Animation morphs into stirring live adventure faithful to source
You could say “Peter
Pan & Wendy,” the latest voyage to the Disney+ recycling bin, is an unexpectedly strong movie.
But it’s not unexpected, so really, you shouldn’t call it that.
Director and co-writer David Lowery has made nothing but interesting features, six so far, and while his latest (co-written by Toby Halbrooks) turns into a bit of a Lost Boy in its brooding investigation of why Captain Hook (Jude Law) got that way, it’s a stirring adaptation of J.M. Barrie’s fantasy.
“Peter Pan & Wendy” starts where it ought to, in London at night. In Lowery’s film, the Darling family (Molly Parker and Alan Tudyk appear as Ma and Pa) is about to send Wendy off to boarding school. Like the eternal boy she’s been hearing about in stories most of her young life, she prefers not to grow up too quickly.
The arrival of Peter
Pan and Tinker Bell, and the whisking of the eager Darling children off to Neverland, changes the itinerary. Neverland is played by the Faroe Islands between Iceland and Norway, plus Newfoundland
and Labrador and bits of British Columbia. It looks like a place you’d love to visit, as opposed to, say, Steven Spielberg’s soundstage-bound “Hook,” which I still wake up screaming about.
“Peter Pan & Wendy” relates directly in visual terms to Lowery’s knack for real-world landscape amid fantastical wonders in films such as “Pete’s Dragon” and, more recently, “The Green Knight.” All the Barrie basics, and ideas cooked up in the 1953 Disney animated feature, remain in this version. Peter vs. Hook. Tiger Lily and the Lost Boys. The crocodile. The reluctance to grow up. Sword fights, pirates, flying, you know the drill. But “Peter Pan & Wendy” goes its own ways. Peter, played by Alexander Molony with a determinedly low-key touch, isn’t sidelined, but Wendy’s in the forefront. As Ever Anderson plays her, she’s a vibrant protagonist on her own quest.
The narrative stalls periodically in its devotion to Hook’s obsession with Peter, and the story behind that. “Show me a child who truly knows the difference between right and wrong,” Hook says at one point, “and I’ll show you a man who can’t remember why it mattered in the first place.” Some of this psychodrama works; some of it works too hard. But Lowery invests the whole of it with a mood both grave and warm, with serious dramatic stakes.
The crocodile is more of a Kraken-dile in size, though Lowery wisely keeps the scares in check. It’s a delicate balance, maintaining Barrie’s fantasies and fears while going for the right kind of humor and action. There’s little in the way of wearying sarcasm or self-referential clutter here. And that, among other reasons, is why the film works.
How many of you like Disney’s business plan, based on the recent animation-to-live-action evidence and the remakes perpetually coming soon? It’s a simple plan, posing a simple rhetorical corporate question: Why chart a course for destinations unknown when there are so many known destinations to revisit?
Don’t love it myself. But hiring creatives who are truly creative doesn’t hurt.
MPA rating: PG (for violence, peril and thematic elements)
Running time: 1:46
How to watch: Disney+