MRW
New member
Looks like I'm jumping in with both feet here, but I've been following this thread for nearly a week, and since I can post now, I'm putting in my two cents.
First of all, yes, movie!Peter was completely inferior to book!Peter. He was more arrogant, selfish, and ultimately insecure. I think there are a lot of factors contributing to the exaggeration of Peter's weaknesses.
First, was the changing of the plot. In the book, Peter had his moments of doubt and then his repentance much sooner because he met Aslan much sooner. He had already repented and re-embraced his role as High King BEFORE he met Caspian, and thus was better equipped to be the mentor Caspian needed.
In the movie, however, more and more time passes without Peter ever seeing Aslan, so his doubts and insecurities grow larger and larger as the Pevensies draw closer to Aslan's how. By the time they get to Caspian, Peter encounters a boy his own age who is already commanding an army, and who has already been fighting skirmishes against Miraz (and this is canon to the book as well). He hasn't dealt with his own personal insecurities yet, and then he has to try and assert his authority to Caspian and to a group of Narnians, many of whom believed him as much a fable as the Telmarines believed Old Narnians to be. The two issues together result in a much more antagonistic Peter.
Second, the ages of the children are not the same as in the novels. Peter and Caspian are 14 and 13 in the novels. Because so much time had passed between the first and second movie, William Mosley was about twenty by the time they filmed his part. While he looks younger than his age, he certainly can't convincingly play a 14-year-old boy, so the movie-makers had to portray the personalities and angst of older teens. A sixteen-year-old is much more likely to be stubborn and selfish and angsty than a fourteen-year-old because they have more of a need to assert their independence and adulthood. This is compounded in Peter, because he WAS an adult for fifteen years, and suddenly now he isn't. He has memories of being a man, of being respected, and obeyed, and (in some cases) feared. Now he's been back in England for a year, being treated as a child, and he's taken it very personally that Aslan didn't called them back into Narnia sooner.
Add to that the absolute horror of having to live your teenage years TWICE. Someone said above that they wouldn't mind getting thirty years shaved off so they could be in their twenties again, but I'm going to go ahead and say that going from middle-age to young-adult is NOT comparable to going from adult to child. I'm in my mid twenties, the same age Lucy and Edmund would have been at the end of The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe. I guarantee you, there is absolutely NOTHING that is appealing about going through puberty a second time, even if I did get to retain all of the knowledge and wisdom I've gained along the way. The loss of independence and respect alone would be frustrating, and I've never been royalty. So for an adult, a king no less, to go back to being a peasant child without even the slightest twinge of frustration just doesn't make sense. Aslan brought them to Narnia in the first place, and he's the one who let them leave. It's only natural for Peter to be angry at him.
Third, Lewis wrote Prince Caspian before The Horse and His Boy. At that point, Lewis just summarized what the Kings and Queens did during their reign, so we just had Peter reprising his role as the ideal and Noble High King. Later, Lewis went on to explain that of the four children, Peter was the main warrior. It was Peter who went up and trounced the Northern giants while Ed and Su were being diplomats, and I believe there was mention of him having to go out and reconquer the Lone Islands at one point as well (though I could be wrong on that). While this was mentioned in LWW, Lewis hadn't yet made the distinction between which children took on which roles. Tirian also says during LB that Peter has the face of a warrior. The movie-makers clearly are taking events in the other books into account (Susan's overall reluctance to believe, the fact that she likes pretty things and that boys fall in love with her, the carvings on the Wardrobe, Prof. Kirke's apple-shaped tobacco case, the empty seats in Miraz's council that probably belong to the seven lords from VDT), and I saw a lot of Peter the Warrior King in the movie's portrayal of him. Since he hadn't met Aslan and had his moment of repentence, it seemed reasonable that he would draw on his past moments of glory and (like Lucy said) forget who gave him the strength to win all those battles.
Fourth, the Peter in the PC movie built on the personality he'd established in the LWW movie. Edmond repeatedly accuses Susan and Peter of trying to act too grown up, and it's clear that they keep going about it in all the wrong ways. In the LWW movie, Peter tries far too hard to be just like his father. In the PC movie, he's trying too hard to be the High King everyone follows rather than establishing Caspian as the leader.
Overall, the things they did to Peter's character made sense to me. After all, in the book, he was the last one of the children to believe Aslan was really leading them. Even Susan believed it was Aslan, she just pretended she didn't because it was more comfortable that way. But Peter sincerely disbelieved Lucy and threw his vote in with Susan and Trumpkin because he thought he knew what he was doing and that he could lead them on his own.
AT THE SAME TIME, I'll admit that in some scenes the directors took the rivalry too far. Peter and Caspian should NEVER have drawn their swords on each other after the failed castle raid. Caspian should have deferred to Peter more, as the Pevensies are Caspian's sovereigns. Caspian should have followed all of Peter's orders regarding the castle raid. He shouldn't have challenged Peter's decision when Peter said that waiting out a siege meant certain death.
However, given the change in plot, and the fact that Peter didn't meet Aslan until the end of the movie, it was good that he wasn't the good and noble high king all the way through. If he had been the noble High King we all know he is BEFORE his repentence, that would have undermined the whole theme, which was that the Narnians needed to put their faith in Aslan even when they couldn't see him. After all, the fact that Peter went back to Narnia at all meant that he still hadn't learned everything he needed to know -- namely that he couldn't just have faith in himself.
Clearly, the solution to all of this was to have Peter meet Aslan before he met Caspian. The rivalry could have been avoided and then the only major complaint would be the ridiculousness of the Caspian/Susan romance.
