2019 film by Joachim Rønning
Maleficent: Mistress of Evil
is a 2019 American
fantasy film
directed by
Joachim Rønning
from a screenplay by
Linda Woolverton
,
Micah Fitzerman-Blue
, and
Noah Harpster
. Produced by
Walt Disney Pictures
and
Roth/Kirschenbaum Films
, it is a sequel to
Maleficent
(2014), itself a
live-action
retelling of
Walt Disney
's 1959 animated film
Sleeping Beauty
, and the second installment in the
Maleficent
film series
. The film stars
Angelina Jolie
as the
title character
, with
Elle Fanning
,
Chiwetel Ejiofor
,
Sam Riley
,
Harris Dickinson
,
Ed Skrein
,
Imelda Staunton
,
Juno Temple
,
Lesley Manville
, and
Michelle Pfeiffer
in supporting roles. Set five years after
Maleficent
, the film sees the eponymous character face the neighboring kingdom's manipulated perception of herself as a villain, in addition to a subplot of the rise of an endangered, powerful fairy race of the Dark Fey.
After the release of the first film in May 2014, Jolie stated a sequel was possible. The project was officially announced the following June. Jolie signed on in April 2016. Rønning, who co-directed
Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales
(2017) for Disney, was hired to direct the film in October 2017. The rest of the cast was added/confirmed in May 2018, with filming beginning that month at
Pinewood Studios
in
Buckinghamshire
,
England
, lasting through August.
Maleficent: Mistress of Evil
premiered in
Los Angeles
on September 30, 2019, and was released in the United States theatrically on October 18 by
Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures
. It received mixed reviews from critics, who praised the performances of Jolie, Fanning, and Pfeiffer, while criticizing the "muddled plot and overly artificial visuals."
[4]
The film grossed $491 million worldwide, although it needed to make around $500 million in order to make a profit when factoring in total budget, marketing and distribution costs.
[5]
It also received an
Academy Award
nomination for
Best Makeup and Hairstyling
at the
92nd Academy Awards
. A third film is currently in development.
Plot
[
edit
]
In the five years since
King Stefan's
death,
[N 1]
Aurora
has reigned as Queen of the Moors and
Maleficent
as its guardian and protector. Despite her service, the neighboring kingdom of Ulstead, home to
Prince Philip
, deems Maleficent a villain.
Diaval
, Maleficent's raven and confidant, overhears Philip proposing to Aurora. When he relays this to Maleficent, she advises against the union, though Aurora vows to prove her wrong.
Philip's parents,
King John
and Queen Ingrith, host an intimate dinner. Maleficent maintains her composure after Ingrith tauntingly mentions Aurora's sleeping curse and Stefan's death. She openly claims Maleficent killed two human fairy poachers last seen near the Moors. When Ingrith carelessly dismisses Maleficent's maternal bond with Aurora, Maleficent reacts angrily and seemingly curses John, who suddenly falls into a deep slumber. Maleficent says she did not curse him, though Aurora disbelieves her. Philip urges his mother to try and awaken the King with a kiss. Ingrith resists, and her weak attempt fails because she does not love John. As Maleficent flees the castle, Ingrith's servant, Gerda, shoots Maleficent with an iron bullet.
Wounded, Maleficent falls into the ocean and is rescued by a mysterious winged creature. She awakens in a cavern where fairies like herself have been in hiding. Among them is Conall, their peaceful leader who saved Maleficent, and Borra, a warlike fairy who favors open conflict with humans and killed the poachers near the Moors. Maleficent is among the last creatures known as Dark Phoenix Fae, powerful fairies forced into hiding and nearly driven extinct by human oppression. She is also the last descendant from the Phoenix, an ancient and powerful Dark Fae ancestor. Because Maleficent's magic is so powerful, Conall and Borra believe she is instrumental in ending the conflict with humans, either by peace or war.
Meanwhile, Aurora grows disillusioned with being an Ulstead noblewoman but is happy that the Moor denizens are invited to the royal wedding. Aurora discovers that Ingrith hates all Moor fairy folk, bitterly resenting their prosperity during a time when her kingdom had suffered and blaming them for her brother's death. Ingrith secretly plots to eradicate all fairies and woodland beings using iron weapons and a lethal crimson powder developed by Lickspittle, a de-winged pixie. Aurora also learns that it was Ingrith who cursed John, using Maleficent's cursed spindle. Ingrith finds out and has Aurora imprisoned. When the Moor folk arrive, they are trapped inside the castle's chapel. At Ingrith's command, Gerda unleashes the deadly crimson powder by playing the chapel's organ. The fairy Flittle selflessly sacrifices herself to save everyone as a last resort by clogging the organ, rendering the organ unplayable, while fairies Knotgrass and Thistlewit cause Gerda to fall to her death.
