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From Yomiuri Online
Depp finds his feet again in 'Finding Neverland'Shogo Hagiwara / Daily Yomiuri Staff Writer
Finding Neverland (Japan title: Neverland)
Three stars and a half out of five
Dir: Marc Forster
Cast: Johnny Depp, Kate Winslet, Dustin Hoffman, Freddie Highmore
There is no denying Johnny Depp is one of the most talented actors of our time. Not only is he good-looking, but he has earned his stripes by succeeding in roles as diverse as a Frankensteinian half-human (Edward Scissorhands) and a weird, indie filmmaker (Ed Wood).
Memories of his portrayals in those movies are cherished by many filmgoers. But just being a talented actor doesn't guarantee you the best part in a great movie every time an offer comes around. When Depp does get stuck in a mediocre flick (such as Once Upon a Time in Mexico or Secret Window), he seems to try to make sure that at least he has a fun time being in it, but seems unconcerned with anything else.
That's not the case with Finding Neverland, a film about British author James Matthew Barrie, who created one of the most famous children in the world--Peter Pan. With Depp's restrained portrayal of Barrie driving the narrative, the film proves to be a moving, thoughtful and beautiful piece of work.
The story revolves around Barrie's encounter and subsequent dealings with the Llewelyn Davies family, an inspiration for the Darlings in the play Peter Pan.
We first see the opening day of Barrie's latest production, Little Mary, at the Duke of York's Theatre in London. The play is a flop and Barrie faces harsh criticism from every corner of the press. Even his producer, Charles Frohman, (Dustin Hoffman) and writer friend Arthur Conan Doyle (Ian Hart) don't hide their disappointment.
His confidence as a playwright shattered, Barrie takes a walk in Kensington Park, where he encounters beautiful but ailing widow Sylvia Llewelyn Davies (Kate Winslet) and her four sons, including Peter (Freddie Highmore), who is frustrated with himself for not being strong enough to deal with his father's recent death.
While his marriage to Mary (Radha Mitchell) is on the verge of collapse, Barrie spends more time with Sylvia and her children, who welcome him as a father figure. But Sylvia's mother, Mrs. Emma Maurier (Julie Christie), doesn't approve because she believes his presence does her family more harm than good. After all, it's the year 1903, not the 21st century, and a widow flirting with a married man can only fuel scandalous rumors, however untrue they may be.
But it is through Barrie's dealings with Llewelyn Davies that he regroups and moves on to write his next play, Peter Pan, inspired by the family. Barrie's foray into the fantasy genre raises more than a few eyebrows. Undeterred by the naysayers, he absorbs himself in the production of the play.
This film, adapted from a play titled The Man Who Was Peter Pan, is only loosely based on true events. As pointed out by critics elsewhere, Sylvia wasn't a widow at the time when the film is set and Barrie is said to have shown too intense an interest in Sylvia's children, which freaked out some of those around him. (Here, he is depicted as a kind, caring character instead.)
One cannot view Finding Neverland as a textbook on Barrie or Peter Pan. But "creative" omissions from and additions to Barrie's real life do the film some good--it proves to be a tightly knit and well-crafted venture.
One drawback is that the story leans a little too much toward the relationship between the established writer Barrie and the would-be writer Peter Llewelyn Davies. That Peter comes of age through writing under Barrie's guidance is a key plot development, but the filmmaker's extensive focus on that particular aspect of the story may seem a little too much. (If you think Max Pirkis got too much screen time as the maritime moppet in Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World, you get the picture.)
Nonetheless, Depp turns in a remarkable performance as Barrie, and brings the right chemistry to the film with Highmore's Peter and Winslet. Depp's outings following the success of Pirates of the Caribbean--Once Upon a Time in Mexico (the third and final part of the El Mariachi series) and Secret Window--were nothing but forgettable. In those movies, he seemed to put in far too little effort, though the makers of either movie should share the blame for their mediocre scripts and directing.
That's not the case here. Depp looks at home in his role, fleshing out a child-adult who based Peter Pan on himself. Finding Neverland is definitely one of Depp's best efforts in recent years.
