Breadmag’s Blog

Finding Neverland Review

Posted by: breadmag on: February 25, 2009

neverland-4105b15dFinding never land is a story that opens with the feeling of being in the most exquisite theatre ever to have been built, in the privacy of your own home curled up on the sofa. Due to this being a film it is very difficult to portray the grandeur a proscenium arch theatre but this film does it.

          It opens with the writer hiding behind a curtain watching his audience come in. You can almost feel his nerves building by the look in his eyes. Everyone in the audience looks stunning, the colours and materials in their clothes show that going to the theatre was and is a special occasion.

          Everyone remembers being a child and going to the theatre for the first time. The ornate carvings, the bright red seats, the ice cream lady in the interval, it was like stepping into another world. Only special productions earn the right to be performed in such a beautiful space to the innocent eyes and beaming smiles of its adoring audience. The production has to match the wow factor of the space so as it doesn’t become lost. Peter pan is such a show and being performed anywhere else would be a crime. For 2 hours this magical film comes to life, you follow the path of Peter pan’s writer, J.M Barrie played by Johnny Depp, to an enchanting world where Never Land was discovered.

You can bring the magic of the theatre to anyone, anywhere whether it be seen on a screen by me when I watched this film or into someone’s home with a private live performance adapted specially for the one person who missed it, as happens at the end of the film to the mother played by Kate Winslet. Space doesn’t make the performance but rather frames it to give it a particular feel.

          The way this film is directed, I feel, is one of a kind. He manages to take the viewers along the amazing ride, seeing the world through a child’s eyes and at the same time managing to address serious issues in the characters lives.

          There are many sub plots the director has to deal with but there are 3 in particular that must be played and addressed in an in-depth way. First of which is the heart ache and frustration of Peter Pan’s writer, J.M Barrie, being torn between what he feels and knows is right and what society tells him is right. A man as a nanny who’s actually a dog, A grand mother who inspires the character of a pirate with a metal hook for a hand, The sweetest mother in the world who’s very being forms Wendy Moira Angela Darling and a young boy called Peter, the most stubborn of all the brothers. who’s name was used to create one of the most iconic children’s characters of all time, Should someone be forced to compromised their creativity because of what people think? Second of which is the story of the relationship with the family who inspired J.M Barrie to compose the best play of his life and Thirdly the illness that takes over the boys mother which eventually leads to her death. The director and writer of Finding Never Land manage to portray all these sub plots but still maintained the sparkle, magic and imagination all the way through by clever camera angles and the use of special effects.

          In the story, when the play is finally performed, in the most perfect theatre, you have come so far with the story you feel a part of it. The directors decision to film close ups of the children in the audience laughing and clapping makes it all the more pleasant to watch because it brings back those memories of the being young and entering this brand new world called ‘The theatre’.

          When the mother dies its symbolised by walking deep into the wonderfully created world named Never Land where she’ll spend the rest of her days among the fairies, pirates and magical creatures created by the man who loved her dearly and truly. This heart felt ending helps the whole story come true with no harsh reality endings. This keeps the magic alive but still enables you to connect intensely with the basic sub plot of the mother and the boys who needed someone to give them hope and belief.

          Imagination is a precious thing that’s enables people to see and do anything they wish. As we age we loose this ability to escape. It helps us through hard times, lost times and in-between times and this film captures that completely allowing you to totally loose yourself and grow along with the characters as J.M Barrie Finds Never Land.

2 Responses to "Finding Neverland Review"

you write horribly

Hello
Please tell me more I would love some constructive critism rather then stabbing insults please, I am totally open!
Please bear I mind am Dyslexic so my writting may not be up to the standard your used to but I am only learning and this was the first thing I ever wrote.
Thanks for your comment if it is honest please would you care to elaborate.
Many Thanks
Sally Ayres

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