Why is tinkerbell bad




















Peter orders Tink to take the Darlings to the island for safety, but Tink leaves them in her dust. She tells the boys that Pan has ordered them to shoot down the "Wendy Bird. The boys do as they thought they were told, and Peter saves Wendy's life which makes Tink so red with rage that she burns through a leaf as she flies away.

When Peter finds out what they have done, he is furious. Lost Boy Cubby reveals that Tink gave them the order, and Peter banishes the fairy for a week as punishment. Later that night, Captain Hook's first mate, Mr. Smee, kidnaps Tink and takes her to Hook's ship, where the captain attempts to toy with Tink's emotions to get her to reveal Peter's hideout. He tells her the pirates are planning on shanghaiing Wendy, and the plot makes Tink more than happy as, with Wendy out of the way, she and Peter can be together again.

She points the way to the hideout on the map, but she forces Hook to promise not to lay one single finger or a hook on Peter Pan before she completes this. Hook agrees, trapping her in a lantern once she reveals the location. The next morning, Wendy, her brothers, and the Lost Boys are captured and given the choice of becoming pirates or walking the plank. Wendy convinces the boys to refuse the offer in high hopes that Pan will save them.

Meanwhile, Hook reveals his plot to plant a bomb in Peter's hideout, disguised as a gift from Wendy. When Tink hears this, she breaks free of her trap and heads for Hangman's Tree. There, she tries to warn Peter, but he brushes her claims off as nonsense. The bomb begins to ring rapidly, ready to explode, but Tink takes it away from Peter and sacrifices herself. In the rubble of Hangman's Tree, Peter is safe, but Tink is fatally injured.

Peter restores her life by telling her just how much she means to him. With Tink saved, Peter heads to the Jolly Roger to rescue his friends. A battle occurs, ending with Hook fleeing for his life from the crocodile who ate his left hand and now wants the rest of the captain. With Hook defeated, Peter decides to escort Wendy home, having Tink sprinkle fairy dust all over Hook's ship so it turns gold and flies.

Tink and Peter are having a normal day in Neverland when they stop by the Jolly Roger to visit and annoy Captain Hook. When they arrive, Hook claims to have his dearest Wendy held captive. Peter battles the evil pirate, but Hook throws "Wendy" overboard to be eaten by an octopus. Peter rushes down to save her, and Tink follows close behind.

When Pan seems to have finally met his end, he emerges from the water, and Tink uses her pixie dust to lift the octopus and land him on Hook's ship. Peter and Tink then leave the scene to free the prisoner. Instead of Wendy, however, they find her daughter Jane. Tink takes an immediate disliking toward her, similar to her disliking of Wendy in the first film. Pan decides to introduce her to the Lost Boys, but Jane quickly grows tired of their savage-like behavior.

She attempts to build a raft to return home, but Pan knows that the only way to leave Never Land is to fly. Tink reluctantly bestows pixie dust upon Jane, but the flight lessons end in failure. Jane loses her temper again when Pan and the boys begin to play rugby with her notepad.

She tells Pan and the boys off and even abolishes her belief in fairies. Jane's disbelief causes Tink to grow ill. After Slightly gives her a check-up, Pan and the gang learn that Tinker Bell will die unless they get Jane to believe in fairies.

Pan and the others then set out to find Jane and make her the very first Lost Girl. Meanwhile, back at Hangman's Tree, Tinker Bell is still struggling to stay alive as her light continues to flicker in and out over and over again, this time going a bit faster as her death draws near. After unintentionally causing herself to slip off a brown mushroom by kicking her left leg in frustration due to her trying to use her pixie dust and only being able to shoot out bits of it , which she was on earlier, Tink finds a mirror next to her, and she's clearly devastated at being the person she was all these years.

Tink then looks as if she's crying. Unfortunately, Jane makes a deal with Hook. If she helps him locate his treasure, he'll give her a ride home on his ship that now has the ability to fly after Tinker Bell sprinkled her pixie dust all over it. Jane tricks the boys into playing treasure hunt, but after bonding with them, she changes her mind and discards the whistle she was meant to use to summon Hook once she found the treasure.

Tootles the Lost Boy finds the whistle and innocently blows it, summoning Hook and his crew. It's too late, however, and Tinker Bell's bright light of life has expired.

Jane mourns the death of the tinker fairy, and her belief in fairies begins to arise. Tink is revived, and the duo heads to the Jolly Roger to face Hook. They arrive and find Peter tied on to an anchor about to be thrown overboard. Tink manages to knock Hook unconscious so Jane can try to retrieve the key. Hook awakens and attempts to kill Jane. Tink sprinkles pixie dust on her and she is able to escape through flight. Not only that, but she is also able to free Peter.

Hook is defeated and Peter escorts Jane home. While there, Peter and Tink - who, after so many years, has finally put her jealousy and resentment of Wendy aside - have a brief but heartwarming reunion with the full-grown Wendy , whom Tink uses her fairy dust to allow Wendy to magically levitate one last time with Peter's permission.

