The Pirate Fairy

The Pirate Fairy (alternatively known as Tinker Bell and the Pirate Fairy[1]) is a 2014 American 3D computer-animated fantasy film directed by Peggy Holmes. It is the fifth direct-to-video feature-length animated film in the Disneytoon Studios' Tinker Bell film series and the Disney Fairies franchise, based on the character Tinker Bell from J. M. Barrie's Peter and Wendy. The film features the voices of Mae Whitman, reprising her role of Tinker Bell, Christina Hendricks as a dust-keeper fairy named Zarina, and Tom Hiddleston as a much younger James Hook.[4]

The Pirate Fairy
Poster
Directed byPeggy Holmes
Produced byJenni Magee-Cook
Screenplay byJeffrey M. Howard
Kate Kondell
Story byJohn Lasseter
Peggy Holmes
Bobs Gannaway
Jeffrey M. Howard
Lorna Cook
Craig Gerber
Based onPeter and Wendy
by J. M. Barrie
StarringMae Whitman
Christina Hendricks
Tom Hiddleston
Lucy Liu
Raven-Symoné
Megan Hilty
Pamela Adlon
Angela Bartys
Anjelica Huston
Music byJoel McNeely
Edited byAnna Catalano
Production
company
Distributed byWalt Disney Studios Home Entertainment
Release date
  • February 13, 2014 (2014-02-13) (Denmark)[2]
  • April 1, 2014 (2014-04-01) (United States)[3]
Running time
78 minutes[2]
CountryUnited States[1]
LanguageEnglish
Box office$64.9 million[2]

Plot

Zarina (Christina Hendricks), a very smart and inquisitive pixie dust-keeper fairy, is amazed by the magic behind pixie dust and is determined to find out all that it is capable of. She secretly experiments with some blue pixie dust, creating various colors of pixie dust; however, when she creates the pink variant, things grow wildly out of control, causing an accident in Pixie Hollow. Her supervisor, Fairy Gary, prohibits her from being a dust-keeper or working with pixie dust in any capacity. In sorrow, Zarina takes her experiments and runs away from Pixie Hollow.

One year later, Pixie Hollow is celebrating the Four Seasons Festival, with performances from fairies of all the seasons. During the show, Tinker Bell (Mae Whitman), Silvermist (Lucy Liu), Iridessa (Raven-Symoné), Rosetta (Megan Hilty), Fawn (Angela Bartys), and Vidia (Pamela Adlon) spot Zarina flying around the audience and using pink pixie dust to summon several poppies that cause everyone to fall asleep, except Tink and her friends who take cover. After Zarina is gone, they realize that she stole all of the blue pixie dust, the only way to make the yellow dust that the fairies use to fly, so they go after her to get it back.

They follow Zarina to the coast, where it is revealed that she became the captain of a pirate crew, including a young James Hook (Tom Hiddleston), who is apparently the cabin boy. The fairies manage to retrieve the blue dust for a moment, but Zarina gets it back after throwing some multi-colored pixie dust at them that switches their talents. Tinker Bell becomes a water fairy, Silvermist a fast-flying fairy, Fawn a light fairy, Iridessa a garden fairy, Rosetta an animal fairy, and Vidia a tinker fairy (much to her horror and disgust). They struggle with their swapped talents as they search for Zarina and the pirate ship, in the process meeting a baby crocodile which takes a liking to Rosetta with her new animal talent.

They find the ship and sneak in, where they overhear Hook talking about how the pirates met Zarina after drifting off course, and she became the captain with the promise of making the ship fly so that they could plunder anything without getting caught. The ship arrives at Skull Rock, where the fairies discover the pirates' camp and a mysterious Pixie Dust Tree, which Zarina has grown using the pink pixie dust.

The fairies attempt to retrieve the blue pixie dust, but are caught when Iridessa loses control over her nature talent and reveals their location. Tink tries to convince Zarina to return home to Pixie Hollow, but she refuses as no one appreciated her unusual talents with dust. With the fairies now captured, the pirates begin making regular flying pixie dust. Hook, curious about what it's like to fly, convinces Zarina to use some on him, and he begins to fly. After joyfully flying around the cave, Hook double-crosses Zarina and traps her in a lantern, revealing he is the real captain of the pirate crew and that he has merely been using her to get the pixie dust for his own purposes.

