This includes the idea that the dark fey all originated in one place — their own version of the Cradle of Humankind.

“We had such a backstory for this and it’s not all necessaril­y revealed in the movie,” said Tatopoulos. “Their original world was that island. The island exploded, like a giant volcano, so they left many, many thousands of years ago and moved around the world, to different parts of the world, different climates. … But they’d been tracked and trapped by people through the centuries and they came back to their original island.”

This history helped guide the design of the island that Maleficent briefly explores during the film, and how the various factions of the dark fey re-created their different home environmen­ts.

Both Tatopoulos and Rønning explained that these details were important to Jolie. As creatures that have been forced out of their homelands, the dark fey are essentiall­y a band of refugees. Their backstory requires care and adds another dimension to the movie’s overall story.

Although the movie alludes to some of these elements, most of the dark fey’s backstory is not explicitly addressed in “Mistress of Evil” since the focus is on Maleficent actually meeting her kind for the first time.

“Sometimes you come up on backstorie­s that are just here for us, the people working on the movie, to understand what we’re doing, and you don’t necessaril­y need or have the opportunit­y to reveal all of it,” said Tatopoulos. “But it’s fun. It’s one of the funnest things in the design world.”

 ?? Photograph­s from Disney ?? CHIWETEL EJIOFOR stars as Connal in the just-released Disney film “Maleficent: Mistress of Evil.”
Photograph­s from Disney CHIWETEL EJIOFOR stars as Connal in the just-released Disney film “Maleficent: Mistress of Evil.”
 ??  ?? ANGELINA JOLIE, here in title role, hosted a key brainstorm­ing session for the movie’s creative team.
ANGELINA JOLIE, here in title role, hosted a key brainstorm­ing session for the movie’s creative team.
 ??  ?? AS CONNAL, Ejiofor’s character is among the new dark fey introduced along with Borra (Ed Skrein).
AS CONNAL, Ejiofor’s character is among the new dark fey introduced along with Borra (Ed Skrein).

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