Pascalle has sent in a scan of the Dutch Preview Magazine for Dec/Jan 2005 - (and you will note they once again have used the photomanipulation I created for "The Libertine," as if it was the real thing).and these lovely hugh scans from the film
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January 3, 2005
From the Clarion Ledger
'Finding Neverland': Depp, cast deliver in-depth performancesBy Anita Modak-Truran
Special to The Clarion-LedgerJohnny Depp (left) and Freddie Highmore in a scene from Miramax Films' Finding Neverland. It's in theaters now.
In Finding Neverland, the movie about Sir J.M. Barrie, the creator of Peter Pan, Barrie (Johnny Depp) peeks out from behind the theater curtain. His dark eyes express eagerness, nervousness and then disappointment at the realization that his play fails to impress the London audience.
Producer Charles Frohman (Dustin Hoffman) requires Barrie to come up with something new (and fast) since money has already been spent on actors and the facility. So Barrie, a man who doesn't want to grow up, creates his greatest play about a lad who never does and who never will.
This picture, written by David Magee from Allan Knee's play and directed by Marc Forster (Monster's Ball), takes us inside Barrie's fantasies. Although this is not a biography (we are told early on that the film is inspired by true events more than 100 years ago), we understand the emotional sources of Barrie's writing and characters, and we see Peter Pan as a clear expression of Barrie's playful and childlike spirit.
Barrie's marriage to actress Mary Ansell (Radha Mitchell) is dried up. Mary complains — not unjustifiably — that he spends too much time with the widowed Mrs. Sylvia Davies (Kate Winslet) and her family. Barrie wedges himself into the Davies family, not because of any sexual interest in Mrs. Davies, but because Peter (Freddie Highmore), the other Davies' boy, and their mother make him feel alive and at home. Even Sylvia's formidable mother (Julie Christie) can't dampen Barrie's wholesome affection for the family; nor can the mean-spirited gossipers.
Neverland is Barrie's idea of perfection; it's a place for children who are growing up too fast and for adults who need to forget.
Depp is at an exciting point in his career. He was awesome as the flamboyant Jack Sparrow in Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl, sheer perfection as the soldier of death in Once Upon A Time in Mexico, and eerily subversive as the cerebral writer in Secret Window.
Depp defies our expectations again with his compassionate portrayal of Barrie. When Barrie kisses his wife on her cheek, you can see in Depp's eyes that his character wishes he could love her and have a family, but he can't. He must borrow someone else's.
The others members of the cast are spellbinding, too. Like Depp, Winslet is riding high. She was magnificent in Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, and, in this film, she is a picture of Edwardian grace and beauty. Christie (Doctor Zhivago) is brilliant. Her character is subtle, mocking and believable. And the children, particularly Master Highmore, bring a wonderful complexity to their roles so that we see more than happy children, but troubled kids who have lost a father and may lose their mother.
Finding Neverland is a giddy homage to our youthful desires. "You can visit Neverland anytime you like."
"How?"
"Just believe."
Interview by Jan Janssen
September 2004Though the life of J M Barrie may have been just as sugar coated as his fabled children's classic Peter Pan, Johnny Depp is pleased as pie to be earning serious accolades for his portrait of the author. Finding Neverland, co starring Britain's Kate Winslet, made its world premiere at the Venice Film Festival and has already prompted film industry observers to tout Depp as an early Oscar candidate. Its a richly deserved tribute to Depp who has not only mastered a Scottish accent but also layered his interpretation of Barrie with the childlike sense of wonder that animated the eccentric writers world. Johnny isn't ready to buy into the Oscar hype yet however.
"I'm glad people seem to have enjoyed the film and my work on it, but I don't want the attention to be focused on me" says Depp. "Kate (Winslet) also does a great job and there are so many elements to the story that make it something audiences will enjoy. I was so happy to have had the chance to inhabit the character because so much of what is beautiful in life is the kind of innocence and amazement at looking at the world which is what Barrie's vision was like. A s we grow older we often lose that ability to experience the world that way and that's a shame."
