Adventure becomes one of the most exhilarating elements and defining characteristics of his curious eternal childhood.
#PETER PAN FULL MOVIE REAL LIFE SERIES#
The plot of the play is made up of a series of adventures, usually led by the spritely Peter, and always ending in triumph. He loves to find adventures and he loves a fair fight. More than family, romance, or stability, Peter loves a good challenge. AdventureĪ defining characteristic of Peter Pan is his insatiable thirst for adventure. When her mother hears about the Lost Boys, she offers to adopt them, providing them with a mother and a family. Wendy immediately acts as a mother to the boys, and they create a makeshift family where there never was one.įinally, at the end of the story, Wendy begins to miss her parents horribly, and decides to go home, bringing the Lost Boys with her. Then, in Never Land, she meets the Lost Boys, orphans whom Peter had discovered in Kensington Gardens. When Peter asks Wendy to accompany him to Never Land, she brings along her brothers, Michael and John. They are adoring parents who think highly of their children, and their quarrels are always loving and affectionate. Darling are preparing to go out to dinner, as they interact lovingly with their three children. The first time we see a portrayal of a close family relationship, Mrs. The play suggests that good always triumphs over evil. Peter, the adventurous boy who will never grow up, represents good, while Hook represents evil. He gets his comeuppance when Peter kicks him into the open jaws of the crocodile. After Peter has come to rescue the Lost Boys and the Darling children, Hook also attempts to kill him again.
He kidnaps Tiger Lily and also attempts to murder Peter by poisoning him. Captain Hook is a bona fide "baddie" and his deeds are evil and intended to cause harm. Good Triumphing Over EvilĪ central and rather simple theme in the play is that of the triumph of good over evil. Peter's "mommy issues" are, therefore, at the center of his character, why he has become such a reckless and adventure-seeking character, and why he is always in search of a mother. He fled his pram as a child, and when he returned to his nursery, his mother had closed the window and no longer expected him to come home. Indeed, it is hinted that his primary trauma, what sent him to Never Land in the first place, was being abandoned by his mother. Part of Peter's arrested development, his desire to be a child forever, is also wrapped up in a Freudian conundrum in which he can only see the females in his life as potential mothers. There is even a suggestion that Wendy is falling in love with Peter, but he tells her he thinks of her more as a mother figure. This is a stereotypical depiction of the role of women in society. Darling and Wendy are portrayed as very maternal, and it is suggested that their role in life should be to nurture children. Peter represents the desire never to get older and never to mature as a person, but to remain immersed in one's imagination and sense of play. He makes decisions based on his desire to remain a child forever, even giving up Wendy and the companionship of the Lost Boys, so that he can stay young and continue to go on wild adventures. Peter Pan is the living and breathing manifestation of the desire to remain a child forever, without responsibility or cares.
The main theme of the story is the conflict between wanting to remain a child, but knowing that one has to become an adult.
"All children, except for one, grow up." This is the opening line of both the book and the play.