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The NeverEnding Story review – a wondrous world of beasts and young heroes

A grieving boy is drawn into a magical land in Wolfgang Petersen’s ambitious fantasy adventure, rereleased for its 40th anniversary

This 1984 family fantasy adventure has been rereleased for its 40th anniversary; it is an ambitious German production in English (with the opening scenes shot in Vancouver) from director Wolfgang Petersen, featuring Spielbergian mop-haired kids and an extravaganza of wondrous beasts and princesses – surely an influence on the Harry Potter movies a generation later. It is freely adapted from one section of the popular German children’s story Die Unendliche Geschichte by Michael Ende. Oddly, given the title, the film does of course provide us with a resoundingly happy ending (although more franchise episodes were to come).

A lonely, bullied boy called Bastian (Barret Oliver) is devastated by the recent death of his mother; his emotionally cold father brusquely tells him not to dwell on his feelings and just get on with things. One day Bastian runs away from the kids tormenting him and hides in a dusty old antiquarian bookshop run by Mr Coreander (Thomas Hill), who takes pity on him and shows him a fascinating book called The NeverEnding Story. Bastian borrows it and while hiding away from his schoolmates instantly becomes engrossed in the tale that is dramatised before our eyes. The magical land of Fantasia is threatened by a destructive force called the Nothing which has caused the young Empress (Tami Stronach) to fall ill. The people of Fantasia call upon a young hero Atreyu (Noah Hathaway) to save them – shades of Frank Herbert’s Dune, perhaps? He must go on a quest to cure what ails the Empress and is in need of help from Bastian, who is astonished to find that he can enter the story himself.

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