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Finding Neverland (Widescreen Edition) |
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Regular
Price $14.99
Starring:
Julie Christie,
Johnny Depp,
Ian Hart,
Dustin Hoffman,
Kate Winslet,
Directed By:
Rated: PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Release Date: 2004-11-24
Studio: Miramax
Format:
AC-3,
Closed-captioned,
Color,
Dolby,
Dubbed,
DVD-Video,
Subtitled,
Widescreen,
NTSC,
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Editorial Reviews and
DVD Information about
Finding Neverland (Widescreen Edition)
Product Description
A Scottish playwright meets a recently widowed mother and her four sons in the park; the friendship with the children inspires the playwright while the relationship with the mother strains his marraige. No Track Information Available Media Type: DVD Artist: DEPP,JOHNNY Title: FINDING NEVERLAND Street Release Date: 08/08/2006 Domestic Genre: DRAMA
Amazon.com
Sweetness that doesn't turn saccharine is hard to find these days; Finding Neverland hits the mark. Much credit is due to the actors: Johnny Depp applies his genius for sly whimsy in his portrayal of playwright J. M. Barrie, who finds inspiration for his greatest creation from four lively boys, the sons of widow Sylvia Llewelyn Davies (Kate Winslet, who miraculously fuses romantic yearning with common sense). Though the friendship threatens his already dwindling marriage, Barrie spends endless hours with the boys, pretending to be pirates or Indians--and gradually the elements of Peter Pan take shape in his mind. The relationship between Barrie and the Llewelyn Davies family sparks both an imagined world and a quiet rebellion against the stuffy forces of respectability, given physical form by Barrie's resentful wife (Radha Mitchell, High Art) and Sylvia's mother (Julie Christie, McCabe and Mrs. Miller). This gentle silliness could have turned to treacle, but Depp and Winslet--along with newcomer Freddie Highmore as one of the boys--keep their feet on the earth while their eyes gaze into their dreams. Also featuring a comically crusty turn from Dustin Hoffman (who appeared in another Peter Pan-themed movie, Hook) as a long-suffering theater producer. --Bret Fetzer
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Customer Reviews for
Finding Neverland (Widescreen Edition)
Classic, they don't make too many movies like this anymore.
Finding Neverland is a very emotional and inspiring movie that resonates the soul. I thoroughly enjoyed the story of the author who wrote Peter Pan and the imagination and artistic fortitude that existed in those times. I also enjoyed the underlying love story that focused on caring for people unconditionally. The cinemotagraphy, to the acting is all first class. Sorry, no violence in this one bro.Finding Neverland (Widescreen Edition)
Conversations difficult to understand
Clarity of speech needs to be improved say our guests who viewed the DVD with us. I agree. Volume had to be boosted significantly.Finding Neverland (Widescreen Edition)
Welcome to Blu-Ray
My sons insist that blu-ray is the way to go, so I did. After watching 'Happy Feet' with them I was sold. The detail is amazing. Finding Neverland is one of my favorite story-within-a-story movies. I don't buy all movies on blu-ray (meaning some of the ones I already own), but this one had to be. It's wonderfully done. Kate Winslet is so ethereally beautiful that I love her in anything, and Johnny Depp is perfect in the part. Her boys, befriended by Depp at a time when their mother was dying, were made more thoughtful and appreciative of the magic of the story of Peter Pan and its first debut on the London stage. I love watching the face of a little boy seeing his first 'magical' performance without the blase' expression which kids now would show to anything not graphically enhanced.Finding Neverland (Widescreen Edition)
Creeps predictably along
As much as I wanted to like it, I found this movie bland and boring. Winslet is wasted, Depp mumbles along, and Dustin Hoffman phones his performance in. The boys didn't convince me either. The direction was flat-footed and had none of the wonder I was hoping for, given the subject matter. The music score is soppy and cliched, and the whole thing is shot like a Hallmark holiday TV special. A good idea for a movie that telegraphs its eventual resolutions about 20 minutes into the film; after that there's little point in watching. I kept waiting for some twist, some insight into their conditions, some surprise, but got none. I have no problem with "slow," quiet movies a la Horton Foote, but they have to have some inner life that makes them special. This is very straight-forward, obvious drama, told with a lot of self-importance.
Finding Neverland (Widescreen Edition)
Tough Love....
2004's "Finding Neverland" is a gentle dramatization of the playwright James Barrie's relationship with a widow and her four young sons, out of which will be born the timeless classic story of Peter Pan. The movie successfully walks a challenging tightrope between comedy and tragedy, as childhood clashes with adult realities.
Johnny Depp is pitch-perfect as James M. Barrie, a imaginative Scottish writer with a failed play and an unraveling marriage on his hands. Walking his dog in a London Park, he encounters the four adventurous children of recently widowed Sylvia Llewlyn Davies (Kate Winslet). His efforts to entertain the children are gratefully welcomed by an overstretched Sylvia. Putting on fantasy games involving dancing bears, pirates and indians for the boys seems to recharge Barrie's own creative batteries.
Barrie spends increasing time with Sylvia and the boys, in the process scandalizing the local gossips, pushing his already unhappy wife (Radha Mitchell) to the edge, and bringing down the wrath of Sylvia's suspicious mother (Julie Christie). His theater producer (Dustin Hoffman in a comically crusty turn) is openly skeptical that Barrie's new play, about a boy who refuses to grow up, will attract an audience. To complicate the situation, Barrie's efforts to bring off the play begin to collide with Sylvia's mysteriously deteriorating health. The stage is set for a very dramatic and emotional opening night.
In spite of the attractive fantasy elements of the story, this is a tough love movie. Barrie, thrust into the role of de facto father, must teach the children the realities of the adult world without prematurely destroying their childhood. Barrie and Sylvia walk a delicate line, balancing their shared concern for the children and their respective needs for emotional support, against the lack of any socially sanctioned basis for their relationship. Barrie must also deal forthrightly with his failures in his own marriage.
"Finding Neverland" is a small window into the theater world of 1903, where "Peter Pan" was a remarkably innovative production. The rehearsals for the play provide comic relief, while its opening night brings together multiple plots threads. "Finding Neverland" is very highly recommended as a entertaining movie, especially for those with their own childhood memories of Peter Pan.Finding Neverland (Widescreen Edition)
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Finding Neverland (Widescreen Edition)
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