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PETER PAN REMAKE PROVES HEARTY FAMILY FUN IS A STORY THAT NEED NEVER GROW UP

▶ Latest adaptation of the classic updates story and characters, excelling with its new spin and commitment to diversity, writes Greg Wakerman

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The story of Peter Pan, Wendy and Neverland has impacted generation­s of viewers and readers. After JM Barrie’s play Peter Pan; or, The Boy Who Wouldn’t

Grow Up first ran in 1904, it was followed up by the 1911 novelisati­on Peter and Wendy.

Big screen adaptation­s began with a silent film in 1924, but it was the 1953 animated film

Peter Pan that brought the story to millions of new fans, while it has been watched by countless more over the decades since. The likes of Steven Spielberg’s Hook, 2003’s

Peter Pan and 2015’s Pan have also been made, but failed to match the magic of the Disney outing.

Peter Pan & Wendy doesn’t reach the same heights either, but it’s still a sweet and delightful take on the beloved story, which it tells through a modern lens, while also exploring timely themes

that make it feel all the more prescient. It is co-written and directed by David Lowery, who previously oversaw Disney’s live-action remake of Pete’s Dragon. Peter Pan & Wendy

opens with a focus on Wendy Darling (Ever Anderson), who is about to leave her mother Mary (Molly Parker), father George (Alan Tudyk) and two brothers John (Joshua Pickering) and Michael (Jacobi Jupe) behind for boarding school.

Wendy is afraid to leave her childhood home behind, even though her parents insist that it’s time she should grow up. Then, one night, Peter Pan (Alexander Molony) and a tiny fairy Tinker Bell (Yara Shahidi) arrive at Wendy’s home to take her and her siblings to the magical world of Neverland, where Pan refuses to grow old.

As well as being the home to Pan, other Lost Boys and an indigenous tribe, Neverland’s waters are sailed by Captain Hook (Jude Law), a pirate and

Peter’s enemy, who wants to gain revenge against him after he cut off his right hand and fed it to a crocodile. He has since replaced his hand with a sharp, metallic hook.

Peter Pan & Wendy might be overly saccharine from time to time, but Lowery’s swash-buckling approach to direction makes sure that it’s always light-hearted and fun to watch. Lowery takes an inventive and carefree approach, he even includes several musical moments in the film. They never feel forced, though, and are organicall­y incorporat­ed.

While he’s always firmly aware of his primary audience, Lowery also manages to make sure that Peter Pan & Wendy is populated with numerous dark moments and scenes that give the story an important edge.

That’s hardly a surprise when you consider that, as well as the child-friendly Pete’s

Dragon, Lowery has previously directed the romantic crime drama Ain’t Them Bodies

Saints, the supernatur­al fantasy A Ghost Story and medieval fantasy The Green Knight, each of which were aimed firmly at adults.

With Peter Pan & Wendy,

Lowery knows exactly the right imagery and shots to use to be gripping, while making sure he doesn’t alienate its intended viewers.

The highlight of which is the look, size and chaos created by the giant crocodile that threatens Hook and his fellow pirates, which leads to the film’s most entertaini­ng sequence. What also makes Peter Pan

& Wendy stand out is how it updates the characters and its story. Not merely in its depiction of Neverland’s indigenous tribe and the diversity of its ensemble, but also by how it examines themes of the fears and pressures of growing up, friendship, ego and responsibi­lity.

Ultimately, there’s a theatrical­ity and melodrama to Peter

Pan & Wendy that occasional­ly overwhelms the film, and its sincerity gets a bit much, too. However, more often than not, it’s an enjoyable and uplifting watch that one can overlook its flaws and enjoy a story that never grows old.

Peter Pan & Wendy is available on Disney+ now

 ?? ?? The Jolly Roger is the ship led by Captain Hook, played by Jude Law. Peter Pan cut off the pirate’s right hand and fed it to a crocodile
The Jolly Roger is the ship led by Captain Hook, played by Jude Law. Peter Pan cut off the pirate’s right hand and fed it to a crocodile
 ?? Photos Disney ?? Above, Ever Anderson plays Wendy Darling; left, Peter Pan lives on Neverland, where he takes Wendy her siblngs
Photos Disney Above, Ever Anderson plays Wendy Darling; left, Peter Pan lives on Neverland, where he takes Wendy her siblngs
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