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May 19, 2014 / 15:29

US filmmakers choose cave in VN for the film Peter Pan

A team from US-based Warner Bros, has surveyed a cave at Phong Nha-Ke Bang National Park in Quang Binh province to select scenes for the film Peter Pan.

The Provincial Department of Foreign Affairs announced that the crew of 10 spent three days discovering the UNESCO-recognised En (Swallow) Cave, one of the park's resplendent spots, to find locations for the world-renowned fantasy-adventure film.

In these possible shots, the film's protagonist Peter Pan will hover through the beautiful grotto and over magnificent mountain ranges and lush forests in the park.

Phong Nha-Ke Bang National Park, the UNESCO's World Heritage Site, is situated in a 2,000sq.km limestone zone, some 500km south of Ha Noi. It is well-known for its cave and grotto systems, comprising more than 300 caves with a total length of over 70km.

Phong Nha holds several world cave records, as it boasts the longest underground river, as well as the largest caverns and passageways in the world.

Apart from the cave, the team is also planning to scour for locations in several other famed scenic spots in Quang Ninh and Ninh Binh provinces.

Peter Pan is one of the favourite children's animated films produced in 1953 by Walt Disney. It is based on the novel Peter Pan or The Boy Who Wouldn't Grow Up, by J M Barrie. The film was entered in the 1953 Cannes Film Festival.

A sequel titled Return to Never Land was released in 2002, and a series of prequels focusing on Tinker Bell debuted in 2008. A pre-schoolers' television series featuring some of the characters also premiered in 2011.