You can see this movie was made with dedication to convey emotions and purposes. It's not just a fantasy movie, it's a well tought out piece of art. I think that's why these scene still have deep impact on us. And yes...i cry a lot when Atreyu lost his friend. It makes me cry even today.
I rewatched it 4 years ago as an adult. By myself, on my laptop, in the dark. It felt like I time traveled to my 5 year old self and I cried all night.
This movie is on Netflix right now... I made my family watch it... I haven’t seen it as an adult.... I was blown away by all the plot points I never understood as a child.
There is a scene in the movie where Atreyu stops to have lunch, and Bastian also stops in that moment to eat. I ALWAYS pause the movie right there and get something to eat. Who else is with me on this?
Growing up in the 80's, I watched this film religiously. Ugly crying into a pillow every time Artax sank into the Swamp, and getting choked up at the scene where the Rockbiter describes losing his friends. As an adult, I now proudly sport an Auryn tattoo and wait until my little girl is old enough to watch too.
So glad i grew up in the 80s and early 90s. We were truly in the best time, a very Creative time. I wouldn't trade it at all for growing up in this messed up era today.
I think this film validated all the kids of the world who lives their lives with noses buried in books, or video games. Role-playing, this film, it made me feel special.
Only if you are able to apply it in the real world like the protagonist. Its suppose to inspire you in the real world, but if you never go back well then it's a loss.
Well, the movie covers only half of the book. The first half is about the importance of fantasy. The second half is about the importance of finding your way back if you delved into a fantasy world. It is also exploring story-telling on a meta-textual level. The book is actually studied on university level over here. The movie, while quite good, doesn't even come close to it. And the ending is one of the reasons why it doesn't. The thing is that in the book NOTHING which was lost in the first half comes back. Bastian creates a new fantasia, but Atrax aso stay dead.
@@swanpride Yeah, that never say die quality of fantasy is definitely an American and specifically a Disney influenced quirk. Old school fantasy is typically a pinch more cruel and less neat in their endings.
The neverending story is one film I have a strong connection with- in part due to my great great uncle being in the movie. He played engywook, the old man who helps atreyu through the gates. His name was Sydney Bromley. ^^
That wasn't the "Never-ending Story", though. The Never-ending story was the story that the Old Man of Wandering Mountain was forced to write by the Childlike Empress. The movie kind of skipped several chapters, there. The title of the movie makes no sense, really, when you leave out those chapters. The (movie) story _isn't_ never-ending. It ends and starts over over and over, yes, but that's not "never-ending". The story that the Old Man was writing, however, WAS never-ending (with only one possibility of escaping the eternal loop).
My daughter (born 2012) now shares my love for this classic childhood fairytale. It truly is a timeless story. Neverending Story is one of her's and my top favorite films.
LEGEND. That movie messed me up as a kid because I was disturbingly sexually attracted to Tim Curry as the demon. Like, he oozed sexuality, and kids do actually pick up on that, but they know they're considered too young and *shouldn't* know anything about that, so it causes anxiety and guilt. I should watch it again so I can just enjoy his sexuality now that I'm an adult! :p
Don't forget about the Goonies and Ghostbusters. While aimed to be slightly more light hearted... both deal with dark themes hard for kids to understand. There's others I can't think of on the spot but I grew up in louisiana so of course I was drawn to the dark themed movies. Lol In fact, I would throw in Ladyhawke. A lesser known movie that was along the lines of legend and Willow.
The black dog/wolf was apparently a political person's name for 'depression'. I think it was Winston Churchill. Interesting symbolism huh?! Also, the self-worth, Atreyu's continual 'I can't do it!'.
Robin Marlo Including hopelessness and all other negative aspects of life if we allow ourselves to give in to them. We can overcome these things as we learn about ourselves with God's help (James 1:5-6), and stay true to our core values.
When I watched the movie as a child I thought it was about growing up and losing your dreams and imagination. That's why everything disappeared. Because people were (like Bastian's father) more about superficial things, which would also fit into the 80s becaue people were hyped about wealth. He even said something like he should keep both feet on the ground when they were talking about how bad he was at school and how he drew unicorns in his maths book or something.
The movie entirely misses the part about Bastian almost losing himself as he recreates Fantasia and then has to go on a journey of self discovery that allows him to understand and forgive his father. Powerful stuff, that book!
Luther Moskal I saw the movie once but read the book many times. I feel like I can’t love the movie the same way I love the book. The movie is so unfinished
His dad doesn't bully him, he is just as depressed as Bastian is about Bastian's mom's death you got the character completely wrong. He is hopelessness and despair not a bully.
Most bullies are, a bully is not evil encarnated, most of the time is confused, lonely and depressed but the result is the same. Bastian feels desqualified by his dad's words, uncared for (his feelings are not recognized as important). I don't think that the father was doing it out of evil, he was in a bad situation, probably struggling within himself and probably that was the way he was brought up but that is not an healthy approach.
I have dealt with very similar to this, personally. The father is ABSOLUTELY NOT "bullying", you are correct. He's showing his son, by example, how to pick himself back up. He has to show his son how to be a man...that's in the job title of being a father. In order to be a man, you cannot let life keep you down. It is your job to provide for your family, and to be a role mode of strength for your children. Life cannot win, pain cannot overcome you. You must triumph. Period. Thank you dad, for teaching me this lesson.
I disagree and angry with u. The father is not a traditional bully but he is using a bully-ing tactic on his son. The father is depressed and is trying to cope with his emotions by suppression and avoidance. Like the author in this video says he is making his son ashamed of his sadness in the mask of adulthood and masculinity. Bullying is defined as a constant and continuous emotional or physical attack on another. Though I agree the father has his best intent, he is ‘bullying’ the boy. I’m not an emotional person and find weepy or sensitive ppl annoying, but I can not fault them for coping with whatever they are going through. Everyone reacts differently to lose. It takes someone more educated than me to help navigate that mess. Someone can be going through the worse, be sympathetic but still a bully..... IMHO
My opinion is based on the book and that's what the book was portraying him to be, a depressed adult who doesn't know how to deal with his emotions so he pretends they're not there and since Bastian reminds him of his wife he ignores him too. I do agree that the movie portrayed him as ignorant for no reason and maybe that's why some people think he's a bully but he is not.
@@Adam.Rushing The concept of being an adult male is lost on a generation of perpetual children. They would call what you describe "toxic masculinity" because they lack the fortitude to actually cope with life and push on through. To be sure, there are healthy ways to deal with loss and grief. But here is a man who is a husband first, and a father second, who is now coping with the loss of his entire world, and the sudden responsibility of maintaining a house and a son on his own. The man's entire life was ripped away from (and most married men would understand what I mean by this... and married women, too). Bastion lost his "world" effectively, but in vastly different way. Bastion does not have the responsibility of his father, and the whole world in front of him, whereas his father is reaching those years where his life is behind him. Perspectively "moving forward" looks worlds different as Bastion will have more opportunity to fall in love, date, make choices, have companionship, his father, his world, his reality has been shattered whereas Bastion is still making his world and his reality.
It's good for how much is missing. I'd be ok with it being twice as long plus put in all the stuff missing from atreyus adventure and maybe the entire second half of the book.
The special effects are lacking by modern standards, but could easily be worse. The movie is still pretty good, though can be spooky and surreal in some places for younger children.
Then you haven't read the book. There are many changes from it, some of them big. The scene of the swamp is even more depressing. The horse *speaks* and tells Atreyu that he want's to die. And the scene were the Child Empress gets her new name... let's say she doesn't beg for a name.
The most amazing part about this movie is that , as old as it is . this movie still draws crowds/has a huge audience as well as the fact that those who know and love the movie have passed it on to future generations!
I’m sure if they do remake it. They will some how make It Woke as fuck and then go broke because of it An all female cast and basin and falkor gets killed in the first two seconds of the movie. (R.i.p. Terminator franchise )
One of my favorite movies of all time. I am 38 years old and the scene where Artax dies is still very painful to this day. But the movie has taken on a different meaning for me as I’ve grown and experienced my own hopelessness and challenges.
Back when film makers remembered how narrative is supposed to work. Films telling a story that matters, where the hero(es) have to struggle to overcome their doubts - rather than a 120 minute socio-political rant. Films that live on in the heart of some of the people who watch them for decades - rather than being forgotten almost as soon as the credits roll.
I loved this movie when I was a kid, I watched this with my dad 100 times, and the symbolism was never lost on me. Thanks for the Nostalgia kick Looper ❤️
Books and video games (RPGs especially) were my escapes from real life so this movie really resonated with me on a personal level as a kid. Still does to this day.
Her voice is so annoyingly patronizing, it makes me want to hurl. This mans wife died, and his son is spacing out. They are both grieving and he’s not bullying.. he’s parenting to the best of his damn ability.
It is sad that she sees the father as bullying his son. He is hurting, just differently than his son. Instead of getting closer he's trying to protect himself and he thinks he's helping his son.
This made me so angry. It's not bullying. They both suffered traumatic loss, they're both grieving and they both have trouble communicating that to one another. The catharsis of the book (not really shown in this movie) is that they learn to communicate their feelings for one another that they've been holding in. Has nothing to do with parenting in the 80s at all, except maybe that people were less aware of how important it is to talk to their children.
This story coloured my childhood. These days, seeing the story, brings back deep felt memories of a magic time in my life, a time long gone. My mother passed away this year, and she loved this story... ,,It has to hurt if it's to heal"...
I cried during this because I connect with it so much. I've always loved this movie. I was bullied from elementary school until the end of high school and dealt with abuse at home. To go to school to be bullied and to go home and be abused is why I have such bad PTSD and probably why I developed rheumatoid arthritis (people with trauma have an increased risk for autoimmunity). My escape was and still is books and art. Art is my creative outlet and when I don't create I my depression gets worse. I think many of us with trauma have an internal world where dreams come true. I used to daydream all the time (and still do sometimes) about my ideal life without pain. My trauma has turned me into an advocate for those who are stepped on, and I'm grateful for being able to stand up and fight for what's right when no one does, but I also now have the price of severe mental health issues and autoimmunity complications that bring me down daily.
You know what else never ends? This is the song that never ends. Yes, it goes on and on my friends. Some people started singing it, not knowing what it was. And the'll continue sing it forever, just because this is the song that never ends. Yes, it goes on and on my friends.
Bastian was literally me all through school and I am using 'literally' correctly in all ways except I'm female. Books were always my escape. I guess this is why The Neverending Story is one of my favorite pieces of fiction. I've even read the book and suffered through the third film.
Did you also crush on the childlike empress or where you jealous of her or something else? I always wanted to know how little girls felt about her since i certainly know how little boys felt about her ^^
I grew up in the 90's and I didn't know about the sequels either. As much as I want to see a young Jack Black, I'ma hafta pass on those and stick with the original
The Child-like Empress was always what I remembered from this movie. Her tortured cry of "Bastian say my name!" for some reason can always make me cry even as an adult.
I never got over seeing this movie when I was a kid in the 80s. Never. I recently watched on Amazon Prime and yes, the scene with the horse always got me. Always did. Always will.
I've always loved the idea of "The Nothing" or "Emptiness". It's a deceptively powerful metaphor for human existentialism. I don't remember watching The Never Ending Story but I might re-watch them. At best for inspiration for my own story I'm writing about hopelessness and the feeling of emptiness and how it leads to nothing. They're very powerful metaphors and they resound to so many people.
Cynicism isn't a truth but both a denial and false truth that most adults must cling to so they can be the grown up and not remember the child wonder they lose to becoming an adult. The kid still sleeps within us all you need only find the way to wake them and cast away the cynicism in your hearts. Artax scene after 35 years STILL makes me cry!
Over harsh on the father, stoicism is lorded in men however its easy to see his father is still battling his own grief. Ideally he could put it aside to support his son but the 'nothing' that grief brings is a harsh demon to fight when men lack support networks to do so.
After hearing her go through the synopsis for the second time, it's obvious Looper has no idea what the Neverending Story was about. But what Looper does have is some social message it wants to project onto the movie, so it keeps haphazardly picking out examples to supports what it wants to say. It didn't even bother to organize, which is why it sounded like the synopsis went through 4 times. The trope in The Neverending Story is not new: Children, who are growing up, leave the innocence and imagination behind. Fantasia represents the collective worlds and characters we all dream up. The Nothingness represents the children abandoning their imaginary worlds. However, all it takes is another child to reaffirm the fantasy for Fantasia to exist. It's not rocket science. It doesn't require anything about hope, cynicism, or any social political commentary of our modern world. It is a timeless inversion of the coming of age story. Instead of growing up, the child reaffirms his childhood.
Wasn't the movie about people losing their ability to "Imagine" And Nothing was simply the lack of imagination. Same way the story book "Gradually lost words the further it got" to force the reader to "Imagine"/""fill" them.
Thats how I saw it too, especially since the old man in the book shop was critisizing the growing interest in technology and decreasing interest in books
The Neverending Story is one of the greatest films ever made. It's just as powerful as it was back in 1984. A cult classic and a timeless masterpiece of 80's fantasy films. I just really wish that it would've gotten the whole book that it was based on.
Tami Stronarch (actress who played the Empress) and Aubree Miller (from Ewoks: The Battle for Endor) were my first celebrity crushes. The Never Ending Story and The Princess Bride and the original Star Wars Trilogy are my favorite films from my childhood.
Michael Ende's novel (on whose first half the film is based) is heavily influenced by Aleister Crowley's Thelema. The most obvious references are the Auryn's inscription ("Do what thou wilt") and the name Bastian gives to the Childlike Empress ("Moonchild"), but it doesn't stop there. As for the hero's journey, the real fun begins in the (nearly unfilmable) second half of the novel, where Bastian misinterprets the Auryn's inscription and loses his whole identity to the hero-persona he crafts for himself by wishing for all sorts of strengths and powers.
Atreyu’s horse getting swallowed in a quicksand is the most heartbreaking movie scene I’ve ever seen as a child, and still one of the most heartbreaking until now.
The only reaction I had to the horse was that it pulled me completely out of the story, because even as a child, I saw a terrified horse. You brought back that childhood trauma just showing it to me. I remember asking my own mother why they couldn't see how scared that horse was? I could see it.
gregory18000 the first movie only actually goes through the first half of the book. The second half of the book is the second movie. Those wishes to fix Fantasia come at a pretty big cost and the point is the book actually heals the wound between father and son.
That's what I was going to say, too. She recapped the films and talked about some of the themes but didn't actually go into what any of it actually meant. The NeverEnding Story is about the destruction of our imaginations. The Nothing represents "the Real World", or the loss of childhood imagination. And, I actually love NEII. It's still heartfelt and pretty good acting. The actors are trying and while it has no where near the budget of NE, it's trying to end the whole of the book. A lot of the events taking place in NE2 actually happen in the book. Bastion goes into the world of Fantasia and begans making wishes. Every wish he makes, he forgets who he is in the Human world. This has happened to almost every child who comes to Fantasia before him. I think this is supposed to highlight the dangers of getting too deeply into a fantasy realm that you forget yourself. Ziaeda exists in the book. There is this extremely sad part when they go to this place called the Forgotten City and they find all these past children who've forgotten who they are and lost the ability to go home forever. They all took the same route Bastion had been taking. It shows him how dangerous forgetting your true self can be: absolute power corrupting absoluty, and how Atreyu had been trying to warn him all along the dangers of making wishes with Auryn. It's a beautifully written book and writing this makes me both sad and wanting to read it again. NE3 is garbage, and doesn't exist. The only good thing about that piece of filth is Jack Black. That's it. Don't watch it, seriously, it will make you want to kill things.
He didn’t name her Moon Child after his mom , that was just Hollywood making it seems so, the book never really mentions his mom at all. It would be interesting to know why. The book portrays the childlike empress not so innocently or childlike, she never sat back and cried and pleaded with Bastian. She is like a Goddess in child form ancient and innocent, good and evil. She has agency and took it upon herself to climb up a giant icy mountain top in a thin night gown barefoot ! She visited the old man that was writing the book in real time and it was one place she was forbidden to go , because it essentially trapped Bastian and everything and everyone in a Neverending loop . This forced Bastian to give her a new name else he would have been trapped in the book forever, he actually didn’t have a choice. To make it worse this wasn't the last time the Childlike Empress trapped Bastian, after giving him her Auryn, Bastain had to go on an even more perilous journey and almost lost his mind in the process. Let’s just all agree NES 3 never happened, though that empress is a wonderful actress. Also the scores for NES 1 & 2 are so underated!
Much like the Dark Crystal and other films from my childhood....i love this movie but haven't seen it in years. The first movie I've seen in theaters. My parents brought me so I might have a hard time watching this because I lost my mom earlier this year. R I. P. Mommy, I miss you!
I loved this movie. The ending was easy to understand even when I watched it as a child. I was born in the early 80s so movies like this have a special place in my heart. It's right up there with the Goonies. Because it's "🎵Good enough, for you is, good enough, for me is good enough🎵" 😊
When I first watched the movie as a little girl, I was completely in love with Falkor and all I wanted was to take a nap against his side. Side note: My library actually has or had the Michael Ende book. SIDE side note: the theme song makes me cry because it’s so beautifully done. Anyone else?
@@MarcoBonechi ... What are you talking about. His kid was being a weakling, and his dad said, "Chin up". This is after he got him horse lessons even, but Bastion was too scared to even try. This is what we're talking about when we mean parenting in the 80's was better. His dad was a good role model. But people don't know how to parent these days because they are too sensitive *(and weak, like Bastion). MW Fresh!
Ah, but let’s not forget the end of that conversation when Bastion’s dad said; “well, I think we had a good talk. We should have more.” This comment tells me that he and Bastion never really had a connection, and his father became even more disconnected after his wife died.
If you really want to understand the neverending story, please do yourself a favor and read the book. Michael Ende himself called the movie a "gigantic melodrama of kitsch, commerce, plush and plastic" as it misses so much of the essence of the book. It is also a huge difference if you first read the book and let your imagination run freely, before being presented images and sounds, which imprint your imagination. I it barely touches me, when I see the horse die in the movie, but when reading the book to my daughter last week, Artax' death made me shed tears. I thank my parents for insisting me to first read the book and then watch the movie.
This movie was one of my favorite movies as a kid. Artax succumbing to the “quick sand” definitely popped a nerve when watching the sequence. Was also very scared when the black cat first made its appearance in the movie
In The Neverending Story, Engywook explains the Magic Mirror Gate to Falkor, he says that the mirror shows a person their true nature. Brave men are cowards. Kind men are cruel. so when Atreyu looks into the Magic Mirror Gate, why does Atreyu see Bastion and Bastion see Atreyu? I think it is because Bastion as the main protagonist of the story is the same as Atreyu, as the empress said: "Just as he is sharing all your adventures, other's are sharing his." Its a 4th wall break inside a 4th wall break. Atreyu realises he is the main character of the book about him, the same way bastion realises he is the main character of the movie that we are watching. This proves to them both that anything is possible. The movie has a great underlining message about the world of books and film and that if people don't pay attention to something it will ultimately fail and turn to nothing. A.K.A - Destroyed by the "Nothing". It's a pretty deep message for a kids movie. What do you think? Maybe I'm overthinking it.
Have the original German and later, translated books this movie was based on...with both, each chapter begins with a letter in the alphabet, with the following chapter beginning with the next one. It is so cool! Ende also wrote an amazing book called Momo that is strongly recommended to any Neverending Story fans...if you can find it!
I find it interedtinf that they translated Moon Child into Czech as Mum. It's perfectly in line with the message of the movie, just slightly different. I love it
"Colonisation"? The Nothing has exactly that to do with colonisation, nothing. The Nothing is created by kids giving up reading for stupidly watching tv, so storyland dies because they don't use their imagination anymore.
ironically the fact that they made that point proves that the ones who made this analyses are consumed by The Nothing and see negative things like this when there is none
Well I reckon it analogically fits, seems like the former “colonialists” nationals are getting TRIGGERED at the mere suggestion there maybe a commentary on their dreadful past !
There is one major problem with this movie, and that is that the sequel goes completely off the rails. And the problem with that is that the message of the book *cannot* be understood without the second part, which is part of the same book. Unlike other works, the two parts of the neverending story were never published as two seperate books although the structure would easily have allowed for it, but they have to be understood as a whole. As such, the ending of the first movie is merely Bastian accepting the power of his imagination and its importance and deciding to use it. The second part deals with him becoming so deeply lost in his own recreated phantasia that he is forgetting himself (for people that only saw the movie of the second part: Xaida is merely an opportunistic manipulator, she does *not* cause Bastians loss of memory. That is inherent in the nature of phantasia itself.), and in the end barely makes it out again, at one point being saved from literally going insane by Atreus *violent* opposition (Also, his dad, not his mother, is the one memory that gets him back. Saying this because he gets a bit of a bad rep in this video...). As such, the neverending story is a balanced allegory for both the importance and power of imagination, but also its terrible dangers and how important it is to find something that roots one to reality. As Ende said himself: "Poetry is a perilous undertaking, and many a one has not returned from it"
I was a young adult when this movie came out, but I cried buckets when that horse died. On a different note, what a fabulous explanation this video provided for the movie!
I saw The Neverending Story II before I saw the first one, and in retrospect I'm glad that I did because partly it made the first movie better for me, and in the second movie they redeemed Bastians father by engaging him in the story this time around and connecting more with his son.
Yeah... Although, it's kind of a shame that the sequal kind of seemed like a let-down in places, and only really seemed to borrow concepts from the 2nd half of the book, rather than really try to adapt it well. Either way, nothing can really be worse than the embarassment that the 3rd movie was. Certainly makes it kind of understandable why the OG author's estate, currently has a vice-like grip on the IP, these days.
@@retrogamelover2012 I felt that way when I saw the third movie. That one just felt like a big cluster f*** in comparison to both of the previous two. At least with the second movie it was fun and enjoyable film, as opposed to the last one which just felt lazy and uninspired.
One of the rules in The Neverending Story is, that fantasticans cannot travel to the human world while humans and creatures without a world of their own like Gmork can cross the borders. By having Bastian pay a visit to the human world while riding on Falkor the ending of the movie completely ruined any chance to continue the story properly - there was more than half of the book left. Instead we got a reimagining of the themes and characters of the book in the second movie.
What movie series from your childhood do you want to learn more about?
Wizards the animated one...its a bit before my time, i found the VHS in my uncles old stuff, i love that movie.
There is NO ending!! You are missed inform🙄
Ok, so I finished the video. Everything else is pretty accurate and well-said. So kudos on that. But the name thing has just got to be corrected!
Who Framed Roger Rabbit, Adventures In Babysitting, The Land Before Time
the land before time, the goonies, the wizard and flight of the navigator
I don’t care how old I am, that horse scene messes me up for a whole day.
Yes. The only thing that comes close is Mufasa's death (Lion King)
Just watching this video made my eyes tear up
You can see this movie was made with dedication to convey emotions and purposes. It's not just a fantasy movie, it's a well tought out piece of art. I think that's why these scene still have deep impact on us. And yes...i cry a lot when Atreyu lost his friend. It makes me cry even today.
just one day....what kind of cold blooded lizard are you...
shameful...simply shameful
Artex!!!! Stupid horse!! You have to try....you have to care...for me................ Absolutely devastating!!!!
I rewatched it 4 years ago as an adult. By myself, on my laptop, in the dark. It felt like I time traveled to my 5 year old self and I cried all night.
Watching movies alone is the best. You get to just enjoy it, feel it.
Powerful comment. Bless you
Nothing hits our generation harder than watching Artax sink into the Swamps of Sadness.
I just watched it again now 24 and I remember the second one the most
🧁
They just dont make films like this anymore. Timeless classics.
True so true
@@parzivalSkywalker ok boomers
They do. What you consider to be a timeless classic is not the same timeless classic to another generation.
@@therecanonlybeone7131 the book is so much better
I agree. ☺️👍👍
This is my childhood movie. No other film has influenced me as much as The Never Ending Story! I still got this one on original VHS dood.
love this movie same to me best movie ever make me cry
This and The Labryinth
guillermo gamboa this comment pretty much describes wtf I just witnessed
This movie is on Netflix right now... I made my family watch it... I haven’t seen it as an adult.... I was blown away by all the plot points I never understood as a child.
Same I watched this continuously and would constantly replay it.
There is a scene in the movie where Atreyu stops to have lunch, and Bastian also stops in that moment to eat. I ALWAYS pause the movie right there and get something to eat.
Who else is with me on this?
It also makes you want an apple. He tears that apple up like its the tastiest thing on the planet.
Every time
Yes! But..”not too much. We still have a looong way to go!!
😂🤦🏽😂😂😁
The "Neverending Story" and "Chrono Trigger" are in my top 10 greatest stories ever told!
I cried SO hard for that horse.
HyShade Artix you’re sinking!
About to cry thinking about it 😭
HyShade 🥺 I still do
The kids and I all cried.
Me too, me too 😞
Growing up in the 80's, I watched this film religiously. Ugly crying into a pillow every time Artax sank into the Swamp, and getting choked up at the scene where the Rockbiter describes losing his friends. As an adult, I now proudly sport an Auryn tattoo and wait until my little girl is old enough to watch too.
Read the book to her. It's even better than the movie.
Did you read her the book yet?
Ive read the book. I also have Auryn tattooed in the middle of my chest
Atreyu killed Artax. He had the Auryn on
So glad i grew up in the 80s and early 90s. We were truly in the best time, a very Creative time. I wouldn't trade it at all for growing up in this messed up era today.
I think this film validated all the kids of the world who lives their lives with noses buried in books, or video games. Role-playing, this film, it made me feel special.
It was definitely one for the misfits.😉
Only if you are able to apply it in the real world like the protagonist. Its suppose to inspire you in the real world, but if you never go back well then it's a loss.
@@vmorales225 of course. If you never leave, what is the point. Using it as an escape for a while is fine. Forever, never.
Well, the movie covers only half of the book. The first half is about the importance of fantasy. The second half is about the importance of finding your way back if you delved into a fantasy world. It is also exploring story-telling on a meta-textual level.
The book is actually studied on university level over here. The movie, while quite good, doesn't even come close to it. And the ending is one of the reasons why it doesn't. The thing is that in the book NOTHING which was lost in the first half comes back. Bastian creates a new fantasia, but Atrax aso stay dead.
@@swanpride Yeah, that never say die quality of fantasy is definitely an American and specifically a Disney influenced quirk. Old school fantasy is typically a pinch more cruel and less neat in their endings.
This was the harry potter of my generation. Such an incredible book, and movie.
interesting! i grown up on both.
So much better than Harry Potter.
Harry potter who?
I can’t handle seeing his horse sink....it still kills me
Delique Scence
it kills the _horse._
The neverending story is one film I have a strong connection with- in part due to my great great uncle being in the movie. He played engywook, the old man who helps atreyu through the gates. His name was Sydney Bromley. ^^
That is so cool!
@@Hinatachan360 right? :3 unfortunately Im too young to have ever met him- the stories I bet he could tell xD
Awwww, that's so awesome! I love this movie. Everyone did such a great job on it!
That’s really cool. I wonder if the cast ever kept any set moments.
@@Tinuvielthefair it's one of my favourites :3 aside from that, my favourite childhood movies are Pokémon the movie and watership down
The narrative does happen again and again, every time the book is read. That's the point.
That wasn't the "Never-ending Story", though. The Never-ending story was the story that the Old Man of Wandering Mountain was forced to write by the Childlike Empress. The movie kind of skipped several chapters, there. The title of the movie makes no sense, really, when you leave out those chapters. The (movie) story _isn't_ never-ending. It ends and starts over over and over, yes, but that's not "never-ending". The story that the Old Man was writing, however, WAS never-ending (with only one possibility of escaping the eternal loop).
First time I saw this movie I was so immersed that when the movie ended I felt completed disoriented. It was hard to come back to reality.
So you, like Bastian, were drawn in to the world of Fantastica (look it up). Read the book. Its so freaking good.
Me too
Same, this move and the Dark Crystal totally transfixed me as a child
This movie was like weed for me as a kid.
2+3 neverending story wasn't as good as 1
My daughter (born 2012) now shares my love for this classic childhood fairytale. It truly is a timeless story. Neverending Story is one of her's and my top favorite films.
That is doing parenting right
The never ending story, The Dark crystal, Labyrinth, Willow and Legend are the quintessential 1980s dark fantasy films for kids.
LEGEND. That movie messed me up as a kid because I was disturbingly sexually attracted to Tim Curry as the demon. Like, he oozed sexuality, and kids do actually pick up on that, but they know they're considered too young and *shouldn't* know anything about that, so it causes anxiety and guilt. I should watch it again so I can just enjoy his sexuality now that I'm an adult! :p
@@amouramarie lol I know what you mean.
Yes Sir!
Don't forget about the Goonies and Ghostbusters. While aimed to be slightly more light hearted... both deal with dark themes hard for kids to understand. There's others I can't think of on the spot but I grew up in louisiana so of course I was drawn to the dark themed movies. Lol
In fact, I would throw in Ladyhawke. A lesser known movie that was along the lines of legend and Willow.
and Flight of The Navigator
This movie is so underated. I saw this as a child and it shook my world wtf
No it's against the law
The Nothing is actually depression.
The nothing is fear.
PHOBOS. Another name for Satan.
Or you could say despair.
The black dog/wolf was apparently a political person's name for 'depression'. I think it was Winston Churchill. Interesting symbolism huh?! Also, the self-worth, Atreyu's continual 'I can't do it!'.
@@phoenixmoon5580 Well Churchill was easily one of the most evil people of the last century so it would be fitting.
Robin Marlo Including hopelessness and all other negative aspects of life if we allow ourselves to give in to them. We can overcome these things as we learn about ourselves with God's help (James 1:5-6), and stay true to our core values.
When I watched the movie as a child I thought it was about growing up and losing your dreams and imagination. That's why everything disappeared. Because people were (like Bastian's father) more about superficial things, which would also fit into the 80s becaue people were hyped about wealth. He even said something like he should keep both feet on the ground when they were talking about how bad he was at school and how he drew unicorns in his maths book or something.
If you’re here, you’re family lol hello 80s kids 👋🏾
Aye Eye Hello 👋 that's me 😆
Hey how are ya 😂👋🏾 wasn’t our childhood awesome???
Pegasus nah your parents are outstanding lol
1983 and now I'm 36
...or the parents of 80's kids. :-D
Upvote if you've actually read The NeverEnding Story.
As always the book was better.
Way better. I love how it had red type for the real-world chapters and green type for the Fantasia chapters.
The movie entirely misses the part about Bastian almost losing himself as he recreates Fantasia and then has to go on a journey of self discovery that allows him to understand and forgive his father. Powerful stuff, that book!
It was the best Singlebook oy my entire life! I really loved it!!!🥰❤
Luther Moskal I saw the movie once but read the book many times. I feel like I can’t love the movie the same way I love the book. The movie is so unfinished
One of the most supreme movies ever made - then and now.
"Come for me Gmork, I am Atreyu!"
*Gmork.
@@Dr.Bright87 Thanks professor Peabody! 👍
His dad doesn't bully him, he is just as depressed as Bastian is about Bastian's mom's death you got the character completely wrong. He is hopelessness and despair not a bully.
Most bullies are, a bully is not evil encarnated, most of the time is confused, lonely and depressed but the result is the same. Bastian feels desqualified by his dad's words, uncared for (his feelings are not recognized as important). I don't think that the father was doing it out of evil, he was in a bad situation, probably struggling within himself and probably that was the way he was brought up but that is not an healthy approach.
I have dealt with very similar to this, personally.
The father is ABSOLUTELY NOT "bullying", you are correct. He's showing his son, by example, how to pick himself back up. He has to show his son how to be a man...that's in the job title of being a father. In order to be a man, you cannot let life keep you down. It is your job to provide for your family, and to be a role mode of strength for your children. Life cannot win, pain cannot overcome you. You must triumph. Period.
Thank you dad, for teaching me this lesson.
I disagree and angry with u. The father is not a traditional bully but he is using a bully-ing tactic on his son. The father is depressed and is trying to cope with his emotions by suppression and avoidance. Like the author in this video says he is making his son ashamed of his sadness in the mask of adulthood and masculinity. Bullying is defined as a constant and continuous emotional or physical attack on another. Though I agree the father has his best intent, he is ‘bullying’ the boy. I’m not an emotional person and find weepy or sensitive ppl annoying, but I can not fault them for coping with whatever they are going through. Everyone reacts differently to lose. It takes someone more educated than me to help navigate that mess. Someone can be going through the worse, be sympathetic but still a bully..... IMHO
My opinion is based on the book and that's what the book was portraying him to be, a depressed adult who doesn't know how to deal with his emotions so he pretends they're not there and since Bastian reminds him of his wife he ignores him too. I do agree that the movie portrayed him as ignorant for no reason and maybe that's why some people think he's a bully but he is not.
@@Adam.Rushing The concept of being an adult male is lost on a generation of perpetual children. They would call what you describe "toxic masculinity" because they lack the fortitude to actually cope with life and push on through. To be sure, there are healthy ways to deal with loss and grief. But here is a man who is a husband first, and a father second, who is now coping with the loss of his entire world, and the sudden responsibility of maintaining a house and a son on his own. The man's entire life was ripped away from (and most married men would understand what I mean by this... and married women, too). Bastion lost his "world" effectively, but in vastly different way. Bastion does not have the responsibility of his father, and the whole world in front of him, whereas his father is reaching those years where his life is behind him. Perspectively "moving forward" looks worlds different as Bastion will have more opportunity to fall in love, date, make choices, have companionship, his father, his world, his reality has been shattered whereas Bastion is still making his world and his reality.
This movie still holds up to this day.
...........................does it though?
It's good for how much is missing. I'd be ok with it being twice as long plus put in all the stuff missing from atreyus adventure and maybe the entire second half of the book.
@@Luccimatic In the future, in another time when money is not an object hopefully someone will make a series of it.
@@roberthudson5283 Even without 21st century technology, The Neverending Story is still a far better movie than most movies (if not all) now.
The special effects are lacking by modern standards, but could easily be worse. The movie is still pretty good, though can be spooky and surreal in some places for younger children.
The Neverending Story should never be remade
Jacob Sullivan Agreed
Then you haven't read the book. There are many changes from it, some of them big. The scene of the swamp is even more depressing. The horse *speaks* and tells Atreyu that he want's to die. And the scene were the Child Empress gets her new name... let's say she doesn't beg for a name.
@ I know it's different from the book but it's still a good movie to watch though
@@parzivalSkywalker what I mean is that someone could make a closer-to-the-book version, covering the whole book.
@ you make a good point there
Rest in Peace Jonathan Brandis. It's 2019 and I still miss seeing his face. I loved watching him on TV shows and movies.
Yeah it sucks when Hollywood molests you and gay shames you.
I always thought he was cute as a kid lol but yes it’s sad
Agreed, this broke my heart as a kid. I had the biggest crush on him as a kid, and I took his loss so hard.
Omg I thought I was the only one!! He will forever be my biggest crush. I wallpapered my room with pictures of him from tiger beat!! ❤❤😍
The most amazing part about this movie is that , as old as it is . this movie still draws crowds/has a huge audience as well as the fact that those who know and love the movie have passed it on to future generations!
If this movie gets a reboot, it will suck so bad.
Haha ignoring the 2005 remake continue to ignore the remake and the 3rd movie jack blacks first movie never ending story 3 I mean there's only 2
Shhhh, they'll hear you...
@@nunyabizness6376 {don't wake DISNEY... 😱}
@@zarephal4998 those are called sequels. Remakes are different...
I’m sure if they do remake it. They will some how make It Woke as fuck and then go broke because of it An all female cast and basin and falkor gets killed in the first two seconds of the movie. (R.i.p. Terminator franchise )
even a warrior is not immune to grief.
One of my favorite movies of all time. I am 38 years old and the scene where Artax dies is still very painful to this day. But the movie has taken on a different meaning for me as I’ve grown and experienced my own hopelessness and challenges.
I hope this movie is never lost to time and forgotten. Its sad to think how many children don't even know it exists.
Back when film makers remembered how narrative is supposed to work. Films telling a story that matters, where the hero(es) have to struggle to overcome their doubts - rather than a 120 minute socio-political rant. Films that live on in the heart of some of the people who watch them for decades - rather than being forgotten almost as soon as the credits roll.
That scene in the swamps of sadness still chokes me up. Im 41 and its still there.
I read that as “I’m still there” at first and thought “Relatable”.
I loved this movie when I was a kid, I watched this with my dad 100 times, and the symbolism was never lost on me. Thanks for the Nostalgia kick Looper ❤️
When I first saw the childlike empress I instantly fell in love back in 1984.
Books and video games (RPGs especially) were my escapes from real life so this movie really resonated with me on a personal level as a kid. Still does to this day.
If this movie gets a reboot, they only need one script...the original book by Michael Ende.
Never understood why they don't just use books as the script. Who cares if it isn't "Hollywood", the people who will go and see it are the fans.
This movie is only the first half of the book
@@GretSeat they don't want to make a movie just to appeal to the fans, it is a much smaller audience. Just look at infinity war.
Looper: “Dad bullying”
Me: Parenting in the 80’s
Her voice is so annoyingly patronizing, it makes me want to hurl. This mans wife died, and his son is spacing out. They are both grieving and he’s not bullying.. he’s parenting to the best of his damn ability.
It is sad that she sees the father as bullying his son. He is hurting, just differently than his son. Instead of getting closer he's trying to protect himself and he thinks he's helping his son.
Wish the word bullying would go away...in the 80’a it was called being picked on...& everyone went thru it
This made me so angry. It's not bullying. They both suffered traumatic loss, they're both grieving and they both have trouble communicating that to one another. The catharsis of the book (not really shown in this movie) is that they learn to communicate their feelings for one another that they've been holding in. Has nothing to do with parenting in the 80s at all, except maybe that people were less aware of how important it is to talk to their children.
Brent Larcom yes but today every one is beyond over sensitive & it sux
This story coloured my childhood. These days, seeing the story, brings back deep felt memories of a magic time in my life, a time long gone. My mother passed away this year, and she loved this story... ,,It has to hurt if it's to heal"...
Yup, I've had the same year, stay strong.
trying to understand the ending of a neverending story is redundant
just trying to understand what name he shouts is hard enough lmao
Duh
It always ends with "Say my name biatch!"
Check My PLAYLISTS no it’s not redundant, it’s.... inevitable.
@@divergent_bowtie1066 Same! I never understood what he shouted!!
The Childlike princess’s name is “Moon Child!!”. It’s Sebastian’s mom’s name. Except, I don’t ever remember ever saying her name.
I cried during this because I connect with it so much. I've always loved this movie. I was bullied from elementary school until the end of high school and dealt with abuse at home. To go to school to be bullied and to go home and be abused is why I have such bad PTSD and probably why I developed rheumatoid arthritis (people with trauma have an increased risk for autoimmunity). My escape was and still is books and art. Art is my creative outlet and when I don't create I my depression gets worse. I think many of us with trauma have an internal world where dreams come true. I used to daydream all the time (and still do sometimes) about my ideal life without pain. My trauma has turned me into an advocate for those who are stepped on, and I'm grateful for being able to stand up and fight for what's right when no one does, but I also now have the price of severe mental health issues and autoimmunity complications that bring me down daily.
I am hope your doing ok now. Please know you can manifest your new reality , very similar to this story.
Get over it.
@@TheSlayerPlayer not nice....you've not walked in this individuals shoes...TO have a lack of understanding
I hope you’re doing better
@@eshun-niiroyal8093 there's a cool Seneca nation saying that is also used in a book title "walk two moons in their moccasins".
I’m only here for the jokes about finding the end to a never ending story
That's just the point. There is no end.
Appendix C Ending.
But, it doesnt end. It should have but then the sequel came out and it ended ......
You know what else never ends?
This is the song that never ends. Yes, it goes on and on my friends.
Some people started singing it, not knowing what it was. And the'll continue sing it forever, just because this is the song that never ends. Yes, it goes on and on my friends.
Bastian was literally me all through school and I am using 'literally' correctly in all ways except I'm female. Books were always my escape. I guess this is why The Neverending Story is one of my favorite pieces of fiction. I've even read the book and suffered through the third film.
Did you also crush on the childlike empress or where you jealous of her or something else? I always wanted to know how little girls felt about her since i certainly know how little boys felt about her ^^
Cartoons were pretty much my escape
The concept of integrity and altruist meaning advanced your life to now.
I grew up in the 80’s, there is only one Neverending Story for me!
I didn't know there was a second one, then she mentions a third?!
@@LoriCrabtree31 Same here!!!
I grew up in the 90's and I didn't know about the sequels either. As much as I want to see a young Jack Black, I'ma hafta pass on those and stick with the original
Ditto 👍
@@LoriCrabtree31 Part 3 has Jack Black in it
The Child-like Empress was always what I remembered from this movie. Her tortured cry of "Bastian say my name!" for some reason can always make me cry even as an adult.
I never got over seeing this movie when I was a kid in the 80s. Never. I recently watched on Amazon Prime and yes, the scene with the horse always got me. Always did. Always will.
Whenever I would watch this as a child, I would eat an apple with Bastian
❤️❤️❤️
Me too!!
"that's a great idea"
Did you cry with him too?
@@charleyhill9867 bless, it's ok. No need to ask, you're amongst friends. If you wanna admit you cried then admit it.
Easily one of my favorite movies.. one of two movies that actually brought me to tears..💯
@sean pittaway E.T. lol.
I've always loved the idea of "The Nothing" or "Emptiness". It's a deceptively powerful metaphor for human existentialism. I don't remember watching The Never Ending Story but I might re-watch them. At best for inspiration for my own story I'm writing about hopelessness and the feeling of emptiness and how it leads to nothing. They're very powerful metaphors and they resound to so many people.
Never ending Story is a timeless tale. Even 100 yrs from now, kids will still watch it and understand its metaphor.
Cynicism isn't a truth but both a denial and false truth that most adults must cling to so they can be the grown up and not remember the child wonder they lose to becoming an adult. The kid still sleeps within us all you need only find the way to wake them and cast away the cynicism in your hearts. Artax scene after 35 years STILL makes me cry!
I remember watching this movie as a kid
Made me pick up a book hoping I could experience what Bastian experienced lol
I don't care how old, how tough or anything else, when Atrax dies you cry.
Truth
Truth. Especially, if you own horses. If you have horses on your farm, you love them like your kids.
But seeing him at end was magnificent
Over harsh on the father, stoicism is lorded in men however its easy to see his father is still battling his own grief. Ideally he could put it aside to support his son but the 'nothing' that grief brings is a harsh demon to fight when men lack support networks to do so.
