NARNIA 4: The Magician’s Nephew Teaser (2023) With Tom Holland & Georgie Henley
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- Опубликовано: 4 апр 2022
- NARNIA 4: The Magician’s Nephew Teaser (2023) With Tom Holland & Georgie Henley
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Eustace Scrubb, now a reformed character following the events of The Voyage of the Dawn Treader, encounters his classmate and new friend Jill Pole at their school, Experiment House, where they are miserable. Jill has been tormented by bullies and is hiding from them. Eustace tells Jill about his Narnian adventures, and how his experiences there led to the changes in his behaviour - which Jill warns is likely to see him targeted by the bullies as well. Eustace suggests asking for Aslan's help, and as the bullies converge on them, the two blunder through a gate that leads them to Aslan's Country.
They encounter a cliff, where Jill shows off by approaching the edge, and Eustace, trying to pull her back, falls over the edge. Aslan appears and saves Eustace by blowing him on a magical wind stream to Narnia. He charges Jill with helping Eustace find King Caspian X's son, Prince Rilian of Narnia, who disappeared some years earlier. He gives Jill four Signs to guide them on their quest and then blows Jill into Narnia, where Eustace is already waiting by a great castle. They watch as an elderly and frail man takes ship and sails from the harbour. To Eustace's dismay, they learn that the elderly man is actually King Caspian; by failing to greet him they have missed the first Sign. Seventy years have passed since Eustace was last in Narnia, even though less than a year has passed in his world. They also learn that Caspian has sailed off to visit again the lands they had sailed to when he and Eustace were young, although many Narnians believe that he has set off to seek Aslan in order to ask who can be the next King of Narnia when he dies. Caspian is obviously deteriorating with old age, and his people fear that he will not live for much longer.
Caspian's Lord Regent Trumpkin the dwarf, now very elderly and deaf, provides Jill and Eustace with rooms in Cair Paravel, but on the advice of Glimfeather the Owl, they make no mention of their quest. Glimfeather summons them to a Parliament of his fellow talking owls, who explain that Prince Rilian disappeared a decade earlier while searching for a large green serpent that had killed his mother.
Jill and Eustace are flown to the marshes on the northern edge of Narnia where they meet their guide, Puddleglum, a gloomy but stalwart Marsh-wiggle. They journey toward the giant-lands north of Narnia. Hungry and suffering from exposure, they meet the Lady of the Green Kirtle accompanied by a silent knight in black armour. She encourages them to proceed northward to Harfang, the castle of the "Gentle Giants", who she says would be glad to have them at their Autumn Feast. Jill and Eustace, overcome at the thought of comfort and warmth, are eager to go; only Puddleglum argues against the journey to Harfang. After a long journey in harsh weather, and braving a mysterious chasm in a driving snowstorm, they are welcomed at Harfang.
From the castle the three see that in the snowstorm they had blundered through the ruins of a giant city in the valley below, thereby missing Aslan's second Sign. They also see the words "Under Me" engraved on the road, which is the third Sign. Discovering from a cookbook in the kitchen that they are the main course for the Autumn Feast, they make a narrow escape from Harfang. Following the Sign, they take shelter in a cave under the ruined city, where they fall down a long dark slope into Underland.
Cast:
Will Poulter, Georgie Henley, Ben Barnes, Skandar Keynes, Anna Popplewell, William Moseley, Tilda Swinton, Liam Neeson, Simon Pegg, Laua Brent, Gary Sweet, Bruce Spence, Andrew Adamson, Shane Rangi, Douglas Gresham, Arthur Angel, Terry Norris, Billie Brown
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The most important things to remember is the series was targeted to children, which was CS Lewis' intention, and that his intention was to present Christian themes. So these can't be remade to resemble Game of Thrones. CS Lewis was actually a friend of JRR Tolkien and wrote them and his Out of The Silent Planet series in response to the growing trend of atheism and secularism in Great Britain. He complained the new movements were producing "men without chests", meaning men without hearts and had been trying to emphasize the importance of myths, fables, and fairy tales in literature and as a part of children's' intellectual development. The most poignant dedication he wrote included the line that if the child he dedicated the book got too old to read it, to put it away on a shelf and dust it off and read it later when she was old enough to enjoy fairy tales again but asked her to have patience if she tells him how she liked the book because he would probably be too deaf to hear or too old to understand what she'd be saying. He was so right about that. Kids get to an age where fairy tales lose their charm but then you get to an age where they capture your heart again. This happened during my college years. I was too busy I thought to read them, but when I graduated and was out in the work force and tired out at lunch break one day, I decided the next time to bring in one of the old books I loved as a kid and next lunch break it helped the rest of the day go along better.
Uh, targeted to children... Alright that's wrong on so many levels. Just cause they are fictional does not mean they are marketed to children. The point is, that it's short books which have a deep story. A child would not understand that the white witch is of the Giant race, or that of much of the series symbolism. If Disney did not understand it, what makes you think a child would understand. The books where in the end marketed to everyone.
@@zombwars7749 You underestimate children, and also ignore the plain fact that Lewis *did* write the books for children. The fact that there are layers within the books that adults can appreciate doesn't change the target audience. After all, adults constantly return to the books they enjoyed as children.
@@MaskedMan66 If you really think this, you need to read on why C.S.Lewis wrote the books. This really should not be an argument, it was obviously marketed to children and adults as C.S.Lewis wanted to bring more people to Christ as he was watching the beginning of the fall (specifically the fall of Christianity). Sadly this is still going on, but it's clear that the reason for the books came from this. That is at least coming from the research I did, if you know something else feel free to let me know.
@@zombwars7749 Perhaps I need to as well, but the fact remains that you underestimate children. Of course they can grasp the fact that Jadis is an alien of a giant-like race (the people of Charn), though I'm not sure what significance that has in your assessment of the matter.
I remember reading that Lewis was impressed by the fact that there were many children who latched on to the Christian elements in his books sooner than their parents did, and had to explain it to them. 🙂
@@MaskedMan66 sorry it took me some time to reply. Sometimes life does happen. I did want to mention however that I don't underestimate children. Children are consistently learning and through different stages of life, yeah they will grasp things differently than me or you because their brains are operating different. Essentially they use a completely different part of their brain. If I remember, this actually changes three times. I believe that depending on where a child is in that development, he/she might notice something sooner than an adult, however they will not grasp the understanding of that yet. Then again, they might grasp it then or later once again depending on the stage of development. Since most the references do come from the Bible, I believe they might have an understanding based more upon what they heard in church more than what they know about the Bible or History (since lots of things about the Giant race is found in through archeology and history not typically taught in schools for the very reasons of parents wanting to teach their own children such things [I understand the reasoning for this, however taking religion out of education has extremely been proven a bad idea and you can see why with the fall continuing to get worse even today]).
I'm happy that they are starting with the Magician's Nephew. I'm hoping that they won't mess with the storyline and that they remain true to the book and the book's intention. The book is wholesome and hope that they won't make it dark and perverted by putting sex and other perverse concept in it. Chronicles of Narnia is a children's book. It's meant to exude purity and innocence.
Right?? The Chronicles of Narnia are some of my favorite books for that very reason
Considering that we live in an age where good is evil and evil is good more than ever in the whole span of human existance, it's unlikely that the people in charge will be faithful to the original source material. If they aren't, I will certainly be very displeased, and so will many. I haven't read the books, but the Disney films were ones I used to watch with my grandfather when I was little, and if it gets twisted and perverted, I do believe it will be very offensive and detrimental as a whole.
@@jonathancarrion0809XXI Read them, they're well worth it. 🙂
@@MaskedMan66 Thank you for the suggestion, I'll consider giving them a try.😀
@@jonathancarrion0809XXI By the way, C.S. Lewis's personally recommended reading order is "The Magician's Nephew," "The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe," " The Horse and His Boy," "Prince Caspian," "The Voyage of the Dawn Treader," "The Silver Chair," and "The Last Battle."
Personally, I like the idea of starting with the with The Magician's Nephew. I've read all the books, and The Magician's Nephew DOES answer several questions.
Exactly, I never really knew who Jadis was intill I read the book and now I know more about her I can envision her better
AND it introduces us to Digory Kirke who was later the professor in The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardrobe.
p.s. Jim Broadbent, the acor who played Professor Kirke, also played Professor SlugHorn in the Harry Potter movies.
@@dontaskwhy615 When Lewis wrote LWW, he just intended her as the Big Bad for the story. All the readers needed to know was that she was evil. There was a little background info on her via Mr. Beaver, but his story about her-- that she was the daughter of Lilith and a djinn-- turned out to be in error.
I think there's still value in having Magician's Nephew release after TLWW in terms of unravelling the greater mystery. You don't same "ah hah" moments connecting the dots to Lion Witch Wardrobe if Magician's Nephew is seen first. Things like learning how the lamp post came to Narnia, the identity of Digory doesn't have the same impact, the unveiling of Jadis, and knowledge that Narnia is just one of many many strange worlds
@@justinnyugen7015 No, but you do have all those same questions in the minds of the Pevensie children whilst you're sitting there wondering, "Will they ever know the answers?"
And come on, the books have been around for almost eighty years, so it's a bit silly to insist that modern audiences experience the Chronicles in the exact same way that the original readers of the books did. The BBC Radio series began with MN and then went on to LWW, HHB, PC, VDT, SC, and LB.
Netflix adaptations of these books won't be successful if they start in The Lion, The Witch, and the Wardrobe because fandom love the Disney adaptation. They MUST cast a perfect actors/actress for the characters specifically the 4 Pevensies and Prince Caspian. They MUST stick to the theme and genre of the books magical, mythical, and lively/balance atmosphere which is the target audience are the children. They SHOULDN'T add some adult stuff like kissing/sex scene, political twist, bloody scenes, and darker stories. Don't compare to and make the Narnia like Game of Thrones and Lord of the Rings/ The Hobbit.
I hope we dont get trash cast like Tom holland
I'm pretty sure generations who have no idea of the original material will find it good, but it would become extremely poor and misguided to try and corrupt a children story into some chaotic mess of horrors untold. That would be foolish and meaningless.
bloody scenes should be in there cause there is alot of war in the books...and no wars are without blood
@@DR_LOVESPONGE yeah but not too brutal
@@crow_g1639
Holland already ruined Spider-Man. So I fear they're going to turn Narnia into the next Games of Trash.
The Cast from the Disney ones can play the adult version of their past characters in ending of LWW, their scenes in the Horse and his Boy, the ending of Silver Chair for Caspian, and throughout their scenes in the Last Battle.
Don’t F*ck with the master of Lewis’s beloved novels.
Think Netflix Think.
is this even true
No; let's finally have Pevensies who all look like they did in the books.
@@MaskedMan66 this is a fake trainer
@@allison3852 That's as may be, but the word is that Netflix is working on its own series. I'd rather they didn't, of course.
@@MaskedMan66 hi
Georgie Henley and the others could appear as grown characters in The Last Battle.
There's someone who has my thoughts.
Unless the new actors don't resemble them; for instance, a new series might finally give us a blonde Lucy.
Skander William Moseley Anna popple well Ben Barnes and will p
@@MaskedMan66 blonde
@@allison3852 Lucy is blonde in the books. There have been three live-action Lucys and they've all had dark hair.
I think it’s probably wise that they’re starting with the Magicians Nephew. It’s still an important part of the story, and it’s something we haven’t seen adapted before, so they won’t be competing with the existing films, but they can still use it to gauge interest in a tv series, and if it doesn’t take off enough to continue, they don’t have to worry about recasting the same characters if they decide to pick it up again since there’s such a significant time skip to the next book chronologically
Who in magician nephew
There have been two radio adaptations on MN, as well as a stage play or two.
@@allison3852 What?
I hope they stay true to the story and the messages C. S. Lewis wanted to send us as they were read through the ages. Magician's Nephew is a creation story, and I can't wait to see the creation of Narnia. I'll also be excited to see my favorite book come to life. The Horse And His Boy.
