
This movie must believe in magic, as it wants things to both be and not to be. It wants sympathy for its devil, it wants both sides of the battle to win, it wants everything to be everything. None of that is really possible, even in the Neverland that is cinema, so the film’s inherent contradictions stand out as a distraction for the viewer. What redeems the proceedings to a great extent is the movie’s stylish presentation; visually and tonally, it gets everything largely right. (One might quibble about a touch of the modern invading the original Edwardian setting, but the discrepancy is not great enough to ruin the experience.) One of the sharpest decisions, and in some ways the most surprising, is to not make the secondary children characters too cloying or outright annoying; they stay reigned in for the most part and allow the principle characters--who are all strongly played, and include an almost unrecognizable Jude Law as Hook--to make the story theirs. I’m not prepared to call this the best version of the story on film--the 2003 version continues to shine for me--but this is a strong effort overall (and exceeds the studio’s 1953 animated version by miles). I believe this one can fly, at least, if not actually soar to the stratosphere.
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