Living a bleak existence at a London orphanage, 12-year-old Peter finds himself whisked away to the fantastical world of Neverland. Adventure awaits as he meets new friend James Hook and the warrior Tiger Lily. They must band together to save Neverland from the ruthless pirate Blackbeard. Along the way, the rebellious and mischievous boy discovers his true destiny, becoming the hero forever known as Peter Pan.
Not in the usual sense, but someone jumps onto a huge wild fantasy bird and flies (on) it. I'm not sure to what extent, if any, the person steers the bird.
A huge fantasy bird is killed by impalement through the head. Also, I believe one or more fish are eaten by a crocodile swimming inside a floating bubble of water. It happens in the blink of an eye, and isn't seen close up. (Fairies aren't animals, of course, but lots of fairies seem to be burned to death by huge gusts of fire, although it's not seen clearly. Just wanted to mention that.)
A number of children in an orphanage are horribly mistreated by nuns, subjected to verbal abuse, dangerous tasks, corporal punishment and malnutrition. Later on, we see hundreds or thousands of kidnapped children held as slaves, forced to do hard labour and living in fear of being punished or picked out for one of the regularly occurring more or less random executions.
Someone is hung upside down and threatened with impending death, then forced to fight a formidable warrior. Also, a number of children in an orphanage are horribly mistreated by nuns, subjected to verbal abuse, corporal punishment and malnutrition. Furthermore, hundreds or thousands of kidnapped children are held as slaves, forced to do hard labour and living in fear of being punished or picked out for one of the regularly occurring more or less random executions.
We see a relatively short, blurry, flickering flashback of a man trying to force a woman back into captivity (which he appears to see as some kind of relationship). She fights him, and he ends up killing her with his sword.
A boy falls to his death (it's an execution). We hear him screaming as he falls. We see neither the impact nor his dead body or the place where his body lay. I'm not sure if he's the only kid who dies. However, it's safe to assume that lots of kids have died in the place where the execution takes place, seeing as hundreds of kids are kept as slaves there, doing hard labour in mines.
Lots of fairies - who can speak and understand speech (including human language), so must be considered characters on a par with humans - seem to be burned to death by huge gusts of fire, although it's not seen clearly.
I don't think so, but we see a close-up of a doll falling to the floor as a number of children are being napped from their beds with violent jerks and lifted up through a hole in the roof, completely without warning.
I wouldn't say so. However, there's something that may be a trigger to some: Blackbeard inhales fairy dust to stay young, he looks terrible in what might be called a drug user kind of way when he hasn't had the dust for a while, and freaks out when he can't have any.
In the very beginning of the movie, we see the loving mother of an infant sorrowfully leaving him at an orphanage out of necessity. The boy grows up not knowing whether she's alive or dead. ----- SPOILERS ----- SPOILERS ----- SPOILERS --- SPOILERS ----- At the age of 12, the son is told that she's still alive, which makes him intensely happy. Soon after, he finds out that she's actually died, which of course causes him grief. Later on, he magically sees the events that led to her death, as well as the moment when she was killed. Towards the end of the movie, he meets her ghost, who speaks to him lovingly and isn't scary. ... There may be a father who dies, too: The chief of a tribe is killed, and a young woman succeeds him as chief, which might indicate that they're father and daughter. However, she doesn't seem to grieve him much, and she doesn't look like him (in that he looks like an Australian aboriginal, and she doesn't look like she's half aboriginal).
Not sure. There are situations in which people can't escape: Someone is hung upside down from a rope, and three people are in a boat-like thingy surrounded by crocodiles. Maybe I forgot something.
Yes, more than one character. We hear them scream, but we see neither the impacts nor the dead bodies or the place where the bodies lay. The whole movie is full of deep falls and characters in immediate danger of falling to their deaths. I mean, it's pretty much ALL the time.
Yes, one, but not scary at all, and not looking like a typical horror movie ghost, but rather in the form of thousands of lights in the shape of the deceased person, who speaks lovingly. It's a beautiful scene.