The End of Innocence
WENIG, GABY
The End of Innocence J.M. Barrie's Peter Pan isn't aging well. BY GABY WENIG The new $100 million filming of Peter Pan, directed by PJ. Hogan for Universal Pictures, bills itself as "the timeless...
...Wendy, however, was a little girl always confused by Peter, and in making her knowing, the filmmaker axes the story...
...But Barrie was happily marooned on an oasis of youth...
...All the prestigious British publications were printing his articles, and he had had three plays performed and six books published, most of which were critical and commercial successes in England and overseas...
...Singularly well informed on the subject of cricket, fairies, murders, pirates, hangings, desert islands, . . . he was old, but not grown up...
...And the actors playing the Lost Boys and the Darling siblings can't quite manage the degree of ingenuousness necessary for the roles to work...
...The script's mistrust of anything like guileless-ness doesn't help...
...Hogan and screenwriter Michael Goldenberg add a character to the story, Aunt Millicent (Lynn Redgrave), a family matriarch who wants to ensure that the Darlings will move upwards out of the middle-class quagmire...
...She was a religious woman who in her youth had belonged to an austere splinter group of the Presbyterian Church known as the Auld Lichts (old lights), and her greatest desire was that her sons become ministers...
...In 1906 Barrie republished the Peter Pan chapters in The Little White Bird as Peter Pan in Kensington Gardens, and in 1908, there was a solo performance of Barrie's addendum, When Wendy Grew Up, an Afterthought, a very short play in which Wendy's daughter Jane flies away with Peter Pan for spring cleaning...
...being so small they unfortunately have room for one feeling only at a time," says the narrator, in a line from the original...
...Sure, there are some new special effects that make the children's flight to Neverland look as if they are flying through the Space Mountain ride at Disneyland, and the fight scenes between Peter and Hook as if choreographed from Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon...
...Similarly, when the original Wendy becomes a mother to the Lost Boys, she feigns adult seriousness and propriety but is actually so childishly delighted that she is given a chance to mother them—even in a place where she needs to make rules about not guzzling imaginary tea too loudly—that it supersedes any seriousness...
...She doesn't talk, she buzzes, mugging for the camera and pulling faces that are so exaggerated and funny that playground children would envy them...
...He is torn between returning to his mother's love and the freedom of the garden...
...He would often almost ruin his plans by bursting into applause for himself, and, because his world was really only big enough for him, he forgot who people were all the time...
...They're no longer pre-teen exemplars of vernal bloom...
...Such a grip has her memory of her girlhood had upon me since I was six...
...In 1902 he published The Little White Bird, about a writer, Captain W., who develops a close friendship with a young boy, David, a thinly disguised account of Barrie's relationship with George Llewellyn...
...In 1900 he published Tommy and Grizel, an autobiographical novel about a writer in London who remains a boy at heart with disastrous consequences for his romantic involvements...
...David was the specter that could unshroud his mother's happiness, and so the living boy dressed up for her in the dead boy's clothes— whistling his whistle, telling her jokes and stories, and trying to recreate for her the stories of her own childhood she would tell...
...Peter Pan is the lord of this place...
...But Peter Pan was developing a life beyond that of the peculiar gravedigger...
...Back in London, when walking in Kensington Gardens, parents who had read The Little White Bird would besiege Barrie with questions about fairies and Peter Pan, and Barrie started working on the story...
...If I live to a time when . . . the past comes sweeping back like shades of night over the bare road of the present, it will not, I believe, be my youth I shall see but hers," he wrote...
...It was mutual attraction from the first...
...Audiences loved it, and the play was revived for season after season...
...Neverland in this film is a flashy place—green and lush, dark and foreboding, happy and giddy...
...Darling is the fool who could not tie his tie and feels so remorseful about his part in the children's flying away that he goes to live in the dog kennel...
...Darling and Captain Hook are both played by the same actor, Jason Isaacs, which is how it was done in the original productions...
...Of course, this was a pity...
...But in several ways Barrie remained a child...
...could see that in her mind's eye, David was frozen in glorious youth, and he ached to become his surrogate...
...In Peter and Wendy and Peter Pan, Wendy's relationship with Peter hovers at the edge of oedipal ambiguity...
...It was an obsession that started before Barrie even grew up...
...In 1897 while taking a walk through Kensington Gardens with his large St...
...Despite his better intentions, Barrie grew up, and despite his mother's contrary desires, moved to London and became a very successful writer as a young adult...
...otherwise he soon gave up doing it...
...She would fling up her arms and exclaim, 'Oh dear, I am sure I sometimes think spinsters are to be envied.' Her face beamed when she exclaimed this...
