Return
to Neverland Movie Review:
The sequel
to Disney's version of Sir James M. Barrie's (after 48 years
- surely a record) finds Captain Hook raiding London during
the Blitz to kidnap the girl Wendy - except that Wendy's
grown up now and Hook has taken her daughter Jane instead.
Amusing and enjoyable (with an honorable effort to duplicate
the long-gone voices of the original actors), the film,
despite its
1940s setting, teems with 21st century Girl Power: where
Wendy's brothers went adventuring with Peter, Jane's brother
stays home in London; where Wendy played mother to the Lost
Boys, Jane is just one of the guys.
As the film begins, it has been years since Wendy left Neverland,
and now she's grown up with two children of her own, Jane
and a toddler brother. They reside in dismal World War II
London. While she may still think of Peter and tell stories
to her own kids about her adventures with the cocky boy
way back when, Peter himself would scarcely be caught dead
with her or any other adult
for more than a few moments at a time.
Jane is a practical girl who cannot fathom a world of make
believe, who can not accept the existence of a world her
mother recounted to the children
year after year.
As Wendy's younger daughter Jane falls asleep long after
her dad is trucked off to the front she is whisked off to
Neverland by the evil Captain Hook (voice of Corey Burton),
who kidnaps her, mistaking her for her mother. It's up to
Peter, (voice of Blayne Weaver) whom she meets along after
he rescues her from Captain Hook, to convince her to have
faith, trust, a belief in pixie dust and the importance
remaining child-like.
A non-believer, at first, her disbelief threatens the life
of Tinker Bell, whose lights are dimming as though she needed
the good wishes of everyone in Neverland just to stay alive.
While Peter tries desperately to convince Jane to get over
her denial, Jane is not interested in sticking around with
him and the Lost Boys, whom she dismisses as "a bunch
of silly, ridiculous children." She wants to go
home.
Nonetheless, Peter and the boys eventually win her over
and help her get in touch with her 'inner-child' right before
Hook captures Peter and takes him back to the ship. It's
up to Jane and Tinker Bell to set him free. This time, in
contrast to the original movie, it's Jane who gets to appear
dramatically on the yardarm to rescue Peter, her hair flowing
heroically in the breeze. Jane's first flight on her own
around the pirate ship as she challenges Hook is delightful
to watch.
Comments:
This movie took me back to when I was 10-years old again.
My wife and I both agree that this movie has the same tone
and "gee-whiz" as the original "Peter Pan."
Peter Pan hasn't grown up a bit. He's still the same irascible
character 49 years later as he was in 1953. We loved it.
As the movie says you really don't have to turn your back
on your youth in order to grow up and be responsible. I
left the movie soaring (just like I did more than two decades
ago). So did the approximately 200 4-year olds to 12-year
olds who won free passes to the screening.
The theme of "Return to Neverland" is similar
to that of the original Peter Pan movie: Only believe. Have
faith, trust, and pixie dust, and don't ever grow up (at
least in your heart and mind). "Return to Neverland"
pays homage to the original "Peter Pan" at every
turn. But a huge octopus that pops its suction cups as if
snapping fingers, an echo of the croc's ticking clock, has
replaced Hook's old nemesis -the crocodile -. I liked the
crocodile much more. "The first film is about a little
girl who is afraid to grow up, but learns that you needn't
give up your youth simply because you age. In our sequel,
Jane learns that you don't have to turn your back on your
youth in order to grow up and be responsible," said
co-director Donovan Cook.
Usually a critic does not judge a movie by audience reaction,
but when cartoons are the order of the day, I think it behooves
us to listen to its effects of the 4-to-8 year olds (the
target audience) in the theater. The older kids seemed to
enjoy it some, but the younger kids seem enraptured by the
show. The adults at the screening who saw the original as
8-year-olds to 10-year-olds (at a guess) during it's first
release seemed as caught up in the show as the younger children.
I could see them transported back to their child hood by
the sparkle in the eye and the rapt attention to the screen.
4
1/2 out of
5
The Critical Couch Potato
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