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    Return to Neverland

    Finding Neverland's beginning: Pan soars with visual thrills despite shortcomings

    Alex Bentley
    Oct 9, 2015 | 8:38 am
    Finding Neverland's beginning: Pan soars with visual thrills despite shortcomings
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    The Peter Pan story has been told in many different ways since J.M. Barrie invented the character in the early 1900s, but rarely have we been shown how Peter actually came to be the boy who never grows up. In deference to the many comic book movies flooding theaters in recent years, we’re finally getting Peter’s origin story with Pan.

    In Pan, Peter (Levi Miller) is left on the doorstep of an orphanage by his mother for unknown reasons. After living in relative squalor for 12 years, he and many other orphans are kidnapped by pirates, led by Blackbeard (Hugh Jackman), and transported to Neverland. Their purpose there is to mine the land for rocks containing pixie dust, a mysterious substance that gives everlasting life.

    Peter doesn’t fit in with the rest of the kidnapped orphans, a fact recognized by a fellow worker, James Hook (Garrett Hedlund). When Peter unexpectedly discovers he has the power of flight, he and Hook decide to try to help each other and figure out a way to escape Blackbeard’s clutches.

    Directed by Joe Wright, Pan displays a visual panache that helps the film overcome its shortcomings. Wright and his team hardly ever miss a chance to try to wow the audience, using both practical and special effects. From flying pirate ships to glowing pixie dust to bursting flashes of color during battles, the film is a wonder to watch virtually from beginning to end.

    It’s especially fun seeing the way they use the familiar iconography of Peter Pan to play with various key moments. The character of Tiger Lily (Rooney Mara), a giant crocodile, and Tinkerbell are all used in slightly unexpected ways so as to set the film apart from other incarnations of the story.

    The film does drag a bit during the middle of its nearly two-hour running time, and the dialogue by screenwriter Jason Fuchs could have used some punching up. But Wright and the performances by the main actors keep things exciting, and the end of the film delivers an emotional wallop that’s well deserved.

    Miller, a virtual unknown, makes for an appealing Peter. He’s neither overly cutesy nor overly rehearsed, giving a performance that feels completely natural. Jackman gets to ham it up as Blackbeard, and he chews the scenery for all it’s worth. He definitely goes overboard a time or two, but it doesn’t hurt the role or the movie. Both Hedlund and Mara live up to their previous good performances, as well.

    Even though it’s not technically based on Barrie’s work, Pan does nothing to discredit the legacy of Peter Pan, and it has a lot to offer viewers whether they’re familiar with the story or not.

    Hugh Jackman in Pan.

    Hugh Jackman in Pan
    Photo courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures
    Hugh Jackman in Pan.
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    Movie Review

    School kids face peril in gripping horror film Weapons

    Alex Bentley
    Aug 7, 2025 | 3:00 pm
    Julia Garner in Weapons
    Warner Bros. Pictures
    Julia Garner in Weapons

    After making his name in the comedy world, writer/director Zach Cregger surprised many by making the highly effective horror comedy Barbarian in 2022. That success made his follow-up film much anticipated, and he’s surprising again with the much darker Weapons, a title that serves to intrigue even as it's only slightly less random than his previous effort.

    The film’s inciting event is the disappearance of almost an entire classroom of third graders taught by Justine Gandy (Julia Garner). For an unknown reason, all of them except for Alex Lilly (Cary Christopher) ran out of their houses at 2:17 am one morning and vanished into thin air. Neither Justine nor Alex claims to know anything about the incident, which is viewed with skepticism by many parents, including Archer Graff (Josh Brolin).

    Told in chapters focusing on different characters, the film methodically approaches the crisis from multiple angles, including deeper dives into side characters like Paul (Alden Ehrenreich), a police officer and Justine’s ex-boyfriend; Anthony (Austin Abrams), a drug addict who tries to find any way to feed his habit; and Andrew (Benedict Wong), the principal at Justine’s school.

    The subject matter of the film inherently makes it deeper than Barbarian, as putting kids in peril is tough to take for many people, especially parents. Cregger shines a light on that stress through the character of Archer, whose obsession with finding out what happened to his son becomes monomaniacal. But by showing the audience stories involving other characters, especially the way Justine gets increasingly isolated, Cregger ensures that the film never becomes bogged down in sadness.

    The diversity of storylines also serves the purpose of keeping the audience guessing as to where the overall story is heading. The strangeness of the kids’ disappearance and a few other odd things early on only hints at the answers that are to come. When Cregger finally decides to put the story into overdrive, it’s a gripping journey involving ultraviolence, bewildered characters, and one supremely creepy woman played by Amy Madigan.

    The film gives cinephiles a lot to dig into with its variety of different shots. Cregger and cinematographer Larkin Seiple don’t do anything overly flashy aside from a couple of sequences without cuts. Instead, they subtly play with angles like approaching a doorknob from underneath or saving a scary reveal until just the right moment that ups the intensity of the film greatly. Jump scares are called upon a bit too often, but the rest of the movie is done so well that the trope can be forgiven.

    Garner, so good in her Emmy-winning role on Ozark, does a fantastic job at carrying the emotional weight of the story. She’s aided by the always-reliable Brolin, whose character mostly acts as a counterweight to hers. Ehrenreich and Abrams are good, if slightly miscast. It’s great to see Wong outside of Marvel movies, and Madigan steals the movie in her late-breaking role. There’s also a fun cameo for fans of Barbarian.

    There are a lot of different filmmakers who can churn out middling horror movies, but Cregger now joins someone like Jordan Peele in making consistently interesting films that also deliver the goods when it comes to scary stuff. Weapons jumps to the top of the list for 2025 horror movies, but it’s also just a great movie, period.

    ---

    Weapons opens in theaters on August 8.

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