...His mother had great educational ambitions for her children...
...He was the seventh surviving child in a family of eight, born in 1860 to David Barrie, a handloom weaver, and Margaret Ogilvy in the Scottish village of Kirriemuir...
...In a 1901 holiday in Surrey, Barrie and the Davies boys, with the help of Porthos the dog who wore a tiger's mask, play-acted stories of pirates and redskins and walking the plank...
...By the time he was thirty-two he was something of a literary celebrity...
...Sagnier is fabulous as Tinkerbell and quite possibly the best part of this film...
...Barrie insinuated himself into the Llewellyn Da-vies family, to the consternation of the boys' father, Arthur, a barrister, who didn't know what to do with this strange little man who hung around his house for longer than was polite and had a disconcertingly idolizing friendship with his wife, Sylvia...
...Darling to success at the bank ("Wit is very fashionable at the moment," she says as she instructs him on making small talk), and—horror of horrors—remove Wendy (Rachel Hurd-Wood) from the nursery so that she can start becoming a young lady...
...The play opened in London in 1904...
...In the bitterness of his remorse he swore that he would never leave the kennel until his children came back," Barrie writes...
...And yet something is different in this new version, for the children around Peter—the Darling siblings and the sorry band of Lost Boys—seem altered...
...Arthur died of cancer in 1907, Sylvia in 1910 (at which point Barrie adopted the boys), George in action on the front in 1915, Michael in a possible suicide drowning in 1921, and Pan's namesake Peter, who called the play "that terrible masterpiece," stepped in front of an oncoming train in 1960...
...The crocodile, who has swallowed a ticking clock that heralds his arrival wherever he goes, in turn stalks Hook, and there are lots of fabulous sword fights, daring rescues of Indian princesses, communions with mermaids and fairies, before the Darlings decide that it is time to fly back to the nursery...
...Here they are contrived to add a soupgon of knowingness that hails maturity, the very opposite of Peter Pan...
...The character was created by a man fixated on arresting time and returning to the idylls of childhood...
...Margaret Ogilvy's face became, in J.M's words, "soft" and "wet" in sadness, and she started her lifelong obsessive mourning for David...
...Bernard dog, Porthos, he met the cherubic muses who would later inspire Peter Pan...
...Much of it looks very familiar, however...
...Fairies...
...It is here that Peter Pan first appears, as one of the characters in a story that the Captain tells David...
...Though the film gestures at this cockiness—Peter says, "Oh, the cleverness of me...
...Tragedy after tragedy, however, shattered the innocence of the family that gave birth to Peter Pan...
...Instead they are the zero-to-ten-age-bracket for advertisers to target, and Neverland is no longer a dreamy island of "coral reefs and rakish-looking craft in the offing and savages and lonely lairs, and gnomes who are mostly tailors, and caves through which a river runs," but a toy store, where children are lured by advertisers to spend their parents' money on Playstations and Swan Lake Barbie dolls...
...The new film version is an attempt to dress Barrie's vision in newer, more expensive clothes...
...He remains as Barrie created him, a character who might change with time, but is never changed by time...
...But he wasn't a complete sentimentalist, and the children's innocence showed itself in their comic hedonism...
...There are two superfluous kisses for example: one as the redskin princess Tiger Lily kisses John Darling after she is rescued, and John blushes, and the other, near the end, as Wendy kisses Peter and empowers him to fly high and defeat Hook...
...Flying away to Neverland, Wendy becomes mother to Peter's Lost Boys—boys who fell out of the perambulators when their nannies weren't looking...
...And the Peter Pans of today are not aeriform boys who still have all their baby teeth but grotesque adults with none of the flight but all of the stunted growth...
...In his original incarnation, Peter Pan was a "betwixt-and-between," not a bird, not a human, but a strange boy creature who escaped his mother when he was seven days old by flying out the window...
...Barrie managed to desexualize kisses by making them thimbles, acorns, and buttons...
...Still, this splashy and extravagant production is testament to the fact that the legend of Peter Pan is not going to fade...
...She wants to steer the tyrannical, socially inept Mr...
...He wandered around Kensington Gardens, shunned by all the living things, scaring the birds and the fairies, just wanting his mother to blow his nose but not knowing that that was what he wanted...
...He thinks of her as his mother, but she wants more than that although she does think of him as the father of the house...
...Her star child was her middle son, David, who showed tremendous academic promise...
...But this film is missing Barrie's ironic humor...
...The film neglects a lot of these comic possibilities...
...But this Tink is—luckily for the audi-ence—mainly bad...
...Hogan for Universal Pictures, bills itself as "the timeless story as you've never seen it before...