First of all, yes, movie!Peter was completely inferior to book!Peter. He was more arrogant, selfish, and ultimately insecure. I think there are a lot of factors contributing to the exaggeration of Peter's weaknesses.
First, was the changing of the plot. In the book, Peter had his moments of doubt and then his repentance much sooner because he met Aslan much sooner. He had already repented and re-embraced his role as High King BEFORE he met Caspian, and thus was better equipped to be the mentor Caspian needed.
In the movie, however, more and more time passes without Peter ever seeing Aslan, so his doubts and insecurities grow larger and larger as the Pevensies draw closer to Aslan's how. By the time they get to Caspian, Peter encounters a boy his own age who is already commanding an army, and who has already been fighting skirmishes against Miraz (and this is canon to the book as well). He hasn't dealt with his own personal insecurities yet, and then he has to try and assert his authority to Caspian and to a group of Narnians, many of whom believed him as much a fable as the Telmarines believed Old Narnians to be. The two issues together result in a much more antagonistic Peter.
Second, the ages of the children are not the same as in the novels. Peter and Caspian are 14 and 13 in the novels. Because so much time had passed between the first and second movie, William Mosley was about twenty by the time they filmed his part. While he looks younger than his age, he certainly can't convincingly play a 14-year-old boy, so the movie-makers had to portray the personalities and angst of older teens. A sixteen-year-old is much more likely to be stubborn and selfish and angsty than a fourteen-year-old because they have more of a need to assert their independence and adulthood. This is compounded in Peter, because he WAS an adult for fifteen years, and suddenly now he isn't. He has memories of being a man, of being respected, and obeyed, and (in some cases) feared. Now he's been back in England for a year, being treated as a child, and he's taken it very personally that Aslan didn't called them back into Narnia sooner.
Add to that the absolute horror of having to live your teenage years TWICE. Someone said above that they wouldn't mind getting thirty years shaved off so they could be in their twenties again, but I'm going to go ahead and say that going from middle-age to young-adult is NOT comparable to going from adult to child. I'm in my mid twenties, the same age Lucy and Edmund would have been at the end of The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe. I guarantee you, there is absolutely NOTHING that is appealing about going through puberty a second time, even if I did get to retain all of the knowledge and wisdom I've gained along the way. The loss of independence and respect alone would be frustrating, and I've never been royalty. So for an adult, a king no less, to go back to being a peasant child without even the slightest twinge of frustration just doesn't make sense. Aslan brought them to Narnia in the first place, and he's the one who let them leave. It's only natural for Peter to be angry at him.
Third, Lewis wrote Prince Caspian before The Horse and His Boy. At that point, Lewis just summarized what the Kings and Queens did during their reign, so we just had Peter reprising his role as the ideal and Noble High King. Later, Lewis went on to explain that of the four children, Peter was the main warrior. It was Peter who went up and trounced the Northern giants while Ed and Su were being diplomats, and I believe there was mention of him having to go out and reconquer the Lone Islands at one point as well (though I could be wrong on that). While this was mentioned in LWW, Lewis hadn't yet made the distinction between which children took on which roles. Tirian also says during LB that Peter has the face of a warrior. The movie-makers clearly are taking events in the other books into account (Susan's overall reluctance to believe, the fact that she likes pretty things and that boys fall in love with her, the carvings on the Wardrobe, Prof. Kirke's apple-shaped tobacco case, the empty seats in Miraz's council that probably belong to the seven lords from VDT), and I saw a lot of Peter the Warrior King in the movie's portrayal of him. Since he hadn't met Aslan and had his moment of repentence, it seemed reasonable that he would draw on his past moments of glory and (like Lucy said) forget who gave him the strength to win all those battles.
Fourth, the Peter in the PC movie built on the personality he'd established in the LWW movie. Edmond repeatedly accuses Susan and Peter of trying to act too grown up, and it's clear that they keep going about it in all the wrong ways. In the LWW movie, Peter tries far too hard to be just like his father. In the PC movie, he's trying too hard to be the High King everyone follows rather than establishing Caspian as the leader.
Overall, the things they did to Peter's character made sense to me. After all, in the book, he was the last one of the children to believe Aslan was really leading them. Even Susan believed it was Aslan, she just pretended she didn't because it was more comfortable that way. But Peter sincerely disbelieved Lucy and threw his vote in with Susan and Trumpkin because he thought he knew what he was doing and that he could lead them on his own.
AT THE SAME TIME, I'll admit that in some scenes the directors took the rivalry too far. Peter and Caspian should NEVER have drawn their swords on each other after the failed castle raid. Caspian should have deferred to Peter more, as the Pevensies are Caspian's sovereigns. Caspian should have followed all of Peter's orders regarding the castle raid. He shouldn't have challenged Peter's decision when Peter said that waiting out a siege meant certain death.
However, given the change in plot, and the fact that Peter didn't meet Aslan until the end of the movie, it was good that he wasn't the good and noble high king all the way through. If he had been the noble High King we all know he is BEFORE his repentence, that would have undermined the whole theme, which was that the Narnians needed to put their faith in Aslan even when they couldn't see him. After all, the fact that Peter went back to Narnia at all meant that he still hadn't learned everything he needed to know -- namely that he couldn't just have faith in himself.
Clearly, the solution to all of this was to have Peter meet Aslan before he met Caspian. The rivalry could have been avoided and then the only major complaint would be the ridiculousness of the Caspian/Susan romance.