Enter the land of Tinker Bell and her four best fairy friends.Enter the land of Tinker Bell and her four best fairy friends.Enter the land of Tinker Bell and her four best fairy friends.
Mae Whitman
- Tinker Bell
- (voice)
Kristin Chenoweth
- Rosetta
- (voice)
Raven-Symoné
- Iridessa
- (voice)
Lucy Liu
- Silvermist
- (voice)
America Ferrera
- Fawn
- (voice)
Jane Horrocks
- Fairy Mary
- (voice)
Jesse McCartney
- Terence
- (voice)
Jeff Bennett
- Clank
- (voice)
Rob Paulsen
- Bobble
- (voice)
Pamela Adlon
- Vidia
- (voice)
Anjelica Huston
- Queen Clarion
- (voice)
Loreena McKennitt
- Narrator
- (voice)
America Young
- Wendy
- (voice)
Kat Cressida
- Mrs. Darling
- (voice)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe first Disney film to feature Tinker Bell in a speaking role.
- GoofsWhen Fairy Mary uses the abacus, she does so in entirely the wrong way, as she holds it with the wires running vertically, rather than horizontally. Despite this, the counters never seem to fall down. In addition, sometimes the abacus correctly has two sections but sometimes it only has one.
- Quotes
Tinker Bell: The mouse's name is Cheese?
Bobble: Must be. He always comes when we yell it.
- ConnectionsFeatured in TinkerBell: Looking for Tinkerbelle's Voice (2008)
- SoundtracksTo the Fairies They Draw Near
Written and Performed by Loreena McKennitt
Arranged and Produced by Joel McNeely
Courtesy of Walt Disney Records
Featured review
The Bad:
Our title character has almost zero points in common with her character from Peter Pan, nor does Peter Pan seem to exist in this universe (we certainly never see him in any of the Tinker Bell series films). The plot is not terribly clever (and I don't feel that just because this is a film aimed at young kids that you need to be overly formulaic) and most of the fairies – who look so interesting – get very little screen time. Tinker Bell's "talent" feels like lazy writing rather than something clever (and, although this doesn't affect the rating on this movie, the rest of the series seems to mostly ignore this idea for Tinker Bell).
The Good:
Tinker Bell seems to have had a personality make-over (probably because she is actually so unlikable in Peter Pan). Now she has more emotions besides jealousy and anger. And she can speak! There's also a "village" beyond living with the lost boys – with more fairies! This is certainly the best part – all those other fairies have the potential to be so interesting! You want to get to know them and see their 'talents'. Tinker Bell's talent, is not a stereotyped "girl's skill", which is nice since this movie is heavily marketed towards little girls. The look of the film is nice. Although there has been much better CGI since this was made, it is still bright and colorful.
The Mom view:
There is nothing objectionable about the film and while predictable for an adult, a young child might not see the end coming and enjoy Tinker Bell's discovery along with her. The moral of the story – finding what you are good at and being happy in that – is not bad, but it might also be seen as "don't try things you aren't skilled at", which isn't as good of a lesson to absorb. I'd be willing to let my preschool/toddler kids see this – including the boys – but it's not the most interesting or well done movie out there for young kids. Uunless you have a child who absolutely loves fairies (NOT one who loves Peter Pan), this is pretty skip-able.
Our title character has almost zero points in common with her character from Peter Pan, nor does Peter Pan seem to exist in this universe (we certainly never see him in any of the Tinker Bell series films). The plot is not terribly clever (and I don't feel that just because this is a film aimed at young kids that you need to be overly formulaic) and most of the fairies – who look so interesting – get very little screen time. Tinker Bell's "talent" feels like lazy writing rather than something clever (and, although this doesn't affect the rating on this movie, the rest of the series seems to mostly ignore this idea for Tinker Bell).
The Good:
Tinker Bell seems to have had a personality make-over (probably because she is actually so unlikable in Peter Pan). Now she has more emotions besides jealousy and anger. And she can speak! There's also a "village" beyond living with the lost boys – with more fairies! This is certainly the best part – all those other fairies have the potential to be so interesting! You want to get to know them and see their 'talents'. Tinker Bell's talent, is not a stereotyped "girl's skill", which is nice since this movie is heavily marketed towards little girls. The look of the film is nice. Although there has been much better CGI since this was made, it is still bright and colorful.
The Mom view:
There is nothing objectionable about the film and while predictable for an adult, a young child might not see the end coming and enjoy Tinker Bell's discovery along with her. The moral of the story – finding what you are good at and being happy in that – is not bad, but it might also be seen as "don't try things you aren't skilled at", which isn't as good of a lesson to absorb. I'd be willing to let my preschool/toddler kids see this – including the boys – but it's not the most interesting or well done movie out there for young kids. Uunless you have a child who absolutely loves fairies (NOT one who loves Peter Pan), this is pretty skip-able.
- Sherrill777
- Nov 8, 2017
- Permalink
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Tinkerbell
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $50,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross worldwide
- $9,208,064
- Runtime1 hour 18 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.78 : 1
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