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Director : Marc Forster
Country : USA
Running Time : 101 minutes
Certificate : PG
Script : David Magee from the play by Alan Knee
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Cast: James M. Barrie
: Johnny Depp
Sylvia Llewellyn Davies : Kate Winslet
Peter Llewellyn Davies : Freddie Highmore
Mary Ansell Barrie : Radha Mitchell
Mrs Emma du Maurier : Julie Christie
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Director Marc Forster: Charting a New Course
to "Neverland"
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He doesn't make the kind of films that Christians would
normally flock to see. But just because Marc Forster directed
"Monster's Ball" - an acclaimed but controversial
movie featuring a brazen sex scene between Halle Berry
and Billy Bob Thornton - doesn't mean he isn't capable
of making a family film.
In fact, "Finding Neverland," Forster's latest
project, is proof that the young German-born director
is capable of a wide variety of films.
""Monster's Ball" is one of those darker
tales of life," Forster said, during a recent promotional
tour. "It was about forgiveness and breaking the
cycle of violence, and I didn't want the sex scene to
be gratuitous. I felt like it was necessary, because it
showed who these characters were." With "Finding
Neverland," however, Forster said that he wanted
to try something entirely different. "When I read
the script, it touched me in a profound way about the
music of life, immortality and reality versus fantasy.
There was something magical about it," he explained.
In the film, Johnny Depp plays Scottish playwright J.M.
Barrie, author of "Peter Pan." The story focuses
on Barrie's boredom with the confines of traditional theatre,
which had begun to permeate his productions, frustrating
his London audiences. One day, while walking in Kensington
Garden, Barrie meets the Llewelyn Davies family: four
fatherless boys and their bohemian, recently-widowed mother
(Kate Winslet). Touched by the boy's search for hope after
their father's death, Barrie befriends the grieving family
- much to the dismay of his socialite wife (Radha Mitchell)
and the children's uptight grandmother (Julie Christie).
But together, through the adventuresome games that Barrie
creates, they are finally able to embrace life once again.
The film was adapted from the award-winning stage play,
"The Man Who Would Be Peter Pan," by Allan Knee,
and is inspired by true events in Barrie's life, including
his friendship with the Llewelyn Davies family, the source
of Barrie's inspiration for "Peter Pan." Chosen
to direct the film by Miramax Studios, Forster immediately
connected with the story, which harked back to his childhood
in the Swiss Alps near Davos. While his physician father
worked long hours, Forster's mother traveled the world,
leaving her sons in the care of a nanny. Forster discovered
solace in games of make-believe.
"I spent a lot of time trying to escape my day-to-day
life," he said. "It left me very lonely."
A 1993 graduate of New York University's film school,
Forster received critical acclaim for his offbeat musical
"Loungers," which won the Audience Award at
the 1996 Slamdance International Film Festival. Forster's
second film, "Everything Put Together," which
deals with the ostracism a young mother faces when her
baby dies from S.I.D.S., premiered at the 2000 Sundance
Film Festival and earned the young filmmaker the prestigious
Movado Someone to Watch/Independent Spirit Award.
But it was his third film, "Monster's Ball,"
that solidified Forster's status as a director capable
of portraying intense issues with unflinching honesty.
The story also earned Berry her first Oscar, granting
her icon status as the first African-American woman to
take home the golden statue.
"We're all storytellers to a certain degree,"
Forster said, with Swiss earnestness. "We're all
actors in our own stories. Every day we make decisions
as to how our movies turn out." Before taking on
"Finding Neverland," Forster first had to tackle
the issue of Barrie's legacy, which had been sullied by
vague allegations of misconduct between him and the Llewelyn
Davies boys. Fortunately, those accusations proved to
be completely unfounded.
"I didn't want to make a movie about a pedophile,
but he wasn't," Forster insisted.
The script met with the approval of Nico Llewelyn Davies,
the youngest of the five boys. Although Nico is not portrayed
in the film, he lived with Barrie after his mother's death
and regarded Barrie as his father, and his daughter has
a cameo in the film.
Biographer Andrew Birkin, in his definitive biography
of Barrie, "J.M. Barrie and the Lost Boys,"
noted that Nico was unequivocal about any possible misconduct
between the playwright and the Llewelyn Davies boys.
"Had he had these leanings in however slight a symptom,
I would have been aware," Birkin wrote. "He
was an innocent - which is why he could write Peter Pan."
Part of a celebrated circle of writers that included
Rudyard Kipling, Thomas Hardy, H.G. Wells and Robert Louis
Stevenson, Barrie was one of the most successful and wealthiest
playwrights of his generation. His work includes more
than forty plays - many of which were major stage hits,
largely due to their biting satire about London's class-driven
society - as well as six novels, seven works of non-fiction
and numerous collections.
Without a doubt, however, it is "Peter Pan"
that Barrie is most remembered for. Not only did the production
become an epic story, but it sparked a revolution by demonstrating
that children were a viable audience for literature. It
also left a tremendous legacy that includes the "Peter
Pan collar," the girl's name "Wendy" and
the word "Neverland."
"Finding Neverland" telescopes the seven years
that Barrie actually spent with the Llewelyn Davies family
into a much shorter period. It also deviates slightly
from the families' history. For example, when Barrie met
the Llewelyn Davies boys, their nanny was with them -
not their mother - and their father was still alive, although
he died shortly thereafter. Also, while Barrie and Sylvia
Llewelyn Davies never had an affair, Barrie did propose
to her, after his wife had left him for another man. Onscreen,
however, their relationship is platonic.
"The film never seems to go quite where you expect
it to go," said Depp. "It never turns into a
sentimental love story of two people destined to be together
or that sort of thing. Instead, it's a much more complicated
and moving relationship between two people who need each
other on a level that's really beyond explanation or words."
That childlike faith is exactly what Forster wants to
portray, and he takes his inspiration from Barrie himself.
"All characters, whether grown-ups or babes, must
wear a child's outlook as their only important adornment,"
wrote the playwright in a stage direction that became
the film's guiding light. It was even included in early
drafts of the script, so that not only the actors but
also the crew would understand the intention behind the
film.
The film ends with the words, "Just believe,"
which refer to believing in Neverland, or the unseen -
something that could be interpreted from a Christian standpoint,
if applied allegorically.
Even without a Christian message per se, however, the
film resonates with many of the same themes that make
"Peter Pan" so rich: the wonder of the imagination,
the nostalgia for childhood innocence and the longing
to believe in something more enchanted than everyday life.
"I saw the film as a story about the power of a
man's creativity to take people to another world, and
about the deep human need for illusions, dreams and beliefs
that inspire us even in the face of tragedy," Forster
said. "For me, it's about the transformative power
of imagination - being able to transform yourself into
something greater than you are, even if nobody believes
in you."
Annabelle Robertson
Entertainment Critic
Crosswalk.com
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