Peter Pan (1953)
The three children of the Darling family are whisked away by he hero of their stories, Peter Pan, to the magical world of Neverland where an ongoing war between Peter's gang of rag-tag runaways and the evil Pirate Captain Hook is taking place.
18 September 1917, Springfield, Massachusetts, USA
November 24, 1941 in Los Angeles, California, USA
9 February 1909, Oxford, Oxfordshire, England, UK
3 March 1937, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, USA
25 December 1913, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA
15 April 1917, Baltimore, Maryland, USA
May 11, 1929 in Los Angeles, California, USA
15 September 1904, St. Petersburg, Russian Empire [now Russia]
25 July 1937, London, England, UK
31 March 1916, New York City, New York, USA
November 03, 2009
Definitely a Disney classic but misses out much of the darker side of J.M.Barrie's fantasy tale.
February 06, 2013
I always thought Peter Pan was supposed to be about childhood innocence. Pan and Tinkerbell were not sweet and cuddly, they both came across as selfish, cold and really unlikable bullies.
February 05, 2016
A delightful entertaining film that will appeal to the young and the not-so young alike.
January 25, 2013
Years later it's still a treasure, because of Disney and his artists' talent for creating memorable characters.
November 03, 2009
Ornamented with some bright and lilting tunes, it is a lively feature-length Technicolor excursion into a world that glows with an exhilarating charm and a gentle joyousness.
December 27, 2010
Stereotypes mar otherwise jaunty Disney adventure.
February 06, 2013
plays as less of a child fantasy of soaring adventure than it does as a retrograde narcissistic adult male fantasy of being desired and pursued by every female in the room
November 11, 2009
Not an especially mature film, probably the most "kiddie movie" of all the 1950s Disney features.
November 03, 2009
A feature cartoon of enchanting quality.
November 03, 2009
Classic Disney, if not authentic Barrie.
February 04, 2013
Who wants their son taking his cues from this meanspirited "hero"?
November 03, 2009
Disney's depersonalizing habit of putting different teams in charge of different sections of the story really shows up here.

