In addition to being a highlight within the universe of princesses, Disney is also a reference when it comes to fairies.
Disney, in addition to numerous princesses in its catalog of memorable animations and characters, has numerous fairies that were featured in its productions. Among these fairies, we can mention Tinker Bell, who had her first appearance in the movie ‘Peter Pan’ and only won a solo movie after 50 years of her debut on the big screen.
In 2002, following “Back to Neverland”, Tinker Bell had its name renamed, and was renamed Tinker Bell, however, with the franchise disney Fairies, your name has been universalized.
The Disney Fairies franchise was intended, when idealized, to reach an age group of younger children who still did not care about princesses. Thus, the brand decided to bet on a new model for Sininho, which would come with a group of helpers to help tell the stories and also on licensed products. When creating new characters, Fawn, Iridessa, Rosetta, Silvermist, Vidia and Perinwinkle appear in the plot.
Thus, when starting the franchise project, Disney was inspired by a quote from the 1902 novel, “The Little White Bird”, where it said: “When the first baby laughed, his laughter broke into a thousand pieces, and they were all gone. jumping. That was the beginning of fairies.” Based on this quote, the history of the franchise was created within a similar premise, where whenever a baby smiles for the first time, laughter travels, and those who make their way to Neverland become a fairy.
With the creation, the franchise produced six feature films and two TV specials, the first being ‘An Adventure in the World of Fairies’, released in 2008, and the last in 2015, being ‘The Monster from Neverland ‘.
However, with the departure of John Lasseter the direction of Pixar and Disney, it was decided to close Disneytoon, the studio that was created in 2004 and was responsible for releasing the sequels to ‘The Lion King’, ‘The Little Mermaid’, ‘Cinderella’ and ‘Bambi’ , as well as franchises such as ‘Airplanes’, derived from ‘Cars’, from Pixar, and ‘Disney Fairies’, justifying the end of productions focused only on these fantastic beings.
Source: Recreio