Tinker Bell and the others attempt to escape their imprisonment without any success until the baby crocodile Rosetta befriended arrives and frees them. The fairies attempt once more to retrieve the blue pixie dust and almost succeed, before being confronted by Hook, who threatens to throw Zarina into the sea unless they hand the blue pixie dust over. Tink willingly gives it up, and Hook sprinkles it over the ship before throwing Zarina into the water anyway, leaving the fairies to rescue her.

As the pirates sail towards the Second Star to start their thieving, the fairies return and use their switched talents to defeat the pirates and turn the ship. Zarina attempts to retrieve the blue pixie dust from Hook, who chases after her. Zarina manages to gain a speck of blue pixie dust which she then throws at Hook, who starts flying crazily as the two kinds of pixie dust react to each other. As the fairies fly away, Hook swears revenge on them and is attacked by the baby crocodile. Zarina returns the blue pixie dust to Tink and her friends, before preparing to leave. However, Tinker Bell offers her a chance to return to Pixie Hollow and she accepts, helping her friends sail the ship back to Pixie Hollow, where the other fairies are waking up with no recollection of what happened.

Zarina is about to promise not to tamper with pixie dust again, but is instead convinced by Tink to show off her astoundingly profound pixie dust abilities, giving Tink and her friends back their original fairy talents and allowing them to put on a beautiful performance for the audience at the Festival. Everyone rushes over to congratulate them, particularly Zarina, whose unusually strong and rare talent of pixie dust alchemy is finally accepted so that she can be who she really is.

In an extra scene during the end credits of the film, a drifting Captain Hook comes across a ship named The Jolly Roger. One of the crew members, Mr. Smee, rescues him.

Cast

Production

The film was originally titled Quest for the Queen.[5][6] Peggy Holmes, co-director of Secret of the Wings signed on to direct the film.[5] It introduced new characters, Zarina, voiced by Christina Hendricks, and James aka young Captain Hook, voiced by Tom Hiddleston.[5] Carlos Ponce also lent his voice to one of the characters in the film.[7]

Disney announced in January 2014 that former Project Runway winner and fashion designer Christian Siriano would be in charge of creating the ensemble costumes for the fairies, specifically Zarina. Siriano stated that "I loved the challenge of this project. I haven't designed for an animated character before, and I'm excited to take my skills into Zarina's world. She's a unique and new character and I wanted to help make her memorable and iconic. Disney characters are everlasting and I'm so happy as a young designer to help create a bit of Disney history."[8]

Release

The film was released internationally in theaters with the title Tinker Bell and the Pirate Fairy on February 13, 2014 and later dates,[2] with 2D and 3D screenings available.[9][10] In the United States the screenings took place exclusively at the El Capitan Theater in Hollywood,[11] from February 28 to March 19, 2014.[12] It was originally scheduled for Fall 2013, before another DisneyToon Studios film, Planes, took its place, delaying the film to Spring 2014.[6]

Marketing

A trailer for the film was released on the Secret of the Wings Blu-ray and DVD on October 23, 2012.[13] The Pirate Fairy is the first film of the Tinker Bell series not to allude to the Disney Fairies brand in promotional material and not to display the brand logo at the beginning of the film, showing instead the DisneyToon Studios logo.[14]

Home media

The film was released by Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainment on DVD and Blu-ray in the United States on April 1, 2014,[3] and in the United Kingdom on June 23, 2014.[15] Bonus features of the DVD include a documentary and two animated shorts. The Blu-ray contains the bonus features of the DVD and additions such as deleted scenes, sing-along songs and a making-of clip of "The Frigate That Flies" song with actor Tom Hiddleston.[16]

During the pre-order period of the combo pack with the DVD, Blu-ray and Digital Copy versions of the film, a limited edition set of four lithographs featuring shots from the film would be included with the order.[17][18] Several stores also released exclusive sets which bundled the combo pack with a certain item of the Disney Fairies merchandise, such as a bonus DVD with the animated short Pixie Hollow Bake Off and 10 other mini-shorts, the story book and read-along CD of The Pirate Fairy film, a set of six wall decal sheets, and a glitter brush.[19][20]

Reception

On review aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes, the film has a rating of 81% based on 21 reviews, with an average score of 6.39/10.[21]

Soundtrack

The film was scored by Joel McNeely,[22] who has also scored the previous films in the Tinker Bell series.

