Secret Of Wings Cast [SAFE]

He touched a frozen strand near his own wing’s core and gently, with a precision he didn’t know he possessed, guided it toward her broken petal. The thread stretched, shimmered, and knitted the tear. Elara gasped. Her wing pulsed once—warm, then cool—and held.

And the secret? It was simple, as all deep magic is:

“Hold still,” he whispered.

(also known as Tinker Bell and the Secret of the Wings ) features a mix of series regulars and new additions for the Winter Woods. Mae Whitman as Tinker Bell as Periwinkle Timothy Dalton as Lord Milori Anjelica Huston as Queen Clarion Supporting Roles Silvermist & Iridessa: Raven-Symoné Rosetta & Vidia: Megan Hilty Pamela Adlon Fawn & Friends: Angela Bartys Jeff Bennett (Dewey/Clank), and Rob Paulsen Winter Fairies: Debby Ryan Grey DeLisle (Gliss), and Matt Lanter The film was directed by Peggy Holmes and Bobs Gannaway.

The legendary Timothy Dalton (best known for playing James Bond) voices the stoic and protective leader of the winter fairies. secret of wings cast

Elara stepped between them. “He didn’t break anything. He saw the truth. The threads—they don’t separate us. They join us. Winter and Summer are just two notes of the same song.”

She lay in a dip of frozen moss, one of her wings bent at a terrible angle. She was a Warm-Spring Sprite, her wings not of ice but of woven petals, their edges glowing with trapped sunlight. Her name, she whispered, was Elara. He touched a frozen strand near his own

Over the following weeks, they met in secret at the border’s edge—a half-frozen, half-blooming hollow where ice met moss. Elara taught him the warmth-names of flowers; he showed her how to read the silent geometry of frost. And together, they experimented with the threads. When he shared a shard of his winter stillness, her firefly glow steadied. When she lent him a breath of summer, his brittle edges softened without melting. Their wings began to change. His ice gained a golden vein; her petals grew a silver spine.

The hollow erupted—not in destruction, but in creation. Flowers of glassy ice bloomed beside roses that shimmered with frost. The stream ran clear, half-warm, half-cool, and fish of silver and gold swam side by side. Vesper’s wings, for the first time, felt the warmth of a thread he had denied for centuries. He stumbled back, tears freezing on his cheeks. Her wing pulsed once—warm, then cool—and held