Depp, 41, is in the middle of a career renaissance that began with last years Oscar nominated role in Pirates of the Caribbean. For years, Depp has been drawn to playing outsiders and oddballs, and it is only recently that his own self image has undergone a drastic transformation-a change triggered by his relationship to French singer/actress Vanessa Paradis. Now six years strong, the Depp-Paradis pairing has produced two children, seen Johnny move to France, and occasioned a happy reversal in his previously dismal outlook on life.
"That was the dark side of me and a pretty dismal time in my life"recalls Depp. "Its like someone you used to know and wonder why things looked so ugly from his perspective. When I was 30 I wasn't that convinced I would make it to 40, but maybe I had to go through all the crap that had built up inside me to get to a point where I could start enjoying life. When I met Vanessa I was still drifting . But being with her has blown me away and made me a better man. Ten years ago I never would have believed in the kind of life I have now as a father, although I still wonder if its ok to be this happy".
Depp must also be smiling his way through life if he stops to take stock of how his film career has undergone a similar reversal of fortune. Last years POTC earned him an Oscar nomination and box office bankability, and his forthcoming film, The Libertine, in which he plays the lecherous 17th century dandy, John Wilmot, aka the Earl of Rochester, is bound to keep that momentum in place. On top of that, there is also considerable hype building around Finding Neverland. Both films are believed to provide Depp with the kind of material that augers well the next years Academy Awards, and further establishes him as a serious actor who has finally fulfilled the promise he showed earlier in his career with performances in Edward Scissorhands, What's Eating Gilbert Grape and Don Juan DeMarco. Depp has achieved a beautiful symmetry in his home and screen selves. but will success and happiness spoil Johnny Depp? We set out to ask the man himself.
Q: You`ve often spoken about some of the sadder moments in your childhood in terms of how its affected you and made you more sensitive to people who are lost of otherwise confused by life. Do you always look to get into the psychological makeup of the people you play?
A: There`s a fragility and vulnerability that I look for in terms of figuring out what makes people tick. While were growing up , we all experience things which somehow warp our personalities and prevent us from being as open or as free as we could be. I grew up in a very different kind of family environment although I didn't know I was living a weird kind of existence until I would go to other kids homes and see how they lived. I also felt very alienated and isolated in school and some kids and one particular teacher would love to pick on me. So that made me pretty defensive and angry in some ways and you want to do anything to escape that kind of aggression your experiencing.
Q: How did you escape this as a teenager?
A: Music was huge for me. I loved playing the guitar and playing in a band and just hanging out with guys who loved music and pretty much felt the same way about school and life that I did. Even though I knew at one point that I would never be a great guitar player, I still loved the freedom that came from playing in a band. My band was good enough to open for Iggy Popp and that was a wild time for us, Music was the thing that got me out of pumping gas and indirectly led me into acting.
Q: Do you thing that teasing and taunting you experienced in high school was still part of the lingering negative attitude you might have had when you were going through a very difficult period in your life in your late twenties and early thirties?
A: That was a big part of it although its too easy to blame other people for your own self loathing. When I was drinking heavily , I was just in a really bad frame of mind and using alcohol to deaden whatever I was feeling at the time. I didn't really know how to handle the process of going from a nobody to someone who's suddenly famous and getting paid more money than he knows what to do with and having people stare at you when your sitting in a cafe. I don't even really know why I was doing it except that I wasn't happy and so you drink to escape that feeling.
Q: Did you ever feel you were going over the edge?
A: You never think you`re on the verge of disaster while you`re looking over the edge yourself. Its your friends and family who are trying to get you to stop destroying yourself and after a while it kind of sank in and I just cleaned up my act. But that didn't really solve the problem which was that I was unhappy with the way my life was going and didn't see any great relief on the horizon.
Q: And all that changed when you met Vanessa?
A: Basically, yeah, I pretty much fell in love with Vanessa the moment I set eyes on her. As a person I was pretty much a lost cause at that point of my life. She turned all that around for me with her incredible tenderness and understanding. Very quickly I realized I couldn't live without her. She made me feel like a real human being instead of someone Hollywood had manufactured. It sounds incredibly corny and phony, but that exactly what happened to me and what she has meant to me.
Q: Do you think fate brought you together?