Afterward, they head back home to Neverland. According to the film, Tinker Bell was born from a baby's first laugh and a white dandelion seed. She arrives in Pixie Hollow , located in Neverland. Upon her arrival, she was able to talk to her friends and her magical talent is found by showing her a number of objects related to each fairy talent which will react to her if that is her innate magical talent.

Ironically, the only object she passes over when looking for her talent is the Tinker hammer, but her inner talent is so skillfully gifted and strong that the hammer goes to her. After hearing stories of the mainland, Tinker Bell becomes excited at the prospect of visiting in the springtime. She soon learns that only nature-talented fairies visit the mainland, and become determined to find a talent that would let her go.

However, Tinker Bell's attempts at learning nature talents fail miserably. She alienates the other Tinkers in the workshop by saying she does not want to be a stupid tinker. However, after her friends see Tinker Bell successfully repair a music box, they tell her that going to the mainland shouldn't matter if tinkering is what she is good at. This does not make Tinker Bell feel better as she calls them out for breaking their promise, and so she goes to Vidia for help.

Vidia, who had been unintentionally humiliated by Tinker Bell earlier, tells Tink that capturing sprinting thistles would allow her to go to the mainland. In attempting to capture them, Tinker Bell ruins the preparations for spring after Vidia secretly interferes. After speaking with Terence , she realizes the importance of a tinker's job.

Tinker Bell is able to redeem herself by inventing machines that speed up the spring preparations, allowing the other fairies to get back on schedule. As a reward, Queen Clarion allows Tinker Bell to go to the mainland with the nature fairies to return the music box to Wendy Tinker Bell had fixed earlier.

The nature-talent fairies bring to the mainland the season of leaves, hibernation, chilly breezes, and pumpkins: autumn. Tinker Bell is trying to make a "Pixie Express". They show her a magical moonstone and explain to her its powers. Every eight years, there is a blue harvest moon in Pixie Hollow.

When the light of this moon passes through the moonstone, it creates blue pixie dust to rejuvenate the pixie dust tree. The Autumn Revelry is the associated event during which the fairies gather to collect the dust.

A new scepter is to be made to raise the moonstone, and Tinker Bell has been recommended. Although Tinker Bell has made mistakes in the past, Fairy Mary explains that tinker fairies learn from them, most of the time. Tinker Bell accepts the task, as well as help from Terence. But as the work on the scepter progresses, Tinker Bell begins to have trouble with Terence, who is trying too hard to be helpful. An accident occurs, causing the scepter and the stone to break.

That night, she attends a show at the Fairy Tale Theater about a magic mirror called the Mirror of Incanta which, according to legend, granted two of three magic wishes before becoming lost. She sets out in a balloon she created to find the Mirror of Incanta. Tinker Bell intends to use the last wish to repair the moonstone. Along the way, she meets Blaze , a brave and daringly bold firefly.

Tinker Bell finally discovers the magic wish-granting mirror of Incanta, but she accidentally wastes the wish foolishly.

She is found by her best and closest friend Terence, who followed her after discovering her plans and the fragments of the moonstone in her empty house. Tinker Bell and Terence start back to Pixie Hollow. Along the way, Tinker Bell fixes the scepter using a white gem from the top of the mirror, the scepter pieces Terence has wisely brought, and the moonstone pieces, all set at just the right angle.

She discovers the magic of friendship, humility, and love. Thanks to inspired teamwork with Terence, she is ready to give the newly constructed Fall scepter to Queen Clarion. When she unveils the scepter, the assembled fairies are alarmed to see the fragments of the moonstone.

However, the broken moonstone shards create an unexpected benefit: they increased the surface area through which the rays of the blue moon could pass, creating the bluest pixie dust ever seen in Pixie Hollow.

This blue pixie dust later appears as the main part in the film The Pirate Fairy when it is briefly stolen by Zarina. When she attempts to go find some lost things, Vidia asks her if she's going to the human house, which isn't too far from camp. The question makes Tinker Bell curious and she eventually sneaks off. Vidia follows behind to watch over her. When Tink reaches the human house, she is amazed by their "horseless carriage".

She takes the time to flitter around under the car, while Vidia tries to get her to leave. Eventually, they do, but on their way back to camp, Tink and Vidia stumble upon a fairy-sized house made by Elizabeth Griffiths , a human girl who wishes to meet a real fairy.

Tinker Bell immediately heads in to investigate, despite Vidia's constant warnings to leave. Tink claims it to be perfectly safe, so Vidia uses her wind to slam the door in an attempt to give Tink a little scare, but it unintentionally locks Tink inside. When Lizzy begins to approach the house, Vidia tries to free Tink but it's no use. Lizzy discovers Tink inside the house and takes her to her home. She prepares to show her father, Dr. Griffiths , but upon witnessing all the butterflies he has pinned in display cases for research, she decides to keep Tink a secret.

Back at the human house, Lizzy reveals her fascination with fairies to Tink. Tink is flattered by the child's obsession, and since it's raining outside, Tink decides to teach her nearly everything about fairies. She tells her how light fairies make rainbows, how animal fairies paint butterflies, and much more. They record their information in a new research book given to Lizzy by her father. Tink and Lizzy have formed a great friendship, but after a while, the rain dies down, and Tink is able to return to the camp.

