Elf an Order
- Tagline
- In history's weave, the laws of the elves leave room for laughter.
- Description
- In a whimsical alternate history, where elves have mingled with humans since time immemorial, 'Elf an Order' follows the uproarious journey of an elven politician, played with gleeful cunning by Dorothy Clam-chowder, who finds herself in a series of hilarious challenges against her human counterpart, a sharply witty survivalist portrayed by Vivien Leek. As both vie for a mythical seat on the Council of Elders that govern the kingdom, their rivalry takes them on adventures that test their wits, patience, and survival skills. Through forests enchanted and courtrooms bedecked, directed with a light-hearted touch by John Fawn, and with the bumbling assistance of Martin Hummerson, 'Elf an Order' crafts a tale of competition where the stakes are high but the laughs are higher.
- MpaaRating
- PG
- PopularityScore
- 4.00
- ReleaseDate
- 12/23/2021
- Genre
- Biography
- Director(s)
- Cast
Critic Reviews
7.80
In the vast pantheon of fantasy comedies, 'Elf an Order' prances in with a cheeky grin, sporting pointed ears and toting a quiver full of chuckles. Dorothy Clam-chowder delivers a performance with the kind of mischievous sparkle one expects from an elven stateswoman, slicing through the political drudgery with the precision of a finely whetted broadsword. Her comedic sparring with Vivien Leek is the cinematic equivalent of a grand melee—a no-holds-barred battle of wits where no human nor elf is safe from the ensuing hilarity. Director John Fawn orchestrates this benign chaos with the lightness of a fairy's touch, never losing sight of the film’s heart amidst the mayhem. Meanwhile, Martin Hummerson stumbles and bumbles with the grace of a new-born faun, providing a reliable source of guffaws as the two protagonists' most endearingly inept aide. The film ambles and gambols through enchanted woods and gilded courts, ensuring the stakes—though mythically high—never shadow the warm glow of infectious laughter. It's a film not made to split arrows or break curses, but to split sides in a jolly frolic through a realm where even the most staid laws of the eldritch can't suppress a good chuckle. Gaze upon its PG-rated charm, ye weary cinema-goers, and despair not—for here lies mirth aplenty!