I. The Mythological and Supernatural: The "Tooth Fairy" Legend
: The spirit's power is absolute only in total darkness. This reinforces the primal fear that what we cannot see can hurt us, turning light into a physical sanctuary.
In popular culture, the most prominent literalization of this theme is the 2003 film Darkness Falls . The narrative transforms the benign childhood figure of the Tooth Fairy into a vengeful spirit, .
: Wrongfully lynched by a mob in the 19th century after a disfiguring fire, Matilda's spirit represents the consequences of "miscarriages of justice".
: The curse—triggered by a child losing their last baby tooth—symbolizes the violent end of innocence and the lingering presence of historical guilt. II. Narrative and Emotional Archetypes
In literature and film, the phrase often signals a turning point where characters must confront their internal "darkness." Darkness Falls | Dazed
The Multivalence of "Darkness Falls" The phrase serves as a potent cultural and literary motif, transcending its literal meaning to represent everything from psychological trauma and environmental catastrophe to the literal end of a narrative scene. It acts as a bridge between the physical world's transition into night and the metaphorical descent of humanity into states of fear, secrecy, or moral ambiguity.
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