| Peter Pan | |
|---|---|
Original film poster | |
| Directed by | Herbert Brenon |
| Written by | Willis Goldbeck |
| Based on | Peter and Wendy byJ.M. Barrie |
| Produced by | Famous Players–Lasky |
| Starring | Betty Bronson Ernest Torrence Mary Brian Virginia Brown Faire Esther Ralston Anna May Wong |
| Cinematography | James Wong Howe |
| Distributed by | Paramount Pictures |
Release date |
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Running time | 105 minutes |
| Country | United States |
| Language | Silent (Englishintertitles) |
| Budget | $40,030 |
| Box office | $630,229 |




Peter Pan is a 1924 Americansilent fantasyadventure film released byParamount Pictures, and the first film adaptation ofthe 1904 play byJ. M. Barrie. It was directed byHerbert Brenon and starredBetty Bronson asPeter Pan,Ernest Torrence asCaptain Hook,Mary Brian asWendy,Virginia Browne Faire asTinker Bell,Esther Ralston as Mrs. Darling, andAnna May Wong as the Indian princessTiger Lily.[1][2] The film inspiredWalt Disney to createhis company's 1953 animated adaptation.[3]
Mrs. Darling (Ralston) is worried because she has seen a boyish face at the nursery window and found a shadow on the floor, but reluctantly goes to a party with her husband (Chadwick). Because Mr. Darling is so strict, the family cannot keep a nurse, so the three children are left in the charge of the dog Nana (Ali). Soon the lively boy Peter Pan (Bronson) appears at the window with the fairy Tinker Bell (Faire), and he finds his shadow in a desk drawer. Wendy (Brian), the oldest child, awakens and sees Peter, and he tells her of his home in the woods and about the fairies. Peter teaches the children to fly and they go away toNever Never Land to join the colony of Lost Boys, who have fallen out of carriages when their nurses were not looking. Tinker Bell is jealous and prompts one of the Lost Boys to shoot Wendy, thinking she is a bird, and she almost dies. The boys, who live in an underground home, adopt Wendy as their mother. A band of Neverland Indians are friendly and battle a band of pirates led by Captain Hook (Torrence), but are defeated. The Captain hates Peter because one of his hands was cut off by Pan and later eaten by a crocodile. Because the crocodile follows him, the Captain fears him and fed it an alarm clock so that its tick-tock will warn him of its approach. The pirates carry off the children and leave poison in Peter's medicine. Tinker Bell drinks the poison and almost dies, but is saved when the children in the audience say that they believe in fairies. Peter enlists the aid of mermaids to get aboard the pirate ship and, with the help of the Lost Boys, they fight and conquer the pirates. Wendy and the children then fly back home. Mrs. Darling, who has grieved, thinks she is dreaming when she sees her children until they rush up on her. Wendy wants to keep Peter, but he says he never wants to grow up. Mrs. Darling agrees to allow Wendy to go back once a year to help Peter with his spring cleaning, and he leaves to go back to the home in the woods. Mr. and Mrs. Darling adopt all of the Lost Boys.[4]
The film closely follows the plot of the original play, and even goes so far as to incorporate much of its original stage dialogue in theintertitles.[citation needed] Added scenes include Nana the dog pouring out Michael's medicine and giving him a bath, and Nana bursting into the home at which a party is being given, to warn Mr. and Mrs. Darling that Peter Pan and the Darling children are flying around the nursery.[citation needed]
Like the original play and several other versions, and unlikethe 1953 Disney film, the 1924 version makes it clear that Wendy harbors a romantic attachment to Peter, but Peter only thinks of her as his mother. The film omits the sceneAn Afterthought, which Barrie wrote after the play was staged, and in which Peter returns for Wendy, only to find that years have passed and that she is now a married woman with a daughter.[citation needed] Barrie selected Bronson for the role of Peter.[4]
Peter Pan was first released in the United States on December 29, 1924. The distributor was Paramount Pictures. In Germany, where the premiere took place in December 1925, the distributor wasUFA.
Since there was no national film archive in the United States and Paramount had no interest in a long-term distribution of the film – distributors held movies only as long in the program as they earned money – most copies ofPeter Pan were destroyed over the years.
For decades, the film was thought to be lost. In the 1950sJames Card, film restorer and curator ofGeorge Eastman House in Rochester, New York, discovered a well-preserved copy in a vault at theEastman School of Music, and made a preservation of that source. Film historian David Pierce discovered an additional and hitherto unknown 16mm copy at the Disney Studios which had been made when the company acquired the rights to the property in 1938. A new restoration was undertaken by the George Eastman House combining the two sources in 1994, and Philip C. Carli composed new film music for it, which was premiered by the Flower City Society Orchestra at the 1996Pordenone Silent Film Festival.
The film was celebrated at the time for its innovative use ofspecial effects (mainly to show Tinker Bell) according to Disney's 45th anniversary video oftheir adaptation ofPeter Pan.[citation needed] In 2000, this film was deemed "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant" by the United StatesLibrary of Congress and selected for preservation in theNational Film Registry.[citation needed]
Thereview aggregator websiteRotten Tomatoes reports an approval rating of 98% based on 42 reviews, with an average rating of 7.9/10. The website's consensus reads, "Armed with technical ingenuity and classic source material,Peter Pan brings J.M. Barrie's beloved fantasy to the screen in dazzling style."[5]
The film is recognized byAmerican Film Institute in these lists: