Hook: 10 Things You Didn’t Know About Spielberg’s Cult Classic

Released in 1991, Hook is the retelling of a classic children’s story with an all-star cast including Robin Williams, Dustin Hoffman, and Maggie Smith, but there are several wild facts about the production. Directed by Steven Spielberg, Williams stars as Peter Banning, an overworked lawyer who does not remember his past as Peter Pan until he’s whisked away to Neverland after Hoffman’s Captain Hook kidnaps his children. The inventive take on the classic tale has become a nostalgic classic for many people who grew up in the 1990s.

While it is a more family-friendly and goofy movie than Spielberg is typically known for, it still contains his typical epic filmmaking style. Hook has an elaborate setting of pirate ships and Neverland alongside detailed pirate costumes. However, there’s more to Hook than audiences may know, as Peter Pan learns to fly and the Lost Boys try to take down Captain Hook. From celebrity cameos to musical numbers created by John Williams, these Hook facts are entirely unexpected.

10 Dustin Hoffman Had A Double Role

Hoffman Voices A Pilot Earlier In The Movie

Robin Williams as Peter Pan on an airplane in Hook

Oscar-winner Dustin Hoffman gets the titular role in Hook, bringing to life a new take on the villainous iconic Captain James T. Hook. While Hoffman’s performance in the role of Hook is one of the highlights of the movie, many fans likely missed the fact that he briefly plays another type of captain in a second role. On the Bannings’ flight to England, Hoffman can be heard as the pilot stating over the intercom, “This is your captain speaking…” foreshadowing his appearance as Captain Hook.

The moment also stands out because of Peter’s fear of flying. With Hoffman as both the pilot and Peter Pan’s foe, the small moment highlights Peter overcoming his fears throughout Hook to defeat his biggest adversaries. However, it is not something that the movie draws attention to; rather, it serves as a funny and cheeky little Easter egg for people to discover later. It also adds to the theory about Hook’s ending and that it might not have been real with the voice perhaps entering Peter’s subconscious.

9 Gwyneth Paltrow Played Young Wendy

Hook Was Paltrow’s Second Movie Role

Gwyneth Paltrow as Young Wendy sitting down and smiling in Hook

Despite Hook being a Peter Pan story, one of the most important characters from the classic story plays a much smaller role. Wendy is the young girl who Peter takes to Neverland in the story. In Hook, it is explained that Wendy eventually got too old to go on these journeys with Peter. However, the flashbacks not only show Wendy’s first meeting with Peter but also reveal that young Wendy is played by future Oscar-winner Gwyneth Paltrow.

Though Paltrow is now known for her roles in such movies as Shakespeare in Love, Shallow Hal, and as Pepper Pots in the MCU, portraying young Wendy in Hook is her second movie role. Paltrow also had major connections to the movie, as her godfather is Steven Spielberg. Her performance showcases the charisma and screen presence she had even at a young age.

8 Glenn Close’s Hook Cameo

The Legendary Actor Is Unrecognizable As A Pirate

Glenn Close dressed as a pirate in Hook

Actor Glenn Close has an extensive decades-long resume, with a wide array of acting credits, including such titles as Fatal Attraction and 101 Dalmatians. However, there are a lot of people who would not recognize that she also appears in a memorable role in Hook. Costumed as a bearded and dirty man named Gutless, the eight-time Oscar nominee appears early into Peter’s return to Neverland as one of Captain Hook’s pirates. Close’s pirate cameo can be found when Hook accuses her character of betting against him luring Peter back to Neverland.

Close’s pirate character is thrown into a wooden chest full of scorpions. It is one of the most frightening scenes in the movie and the terror of it is sold even more by Close’s brief but committed performance. While the fake beard and wig are convincing, Close really sells the part with her performance, making her even more unrecognizable.

7 The Hook Was Reversed For Dustin Hoffman

Hoffman Changed One Of The Villain’s Most Famous Aspects

Dustin Hoffman looking up in confusion in Hook

Dustin Hoffman’s performance as Captain Hook allowed him to bring his own spin on a classic character, infusing the role with humor, depth, and true villainy. However, the actor also got to change one major aspect of the character by switching the hand of the pirate captain’s hook. In the movie, Captain Hook has his hook affixed to his left hand because Hoffman is right-handed. However, in Peter Pan, the play, and the novel Peter and Wendy, Captain Hook is missing his right hand and often uses his hook as a weapon.

Though Disney’s Peter Pan adaptation also features Captain Hook missing his left hand, Hook swapped the hook to make sword fighting easier for Hoffman. Hoffman’s Captain Hook also has several different attachments for his missing hand. During the baseball scene, Hook has a baseball mitt attached to his missing limb. Other attachments include a goblet for drinking and a pointer.

6 Hook Is Spielberg’s First Razzie Nomination

The Movie Itself Is One Of Speilberg’s Worst Reviewed

Julia Roberts as Tinkerbell smiling in a lamp in Hook

Julia Roberts’ performance as Tinkerbell earned her a Golden Raspberry nomination for Worst Supporting Actress, marking the first time a role in a Spielberg film had received a Razzie nomination. However, Hook was nominated for five categories at the 64th Academy Awards, including Best Art Direction, Best Costume Design, Best Visual Effects, Best Makeup, and Best Original Song. Hoffman was even nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Actor in a Motion Picture Musical or Comedy.

The Razzie nomination speaks to the fact that, despite Hook being beloved by ’90s kids, the movie received largely negative reviews when it was released. Today, it sits at 29% on Rotten Tomatoes, making it the lowest rating for any movie that Speilberg directed. In fact, Spielberg himself doesn’t Hook, despite the cult status it has achieved.

