The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian

by Andrew Adamson (Director)

Other authorsC. S. Lewis (Author), Mark Johnson (Producer), Eddie Izzard (Actor), Ben Barnes (Actor), Douglas Gresham (Actor), Ken Stott (Actor), David Walliams (Actor), Tilda Swinton (Actor), Harry Gregson-Williams (Composer), Harry Gregson-Williams (Actor), William Moseley (Actor)32 more, Georgie Henley (Actor), Skandar Keynes (Actor), Anna Popplewell (Actor), Liam Neeson (Actor), Andrew Adamson (Author), Andrew Adamson (Producer), Christopher Markus (Author), Stephen McFeely (Author), Warwick Davis (Actor), Ashley Jones (Actor), Peter Dinklage (Actor), Damián Alcázar (Actor), Karl Walter Lindenlaub (Cinematographer), Philip Steuer (Producer), David Bowles (Actor), Sim Evan-Jones (Editor), Josh Campbell (Actor), Sergio Castellitto (Actor), Pierfrancesco Favino (Actor), Vincent Grass (Actor), Predrag Bjelac (Actor), Jan Pavel Filipensky (Actor), Shane Rangi (Actor), Simón Andreu (Actor), Alicia Borrachero (Actor), Juan Diego Montoya Garcia (Actor), Cornell John (Actor), Lejla Abbasová (Actor), Yemi Akinyemi (Actor), Carlos Da Silva (Actor), Klára Issová (Actor), Gomez Mussenden (Actor)
DVD, 2013

Description

The four Pevensie children - Peter, Susan, Edmund and Lucy - return to Narnia, only to discover that hundreds of years have passed since they ruled there. Now, crowning himself king, the evil General Miraz has taken charge. The children enlist the help of a heroic mouse called Reepicheep. They set out find the exiled Prince Caspian, determined to see him rightfully named king.

Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

2008

Physical description

7.75 inches

Publication

WALT DISNEY STUDIOS HOME ENTERTAINMENT (2008), Edition: 1 Disc DVD

ISBN

786936735437

UPC

786936735437

Library's rating

½

Library's review

I'm very impressed with this movie. It manages to find an arc for most of the children (Edmund not so much, but he has the biggest arc in the first film, so that's probably fine), really mines the novel's rather small hints of political intrigue for all its worth, and provides a story that combines
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two difficult things: feeling like a natural progression of the story, while also being much more mature and grounded in tone and themes than that of the more fairy tale-esque first installment. My favourite of Disney's three Narnia films by quite a huge margin.
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Awards

Ursa Major Awards (Runner-Up — Best Anthropomorphic Motion Picture — 2008)

Rating

½ (35 ratings; 3.7)
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