...Peter Pan is the story of Wendy (a name Barrie invented, to the dismay of thousands of girls subsequently given the name), Michael, and John Darling, who are lured out of the nursery window by Peter Pan, the boy who doesn't want to grow up...
...That's a pity, really, because innocence is what Peter Pan is all about...
...And for the boys, Barrie was an ultimate playmate...
...The film takes place in early twentieth-century London, the same place and period where James Matthew Barrie originally wrote the story, and its Peter is the same flamboyant sylph who has been charming adults and children for more than a century...
...sometimes she was all good...
...His high forehead, bulging eyes, and broom moustache gave him a thoughtful countenance, but his body was small, about five feet tall...
...There are fairies that act like illuminated human humming birds, mermaids that look like large piscean silver fetuses, and a weather system that can see four seasons in one day...
...There they battle the lasciviously charming Hook and his hideous pirates twice—the first time on the turrets and landings of Hook's dark stone castle, which is replete with mechanical gates that lower into a murky moat where the ticking crocodile waits patiently, and the second time onboard the Jolly Roger pirate ship...
...The film is dedicated to one— Dodi Fayed, the final paramour of Princess Diana, who was a nouveau riche eternal child living a giddy and carefree life where he spent lavishly but didn't pay his bills...
...Darling did he had to in excess...
...Six-year-old J.M...
...But in 1866 when he was thirteen, David died in a skating accident...
...In the ensuing years, the story of Peter Pan was read, performed, and filmed countless times...
...Indeed, that's what provided Barrie with the wit that makes reading Peter Pan a delight and prevents it from being merely a mawkish treatise on the folly of maturity...
...In this film, Hallmark sentimentality replaces the humor, and a curious knowingness replaces the unselfcon-sciousness that used to make the story run...
...Tink was not all bad...
...once and, as they are flying, asks John who he is—Sumpter is more puckish than conceited...
...Though he married actress Mary Ansell in 1894, he thought marriage a ghastly prison, and, rumored to be impotent, he invested no energy in it...
...Barrie always had a pronounced distaste for adulthood and a Gaby Wenig is a writer in Los Angeles...
...During the second fight, Pan gets the energy to finish off Hook after Wendy kisses him and sends his powers soaring...
...Barrie photographed the exploits and self-published the shots in a book called The Boy Castaways of Black Lake Island...
...Instead he retreated into the world of youth that he loved so much, both in his professional work and in his private life...
...But the film is basically a live-action version of the 1953 Disney animated classic...
...That night, of course, Peter Pan (Jeremy Sumpter) and Tinkerbell (Ludivine Sagnier) arrive in the nursery and inveigle the children to fly back with them to Neverland...
...Relations with the opposite sex filled him with trepidation...
...Eventually he becomes the garden's gravedigger, burying the children who perished because they remained there after lockout time...
...Barrie published his novelized version of the story, Peter and Wendy, in 1911...
...The five-year-old George, four-year-old Jack, baby Peter, and later Michael and Nico Llewellyn Davies, were the quintessential children: pint-sized, angel-faced keepers of the youth crypt...
...In his tongue-in-cheek introduction, Barrie attributes authorship to the five boys and says he "rubbed the five of you violently together, as savages with two sticks create a flame," and created Peter and his adventures in Neverland...
...His books and plays made him very wealthy, but he never cared for money, and didn't notice when his manager misappropriated thousands of pounds or large checks weren't cashed...
...As Andrew Birkin notes in J.M Barrie and the Lost Boys, Bar-rie "could wiggle his ears and perform magic feats with his eyebrows...
...But perhaps the film is only accounting for how different children are today...
...In Barrie's original, for example, Nana the dog is the sensible one at the Darling house while Mr...
...The dastardly Captain Hook, so-called because of the hook he used to replace his arm after Peter cut it off and threw it to the crocodile, stalks them all...
...but whatever Mr...
...Throughout his life young pretty women, very often the actresses of his plays, mesmerized him, but he agonized that his height and cal-lowness rendered him invisible to them...
...The production was lavish, with its flying children, flickering fairies, and enchanting animals...
...She is tremendously loyal to Peter, but she hates Wendy and is furious at Peter for liking Wendy, so she concocts little fairy plans to get Wendy out of Neverland...
...Another, faded pop star Michael Jackson, who is so dedicated to being Peter Pan that his ranch is called Neverland, trails weird scandals wherever he goes...
...He loved telling stories and writing stories, and he was a prodigious worker, producing reams of articles, books, and plays...
...The original was obnoxiously cocky, so enamored with himself and pleased with his cunning that he sang his own praises all the time...
...belief in the innocence of children...
Vol. 9 • January 2004 • No. 18