5 Hook Was Originally A Musical

Speilberg Scrapped The Idea Before Filming Began

Peter looks startled when confronted by Captain Hook in Hook

Spielberg originally envisioned Hook as a musical but removed all the songs shortly before production. Composer John Williams wrote a number of songs alongside lyricist Leslie Bricusse which were even rehearsed before Spielberg pulled the plug. Several instrumental versions of the songs still appear on Hook’s soundtrack.

Hook would be a very different movie if it were a musical. While Robin Williams and Hoffman have the personalities to pull off musical numbers, song and dance would change the movie’s rhythm and interrupt more serious storylines, such as Peter’s son wanting to remain with Hook because Peter breaks promises. However, there is one musical moment that remains in the movie involving Peter’s daughter, Maggie. Given that it is not a memorable scene in Hook, Spielberg may have been right to scrap the original idea.

4 Dodi Fayed Has An Executive Producer Credit On Hook

Fayed Was Killed Along With Princess Diana In 1997

The Lost Boys looking in awe in Hook

While Hook is a star-studded movie with a lot of A-list talent on screen, some behind-the-scenes participants are quite surprising. Dodi Fayed, a film producer and the romantic partner of Princess Diana when the duo was killed in a car crash in 1997, is an executive producer for Hook. As the son of billionaire Mohamed Al Fayed, Fayed worked for his family’s production company, Allied Stars. Through Allied Stars, Fayed served as executive producer on only a few movies, including Breaking Glass, F/X, and F/X 2.

Fayed also produced Chariots of Fire, which was nominated for seven Academy Awards, and The Scarlet Letter starring Demi Moore. However, Fayed owned certain rights to make a Peter Pan film and sold his rights to Hook’s production company, TriStar Pictures, in exchange for an executive producer credit. Fayed’s name has taken on greater significance in history following his death, so it is a surprise to see him listed in the credits and learn of his involvement in the movie business.

3 The Mysterious Floating Couple Is Well Known

Two Star Wars Icons Reteam In Spielberg’s Movie

George Lucas and Carrie Fisher Hook Cameo on Bridge in Hook

Along with Glenn Close’s surprising cameo in the movie, there are some other surprising appearances from big-name celebrities that are even harder to spot in Hook. When Tinkerbell is flying an adult Peter back to Neverland, pixie dust falls onto the duo on the bridge, which also causes them to float. Though they cannot really be seen in the wide shot, George Lucas and Carrie Fisher cameo in Hook as a kissing couple on the bridge.

Fisher has additional connections to Hook as she helped with Tinkerbell’s dialogue and some script doctoring. Lucas was given a cameo as a friend and frequent collaborator of Spielberg. The fact that the director of Star Wars and Princess Leia herself appear on screen in a Speilberg movie without most people knowing is a fun little moment for Spielberg to include.

2 Bob Hoskins Reprised His Role For The Neverland Series

The SyFy Series Is A Prequel Story Of Peter And Hook

Bob Hoskins as Mr Smee smiling in Neverland

Mr. Smee is another classic character from Peter Pan lore as Captain Hook’s trusty right-hand man who is often seen as bumbling and the one Hook blames everything on. While he is usually a supporting character in the story, Bob Hoskins steals many scenes with his take on Smee in Hook. Hoskins plays Smee as a much more capable man, often seeming more beloved and intelligent than Captain Hook himself. Hoskins is so iconic in the movie that he reprises his role of Mr. Smee for SyFy’s Neverland.

The fantasy miniseries Neverland served as a prequel to the story of Peter Pan and depicted Hook and Peter’s falling out. A young Jimmy Hook and his delinquent friends are transported to Neverland with an orb, leaving Peter behind. In Neverland, Mr. Smee worked for Captain Bonny until her death when Captain Hook took over the ship. Considering the time between roles, Hoskins fits right back into the crew as Smee. Reprising his role of Mr. Smee for Neverland is one of Hoskins’ final performances before he died in 2014.

1 Maggie Smith Was 56 In Hook (But Her Character Was Much, Much Older)

Smith Died In 2024 And Was Still Not As Old As Her Hook Character

Maggie Smith as Wendy looking shocked in Hook

The recent passing of legendary actor Dame Maggie Smith likely led to a lot of fans revisiting Hook and looking back on her memorable performance in the movie as Granny Wendy. She plays the older version of the young girl whom Peter met all those years ago and the first one to realize that it was Hook who has taken the children to Neverland. Smith brings so much gravitas and grace to the role and it is all the more impressive considering that she was much younger than the older character she was playing.

Though Smith was only 56 years old then, Granny Wendy was in her 90s. Appearing frail as she tries to convince Peter of his past, Smith’s transformation into Granny Wendy is truly shocking but believable. With plenty of makeup and her soft demeanor, Smith manages to play the part perfectly. When Smith passed away in September 2024 at the age of 89, she still hadn’t reached the age of the character she played decades ago.

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ScreenRant logo 7/10 6.5/10 Hook PGAdventureComedyFamilyFantasy

Directed by Steven Spielberg, Hook stars Robin Williams as Peter Banning, a harried American lawyer who, after his children are kidnapped by Captain Hook, finds out that he is Peter Pan, having lost his memories of Neverland. In order to rescue his children, Peter must find his childlike spirit of adventure and regain his memories as he does battle with Hook and his crew. Dustin Hoffman stars alongside Williams as Captain Hook, along with Julia Roberts, Maggie Smith, and Charlie Korsmo.

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*Availability in US Director Steven Spielberg Release Date April 10, 1991 Cast Dustin Hoffman , Robin Williams , Julia Roberts , Bob Hoskins , Maggie Smith , Caroline Goodall Runtime 142 minutes