The NeverEnding Story

A boy who needs a friend finds a world that needs a hero in a land beyond imagination!

7.2
19841h 37m

While hiding from bullies in his school's attic, a young boy discovers the extraordinary land of Fantasia, through a magical book called The Neverending Story. The book tells the tale of Atreyu, a young warrior who, with the help of a luck dragon named Falkor, must save Fantasia from the destruction of The Nothing.

Production

Logo for Constantin Film
Logo for Bavaria Film

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: 40th Anniversary Limited Edition 4K Trailer

40th Anniversary Limited Edition 4K Trailer

Thumbnail for video: Original Trailer

Original Trailer

Thumbnail for video: Atreyu Kills Gmork

Atreyu Kills Gmork

Thumbnail for video: Artax Dies and Meeting Morla

Artax Dies and Meeting Morla

Thumbnail for video: Full Movie Preview

Full Movie Preview

Thumbnail for video: 40th Anniversary Spot

40th Anniversary Spot

Thumbnail for video: Ways The NeverEnding Story Is Different From The Book

Ways The NeverEnding Story Is Different From The Book

Thumbnail for video: Fathom Events Spot

Fathom Events Spot

Thumbnail for video: Feature Clip

Feature Clip

Cast

Photo of Tami Stronach

Tami Stronach

The Childlike Empress

Photo of Alan Oppenheimer

Alan Oppenheimer

Rockbiter / Falkor / G'mork / Narrator (voice)

Photo of Moses Gunn

Moses Gunn

Cairon - Empress' Servant

Photo of Frank Lenart

Frank Lenart

Teeny Weeny / Night Hob (voice)

Photo of Gerald McRaney

Gerald McRaney

Bastian's Father

Photo of Deep Roy

Deep Roy

Teeny Weeny

Photo of Chris Eastman

Chris Eastman

1st Bully

Photo of Thomas Hill

Thomas Hill

Carl Conrad Koreander - the Librarian

Photo of Bernd Eichinger

Bernd Eichinger

Man Next to Man Who Drops Milk (uncredited)

Photo of Wolfgang Petersen

Wolfgang Petersen

Man Who Drops Milk (uncredited)

Photo of Silvia Seidel

Silvia Seidel

Fairy (uncredited)

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Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

6/10

I remember seeing this film when I was young - spurred on by the Limahl theme song that was in the charts at the time, and rather enjoying it. Based on just the first half of Michael Ende's original novel, it's a gentle fantasy tale of a young boy - "Bastian" (Barret Oliver) - who is being bullied by three classmates. When one day he seeks refuge in a bookshop, the owner shows him a mysterious book that he "borrows" and reads - introducing him to the magical, and dangerous, kingdom of "Fantastica" where he learns that it's benign, kindly young "Childlike Empress" is dying and that only he can help "Atreyu" (Noah Hathaway) save her and everyone from disaster at the hands of "The Nothing". The youngsters are strong with their performances, and Wolfgang Petersen's adaption of his own screenplay remains reasonably faithful to the delicate story with clever, engaging animation - a combination of intricate puppetry and blue-screen effects that is both charming and fun: the luck dragon ("Falkor") and the "Gmork" greatly add to the story of wishes and secrets as "Bastian" races against time to accomplish his task. Time has been quite kind to this film (apart from, maybe, the haircuts!) and it still holds up well.

R

r96sk

9/10

A fantasy flick of real quality!

I got to watch this at the cinema thanks to its release as part of its 40th anniversary, the second movie I've seen re-released on the big screen after 'Trainspotting' back in May. That Danny Boyle flick from 1996 is great, as is this Wolfgang Petersen feature from 1984. I wasn't sure what to expect, I only knew of its genre and that famous theme song.

One of the first things to note about 'The NeverEnding Story' is how well it has aged, it looks awesome. The practical effects still look top quality and are super effective, I watched 'Big Trouble in Little China' yesterday and that has aged rather poorly in the effects department - and was released two years after this!

I really loved seeing the world come to life. The effects are a big reason for that, though this shows the importance of getting strong voice actors. Alan Oppenheimer is fantastic in the roles of Falkor, Gmork and Rockbiter, credit to Robert Easton as Morla too. As for the 'normal' actors, Sydney Bromley, Moses Gunn and Tilo Prückner are excellent in their respective roles.

Younger actors Barret Oliver, Noah Hathaway and Tami Stronach all do good work. I could've done without, and this my only thing close to a criticism (which it even isn't), the constant leaps back to the reader (Oliver's Bastian), it's not bad but sometimes doesn't feel necessary; less is more, sorta thing.

A brilliant film, one with an edge to it as well... 🕊️🐎

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