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- <text id=91TT2792>
- <title>
- Dec. 16, 1991: Spoiled Brainchild
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Dec. 16, 1991 The Smile of Freedom
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- CINEMA, Page 74
- Spoiled Brainchild
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By Richard Schickel
- </p>
- <qt>
- <l>HOOK</l>
- <l>Directed by Steven Spielberg</l>
- <l>Screenplay by Jim V. Hart and Malia Scotch Marmo</l>
- </qt>
- <p> A Peter Pan who works days as a mergers and acquisitions
- lawyer? Whose cellular phone is practically grafted to his ear?
- Who is--pause here for J.M. Barrie to shift in his grave--afraid of flying?
- </p>
- <p> Welcome to '90s revisionism run riot. And, assuming such
- a well-loved tale actually needs to be made more relevant for
- today's audience, a not unpromising conceit. Robin Williams is
- a Peter Unprincipled, grounded in all the latest guilts and
- anxieties. He has a new surname (Banning) and a wife and two
- kids he neglects, owing to the press of the greed business. He
- is also afflicted by a convenient case of amnesia. He knows he's
- an orphan, but he can't remember anything that happened before
- "Gran Wendy" (Maggie Smith) arranged for his adoption by an
- American couple. Namely, he can't remember that he passed his
- preadolescent years wearing a little green tunic and a silly
- hat.
- </p>
- <p> Unfortunately, it requires a great whirring and clanking
- of plot machinery to make us believe this Peter is the One True
- Peter. The sounds of still more noisy manufacturing accompany
- the creation of a father-offspring conflict and the maneuvering
- of the Banning clan back to Gran's house. There, the children
- are bedded down near a familiar open window, through which they
- can be conveniently abducted by Captain Hook (Dustin Hoffman).
- In due course Banning will be conducted through the same window
- by his old friend Tinkerbell (Julia Roberts). His mission is to
- rescue his kids, but that gives him the chance to prove he's
- really a caring male (a Bly, if not entirely blithe, spirit) and
- to rediscover his true, spritely identity.
- </p>
- <p> Whew. No wonder the guy has trouble getting off the
- ground. He's carrying too much baggage. And so is Steven
- Spielberg's movie, which starts out deceptively, that is,
- wonderfully, with a school production of the original Peter Pan--cardboard scenery and sweetly earnest little players, faces
- scrunched by the effort of remembering their lines. This is the
- director at his formidable best, tenderly evoking the spirit of
- childhood.
- </p>
- <p> A wild surmise leaps up: maybe Hook is going to be a true
- work of the imagination, something quick and wildly
- improvising, like a child's account of a made-up adventure. But
- the real function of this sequence is to provide a humble
- contrast to the excesses that follow, rendering the
- well-publicized gazillions that have been lavished on Hook all
- the more impressive.
- </p>
- <p> The special effects--they mostly involve flying--have
- a nice, tossed-off air about them. The sets are spectacular,
- but their scale and luxe become oppressive. And they impose a
- peculiar burden on the director. He has a terrific way with
- action sequences, a genius for inventive detail that reads
- clearly even at his preferred pace, which is warp speed. But
- even he has to strain to fill these spaces; and his resort to
- a food fight, symbolizing Peter's rebonding with his old pals,
- the Lost Boys, is dismal and realized without conviction.
- </p>
- <p> Since so many of Spielberg's movies have dealt with
- abandoned or abducted children (Close Encounters of the Third
- Kind, Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom, Empire of the Sun,
- just to name the top of the line), no one can doubt the
- director's emotional attachment to his material. It's just that
- he has chosen the wrong way to demonstrate it. In effect, he has
- spoiled his brainchild rotten. Hook is not bratty, which might
- at least have been fun. It's stuffy, like one of those
- overdressed rich kids, standing forlorn in the corner at a
- party, afraid of ripping his clothes.
- </p>
- <p> John Williams' score, all thunder, lightning and
- self-importance, reinforces the film's charmlessness, and
- Hoffman's Hook emblematizes it. He's broody and self-absorbed,
- utterly gleeless in his villainy. But then even Robin Williams,
- that freest of comic spirits, never has a truly antic moment.
- Roberts, as Tinkerbell, is luckier than her co-stars. Her
- character has no obligation to try to fill the already
- overstuffed screen. Couldn't possibly do it anyway, since she's
- only a wee little fairy, a couple of inches tall. But Roberts
- is ingenuous, unaffected and what Hook is only some of the time--light on her wings.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-