The Dark Fae launch an assault on Ulstead but soldiers begin massacring them until Maleficent, channeling the Phoenix power, joins the battle. She nearly kills Queen Ingrith but Aurora appeals to Maleficent's humanity to spare her, and declares that only Maleficent is her mother. With Maleficent distracted, the Queen fires her crossbow. Maleficent saves Aurora, but is struck by the arrow, dissolving into ashes. Devastated, Aurora mourns over Maleficent's death. However, as Aurora's tears fall on the ashes, Maleficent is reborn as a Phoenix. Terrified, Ingrith throws Aurora off the tower to distract Maleficent and runs away. Maleficent saves her. Ingrith is stopped by Borra and the other Dark Fae as she tries to escape.
Philip forges peace between the fairies and humans and the Ulstead soldiers stand down. Maleficent reverts to her fairy form and gives Aurora and Philip her blessing. Upon receiving it from Lickspittle, Maleficent destroys the spindle and its curse, awakening John from his slumber. As punishment for her crimes, Ingrith is transformed into a goat by Maleficent, until she can accept the peace between the two peoples.
After Aurora and Philip are wed, Maleficent returns to the Moors with the other Dark Fae. She promises to return for the christening of Aurora and Philip's future child.
Cast
[
edit
]
Top row:
Angelina Jolie
,
Elle Fanning
,
Harris Dickinson
,
Michelle Pfeiffer
, and
Sam Riley
play
Maleficent
,
Aurora
,
Prince Philip
, Queen Ingrith, and
Diaval
.
Bottom row:
Chiwetel Ejiofor
,
Ed Skrein
,
Juno Temple
,
Leslie Manville
, and
Imelda Staunton
play Conall, Borra,
Thistlewit
,
Flittle
, and
Knotgrass
.
- Angelina Jolie
as
Maleficent
, The most powerful Dark Fae and the former ruler of the Moors; heir of Phoenix; Aurora's adoptive mother.
- Elle Fanning
as
Aurora
, Maleficent's pure-hearted and free-spirited surrogate daughter and the current ruler of the Moors, who is engaged to Prince Philip.
[1]
- Harris Dickinson
as
Prince Philip
, the Prince of Ulstead and Aurora's husband. He was portrayed by
Brenton Thwaites
in the first film.
- Michelle Pfeiffer
as Queen Ingrith, the power-hungry Queen of Ulstead, John's wife and Philip's mother, who despises Maleficent and Aurora.
- Sam Riley
as
Diaval
, a raven that is given human form by Maleficent.
- Chiwetel Ejiofor
as Conall,
[6]
a ruler of Dark Fae that rescues Maleficent.
- Ed Skrein
as Borra,
[7]
a Dark Fae that leads the attack on Ulstead.
- Robert Lindsay
as
King John
,
[8]
the King of Ulstead. The character is briefly mentioned by Prince Philip in
the first film
.
- David Gyasi
as Percival, the captain of the guards who works for the Ulstead Royal Family.
- Jenn Murray
as Gerda,
[9]
a woman who is loyal to Queen Ingrith.
- Juno Temple
as the voice and motion-capture of
Thistlewit
, a green fairy.
- Lesley Manville
as the voice and motion-capture of
Flittle
, a blue fairy.
- Imelda Staunton
as the voice and motion-capture of
Knotgrass
, a red fairy.
- Judith Shekoni
as Shrike, a Jungle Fae.
- Miyavi
as Udo, a Tundra Fae.
- Kae Alexander
as Ini, a Desert Fae.
- Warwick Davis
as Lickspittle,
[10]
a de-winged pixie who reluctantly works for Queen Ingrith.
- Emma Maclennon as the voice and motion-capture of Pinto, a hedgehog-like creature.
- Maclennon also provides the voice and motion-capture of Button.
- Aline Mowat as the Narrator.
- Freddie Wise as Young Peasant.
[11]
- John Carew
as Jungle Warrior Fae.
[12]
Production
[
edit
]
Development
[
edit
]
On June 3, 2014, following the release of the first film,
Angelina Jolie
hinted that a sequel to
Maleficent
was a possibility.
[13]
On June 15, 2015,
Walt Disney Pictures
announced that the sequel was in the works and that
Linda Woolverton
would return to write the screenplay for the film.
[14]
On April 25, 2016, Disney officially confirmed Jolie's return as the title character.
[15]
On August 29, 2017,
Joe Roth
was confirmed as returning as producer.
[16]
In September 2017, Jolie stated that they "have been working on the script and this is going to be a really strong sequel."
[17]
On October 3, 2017,
Deadline
reported that the film would be directed by
Joachim Rønning
and it would start filming in the first quarter of 2018.
[18]
Casting
[
edit
]
In April 2018,
Ed Skrein
was cast in the film to play a dark fae, with
Elle Fanning
returning to play Princess Aurora from the previous film.
[19]
Michelle Pfeiffer
was also added as a character described as a queen,
[20]
later clarified to be an evil queen
[21]
named Queen Ingrith.
[22]
In May 2018, it was announced that
Harris Dickinson
would replace
Brenton Thwaites
in the role of Prince Philip, due to scheduling conflicts with the latter actor.
[23]
Later it was also confirmed that
Jenn Murray
,
David Gyasi
,
Chiwetel Ejiofor
and
Robert Lindsay
had also joined the cast.
Sam Riley
,
Imelda Staunton
,
Juno Temple
and
Lesley Manville
were also confirmed to reprise their roles from the prior film.
[24]
[25]
[26]
In June 2018
Judith Shekoni
joined the cast.
[27]
Costume design
[
edit
]
Ellen Mirojnick
, who had previously worked on
The Greatest Showman
,
Starship Troopers
, and
Fatal Attraction
, was in charge of creating costumes for the film. Mirojnick drew inspiration fine art and paintings, as well as nature and the
Renaissance
era.
[28]
Filming
[
edit
]
Principal photography
began on May 29, 2018, at
Pinewood Studios
in
Buckinghamshire
, England.
[26]
[29]
Filming
wrapped
on August 24, 2018.
[30]
[31]
Visual effects
[
edit
]
The visual effects were provided by
The Moving Picture Company
and Mill Film, which was supervised by Jessica Norman, Damien Stumpf, Brian Litson, Ferran Domenech, and Laurent Gillet, with
Gary Brozenich
serving as the Overall Supervisor.
[32]
According to
Gary Brozenich
, the majority of the film's effects were for the enormous battle sequences taking place in and around Castle Ulstead and Queen Ingrith's creation, a mix of fairy dust and iron which turns into a red powder-like substance that destroys the creatures in the film, and is brilliantly realized on-screen as explosions of red smoke in the sky.
[33]
When visualizing the film, Director
Joachim Rønning
pictured the red dust bombs exploding over Berlin during
World War II
. The wings for Maleficent?who had three different looks, were created with CG effects in post-production, but the simulated flying was completed during principal photography. He and the team were determined to make all the flying sequences look as effortless and real as possible, while keeping the actors safe. The actors wore a tuning fork rig that attached to the actor's hips and was controlled by operators off set. This gave the actors the ability to hover and dive, which makes the action look very fluid and natural.
[33]
Music
[
edit
]
On May 22, 2019, it was revealed that the film's score would be composed by
Geoff Zanelli
, replacing
James Newton Howard
from the previous film.
[34]
The film marks Zanelli and Rønning's second collaboration, after
Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales
.
[34]
Zanelli said that "the storytelling in
Maleficent: Mistress of Evil
is fantastic", for which he said that "writing [the film's] score is a dream come true".
[34]
On September 20, 2019, the song "
You Can't Stop the Girl
" by
Bebe Rexha
, from the film's soundtrack, was released as a single.
[35]
The score album was released on October 18, 2019 by
Walt Disney Records
.
Marketing
[
edit
]
The first
teaser trailer
for the film was released on May 13, 2019.
[36]
On July 8, 2019, the official trailer for the film was released, in which Ejiofor's character was revealed.
[37]
On September 4, 2019, Disney released a behind-the-scenes featurette in which the cast talk about the evolution of
Maleficent
's personality and some of the moral challenges each of the characters face in the story.
