Is it just me, or is Pete's Dragon the best Disney remake?

Pete's Dragon
(Image credit: Disney)

Nobody was asking for a remake of Pete’s Dragon. The singularly peculiar live-action/animation musical from 1977 has aged with a ‘you had to be there’ quality and hasn’t gained many new fans since. 

Perhaps that’s why the 2016 version didn’t make as much of a box-office dent as many of its stablemates, from Alice In Wonderland to Aladdin to The Lion King. But for my money, it’s far and away the best of the crop of Disney’s redos.

Lowery calls the film “surprisingly personal”, and it doesn’t feel out of place in a filmography that includes Ain’t Them Bodies Saints (2013) and The Old Man & The Gun (2018). That he was able to make something this intimate and folksy within the studio system is remarkable. 

Dealing with big themes through a child’s eyes, the film moves at an unhurried pace while giving ample screentime to its main attraction. The decision to make Elliot fluffy was not uncontroversial, but it gives him a warmth and naturalism that’s totally in step with this story. While his wide eyes and expressive nostrils don’t lack for feeling, Elliot retains a believably organic quality.

No doubt about it, Pete’s Dragon escapes the subgenre to stand alone on its own four feet as a cracking film in its own right, besting its higher-grossing counterparts. Or is it just me?

Matt Maytum

Matt Maytum is the former Editor of Total Film magazine. Over the past decade, Matt has worked in various roles for TF online and in print, including at GamesRadar+. Bucket-list-ticking career highlights have included reporting from the set of Tenet and Avengers: Infinity War, as well as covering Comic-Con, TIFF and the Sundance Film Festival.