Archive for the ‘Hook’ Category

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Watch Hook Online

Mardi, janvier 19th, 2010
Watch Hook Online. Watch Hook Online.

Movie Title: Hook
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Hook is available for streaming or downloading.

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The subtitle to the play “Peter Pan” is “The Boy Who Would Not Grow Up”. Spielberg’s sequel could well be called “The Man Who Grew Up Too Powerful”. The legend of Peter Pan is reversed, as are many roles. Robin Williams has the easy task of playing the thoughtless parent, the moderate task of playing the grownup Peter Pan, and the incredibly difficult task of making the transition between the two believable.

Dustin’s Hoffman’s Capt. Hook knows, as do all of us who remember his soliloquy, that no shrimp children admire him. His trouble with how he will be remembered, and with Top-notch Manufacture, ring quite fair to the current. The character is suave, urbane, vicious, moving, and ultimately tragic.

At first I was annoyed at the fresh elements in Never-Never-Land, but I soon realized that they had to be there, as Never-Never-Land was always a compilation of everything Lost Boys found inspiring. In the twenties, that included Red Indians, but if they were lost in the 1980s, well then, baseball and skateboards should be included. The unusual play was Edwardian, but the movie makes no sense unless it’s updated.

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The role-reversal and eventual re-reversal is enthralling. In the play, the same actor always plays both Hook and the thoughtless and cruel father, Mr. Darling. But here, Peter is the uncaring father and a corporate pirate, while Hook takes the children to Never-Never-Land. The lost boys are, at first, quarrelsome and threatening, while the pirates are a blissful adventuresome lot, even sentimental in the lullaby sequence. But while the Lost Boys befriend Peter recover himself (and to recover their have innocence), Hook’s attempt to find over Peter’s kids is, in the slay, a failure, and we are brought paunchy circle. The final scene of the helpless Hook surrounded by Peter and his boys parallels the earlier scene of the helpless Peter Banning surrounded by Hook and his pirates. (”Somebody lend me a hand.” “I already have.”)

The movie has one major flaw - most people don’t know the Peter Pan tale well enough to really understand it. Seeing the play “Peter Pan” won’t relieve noteworthy, either, because there’s a lot in the storybook “Peter and Wendy”, and in the play’s stage directions, that enhances the opinion of the movie Hook. In a scene usually crop from the play, Peter sacrifices himself for Wendy, and thinks he is about to drown. His line is “To die will be an awfully stout adventure.” Later, when Wendy and the Lost Boys are leaving Never-Land, Peter is left alone, slumped in his chair. The stage directions status that at this point, if Peter only understood a puny more, he would say, “To live would be an awfully vast adventure.” Hook is the epic of how Peter finally learns that to live is, indeed, an awfully great adventure. Along the method, he must also survey what a Blissful Understanding for a grown-up is, and that a man with no childhood is as incomplete as a boy who would not grow up.

The pretend-food that was always Peter’s common kind of meal is obsolete to advantageous attain. I found the first moment when Peter’s adult façade started to shatter down surprisingly believable. He is in an insult contest, and losing badly, until he finds the intersection between his grownup life and the childish contest. He wins with the biggest, most impressive insult, ending with “… don’t mess with me, man, I’m a lawyer.”

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Maggie Smith’s Wendy fills in the roles of both Wendy and Mrs. Darling from the play. Her misfortune with the night-lights is especially fulfilling. We are also re-introduced to Tootles, who was the Lost Boy who always missed the adventure, and so he does again. Several times in the movie, the first time I saw it, I mouthed the dialogue along with the actors, because I knew that after Hook said, “Prepare to die”, Peter had to acknowledge, “Dim and infamous man, have at thee.” There’s a brief appearance of Michael’s contain and John’s top hat, which they took with them to Never-Never-Land so many years ago. Lisa and Nana return (Nana IX, really), and many other details perform it a fantastic reunion. Bob Hoskins’s Smee and Julia Roberts’s Tinkerbell are proper to the modern, and yes, she says The Line She Had to Say.

Yes, Peter Pan grew up. But he didn’t do it when he became a lawyer; he did it in Hook.

This movie is so considerable more than a children’s sage. It is a magical reminder of how distinguished each of us really is. The movie begins with Peter Banning (Attorney at Law) who forgets the truth of who he is. He becomes obsessed with success, drinks too noteworthy and avoids his family. Through a series of events he is forced to see within for the “true” him, Peter Pan. Peter Pan knows that all he has to do is believe “one blissful understanding” and he can skim. I reflect this is just of all of us. The more we remember and honor who we are and the more we focus on the clear, the better life works. Peter Banning was a gloomy, “fleshy worn grandpa man” but when he remembers who he is, he’s filled with boundless joy and energy. A very spiritual message indeed.
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