After hearing her go through the synopsis for the second time, it's obvious Looper has no idea what the Neverending Story was about. But what Looper does have is some social message it wants to project onto the movie, so it keeps haphazardly picking out examples to supports what it wants to say. It didn't even bother to organize, which is why it sounded like the synopsis went through 4 times.
The trope in The Neverending Story is not new: Children, who are growing up, leave the innocence and imagination behind. Fantasia represents the collective worlds and characters we all dream up. The Nothingness represents the children abandoning their imaginary worlds. However, all it takes is another child to reaffirm the fantasy for Fantasia to exist. It's not rocket science. It doesn't require anything about hope, cynicism, or any social political commentary of our modern world. It is a timeless inversion of the coming of age story. Instead of growing up, the child reaffirms his childhood.
In the book, the "Nothing" is an instrument of control and fascism.
completely agree with you.Themes of colonisation had me lost. What on earth is she trying to shoe horn in. your analysis is spot on
Wasn't the movie about people losing their ability to "Imagine"
And Nothing was simply the lack of imagination.
Same way the story book "Gradually lost words the further it got" to force the reader to "Imagine"/""fill" them.
Thats how I saw it too, especially since the old man in the book shop was critisizing the growing interest in technology and decreasing interest in books
@@GreatMCGamer It is but have you ever payed attention to how the expanding universe theory work's. It will all be nothing one day 🤣
That scene with the horse? It still hurts.
It's gonna hurt even more when you find out that that horse actually died during that scene and the kid almost died.
@@kukukachu The horse was actually given to Noah Hathaway after filming as a gift. It didn't die.
@@kukukachu Thats a myth. The actual horse didn't die during the scene.
@@J.Starkweather If it's a myth then why is it in the bonus features?
@@RivendareRogue ...no
Go watch the bonus features that came with the DVD.
Looper: “We finally understand the ending of the never ending story”
Me: *Impossible*
Preston Garvey sure looper, whatever you say
This is a really great picture that was perfectly cast, especially the empress who was a magnificently beautiful young girl. I loved this picture.
The Neverending Story is one of the greatest films ever made. It's just as powerful as it was back in 1984. A cult classic and a timeless masterpiece of 80's fantasy films. I just really wish that it would've gotten the whole book that it was based on.
you can get the book, but it looks nothing like the book in the movie...
@@BP-BotPro At least it got the spirit of the book
Tami Stronarch (actress who played the Empress) and Aubree Miller (from Ewoks: The Battle for Endor) were my first celebrity crushes.
The Never Ending Story and The Princess Bride and the original Star Wars Trilogy are my favorite films from my childhood.
The Neverending Story, Labyrinth and The Princess Bride is my perfect trilogy of movies... I can watch them anytime... ❤🥰
Michael Ende's novel (on whose first half the film is based) is heavily influenced by Aleister Crowley's Thelema. The most obvious references are the Auryn's inscription ("Do what thou wilt") and the name Bastian gives to the Childlike Empress ("Moonchild"), but it doesn't stop there.
As for the hero's journey, the real fun begins in the (nearly unfilmable) second half of the novel, where Bastian misinterprets the Auryn's inscription and loses his whole identity to the hero-persona he crafts for himself by wishing for all sorts of strengths and powers.
If you loved the movie growing up, I really suggest finding the book. The actual book from Michael Ende was wonderful!
@@PatricioINTP that's what the author had in mind when he wrote it.
*You get the free symbol or medallion too with the book It’s on the cover!*
But that is another story and shall be told another time.
I wish I did! Instead I got it tattooed! 😆
punk1attitude 🤣🤣🤣‼️
They don't make movies like this anymore .......f'iiing love this movie.
Atreyu’s horse getting swallowed in a quicksand is the most heartbreaking movie scene I’ve ever seen as a child, and still one of the most heartbreaking until now.
The only reaction I had to the horse was that it pulled me completely out of the story, because even as a child, I saw a terrified horse. You brought back that childhood trauma just showing it to me. I remember asking my own mother why they couldn't see how scared that horse was? I could see it.
I understood the ending when I was a 5 year old kid when the movie came out.
best classic movie ever. you know they really dont make movies like this anymore.
This is symbolic for ones own spiritual journey
The original movie is the only one we acknowledge.
gregory18000 the first movie only actually goes through the first half of the book. The second half of the book is the second movie. Those wishes to fix Fantasia come at a pretty big cost and the point is the book actually heals the wound between father and son.
You didn't explain nothing. You just recapped the movie. What about never ending story 2?
It sucked.
We do not speak of such things!
Part 2 and 3 Do not exist!!
The unfortunate thing is that Part 2 was the actual second half of the book. It was nowhere near as bad at Part 3.
That's what I was going to say, too. She recapped the films and talked about some of the themes but didn't actually go into what any of it actually meant. The NeverEnding Story is about the destruction of our imaginations. The Nothing represents "the Real World", or the loss of childhood imagination.
And, I actually love NEII. It's still heartfelt and pretty good acting. The actors are trying and while it has no where near the budget of NE, it's trying to end the whole of the book. A lot of the events taking place in NE2 actually happen in the book. Bastion goes into the world of Fantasia and begans making wishes. Every wish he makes, he forgets who he is in the Human world. This has happened to almost every child who comes to Fantasia before him. I think this is supposed to highlight the dangers of getting too deeply into a fantasy realm that you forget yourself. Ziaeda exists in the book. There is this extremely sad part when they go to this place called the Forgotten City and they find all these past children who've forgotten who they are and lost the ability to go home forever. They all took the same route Bastion had been taking. It shows him how dangerous forgetting your true self can be: absolute power corrupting absoluty, and how Atreyu had been trying to warn him all along the dangers of making wishes with Auryn. It's a beautifully written book and writing this makes me both sad and wanting to read it again.
NE3 is garbage, and doesn't exist. The only good thing about that piece of filth is Jack Black. That's it. Don't watch it, seriously, it will make you want to kill things.
He didn’t name her Moon Child after his mom , that was just Hollywood making it seems so, the book never really mentions his mom at all. It would be interesting to know why.
The book portrays the childlike empress not so innocently or childlike, she never sat back and cried and pleaded with Bastian. She is like a Goddess in child form ancient and innocent, good and evil. She has agency and took it upon herself to climb up a giant icy mountain top in a thin night gown barefoot ! She visited the old man that was writing the book in real time and it was one place she was forbidden to go , because it essentially trapped Bastian and everything and everyone in a Neverending loop . This forced Bastian to give her a new name else he would have been trapped in the book forever, he actually didn’t have a choice.
To make it worse this wasn't the last time the Childlike Empress trapped Bastian, after giving him her Auryn, Bastain had to go on an even more perilous journey and almost lost his mind in the process.
Let’s just all agree NES 3 never happened, though that empress is a wonderful actress.
Also the scores for NES 1 & 2 are so underated!
Much like the Dark Crystal and other films from my childhood....i love this movie but haven't seen it in years. The first movie I've seen in theaters. My parents brought me so I might have a hard time watching this because I lost my mom earlier this year. R I. P. Mommy, I miss you!
So very sorry for your loss🕊
@@alishagadsden8406 thank you so much, Alisha. I appreciate it!
