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| PETER PAN
(director: Herbert Brenon; screenwriter: from the play
by J.M. Barrie/Willis Goldbeck; cinematographer: James
Wong Howe; music: Philip C. Carli; cast: Betty Bronson (Peter
Pan), Esther
Ralston (Mrs.
Darling), Cyril Chadwick (Mr. George Darling),
Virginia Brown Faire (Tinker
Bell), Ernest Torrence (Captain
Hook), Mary Brian
(Wendy), Philippe de
Lacey (Michael), Jack Murphy (John), George Ali (Nana the dog),
Anna May Wong (Tiger Lily), Maurice Murphy (Tootles),
Edward Kipling (Smee), Ralph Yearsley (Italian Cecco),
Charles A. Stevenson (Jukes); Runtime: 102;
MPAA Rating: NR; producer: Herbert Brenon;
Kino Video; 1924-silent) "One of the greatest children's film ever made." Reviewed by Dennis Schwartz One of the greatest
children's film ever made. It's based on
the hit play by J.M. Barrie, and is written by Willis
Goldbeck. The
Broadway play that ran from 1904-1913 featured Maude Adams as Peter, who
made the role she played on and off for all those
years a coveted one. Women were chosen for the
Peter role because it required flying across the stage
on a harness and petite women were easier to carry
than men. Barrie sold the rights of his precious play
to Paramount provided he alone could chose who plays
Peter Pan, and surprised everyone by turning down such
established stars as Mary Pickford, Gloria Swanson and
Lillian Gish for the virtually unknown ballet dancer
teenager from New Jersey Betty Bronson. The great Paramount film vanished from the studio
after its release and was not seen for decades. It was
finally located at the Eastman Theater, in Rochester,
which was owned by Kodak, in a vault of decomposing
nitrate films.
The highly
flammable film was restored in 1952 with its authentic color tints
intact and in 1999 it added a music score by Philip
C. Carli. The special effects are few but are
remarkably well-done by Roy Pomeroy. Director Herbert Brenon ("The
Telephone Girl"/"Lummox"/"Wine, Women and Song") does a nice job keeping
it jolly and kid friendly, completely capturing the
intention of the author to keep it as a children's
delightful lark. The playful Peter Pan (Betty Bronson) flies into the second
floor nursery room of the cute Darling children--Wendy (Mary Brian, 16 at the time), John (Jack Murphy), and Michael (Philippe de Lacey) --
looking for his shadow snipped off by their
household dog and after getting his shadow stitched
on by the oldest child Wendy, teaches the kids to
fly.
The children's nurse is the dog Nana (George Ali), as the human nurses
refuse to work for their kid's irritable and twitchy
father (Cyril
Chadwick).
When the parents dine out, the protective Nana is
placed outside in the doghouse by Mr. Darling and
can't prevent the kids from flying off with Peter, the eternal youth who never
grew up, as they go into the dream forest of Never Never Land, an island
where Peter takes care of the Little Lost Boys. The
sweet Mrs. Darling (Esther Ralston, 23 at the time) is heartbroken at the
loss. The adventures in Never
Never Land include one with Tinker Bell (Virginia Brown Faire), a fairy sidekick of Peter's who
is not seen clearly in close-ups on orders from
Barrie but is clearly seen as a flash of light, who becomes jealous of
Wendy and Peter's growing friendship and persuades one
of the Lost Boys to shoot her with an arrow. Wendy recovers from the
wound and forgives the shooter, and then treats the
boys as if she were their mom. The group, living with
a friendly Indian tribe, also visit a mermaid colony.
After pirates attack the Indians and kidnap the Lost
Boys, Peter Pan frees them and there's a sword fight
between the
Lost Boys and
the gruff Captain Hook (Ernest Torrence) and his notorious band of
pirates. With that success and Hook forced to walk the
plank, the children return home and bring along the
orphaned six Lost Boys for their mom to adopt. Peter
is also offered a chance to be adopted, but opts to
return to the magical Never Never Land and just have
fun. The film comes with the warning that if one of the actors says I don't believe in fairies, one fairy dies. REVIEWED ON 2/25/2012 GRADE: A Dennis Schwartz: "Ozus' World Movie Reviews" © ALL RIGHTS RESERVED DENNIS SCHWARTZ |