[38]
On September 10, Disney released a
black and white
sneak peek detailing the makeup process to transform
Angelina Jolie
into Maleficent.
[39]
Novelization
[
edit
]
A tie-in novelization of the film was published by
Disney Publishing Worldwide
on October 8, 2019.
[40]
Release
[
edit
]
Theatrical
[
edit
]
Maleficent: Mistress of Evil
was theatrically released on October 18, 2019 by
Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures
,
[41]
moving up from the film's previously announced date of May 29, 2020.
[42]
Home media
[
edit
]
Maleficent: Mistress of Evil
was released by
Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainment
on
Digital HD
on December 31, 2019, followed by a
4K Ultra HD
,
Blu-ray
and
DVD
release on January 14, 2020.
[43]
Maleficent: Mistress of Evil
was released on
Disney+
on May 15, 2020.
[44]
Reception
[
edit
]
Box office
[
edit
]
Maleficent: Mistress of Evil
has grossed $113.9 million in the United States and Canada, and $377.8 million in other territories, for a worldwide total of $491.7 million.
[45]
[3]
It was estimated the film would need to gross $400?475 million worldwide in order to
break-even
, and around $500 million in order to turn a profit.
[2]
[5]
In the United States and Canada, the film was released alongside
Zombieland: Double Tap
and was initially projected to gross $45?50 million from 3,790 theaters in its opening weekend.
[46]
However, after making $12.5 million on its first day (including $2.3 million from Thursday night previews), estimates were lowered to $38 million. It went on to debut to $36.9 million, finishing first at the box office but marking a 47% decline from the $69.4 million opening of the first film.
[47]
The lower-than-expected opening was blamed on the five years between installments, mixed critical reviews and competition from fellow releases.
[2]
[5]
In its second weekend, the film made $19.4 million, retaining the top spot at the box office, before falling to third place in its third weekend with $13.1 million.
[48]
[49]
Critical response
[
edit
]
The
review aggregator
website
Rotten Tomatoes
reported the film holds an approval rating of 39% based on 256 reviews, with an average rating of 5.1/10. The site's critics consensus reads: "While it's far from cursed,
Maleficent: Mistress of Evil
too rarely supports its impressive cast and visuals with enough magical storytelling to justify its existence."
[50]
On
Metacritic
, the film has a weighted average score of 43 out of 100 based on 40 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".
[51]
Audiences polled by
CinemaScore
gave the film an average grade of "A" on an A+ to F scale, the same score as the first film, while those at
PostTrak
gave it 4.5 out of 5 stars and a 59% "definite recommend".
[2]
Forbes
film critic Scott Mendelson called it the "best 'live-action Disney fairy tale' flick since
Pete's Dragon
,
" a 1977 live-action Disney flick that got the
remake treatment in 2016
.
[52]
Los Angeles Times
film critic Justin Chang calls the film (written by returning scribe
Linda Woolverton
and
A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood
co-writers
Noah Harpster
and
Micah Fitzerman-Blue
) an "enjoyably deranged" continuation of the first movie thanks to Jolie's commitment to the character's grim quirks, though he ultimately notes the "flat dialogue, overblown battles, and cloying CGI critters" weigh down the film's merits.
[53]
IndieWire
's Eric Kohn adds that Jolie's natural charm adds so much "delicious flamboyance to this striking villainess that she outshines the latest heavy-handed Disney refashioning" before quipping that "only the world's biggest movie star could upstage her own movie with each fearsome scowl."
[54]
Accolades
[
edit
]
Future
[
edit
]
A third
Maleficent
film was announced to be in development in September 2021, with
Angelina Jolie
attached to the project as a producer. The first draft of the script had already been written at that time, by
Linda Woolverton
and
Evan Spiliotopoulos
.
[59]
Disney confirmed that same month that the project was in the works, with Jolie expected to reprise her role.
[60]
[61]
[62]
In November, during an interview about Jolie's film
Eternals
on the podcast
D23 Inside Disney
, the actress hinted at her return as Maleficent in a third film.
[63]
On December 6, 2023, Angelina Jolie confirmed that she would reprise the role of Maleficent in a
Wall Street Journal
interview; she also confirmed that the film was still in development.
[64]
Notes
[
edit
]
References
[
edit
]
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a
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