Have you ever heard either of the radio adaptations?
@@MaskedMan66 Only the ones by Focus on the family. I loved those but I can't find them on youtube now sadly. I could buy them form focus on the family store though.
@@kennethschlayer4614 I've heard that series, as well as the BBC one, many times.
FUN FACT: The English actor Martin Jarvis was in both versions; he was Bree for the BBC and King Lune for Focus.
@@MaskedMan66 I like Focus best as it has an introduction from Lewis's Stepson and was very well done,
@@kennethschlayer4614 They were both excellently done, but I preferred the BBC version because it didn't rely so heavily on narration. That tended to bog things down in the Focus series, IMHO.
The scripts for the BBC version were done by Brian Sibley, who also adapted _The Lord of the Rings_ for radio; I regard that series as the best literary adaptation ever done for radio, and one of the best-produced and acted radio shows in the history of the medium. Two actors from the animated TLotR movie reprised their roles, namely Michael Graham Cox as Borormir and Peter Woodthorpe as Gollum.
That series and the BBC Narnia shared a fair number of actors. 🙂
I dont know if Azlan would be the same without Liam Neeson
It's Aslan, and the best voice for him was Stephen Thorne; believe me, Neeson pales by comparison.
Mhh I miss the old cast :(
The BBC cast, you mean?
You guy's forgot The Horse and his Boy. It's the only time we can see the four siblings in their Hey day.
They are supporting characters in that story.
This is my favourite of the books! I really really hope they do it justice and stay faithful to the source material, and release the adaptations in proper series order 🥰
I don't care how long it takes, I just want to see it done properly unlike others *cough* Eragon *cough cough* Rings of Power 🙄😒
Are people still doing that dumb coughing thing?
I honestly would like them to do the horse and his boy later on in the series, so we would see the Pevensies' reigns as actual adults. Not played by different actors from their child counterparts.
I just realised the magic for me is in the books and the audio books. In my memories of reading the books in winter with my mom and remembering lantern waste. I have already experienced the magic, I can go back to the wonderful story and in my life I just put an addiction down tonight and I am trying to get the enchanted turkish delight out of my life .........oh Jesus and Aslan you are my way...
Magicians Nephew is literally a PREQUEL to Lion, Witch, Wardrobe. It could've been picked as film 3 and a real success.
As Jadis Origins are revealed.
It's the first story in the series as it should be told. C.S. Lewis's preferred reading order, and the one he recommended, was in order of internal chronology.
By the way, how could it figuratively be a prequel?
I kind of wish Disney would have continued their version of the series seeing on how they basically have an infinite supply of budget money. I'm not all hyped for a reboot because I already love the original cast from the past 3 movies. I also don't really trust Netflix seeing on how they promise fans film projects they just started working on and cancel them before they even got their first episode/film.
Those are my thoughts exactly! I think Disney interpreted the ideas really well. Netflix will most probably make it very gory which just ruins the whole purpose/plot, and the cast is literally the best. As soon as someone says Edmund I immediately think of Skandar and the same goes for the other characters.
I'm honestly kind of upset, but let's hope for the best :D
Money doesn't excuse poor scripts that made audiences lose interest.
@@mrithvika Disney's take on the Chronicles ran counter to C.S. Lewis's reason for writing them.
Starting from Magician's Nephew means that Netflix will make its own versions of The Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe, Prince Caspian and the Voyage of the Dawn Treader based on the books. I've read all those three books and watched the BBC versions of all three Chronicles of Narnia, so I am very familiar with how the three books' plots goes. Because of that, I'm very, very excited to see what the Netflix's own adaptions of those three Chronicles of Narnia look like. 😃😃😃
And The horse and his boy remember that the last battle too
@@nmoney6655 Yeah. I've read both books and stayed on the tune about their plots, so Im excited to see their adapted versions.
heads up BBC did 4 of the books. The Silver Chair was the last one they did and yes the BBC versions have been the truest adaptations of the books. It will be interesting to see what Netflix does to them.
@@saphiregomez5402 The truest visually; but there are two radio series that follow the books much more closely; one was by the BBC and the other by Focus on the Family.
I feel that the best way to do The Voyage of The Dawn Treader would be a series.
Don’t make it darker! It’s not a dark story. Just stick to the books!
Jadis literally killed everyone in her world. What is not dark about that?
"The Last Battle" is pretty dang dark until they get to Aslan's Country.
There are a lot of dark elements, actually. IE - Charn.
@@MaskedMan66 So is Silver Chair, and the beginning of Prince Caspian. I think the reason the other movies sort of flopped is because they were too kiddy, too Disney. Yes, that is book accurate, but that kiddy cheesiness doesn't translate well to screen.
Start with the Magician's Nephew definitely! It will explain how everything began of course but will prevent a side by side immediate comparison to the Disney version. It's a marvelous story!
The best part of having read this collection 7 times in my life was reading them as they were published. it should stay that way. Done in chronological would kill so much of the fun that came from reading the magicians nephew last. it was like perfect way to tie everything together about the fantasy world and its characters that left you satisfied.
C.S. Lewis disagreed with you. His preferred reading order, and the one he recommended, was in order of internal chronology.
And why on Earth did you read MN last? It's not the last in either order.
I think there's still value in having Magician's Nephew release after TLWW in terms of unravelling the greater mystery. You don't same "ah hah" moments connecting the dots to Lion Witch Wardrobe if Magician's Nephew is seen first. Things like learning how the lamp post came to Narnia, the identity of Digory doesn't have the same impact, the unveiling of Jadis, and knowledge that Narnia is just one of many many strange worlds.
it'd be like if Harry Potter started with Tom Riddle or Dumbledore's story
Great but hopefully they don’t make it persevere or too dark. The original had some sad scenes but it wasn’t gore or sensual or dark. It’s meant to be very innocent since it was made for children. So hopefully they don’t add themes that are unnecessary and it stays with that magical vibe.
"Persevere?"
FINALLY!!!
I think that it would be cool for the other narnia books to get movie adaptations at leas, i am a proud owner of the three updated movies versions that were made and i was hoping for the others to be made into updated movies as well so if netflix does make the entire book series into movies i will only focus on magician's nephew, the horse and his boy, the silver chair, and the last battle and just watch the three movies where they fit in the series because i do like all three of them
A Netflix series would be its own animal, not connected to the Disney films.
A quote from C.S. Lewis answering "Which order should I read these in?" Was "Do whatever you like, I didn't plan this"
Suggested cameo for Georgie Henley: the Telmarine teacher who follows Aslan in Prince Caspian at the Bridge of Beruna.
Caspains old nurse has been left out of every version (visual and audio) ever done. It's high time they included her for the most tear-jerking scene from the book.
It's important to bear in mind the images Lewis had in mind when he wrote the books. The Magician's Nephew is really, really Art Nouveau, with overtones of William Morris. The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe is heavily Wagnerian. The Horse and His Boy is an Arabian Nights adventure. The Voyage of the Dawn Treader has a feel throughout of medieval tapestries.
I really don't know about The Last Battle. Hieronymus Bosch?
Any movie adaptation would probably consider the target audience and their acceptance of themes as a priority over the author's perceived intentions.
LB is your Wagnerian piece! It's all about endings and beginnings, and fighting for a seemingly lost cause.
@@mbarrett99 "Perceived?" Lewis made it known quite explicitly.
Each book as a season sounds good
And each episode could be a chapter.
I would love to see a Magician's Nephew, I read the book a couple months ago and it was really good, though I do hope they don't change the theme of the books, child friendly and fun and I agree with more than half these comments, they should not be adding any kissing/sex scenes, it's not right to the series but I will be very happy to see what they do.
I'm working on a parody
@@trickshotsmoviesandcubing2317 Why?
@@MaskedMan66 because I like making parodies of my favorite things. It's not very good, but you can watch it. It will be easier to find on my playlists, last episode of Stupid Stories Season 1
I’m a big fan of The Chronicles of Narnia, I grew up with the books, and really got excited when I had heard about the movies being made. But I will admit, “ The Magicians Nephew “ really should’ve been the first one to put on film ( since it was the first one in the book series ). When I read all the books in order, it definitely helped the full story to make more sense. When I saw “ The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe “ made as the first movie, I did enjoy it, but then also thought that it would’ve been better if “ The Magicians Nephew “ had been made first ( the Harry Potter series was another favorite series of mine, and being done in order, that certainly helped that story make sense ). I honestly can’t wait for the next “Chronicles of Narnia “ to come 👍
I agree-- and far more importantly, C.S. Lewis would have agreed-- that MN should be the first in any retelling of the Chronicles. But the Disney movies were absolutely dreadful.
I was so excited when I stumbled across this video and seen the caption. To hear that Magician's Nephew was going to be made sounded great, but when it was said that Netflix has purchased the rights and was making the shows/movies my heart sank. Seeing what Netflix has done with Cowboy Bebop, He-man, She-Ra, and the butchery that's about to occur with the Last Avatar I have no expectation that this series of shows/movies will be anything else but a disappointment. Another beloved franchise that's going to be filled current day politics and social ideology like the MCU, Dr. Who, Star Trek, Star Wars, Wheel of Time and Lord of the Rings. RIP Narnia I'll remember your former glory.
"Star Wars?" How do you figure?
@@MaskedMan66 For me the only decent Star Wars property (in current day) is the Mandalorian. Force "Awoken" and the following movies, Boba Fett, and Obi Wan all sucked. I believe because these movies and shows focused on pushing current social ideologies rather writing a good script. I feel this what will happen with Narnia with Netflix at the helm in its creation. We're not going to get C.S. Lewis but more of agenda driven social ideologies pushed rather than the authors version of the story.
@@KIRBBQ You need to explain your accusation, because I'm not seeing it; what's "woke" about any of what you mention (apart from the two women kissing at the end of Episode IX, which stuck out like a sore thumb)? And of all those projects, I find "The Mandalorian" boring, and its treatment of Gina Carano disgusting; there was definite politicizing there.
@@MaskedMan66 Here is what I mean. In Force Awakens or as I like say Force Awoken, Rey is "Mary Sue" without any training she's able to perform the Jedi "mind trick" beat Kylo Ren a trained Jedi, Luke is reduced to a joke to elevate Rey. Boba Fett is reduced to a joke elevate Ming-Na Wen (can't remember the character name at the moment and for the record I loved her character in Agents of SHIELD) , Obi Wan and Vadar are reduced to being jokes to elevate Leia and Reva. The theme in all these is to down play the male character to make the female characters look strong and intelligent. This is part of the current day enviornment in entertainment to show that women and better than men. Even in the most recent Predator movie Prey here's a woman weighing all of a buck o five woman able to beat 5 to 7 male trappers all of whom out weighed her (no where in movie is it shown she's have been a great fighter trained in some martial art that would help the viewer believe this why she can do this), she's able to gin up enough strength (I guess by the power of Grey Skull) to rip the tooth out of a the Predator's mouth, and come out the whole fight unscathed. I'm not against females leads or characters within the Star Wars universe I love Ventress, Ashoka, Bo Katan, and Saban. This are great characters and enjoyed arcs on TV. I hope this helps.
@@KIRBBQ LMHO Oh, here we go with the old, "Rey was never traaaaaaaaiiiiinnnnnedd" whine. Her aptitude with the Force (which freaked her out and terrified her, as you have ignored) was one of the intriguing mysteries of the third part of the saga, and finally explained in Episode IX by the fact that she was Palpatine's granddaughter. Besides, who ever said there was no such thing as a Force prodigy? Anakin certainly was.
It should be noted that Ren beat her as well, most notably in Episode VII.
Luke's character arc was a classic one: the fallen hero who redeems himself and saves the day; it turns up a lot in samurai films. As for Rey being "elevated," you're again ignoring how often she klutzed out while on Ahch-To; doubtless the Caretakers were glad to see the back of her.
Make no mistake, Rey was a flawed, inexperienced, immature character who, even when she'd accepted her destiny by the end of the story, still has much growing and learning to do.
I haven't seen any of the Boba Fett show, but from the clips I've seen of _Kenobi,_ I don't see any reduction in Obi-Wan's dignity; on the contrary, McGregor exudes the stuff. And I'm ecstatic to learn that Ming-Na finally got into _Star Wars,_ though not quite in the way she'd originally hoped. She made known her wish to play a Jedi Knight as far back as shortly after TPM came out.
I've never seen a Predator movie in my life, but from what I've seen, ANY human being is smaller than one of those critters, so regardless of what's in the trousers, a human victory is a human victory.
If someone does make a film or a miniseries of The Magician's Nephew, I hope they spend a substantial amount of time dedicated to Diggory and Polly's visit to the dying world of Charn and meeting Jadis. I wouldn't want to see that point in the story reduced to a 2-3 minutes long visit.
I would like aslan to continue to be Liam neilson plus he wouldn't be the same if he wasn't. Ive got some suggestions for the casting. Maybe some once upon a time characters could be an option. What about Colin O'Donoghue as Caspian. Maybe also some famous faces in Narnia. We need more gags for the kidnappings in Narnia. A mighty suggestion bring back the original cast and be all together in the last battle. Another awesome suggestion as susan what about kate from neighbors plus she looks like the 1st susan
when is it coming out
I do think the cast of the pevensies could pass as there older selves in a lion the witch and the wardrobe, or A horse and his boy.
I need a movie adaptation of The Horse and his boy
I would like them to follow the books in chronological order, from Magicians Nephew to the Last Battle.
I enjoyed the first two of the Disney Narnia films but I really didnt like the third, Voyage of Dawn Treader, with the plot of the blue mist and the serpent being a major enemy. Disney took some artistic license and just wrecked the shit out of it.
I enjoyed the fact that the battle scenes werent just brief skirmishes as they were depicted in the BBC television miniseries of the late 80s and early 90s, but large set piece battles. I would like the battles to be large in the Netflix series (despite the fact very little was written about the battles in the novels as they werent really the focus)
In the BBC version of The Silver Chair, at the owl's meeting, one of the owls suggests that the Lady of the Green Kirtle could be one of the same crew as the White Witch who came before her. Coincidentally, both the White Witch and the Lady of the Green Kirtle were played by the same actress (as was the hag who appeared in Prince Caspian, who said "Who ever heard of a witch who really died? You can always bring them back". I felt that this made for an interesting chance for artistic license - the White Witch, first appearing as Queen Jadis in Magician's Nephew, appears as the White Witch at the height of her powers in Lion, Witch & Wardrobe, is supposedly killed by Aslan but goes into hiding, becoming nothing more than a hag who is supposedly killed in the story Prince Caspian, but then she returns by The Silver Chair as the Lady of the Green Kirtle who transforms into a serpent who is killed by Prince Rillian. I think that is a perfect opportunity to make the White Witch a recurring villain for six of the seven novels, perhaps in the Netflix version of The Horse & His Boy, her survival and transformation into a hag is hinted at - the book is set during the Golden Age when the four children rule as kings and queens. After the Witch's defeat, they would have hunted down her surviving forces and perhaps hear rumours of the White Witch surviving the events of the LWW, but she doesnt actually appear. And then in Prince Caspian she appears as the hag, but without it actually being confirmed that she is the same person, and then she appears as the Lady of the Green Kirtle who uses her same powers of bewitchment that she once used on Edmund on Prince Rillian, luring him to her side, before eventually being killed
I would like to see four actors & actresses chosen to play the four Pevensies and actors to play Professor Kirke and Eustace and actresses for Polly Plummer and Jill Pole, and have the same actors / actresses play those characters, perhaps making them age with CGI like Harry Potter did for the Epilogue set twenty years after the final battle.
Aside from the above suggestions, I would like the books to be followed closely without coming up with the same ridiculous storyline that the third Disney film came up with.
I Need To Know when
Magician's Nephew movie
Released ?
I would suggest to Netflix that not only should they respect the Christian elements of the stories, but they should avoid a rather stupid device the Disney films used, and that was bringing the White Witch back in every movie, and making her a constant presence and fear in Edmund's mind. In the books, he was free of her the moment he met Aslan, and once Aslan killed her, she was dead for good.
We know that the Hag and the Werewolf claimed she could be brought back, but there was no evidence to support their claim, i.e., no witch ever did return from the dead in any Narnia stories.
Alao the werwolf wcene acts as a good end to her plotline as it showed edmund is not willing to let anyone make the mistake he did and bring her back edmund brraking the ice was symbolic of keeping her in the past and not repeating mistakes
@@demonic_myst4503 Her story ended at the paws of Aslan in LWW. The Hag and the Werewolf were full of baloney in thinking they could bring her back.
@@MaskedMan66 i know but the ice scene had strong characterisation for edmund i mean
@@demonic_myst4503 I'm not sure what "ice scene" you mean.
@@MaskedMan66 the scene where they are bringing her bacvk in the secondfilm where edmund stabbs his sword into the ice where the queen is about to be reborn from to prevent them bringing her back
Respect the original stories ie don't make major plot changes. The reason why the books are beloved, is because of the OG story. Learn from the many disasters of Hollywood adapting novels by changing too much.
I hope they keep the Christian themes, keep it appropriate for children and start with The Magicians Nephew! The stories are perfect as they are and do not need to be revamped. The books are perfect as they are!
The three movies made previously were all lacking in staying true to the story and storyline development. The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe was the best of the three. "Prince Caspian" and "Voyage of the Dawn Treader" were butchered badly, so much so that even loyal Chronicles of Narnia fans stayed away.
Bottom line, all the Chronicles of Narnia stories, as written by C.S. Lewis, have solid storylines. The script writers just need to stay true to them and not overuse CGI and special effects. Each story has the potential to be epic film.
I also agree that it would be good to do the movies in chronological order, starting with the "Magician's Nephew" and ending with "The Last Battle."
i hope they stay true to the books from beginng to end
The magician's nephew of course
The Magician's Nephew will be my choice to be the first because it will explain the origin, and how the characters went to Narnia.