She makes her way out, but she watches Lizzy attempt to show her father the research before she leaves. Unfortunately, he's too busy fixing the house's leaks, as usual, to pay Lizzy any mind. Tink returns and decides to fix the leaks so Lizzy can spend more time with her father.

After she does, she chooses to release a captive butterfly Lizzy's father was planning on showing to a group of scientists, which causes Lizzy to get grounded. To make up for what had happened, Tink shows Lizzy how to fly and when her father finds footprints on the ceiling, she tells him about Tink.

He discards the claims and begins to throw her fairy drawings and research book into the trash. This sight angers Tink, and the tinker reveals herself, telling the father off while doing so though he only hears jingles when she talks. The astonishing sight of a fairy prompts Dr. Griffiths to capture Tink, but Vidia arrives and pushes her out of the way. Vidia is then taken by Dr. Griffiths to London for research, but Lizzy and the fairies are able to convince him to think otherwise, which he does.

So when they get too old he kills them. Another version says Peter Pan is actually an angel and Neverland is heaven. In this version all of the lost boys are dead and Peter is helping them find their way to heaven. These factors arguably make him the most sympathetic Disney Villain, and one of the most popular.

When Peter Pan eventually left her for Wendy Darling, she became dark and cold, turning into the evil Queen. Tinker Bell Dies Off-Screen, Of Old Age Apart from her homicidal jealousy, Tinker Bell is a charming, memorable character filled with magical dust that Peter spanks out of her in a scene that is in no way intended for children.

She gets very jealous when she sees Wendy flirting with Peter, and Peter seems to like Wendy back. Tinker Bell eventually becomes so jealous that she convinces the lost boys to help her shoot Wendy down. Tink even sacrifices herself to save him. Yes, Tinker Bell drinks the poison meant for Peter Pan. She is in love with Peter and wants to save his life. Barrie book, you know that this exhortation yields a happy ending. Fervent belief, accompanied by vigorous clapping, brings a dying fairy called Tinker Bell back to life.

Her body automatically pulls her away. A faerie heart is different from a human heart. I've seen some trailers and clips from this movie and the animation looked quite good, so although my expectations weren't the highest, I still hoped that "Tinker Bell were going to be a watchable picture - which it turned out to be. It's a shame that this film wasn't released on theaters, cause, like Brettster said, it was much better than Disney's recently theatrical releases "Chicken Little", "The Wild" and a whole lot better than the previous "Peter Pan"-cartoon, "Return to Neverland".

Anyway, about the movie; It is very sweet in many ways. The mood is reminiscent at the Disney features from the 90's. The animation is absolutely beautiful and detailed and the delightful score which is sometimes Irish inspired provides the sweet, enchanting mood of the film.

The characters are cute and adorable and the moral is a good one. The movie is a film that families can safely watch together. And then there's the songs; "Tinker Bell" doesn't contain many songs, which is good, cause often the songs on Disney's non-theatrical releases are quite mediocre.

While the songs on "Tinker Bell" aren't memorable, they are not disturbing neither and are quite all right. So do your self a favor and check out "Tinker Bell". Parent of a 2 and 4-year-old Written by MamaQ March 29, Adult Written by Kathryn Y. March 9, Mom of Almost 4 YO Fine movie about fairies.

At one point Tinker Belly gets a makeover into her cute self as we know it but they don't focus too much on it. Limited scariness as there is only one part with a Hawk, my sensitive almost-4YO was not bothered.

Bit of a rivalry with another fairy sets up most of the storyline and it wasn't my favorite but as I said the movie was overall fine. I would let her watch it again. Parent of a 2-year-old Written by Thechaddicks July 3, Natures helpers!! It took the "why" out of things and installed a "who" instead; definitely plays with expanding their imagination;. Parent of a 2, 4, 8, 14, 14, and year-old Written by parentof7 March 1, Adult Written by thehinsons March 4, Good film, unlike most disney titles.

In my opinion most disney titles are made for adults. With a few exceptions they could all be full length adult dramas if they weren't animated.

Tinkerbell is one that parents can take a breather on. There is only one scene that frightened my 2yo, with the sprinting thistles, but apart from that, my girls love this movie. And we do too. We're very conservative about what we let our kids watch, and this movie makes the cut. Adult Written by Sweetdays November 11, Beautiful to watch, some potential confusing elements for children It IS a beautiful movie to watch.

Like all Tinkerbell movies, it has subtle homosexual allusions with the boy fairies that might require some explaining to children. And the thing with the love interest is getting to be a little much Parent of a 5-year-old Written by Hal H July 24, And those who want especially to wait for movies can wait till age 5 even for this one -- but as far as feature films go, this is about as nice as they ever get. This title contains: Educational Value. Positive Messages. Parent of a 7 and year-old Written by fastraxsg December 16, The world of faires is so realistic that I really think everyone should have a chance to watch it!!

Its one of those movies that will never grow old. Adult Written by Beckstar October 31, Nothing wrong with this! It's perfectly animated, fun and cheerful and quite touching at points. No problems with language, sex or anything like it!



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