*Buy a copy of the DVD sir and re-live the memories sir!* ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️
@@afriend9428 someday I will
Sorry for your loss, pal.
now i am 44 , the horses death still breaks me . this movie reminds so much about my childhood.
Looper: We Finally Understand The Ending Of The NeverEnding Story
gz, it only took you 35 years
Just watching the clip of Artax sinking got me choked up.
Looper: *Finds the ending of the never ending story*
Master Chief: Wait that’s illegal
Navy HALO? On the XBOX?
@@afriend9428 The joke is from Red Vs Blue
@@NavyNexus_ Not Church, It was Caboose who said that.
I loved this movie. The ending was easy to understand even when I watched it as a child. I was born in the early 80s so movies like this have a special place in my heart. It's right up there with the Goonies. Because it's "🎵Good enough, for you is, good enough, for me is good enough🎵" 😊
Read the book when you get a chance. It's 100 times more detailed and delightful. Bastian's journey into the book and into himself is amazing.
When I first watched the movie as a little girl, I was completely in love with Falkor and all I wanted was to take a nap against his side.
Side note: My library actually has or had the Michael Ende book.
SIDE side note: the theme song makes me cry because it’s so beautifully done. Anyone else?
Even the memory of the movie brings even emotions to me. Those memories help me through today's madness coming from all sides.
Bastions father was bitter and detached because he lost his wife and was afraid to love again.
Idk... he seemed like a good Dad to me.
You mean selfish. Kids come first
@@MarcoBonechi ... What are you talking about. His kid was being a weakling, and his dad said, "Chin up". This is after he got him horse lessons even, but Bastion was too scared to even try. This is what we're talking about when we mean parenting in the 80's was better. His dad was a good role model. But people don't know how to parent these days because they are too sensitive *(and weak, like Bastion). MW Fresh!
Ah, but let’s not forget the end of that conversation when Bastion’s dad said; “well, I think we had a good talk. We should have more.” This comment tells me that he and Bastion never really had a connection, and his father became even more disconnected after his wife died.
This movie will always hold a special place in my heart
If you really want to understand the neverending story, please do yourself a favor and read the book. Michael Ende himself called the movie a "gigantic melodrama of kitsch, commerce, plush and plastic" as it misses so much of the essence of the book.
It is also a huge difference if you first read the book and let your imagination run freely, before being presented images and sounds, which imprint your imagination.
I it barely touches me, when I see the horse die in the movie, but when reading the book to my daughter last week, Artax' death made me shed tears.
I thank my parents for insisting me to first read the book and then watch the movie.
This movie was one of my favorite movies as a kid. Artax succumbing to the “quick sand” definitely popped a nerve when watching the sequence. Was also very scared when the black cat first made its appearance in the movie
"We don't even care whether or not we care"
A wonderful, great, all time classic movie! Powerful messages throughout the whole film, I absolutely love this film!
In The Neverending Story, Engywook explains the Magic Mirror Gate to Falkor, he says that the mirror shows a person their true nature. Brave men are cowards. Kind men are cruel. so when Atreyu looks into the Magic Mirror Gate, why does Atreyu see Bastion and Bastion see Atreyu?
I think it is because Bastion as the main protagonist of the story is the same as Atreyu, as the empress said: "Just as he is sharing all your adventures, other's are sharing his." Its a 4th wall break inside a 4th wall break.
Atreyu realises he is the main character of the book about him, the same way bastion realises he is the main character of the movie that we are watching. This proves to them both that anything is possible.
The movie has a great underlining message about the world of books and film and that if people don't pay attention to something it will ultimately fail and turn to nothing. A.K.A - Destroyed by the "Nothing".
It's a pretty deep message for a kids movie.
What do you think? Maybe I'm overthinking it.
Have the original German and later, translated books this movie was based on...with both, each chapter begins with a letter in the alphabet, with the following chapter beginning with the next one. It is so cool!
Ende also wrote an amazing book called Momo that is strongly recommended to any Neverending Story fans...if you can find it!
I find it interedtinf that they translated Moon Child into Czech as Mum. It's perfectly in line with the message of the movie, just slightly different. I love it
This movie and Krull were wild to watch as a kid.
This movie was Wayyyyy ahead of it's time!! Classics never die!!!
"Colonisation"? The Nothing has exactly that to do with colonisation, nothing. The Nothing is created by kids giving up reading for stupidly watching tv, so storyland dies because they don't use their imagination anymore.
Thank you
I’d say that the nothing is like the dementors from Harry Potter
If this video was an actual film analysis, I'd give it an F for that stupid point alone.
ironically the fact that they made that point proves that the ones who made this analyses are consumed by The Nothing and see negative things like this when there is none
Well I reckon it analogically fits, seems like the former “colonialists” nationals are getting TRIGGERED at the mere suggestion there maybe a commentary on their dreadful past !
There is one major problem with this movie, and that is that the sequel goes completely off the rails. And the problem with that is that the message of the book *cannot* be understood without the second part, which is part of the same book. Unlike other works, the two parts of the neverending story were never published as two seperate books although the structure would easily have allowed for it, but they have to be understood as a whole. As such, the ending of the first movie is merely Bastian accepting the power of his imagination and its importance and deciding to use it. The second part deals with him becoming so deeply lost in his own recreated phantasia that he is forgetting himself (for people that only saw the movie of the second part: Xaida is merely an opportunistic manipulator, she does *not* cause Bastians loss of memory. That is inherent in the nature of phantasia itself.), and in the end barely makes it out again, at one point being saved from literally going insane by Atreus *violent* opposition (Also, his dad, not his mother, is the one memory that gets him back. Saying this because he gets a bit of a bad rep in this video...).
As such, the neverending story is a balanced allegory for both the importance and power of imagination, but also its terrible dangers and how important it is to find something that roots one to reality.
As Ende said himself: "Poetry is a perilous undertaking, and many a one has not returned from it"
I was a young adult when this movie came out, but I cried buckets when that horse died.
On a different note, what a fabulous explanation this video provided for the movie!
best " kids"movie ever made...nothing even comes close..
I saw The Neverending Story II before I saw the first one, and in retrospect I'm glad that I did because partly it made the first movie better for me, and in the second movie they redeemed Bastians father by engaging him in the story this time around and connecting more with his son.
Yeah... Although, it's kind of a shame that the sequal kind of seemed like a let-down in places, and only really seemed to borrow concepts from the 2nd half of the book, rather than really try to adapt it well.
Either way, nothing can really be worse than the embarassment that the 3rd movie was.
Certainly makes it kind of understandable why the OG author's estate, currently has a vice-like grip on the IP, these days.
@@retrogamelover2012 I felt that way when I saw the third movie. That one just felt like a big cluster f*** in comparison to both of the previous two. At least with the second movie it was fun and enjoyable film, as opposed to the last one which just felt lazy and uninspired.
@@retrogamelover2012never saw the third movie always felt one and two were it
i dunno why but i shed a tear during this the explanations are so deep and powerful.
One of the rules in The Neverending Story is, that fantasticans cannot travel to the human world while humans and creatures without a world of their own like Gmork can cross the borders.
By having Bastian pay a visit to the human world while riding on Falkor the ending of the movie completely ruined any chance to continue the story properly - there was more than half of the book left.
Instead we got a reimagining of the themes and characters of the book in the second movie.