The. Magicians . Nieghew. Is the . First. Book . Of. The. Series. . Of. Ninana. Books. And. Not loin e. And. Witch. And the.ward.owbard. Rebekahx
Hope they wont do the same mistake they did with the percy jackson movies, they should follow the books and not make it dark, they should keep it for children like it original dessin. Many like to books even if it for a youngers group age. Many book adaptation flop because they don't follow the books. Some changes are okay but changing it too much and make it more like the lord of the rings or game of thrones could ruin it. But even so, their is still a risk they make it if they stay on this ideal. Lets hope.
I WANT THEM TO FINISH THE ORIGINAL STORY FRANCHISE DISNEY STARTED. OR HAVE DISNEY MAKE THE FINAL MOVIE TO END IT FULLY. ONLY ONE MORE MOVIE. THEN NETFLIX CAN DO REBOOT. OR NETFLIX. MAKE THE FINALS ENDING TO DISNEY STORY AND HAVE A REBOOT. WRITE A SCRIPT TO END THE FINAL FRANCHISE. THEN WHEN U REBOOT. YOU CAN MAKE YOUR DARKER VERSION OF NARNIA. SO THERE WILL BE TWO VERSIONS OF NARNIA. ONE MADE DARK AND ONE MADE LIGHT
TMN is a good story and I wouldn't mind if they started there. However, the LWW +PC + VDT are too recent and I would like to see them do Silver Chair or Horse & His Boy before going back to re-release movies that are still relatively recent for many Narnia viewers. I'm not sure that Last Battle would translate well to the cinema, because the story itself is more sobering and dark in some ways.
The first part of LB is dark, and is meant to be, but you still have a rooting interest in Tirian and his allies, not to mention our old pals Eustace and Jill. The second part of the story makes the hardships of the first part all worth it, because it's sheer joy.
I think something similar to series of unfortunate events style meets Harry Potter style would match the book more.
3:59 maybe Adam driver ?
I think that #NETFLIX should team up with #BBC & do a remake of the 1980s tv version of The Chronicles of #Narnia under the same intro but with better effects!
I remember watching the 80s one before Disney got rights to make theirs. I'm gonna see if those 4 are on RUclips
Tyler hochelin as PRINCE CASPIAN.
Dylan O brian as PETER.
TOM HOLLEND AS EDWARD
Lily Aspell as LUCY
Ben Barnes as PRINCE CASPIAN FATHER. THE KING
It’s Edmund
Who's gonna take the role of Susan?
let anyone but Netflix do it because we don't want it to fail
the original cast could play as the grown characters, and in my opinion ben barnes doesn't look the age he is so I think he could still play as prince caspian(?
Barnes was always way too old for the part (P.S.: Caspian was King from the end of his first book until his death). As for the Pevensies, it would be refreshing if they hired performers who looked like the characters; for instance, it would be nice to finally see a blonde Lucy.
If I were to suggest they SHOULD continue where Disney and 20century fox stopped the franchise. Instead of the reboot, and as a MOVIE series with longer duration of time like Lord of the Rings. To see if their adaptations will success or how far they can do their best for this type of genre/theme aside from sci-fi, crime, romance/sexual, action, etc.
It is the acting and the script that is all important. Lessons need to be learnt from the star wars prequel films. If the acting is wooden and the script banal then you can have special effects till kingdom come and the whole things will still nose dive. In fact if you have too many super fantastic special effects - or if the whole movie is just one massive special effect then the special effects are not really special any more. The audience become punch drunk with them. So it is important not to go too over the top with them but to use them in a strategic way. That way they are more striking and awe inspiring. C.S Lewis himself made a very valid point when he said that adults who really have grown up can appreciate the power of fairy tales and fantasy and do not think that they are childish. The producers need to realise that there are a lot of adult Narnia lovers who really really want this project to succeed. They need to be just as aware that there is an adult audience for these films as there is an audience of younger people. Catering for both parties (not either one at the expense of the other) is vital.
Whose acting was "wooden?" As with every _Star Wars_ production, the actors essentially *were* their characters, and nobody could have taken their places. And SW has always boasted tons of special FX; if you don't like FX, don't watch a SW film. You can't do fantasy or sci-fi without them.
The Pevensies were not in the Magicians Nephew book.
As long as they keep the people the same and not box tick.
Amen!
I'm so scared Netflix is going to screw up Narnia
I'd like to see magicians nephew and then do the rest the way it should have been done
Read at 10. Starting again at 57
I am fine if netflix reboot the franchise. Only if disney can finish the final story for the original. If the original dont finish. We will riot. Have netflix make a reboot. But have disney finished the final franchise. I dont want a reboot if the original cast and movie from out childhood ends. Let disney make the final movie please. Then let netflix reboot. Its only one. I can settle if netflix make the final story for original cast. Just finish the franchise. Then start over with the wizard. Its only one more. Dont leave it as a cliff hanger. They need to take the train and meet their parents. Live in asland kingdom. Heaven.
Tom holland in narnia prequel yes as younger professor digory yes I want to see professor digory adventure
Digory is twelve years old in "The Magician's Nephew."
I would love it if NETFLIX would produce, the Magician's Nephew. The first book in the Chronicles of Narnia. - Author of The Chronicles of Assignments: PRINCIPALITIES - An Adventure in Spiritual Warfare against the Church, a novel by R. W. Touchton.
Best cast for Narnia
Jenna Ortega as Lucy
Meg Donnelly as Susan
Tom Holland as Peter
Milo Mannheim as Edmund
Why is everyone so old?
How would George Henley back?? She's too old to play Polly or Lucy. And too young to play The White Witch.
And unfortunately, Susan isn't in The Magician's Nephew.
None of the Pevensies are in MN; it's decades before they were born. And who's to say how old the WW is meant to look? But to be sure, Henley's the wrong type.
In The Horse and his Boy, the four Pevensies feature as adult kings and queens still in Narnia
Chronology provides irreplaceable context!
