It is the basically juvenile fantasy of wanting to remain a child forever- there are sub-harmonics of this in the song ( Believe) which is associated with the Yuletide film-The Polar Express. the rather tepid argument suggests that permanent childhood- if attainable, would be an ideal state. Sorry Pete- adults have more fun.,
The main problem? Peter doesn't want to grow up. Lol, but I'm not quite sure. Well, the story is about Wendy and her two brothers going to Neverland with Peter Pan, where there's a Pirates wanting to kill Peter... Well, I'd say that the main problem were that Wendy couldn't decide if she'd stay in Neverland or go home to her mothers that was waiting for her, and would soon make her ''grow up from a girl to a woman''. But that the Captain Hook wanted to kill Peter can also be called a problem.
Personal view on the ''main problem'':
Well, this is just my personal view about this, so this isn't like a correct answer. But I love the 2003 Peter Pan movie, because that doesn't include that ''Peter loves Wendy, it's just not a romantic love; he thinks of her as his mother.''
In the 2003 movie Peter has a crush on Wendy, and that shows quite ALOT. Example in my favourite scenes when:
1) Peter stares at Wendy, and she glances at him and he quickly looks away.
2) Wendy asks what he feels, and she suggests many feeling as in ''Jealousy?'', Peter instinctively thinks of Tinkerbell, then Wendy suggests ''Anger?'' Peter instinctively lunges for Captain Hook. And then she says: ''Love?'' and Peter looks back at Wendy.
3) This is my favourite scene of the whole movie.
Peter: ''Love? Never heard of it.''
Wendy: ''I think you have, Peter. And I dare say you've felt it yourself. For something or... someone.''
Peter: ''Never. Even the sound of it offends me.''
Wendy: ''Peter...'' [Wendy tries to touch his face, but Peter jumps away.]
Peter: [yelling] ''Why do you spoil everything? We have fun, don't we? I taught you to fly and to fight! What more could there be?''
Wendy: ''There's so much more.''
Peter: ''What? What else is there?''
Wendy: ''I don't know... I guess it becomes clearer when you grow up.''
Peter: ''Well, I will not grow up! And you cannot make me! I'll banish you like Tinkerbell.''
Wendy: ''I will not be banished!''
Peter: ''Then go home. Go home and grow up! And take your feelings with you.''
^ This above made me think that in the 2003 movie, the main problem was that Wendy made Peter fall in love with her, and falling in love means growing up, and growing up is what Peter absolutely didn't want to. So the main problem was: Peter didn't want to grow up, even if he had to.
peter pan never grows up
king ina mo
bahay
in Neverland
Peter Pan began as a short story, became a book, and then a play. The movies were the last telling of the story.
Faith, Hope trust and quality of friendship..... loyalty and love are also pretty main
No. Peter Pan is a fictional boy written in a story in the late 1800's.
Read the book, watch the film and ask any experts for the answer. i am no expert!
hook kidnaps Wendy to trick peter pan to kill him
If you mean stories with Peter before Peter Pan, then there is Peter Pan in Kensington Gardens, The Starcatcher series, and the Neverland TV miniseries.
The lived in the forest in never land with Peter pan
yes
bahay
in Neverland
Peter Pan began as a short story, became a book, and then a play. The movies were the last telling of the story.
Faith, Hope trust and quality of friendship..... loyalty and love are also pretty main
No. Peter Pan is a fictional boy written in a story in the late 1800's.
Peter pan
what was peter pan before it become a book