Movies, DVDs, and television shows aimed at young children often feature smart and fun children teaching adults a thing or two about life. Sadly, the theme of rebellion is popular with young audiences and Hollywood knows it. Praise God that He’s rescued many from lives of rebellion, including this reviewer, but there are many that don’t get rescued. Parents, teachers, and friends can try to help, but a dabble in the dark side can lead to deaths, incurable diseases and even suicide. The truth is that rebellion against one’s parents can end in catastrophe. It’s the same theme as in THE LITTLE MERMAID where humans and merpeople learn to get along because of Ariel’s rebellion (after they’re forced to work together to avert a catastrophe). However, the end result is that Tinker Bell’s rebellion has a lasting positive result.
The movie shows that the leaders of the summer and winter fairies had good reason to keep the two groups apart and shows the danger of disobedience. This leads to a catastrophe that requires heroic effort on the part of both summer and winter fairies to overcome. The two become instant friends and Tinker Bell devises a snow-making machine to enable Periwinkle to visit the summer fairy region. There, she discovers she has a winter fairy sister named Periwinkle. She makes herself a winter outfit and ventures into the winter fairy region.
Tinker Bell’s curiosity is stronger than her commitment to obedience. The wings of each kind of fairy can be destroyed by prolonged exposure to the opposite temperatures. Summer fairies aren’t permitted in the region of the winter fairies, and winter fairies aren’t permitted in the summer region. At the middle of the log bridge, the world becomes covered in snow and ice. When Tinker Bell assists a friend in herding some rabbits from their summer quarters to the winter quarters, she comes to a log bridge between the two regions. The movie opens with Tinker Bell and her friends preparing baskets to be taken by owls from the land of the summer fairies to the land of the winter fairies. The beautifully-animated, G-rated movie has no foul language or violence but receives a caution for showing children’s rebellion leading to long-term good. SECRET OF THE WINGS is a made for DVD fairy story featuring Tinker Bell meeting her winter fairy sister Periwinkle as the result of an act of disobedience. There will never be a day when rebellion leads to God learning a lesson from mankind about what’s really best. Children need to know God really does know what’s best. The truth is that rebellion can end in catastrophe. The same thing occurs in THE LITTLE MERMAID where humans and merpeople learn to get along because of Ariel’s rebellion after they’re forced to work together to avert a catastrophe.
It also shows the dangers of disobedience. SECRET OF THE WINGS shows that the fairy leaders had good reasons to keep the summer and winter fairies apart. Tinker Bell devises a snowmaking machine to enable Periwinkle to visit the summer fairy region. So, she ventures into the forbidden region of the winter fairies. Despite included in the film's credits, the music that plays in Wendy's music box "You Can Fly! You Can Fly! You Can Fly!" (the same from Peter Pan (1953) movie), composed by Sammy Cahn, Sammy Fain, was not available in Tinker Bell's albums.In SECRET OF THE WINGS, Tinker Bell’s curiosity is stronger than her obedience.To the Fairies They Draw Near, Part II – Loreena McKennitt.A Child's Laughter / Flight to Pixie Hollow.To the Fairies They Draw Near – Loreena McKennitt.The album contain instrumental musics and three songs used in Tinker Bell movie, also present in the previous album. The album was launched in Jby Intrada Records as part of an agreement with Walt Disney Records. The movie score was composed by Joel McNeely that recorded in Sony Scoring Stage with 88-piece from Hollywood Studio Symphony and the violinist Máiréad Nesbitt.