They need to possess the same charm as the old BBC series and not get lost in the unnecessary special effects. That’s where the Disney films went wrong IMO - fingers crossed Netflix pulls through
There was nothing wrong with the FX; the problem was in the dreadful scripts.
Louis Partridge would be a good prince.
If you mean King Caspian, he's too old, just like Ben Barnes was. Caspian was twelve in his first adventure.
Start: The Nephew's Uncle
?????
I hated that Disney aged Caspian up so much and created the love story between him and Susan! I’m pro publication order!
The magicians nephew is the fifth book in the original Chronicles and should remain so. The lion, witch and wardrobe is the first and reads better that way. The chronicles make much more sense in it's original order. It should never had been rearranged.
Don't you mean the sixth?
Wait is this happening
after 12years i want to seen 4 siblings
me too
They aren't the only Earth folk to visit Narnia.
Netflix, please stay faithful to the books! I loved this series of books as a child and it was great to see Disney staying true to the books and if netflix wander off the story it would be a tragedy!
To me, the reason the first movie did so well was because it was true to the book. Each successive movie strayed farther away from the original story. Why ruin a story line that has enchanted people for generations?The magician's nephew would be a great place to start to distinguish it from Disney. But please be faithful to the books!9:09
They had better not have eliot page being some faun or dryad
why not Jacob tremlay he's 17 he could play in the magicians nephew
They are gonna mess it up nothing like the original
Which "original?"
There is certainly a concern that they will excessively change the book.
How about Robert Pattinson he made a perfect 😍 Edward Cullen from Twilight
Who would you cast him as?
Edmund
@@nmoney6655 Way too old, even for King Edmund.
I thought he hated being Edward Cullen in twilight. What makes you think he’d like to be in narnia?
I missed a presentation of the Magicians Nephew above all but whoever plays Jadis will need to stay throughout. And what is your problem with Lewes's ending with Aslan standing up to be who so many of us clearly understood to be Jesus. Are you part of the ACLU organization that is trying to stop that ending of Lewis's story.
Lewis. And the only actress I think could do justice to Jadis would be Gwendoline Christie, who played Captain Phasma in Episodes VII and VIII of _Star Wars._ She's 6'3", which is a perfect height, and she can deliver the villainous goods. 🙂
Chronological order is best, but also stay true to the stories. That was the problem with Disney, too many things were incorrect and distracted from the movie!
Mary mouser would be a great Lucy
I'm guessing you mean Queen Lucy the grownup. And how about we finally have a blonde Lucy?
@@MaskedMan66 she's a mixed blonde and brunette and and yes seeing her the grown Lucy in voyage of the dawn treader as a young adult to mid twenties one is what I'd like to see
@@patricksanders2219 Lucy Pevensie is a blonde.
@@patricksanders2219 But yes, Miss Mouser would probably be good for playing Queen Lucy in HHB. Big question, of course, is can she do an English accent?
@@MaskedMan66 maybe, if not that is a skill that can be learnt
The best adapting film based on Christian faith represent 🤗🙌✝️♥ compassion Yahway
I hope they will keep the spirit in which these were written in the story. I mean, of course, that the children's journey is an allegory for a spiritual journey. Aslan, The son of The Emperor o'er The Sea, is an allegorical form for Jesus. This was always supposed to be the fabric of these tales.
You haven't read the books, have you? There's no allegory; Aslan IS Jesus. There are clues throughout the books, and it's made plain in the final scene of "The Last Battle."
"If Aslan represented the immaterial Deity in the same way in which Giant Despair (in John Bunyan's "The Pilgrim's Progress") represents Despair, he would be an allegorical figure. In reality however he is an invention giving an imaginary answer to the question, ‘What might Christ become like, if there really were a world like Narnia and He chose to be incarnate and die and rise again in that world as He actually has done in ours?’ This is not allegory at all."
--C.S. Lewis
i wont even watch the remakes...the books and audio dramas are all that i need and the 3 original movies.
The movies are awful. But haven't you seen the T.V. versions of LWW, PC, VDT, and SC?
By the way, have you heard both radio series?
What a click bait! You say it’sa teaser trailer, use the logo and try to make it appear legit, then you just hash a bunch of clips off the first three together with that incessant voice in the foreground and nowhere did I see a disclaimer or fan made notice. Boo!
You keep reiterating that Netflix can do whatever they want with the series. This is both true and complete bunk! Yes, there would be no repercussions from the C.S. Lewis society, which was a stupid move on their part, but there certainly WOULD be consequences from the target audiences. This is what Disney ran into. The first movie was a faithful adaptation of the story. The second and third certainly weren't. The public punished Disney by rejecting the two sequels. Disney richly deserved this. If Netflix does not do a faithful adaptation of the series they will suffer the losses just like Disney. Tread softly Netflix. You are on thin ice in front of a frozen waterfall during spring thaw.
Another problem with dawdling whilst making these is that children do not remain in a state of arrested development during filming. They will have to make these series in a timely manner or the children will grow up on them before the series is completed.
Magicians nephew should be first and the rest follow the order the author intended. It is a wonderf story. They need to stick with mood and intent of the author or it will be ruined. CS Lewis was an exceptional author and to try and make it more violent than intended it will make the story something else it was not intended to be. Stick to the CS Lewis way of story-telling, please. Thanks.
narnia 4 not happening it they did do a fourth movie it probably wood came out in 2013 or 14 I'm guessing
Strictly speaking, Disney did 2, 4, and 5.
@@MaskedMan66 No, they didn't. LWW is the first Narnia book to ever exist, and was intended by God and Lewis to be read first, that is why it was created and published first.
well, it's netflix, so i wouldn't be surprised if they Make Jadis african, or Aslan being the bad guy because he represents the christian god
I will be so disappointed if the series begins with the Magician's Nephew! It should stay with the order as they were originally published; NOT chronologically! That ruins so much of the suspense and mystery!
C.S. Lewis disagreed with you. His preferred reading order, and the one he recommended, was in order of internal chronology.
The Magician’s Nephew explains a lot and includes the story of the creation of Narnia. It really has to go first.
