| Finding Neverland |
|
|
|
| Written by Adeline Loh |
| Monday, 29 December 2008 12:25 |
|
In a queer twist of events, Finding Neverland opens to land Johnny Depp his second Oscar nomination, but wait, Finding Neverland was shot even before Pirates of the Caribbean (which won him his first nomination) sealed Johnny Depp's well deserved hot spot in Hollywood. Would Finding Neverland have gained the same response had Depp not swaggered his way into the mainstream?
Based loosely on real events, Finding Neverland (check out the Widescreen Edition) When we meet Barrie, his wintry marriage coupled with the failure of his plays has snuffed the light out of him, but not for long. A chance encounter with the Llewelyn Davies family, the widowed Sylvia Llewelyn Davies (Kate Winslet) and her four sons, relights a fire in Barrie for... the four boys, especially Peter who's played by the precocious Freddie Highmore who was then only 9 years old. Depp and Highmore experienced such chemistry in here that the two will reunite on this year's Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. In the true, chaste manner of fairy tales, Finding Neverland never hints at an illicit affair between Barrie and Sylvia, despite his courtly, boyish charms and her fragile beauty. Skeptics would relate to Emma du Maurier (Julie Christie), Sylvia's mother who frowns upon with suspicion on Barrie's besetment with Sylvia's children. Historians would point out the film's historical inaccuracies: there were 5 children, not 4, and Sylvia's husband had not passed away when Barrie met the family. The rest of us will simply be enthralled by this curious tale behind one of our childhood's greatest fairy tales. While appearances seem to show that this is merely a glorious and soppy tale of relit passions and fulfilled aspirations, Depp's subtle acting suggest a deeper side to Barrie, a complex inner life that hovers the fine thread between man and boy. As Barrie and the boys put up a special play for the dying Sylvia, perhaps Barrie experiences the pain of mortality and Neverland, the idea of eternal childhood, is merely the dream that keeps him going. |
| Last Updated on Saturday, 10 January 2009 00:21 |
Cast from this movie also appeared in:
More movie features
| Jessica Alba 05 Jan 2009 A natural born actress with a deep love for the screen, this self-confessed rebel girl is now one of the most popular actresses in Hollywood, proving that the action hero doesn't [ ... ] |
Global Culture on DVD 26 Jan 2009 I just watched a film I have been wanting to watch for a long time now; I watched it so I could write a review here and now. The film is Seven Samurai, directed by Akira Kurosawa. [ ... ] |
| More features | |
Movie Reviews
| Blair Witch 2: The Book of Shadows Alexander Zaitchik Once again, a horror knock-off turns to comedy due to the thorough inability to scare or innovate. Whatever lo-fi magic authenticity the first film posessed when it exploded like a giant underground [ ... ] |
| The Watcher Alexander Zaitchik The Watcher is the cinematic equivalent of going to a moderately-priced restaurant, ordering a decent meal, only to have it just lie there on your plate and stare back at you. You're not expecting ha [ ... ] |
| More movie reviews |
The latest feeds from other member sites of the Think Media network: |



Indeed, the film shows Depp in one of his most restrained roles, abandoning his quirk for donning scissors or outlandish pirate suits for a more clean-shaven, polite Edwardian persona as J.M. Barrie, the creator of wonder boy Peter Pan.