10/10
A perfect finish to the story of Pixie Hollow
22 February 2015
Warning: Spoilers
DisneyToon Studios has managed to dive in head-first into the world of Peter Pan's fairy friend TinkerBell, illuminating every aspect of her world, Pixie Hollow.

Starting with the very first movie, released back in 2007, Tink and her fairy friends have taken us on an eight-year ride, managing to describe every detail of fairy lore. First off, we have the four seasonal divisions of Pixie Hollow (one of which hid TinkerBell's twin sister for three movies), the origin of the blue dust, the Blue Harvest Moon, the relationship with a human girl named Lizzie and her scientist father on the Mainland, along with talent-switching dust, how Captain Hook became obsessed with fairies, Tink's origins with Wendy (well, mainly her music box) and now, the Legend of the NeverBeast: a terrifying cat-like creature who can control the weather.

I love the centric view of Fawn in this movie. She seemed to be the only one who hadn't had her time in the limelight, and in this movie, she is determined to prove that the NeverBeast isn't what everybody thinks, and boy, did she ever! Even though Gruff (NeverBeast) had to go back into hibernation for a thousand years, they played with the finale perfectly, with the pathway illuminated by flowers and lighted dandelions dancing through the night sky. The most touching part was the closing of Gruff's eye, with Fawn in his reflection, to metaphorically close the book on the story of TinkerBell and Pixie Hollow, leaving behind a saga of family-friendly animated films that will not soon be forgotten.
18 out of 21 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

Recently Viewed