@@adeejinnz That's what the BBC thought when they did their radio series of the Chronicles.
@MaskedMan66 Not true. That theory is based only on one obscure and unclear sentence in a letter he wrote to a fan. The series itself, as originally published, make it so clear as to the correct order.
@Adrian Jenkins But it starts out in a way that clearly show that the readers already know much about Narnia, and that this book is going to go back to explain its beginning, like a prequel.
You need to start with the magician's Nephew then leave Disney's the lion the witch and wardrobe then youdo the boy and his horse you can use all the you can leave all the kids in this one because they were full grown if you remember right they were full grown when they came back through the Wardrobe so they were adults in that one and they are now adults and can be in this one and then the silver Chair you got to have eustis and Jill Paul we already know who eustis is it's going to have to find a Jill Paul and then the last battle the kids are about again they're older perfect that's where they are now you do that one and please follow the books the books are for children not the adults we don't want to see no sex you see all that blood and gut and Glory no darkness and deep dark stuff it was written for kids to teach them about the Bible you know aslan is Jesus keep it that way just just enough to get the kids attention you don't have to get all that gory stuff you all do just follow the books don't add all your funky stuff just stay true to the books and your movies will come out great stay true to the books and as much as I love Lucy she cannot be in The magicians nephew for the silver Chair because she has to be in a boy in the scores and the last battle and you can't have Lucy and Jill Paul being in the last battle and being the same person that you got to think guys have fun and may God bless you
You mean Eustace. And Jill's last name is Pole.
And the third book is called "The Horse and His Boy."
Anyone that was introduced to Narnia for the first time without Lucy has a tainted view of Narnia and will never truly experience it. You are supposed to experience Narnia for the first time with Lucy the Valiant. Shift has so many of you worshipping Tashlan, thinking you were meant to learn about it first via Magician's Nephew, when neither God nor Lewis meant for that, that's why LWW was the first book.
Bring back Tilda! She made the White Witch Iconic
They need to go in Chronological order ie: the order that C.S. Lewis wanted them read in: The Magicians Nephew, TLTWATW, The Horse and his boy, Prince Caspian, The Voyage of the Dawn Treader, The Silver chair, and the Last Battle. And make it good! Make it actually follow the book the way it was written, not with a bunch of "woke" garbage in it.
This is a lie. The books are meant to be read in the order that they were created. You are supposed to be introduced to Narnia for the first time with Lucy and Lucy only.
Greta Gerwig is show runner
i thought lucy was done
Not if they're doing a whole new version.
@@MaskedMan66 what about Edmund Caspian and eutance
@@allison3852 If they're starting over-- and following the books-- everyone will be in it.
@@MaskedMan66 even Peter and Susan
@@allison3852 Everyone, beginning with Digory and Polly.
I hate Netflix. Disney needs to continue what they started and just stop screwing it up. They should have started in order though.
They did start in order. The books are meant to be read in the order that they were created. You are meant to be introduced to Narnia for the first time with Lucy through the wardrobe. Anything else is a tainted intro to Narnia and not what God or Lewis intended. That's why LWW was released first, because it is supposed to be read first.
@@kennyhudson9201 Actually the first book is called The Magician's Nephew. They never explained how the lampost got to Narnia in the second book. You would only know that if you read/saw The Magician's Nephew. Other details like this are imortant. because it also explains how Narnia came to exist.
@@IzzyNChristThe first book is called The Lion, The Witch, and the Wardrobe. It was released, published and read by thousands years before Magician's Nephew was even written. Four other Narnia books were also released before Magician's Nephew. You are not supposed to know why the lamppost is there yet. It is a mystery given explanation later like all mysteries.
Do you think Phantom Menace is the first Star Wars movie despite coming out decades after A New Hope?
Narnia was meant to visited for the first time with Lucy. The first world besides our own we are meant to know about and experience is Narnia, not Charn, or the Woods between Worlds. If Magician's Nephew was meant to be read first it would have been released first, and not years later after 5 Narnia books were already written, published and experienced.
@@kennyhudson9201 I didn't know he wrote it first, but still it gives the story more context that way. So many things weren't explained when they did the movies this time around
I am really worried about what Netflix will do. They should portray the story with the intention of C.S. Lewis. This means clear connection to the Christian nature of the books and parallels with biblical stories. This means starting with The Magician’s Nephew in which Narnia comes into existence. I am worried they will try and drop that and bring in LGBTQ+ characters or other current popular things to put in movies. Lewis was indisputably a Christian author.
I am with you on this. If they will do the same as what they did to Anna of Green Gables, it would be so dissapointing . It was meant for kids, so no need for darker magic, LGBTQ adaptations - please don't mess up the beauty of this work.
That's my main concern as well. The entertainment industry is really pushing it these days. If you're gonna remake something, don't add anything to it or take away. By doing that, you destroy the message of the book and series entirely. I am wary of Netflix taking this up, they have a history of doing the same as Disney is right now. Until it's out and it is reviewed, I'll probably assume the worst case scenario. ESPECIALLY if they're going to make this into a universe. I hope when I die, my books won't be handed over to the highest bidder but to someone who is trustworthy to take care of it because the message needs to be preserved.
@@joleneblankenburgh9555 You're talking about _Anne with an 'E',_ I take it? Yeah, I've heard some really whack things about that show.
@@bluejayawh7924 You're an author?
WHERE WAS TOM HOLLAND?? HUUUUHHHH??!!!!!!!!
Busy playing Spider-Man.
I’m a little disappointed they won’t be using the original cast but I can get past that what I’m worried about is that Netflix with make the stories then do show spin-offs like with what Amazon has done with the rings of power and screw with the storylines because Netflix has already said they wanted to “expand the universe” presumably to compete with GOT and LOTD but I don’t agree with this and I feel Narnia was always meant to be allegorical of the Christian walk and I have no faith in left wing filming industry giant Netflix to do the right thing
The "original" cast as you refer to them (they aren't), are all grown up now, and some of them were too old for the characters they played in the first place. Also, C.S. Lewis would tell you that Narnia isn't allegory.