Songs

The soundtrack features an original song titled "Who I Am," performed by Natasha Bedingfield, as well as Bedingfield's previously released song, "Weightless," which was initially used on the film's scratch recording but so well received, director Peggy Holmes decided to make it permanent.[23]

Another original song, "The Frigate That Flies," with music by Gaby Alter and lyrics by Gaby Alter and Itamar Moses,[24] is performed in the film by the pirate crew as a musical number.

gollark: The one which you just get purely randomly?
gollark: How about the one for resetting your achievements?
gollark: Unlikely.
gollark: <@151391317740486657> about 250.
gollark: Hey, I could launch a new potatOS-based service which constantly runs text-to-speech on your microphone's sound input, and uses it for research™, and pays you in arbitrary points.

References

  1. Adams, Mark (February 4, 2014). "Tinker Bell And The Pirate Fairy". Screen Daily. Retrieved May 18, 2020.
  2. "The Pirate Fairy". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved September 4, 2014.
  3. Beck, Jerry (December 5, 2013). "FIRST LOOK: Disneytoon Studios' "The Pirate Fairy"". Animation Scoop. Retrieved December 7, 2013.
  4. Taylor, Amanda (August 9, 2013). "'The Pirate Fairy': Christina Hendricks and Tom Hiddleston join newest Tinkerbell movie". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved October 23, 2013.
  5. "D23 Expo: New Art From the Upcoming Disney, Pixar and Disneytoon Movies". ComingSoon.net. August 9, 2013. Retrieved August 10, 2013.
  6. Liu, Ed (June 13, 2012). "Disney Delays "Planes" to Fall 2013, "Quest for the Queen" to Spring 2014". Toon Zone. Archived from the original on January 12, 2013. Retrieved April 4, 2014.
  7. "Actor, Singer, Composer, TV Personality Carlos Ponce Named Recipient of Hispanicize 2013 Latinovator Award". PR Newswire. March 26, 2013. Retrieved March 27, 2013.
  8. Warner, Kara. "'Project Runway' Meets 'Pirate Fairy': Christian Siriano Designs New Tinker Bell Movie Costume". Yahoo!. Retrieved January 8, 2014.
  9. "Mareel - Tinker Bell and the Pirate Fairy 3D". Mareel. Archived from the original on June 1, 2014. Retrieved June 1, 2014. These are 3D screenings
  10. "Tinker Bell And The Pirate Fairy Movies for Juniors | Book Tickets at Cineworld Cinemas". Cineworld. Archived from the original on June 1, 2014. Retrieved June 1, 2014. Available in: RealD - 3D
  11. Kang, Inkoo (February 27, 2014). "Review: 'The Pirate Fairy' a glittery Disney romp". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved September 7, 2015.
  12. Burbank, Kyle. "The Pirate Fairy at the El Capitan Theatre". LaughingPlace. Retrieved April 23, 2014.
  13. KageNoAku (October 25, 2012). "Tinker Bell – Quest for the Queen Sneak Peak 1080p". YouTube. Retrieved October 27, 2012.
  14. "The Laughing Place - 'The Pirate Fairy' Blu-Ray Review". The Laughing Place. Retrieved June 1, 2014. The Pirate Fairy is the first film in the Disney Fairies series to not include the Disney Fairies logo, which has been replaced with a DisneyToon Studios logo before the film.
  15. "Tinker Bell and the Pirate Fairy UK Blu-ray". Blu-Ray. Retrieved June 1, 2014. The release will be available for purchase online and in shops across the country on June 23rd.
  16. "'The Pirate Fairy' Blu-Ray Review (March 31, 2014)". LaughingPlace. Retrieved April 23, 2014.
  17. "Last Day for The Pirate Fairy Pre-Order!". DisneyStore. Retrieved April 23, 2014.
  18. "Disney store display for the Pirate Fairy! It is..." Its Disney Freaks. Retrieved April 23, 2014.
  19. "Own Disney's The Pirate Fairy". Disney. Retrieved April 23, 2014.
  20. Burg, Jen. "Disney's Pirate Fairy Gift Set Options, Fun Freebies & Coupon". The Suburban Mom. Retrieved April 23, 2014.
  21. "The Pirate Fairy (2014)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved December 23, 2019.
  22. "Joel McNeely Scoring 'The Pirate Fairy'". Film Music Reporter. Retrieved May 19, 2014.
  23. "WATCH: Tinker Bell 'The Pirate Fairy' Clip with 'Who I Am' by Natasha Bedingfield". Stitch Kingdom. Archived from the original on January 30, 2014. Retrieved January 30, 2014.
  24. "Heath Calvert, Jarrod Spector, Emily Padgett, Rebecca Naomi Jones and More Read Nobody Loves You April 17–18". PlayBill. Retrieved May 30, 2014.
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