A: I don't know what it was but I`m glad that Roman Polanski wanted me to do his movie (The Ninth Gate)and I was sitting in a restaurant in Paris when I made eye contact with Vanessa.
Q: Do you ever wonder why you happened to meet the right woman then and not earlier?
A: You have to be open to meeting someone and not be locked in your own ugly frame of mind. I was definitely ready to have someone be there for me when I met Vanessa but it was much more than that. She had this incredible self-assurance and naturalness to her the whole way of being that it just made me feel so good to be around her. You cant explain it but you can feel it.
Q: What do you think about your life when you look back to the time before you met Vanessa?
A: I just wonder what I was doing with myself, I can only tell you that I just didn't have a good feeling about who I was or what I was doing with my life. I enjoyed acting and I loved the process, but at the same time I hated the celebrity that came with it even though I know its part of the game and the recognition you need to have people come see your movies. I just couldn't get my head into the place where I could just enjoy the attention and deal with it on that level instead of feeling stalked and paranoid about it. I`m a lot cooler about it now. I like the fact that my children think I`m a pirate and they can tell other kids that their dad is a nice pirate.
Q: Is marriage something you think about?
A: Sometimes. But the truth is that Vanessa and I have considered ourselves husband and wife since the day we moved in together. I`It's not a big issue for us because we know what we feel for each other and that that kind of connection is what`s going to keep us together for a very long time . Marriage would just be a formality.
Q: Do you feel you`ve achieved a kind of wonderful synchronicity with the way your private life and career seem to be working out so well?
A: Having a family has made me a much healthier and happier person and consequently a better actor.
I would never have appreciated being able to play in a film like POTC, for example, if it hadn't been for having a family of my own and seeing the joy little kids have when they see Captain Jack. Having my own children has just ripped away a lot of the confusion and insecurity that had been dragging me down for pretty much my entire life . I never knew what happiness was until I met Vanessa and we had our first child. And having that kind of beauty in my life has also made me appreciate being an actor much more. It all fits now.Q: You were always notoriously hateful of the paparazzi.
A: I haven't changed my thinking about those guys very much! Even in France I still have them staking me out and watching our house in the countryside. I don't see the point of guys earning their living by taking photos of me and Vanessa walking our kids to a playground. But I`m trying not to let myself get worked up about it anymore. That just makes them even more money and they know that so some of them try to provoke you that way. So Vie stopped playing into their hands. I`m just trying to be a boring family guy so there's no value to taking my photo any more.
Q: You seem to be a happy man these days. Does that kind of inner calm change your approach to the kinds of roles you want to be playing ?
A: I still love the challenge of playing eccentrics. I don't see the point in playing the usual kind of leading men type roles and I also don't feel that I`m necessarily right for those kind of parts, I loved Captain Jack and were doing the sequel to that and I think that's the kind of film I want my kids to see me in and maybe my grandchildren one day. But mainly the thing which attracts me is how many odd layers I can find in a role. That's what excites me as an actor-its the process of creating a character and playing with all the possibilities. I also think that most of the people who appreciate my work look forward to seeing me playing unusual or eccentric personalities.
Q: How eccentric are you in person?
A: I have a few quirks like being interested in insects and odd smells and stuff like that. More than that I`m not telling (Smiles)
Q: Did you ever use acting as an escape?
A: I think I did. But now its more of a creative release than anything else. When I finished making a movie in the past, I never felt that I had anything that interesting to go back to in terms of my life. Now I look forward to being with my family.
Q: Are you finding that raising your children has affected the way you approach your career?
A: Strangely even when I was miserable in my own life, I usually loved being on a film set and I truly reveled in the atmosphere of working with the director and the actors in creating something. Making films was always a refuge for me because I was totally focused on the work and not thinking about my own problems. Being with Vanessa and having children had made things very easy and clear for me. There`s nothing dark about my world anymore.
I watch our son and daughter playing around the house or learning new things and I wonder what on earth could be more beautiful.
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Legal Stuff:FINDING NEVERLAND and the characters, events, items, and places therein are trademarks of Miramax Film Corporation. Copyrights and trademarks for the film are held by their respective owners and their use is allowed under the fair use clause of the Copyright Law.