Plots(1)

Elements that control the Earth – Air, Fire, Earth and Water – subject people to a “regular inspection”. We watch Water on behalf of all of the elements; people call it the Rain Nymph. She wanders through the country dressed like a poor woman. She finds that people started to think mainly of money and that love and good wither away. One of these people is farmer Lakota (Miroslav Donutil) whose son Ondra (Jakub Gottwald) is in love with poor Květuška (Viva Kerekes). The farmer is not happy to see their love. When the elements come back to the Sun, they demand severe punishment. The Sun hesitates, it knows that people are people, and likes them despite their failures but is outvoted. The Rain Nymph (Lenka Vlasáková) helps him in the last moment. She asks the Sun whether she could punish the people herself, and takes rain away from people. The country suffers from draught. People have nothing to harvest, grain does not grow and straw is almost burnt. Lakota uses the situation and promises to Ondra that he can marry Květuška under the condition that she provides for rain. She goes to the Rain Nymph and has to complete three tasks. The tasks are difficult, very difficult and Květuška and Ondra will not have won even after they are completed. Lakota is incorrigible... But do not be afraid, good and love will finally win as is usual in fairy-tales. (official distributor synopsis)

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Reviews (4)

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Malarkey 

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English I don't like it when someone claims that a certain genre in music, film, or anything else is dead. It's nonsense. Then it could be said that most genres are dead. Fairy tales have always been here, are here now, and will be here in the future, so why make such a fuss about it. Otherwise, Rain Fairy itself is not a bad fairy tale at all. It's just a bit uneventful. Actors like Donutil, Dulava, Dejdar or Nárožný were great, but there was still something missing that would truly entertain me in that fairy tale. The scenery was beautiful, Iceland surprised me incredibly, even the effects weren't bad, and the story certainly intrigued me. But when I compare it, for example, with Hell with a Princess, I feel like this fairy tale is taken very seriously. After all, that's exactly what was never addressed in fairy tales. Seriousness. In the fifties, a movie like Dařbuján and the Pandrholou was made, and nobody cared that the characters were drinking alcohol in the fairy tale. I need honesty in fairy tales, and I felt a little bit of it was missing here. ()

NinadeL 

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English Cieslar has proven that he’s good and he’s already proven his reputation in such great films as Spring of Life and Shadows of the Deceased. I was quite pleasantly surprised by The Rain Fairy. This is a truly cinematic fairy tale from the Czech basin that we haven’t seen in a long time. The special effects, cinematography, and music are great. The visual concept is pleasing to the eye, as are the meticulous and distinctive costumes. The story is clearly linked by a traditional view of the Bohemian countryside and the supernatural motivated by the most basic barbaric religions. The middle and older generations act excellently and the only thing that doesn't work, unfortunately as usual, are the new young actors. Kerekes and Gottwald's performances are examples of incredibly non-film acting. It's a mystery to me why they keep trying these young "talents" from Slovakia or endless series when it doesn't have the desired results. ()

D.Moore 

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English Expository and well-cast boredom with a few bright moments, the brightest of which was probably Petr Nárožný's small role. Otherwise, I could only shake my head in amazement, because the plot was unusually strange and the logic of who went where and why, who followed, who came back and what happened to them afterwards, left me wondering. ()

kaylin 

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English It's evident that the best years of Czech fairy tales are indeed behind us, but this fairy tale still has quite good characters and, above all, an interesting story. What doesn't quite work is the execution, which feels oddly unnatural due to the digital effects. It doesn't look nice, and I think even children might not like it in some places. But it has a nice, fairly standard division between good and evil, and a plot that must end well, although you want to know how it will reach that good ending. ()