The Kingdom of the Fairies, like Méliès's similarly spectacular films
A Trip to the Moon (1902) and
The Impossible Voyage (1904), was one of the most popular films of the first few years of the twentieth century. When
Thomas L. Tally debuted the film at his Lyric Theater in Los Angeles in 1903 (billing it as "Better than
A Trip to the Moon"), the
Los Angeles Times called the film "an interesting exhibit of the limits to which moving picture making can be carried in the hands of experts equipped with time and money to carry out their devices." The film theorist
Jean Mitry called it "undoubtedly Méliès's best film, and in any case the most intensely poetic." Prints of the film survive in the film archives of the
British Film Institute and the
Library of Congress. ==References==