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Reviews
Peter Pan Live! (2014)
Where there's live, there's hope
I am surprised at all the negative reviews. This was live television. It is not supposed to be perfect. Many theater plays do not always go well and this is the same thing. It is precisely that spontaneity that comes with a live performance that makes it so much fun to watch. There is no post-production work when you do live, so that can't fix the occasional crew member or light that gets in the picture.
Most of the cast did a great job. If you know the history of Peter Pan productions, you would not be surprised at a young woman playing the title role. Allison Williams pulled it off beautifully, with a great singing voice and the guts to hook up to a wire on live TV.
As far as the stone-faced Christopher Walken, he played the role as he saw it. It worked, but it wasn't Dustin Hoffman or Cyril Ritchard. They saw it differently. It is called artistic license and Walken kept to his own style.
I gave it a 7 out of 10 because I thought the lost boys and the Indians were too old. They were extremely talented as dancers, actors and singers, but they looked almost perverse as they attempted to act like kids. Had they cast kids in those roles, the dancing and singing may have suffered, perhaps, but it would have looked better.
Some reviewers also complained about the sets. With very little CGI and only sparing use of green screen, the set designers did great! Neverland is a product of a child's imagination...it should be colorful.
I grew up watching Mary Martin play Peter Pan on our 9" black and white television. This was a modern tribute to that legendary performance. Watch the original again and you will see how archaic it looks. The performances are why it is a classic, and I hope time will show that this is no different.
Other than the too old ensemble to bring it down just a little, live television is something we need to see a lot more of.
The Revenge of the Sons of the Desert (1987)
Everything from soup to nuts!
An excellent documentary about The Sons of the Desert. Sandy Marshall attended the 1986 S.O.D. convention in Philadelphia (actually Valley Forge, PA) and created this film. I was fortunate enough to be the registrar for the convention, since I was a bored member (that's right!) of the Two Tars Tent (Philadelphia chapter) of the Sons at the time. You can see me in the film in several shots, including giving a toast to Mae Bush and Charlie Hall at one of the banquets.
There are stars galore in the film, including Lois Laurel (Stan's daughter), Rosina Lawrence, Mae Questel (voice of Betty Boop and Olive Oyl), Dorothy DeBorba (Our Gang's Little Echo), The Nighthawks Orchestra, and many others.
The film captures the half-assed dignity of the Sons conventions, right down to the cocktails. I was pleased to see that it was finally released on DVD, included in the Laurel and Hardy Collection, Vol. 1, along with three movies; Great Guns, Jitterbugs, and The Big Noise. They are not the best movies from the boys, but I guess it is just another purple moment, not teaming their best film, Sons of the Desert, with a documentary ABOUT The Sons of the Desert! Buy the collection and then buy another collection including Sons of the Desert. You can't have too many L&H films!