9 / 10
The NeverEnding Story is the rare children’s film that takes children seriously as readers. Wolfgang Petersen directed it. The script is based on Michael Ende’s 1979 German novel, which Ende publicly disowned the film adaptation of and which he asked to have his name removed from the credits before the film’s release. The film adapts only the first half of the novel. The second half, which is darker and stranger and arguably more interesting, has never been satisfactorily adapted to screen.
Barret Oliver plays Bastian, a lonely boy who steals a leather-bound book from a bookshop and reads it in the school attic instead of going to class. Noah Hathaway plays Atreyu, the boy hero inside the book whose quest is to save Fantasia from a force called the Nothing. Tami Stronach plays the Childlike Empress. The luckdragon Falkor is a practical puppet operated by multiple puppeteers. The film cost twenty-seven million dollars, which made it one of the most expensive non-American films ever produced at the time.
What Works
The film commits to the metaphor. Fantasia is not a real place. The Nothing is not a real villain. Both are forces in Bastian’s interior life, externalized as a fantasy story he reads. The film is about what happens when a child does not let himself imagine. The metaphor lands because the film does not explain it. The audience figures it out by watching Bastian read.
The creature design is the best practical effects work in any fantasy film of the mid-1980s. The Rockbiter is a man-sized practical puppet who eats stones. The Racing Snail is a man-sized snail with a saddle. Morla the Ancient One is a giant turtle puppet. Falkor is twelve meters long. None of it is CGI because CGI did not exist as a production option. All of it is built.
For Writers
A story about reading is a structural risk because reading is internal and films are external. The NeverEnding Story solves the problem by making the story Bastian is reading the main visual narrative, with Bastian appearing in cutaway scenes that punctuate the fantasy story he is following. The structural trick is that the reading is shown rather than depicted. The lesson is that internal experiences can be externalized if you find the right structure. Look for the architectural solution before deciding the experience cannot be filmed.
Atreyu and the Swamp
The sequence where Atreyu’s horse Artax dies in the Swamps of Sadness is the moment the film became a generational trauma. Atreyu is leading Artax through the swamp. Artax sinks slowly into the mud. Atreyu cannot pull him out. The horse looks at him and lets himself disappear. The scene is shot in long unhurried takes. Atreyu screams at him to get up. The horse does not get up. Children in 1984 were not warned about this scene. They were not prepared.
The decision to film an actual horse partially submerged in a hydraulic platform is the kind of practical-effects commitment that a modern production would not attempt. The horse was safe. The audience did not feel safe. The scene is the film’s emotional center and it is the reason multiple generations of viewers still talk about the movie with something resembling religious feeling.
For Writers
A children’s story that lets bad things happen without softening them is more honest than a children’s story that protects the audience from grief. The Artax scene works because the film does not flinch. The horse dies. Atreyu has to keep going without him. The lesson is that children’s fiction is improved by adult commitment to consequence. Younger readers can handle real grief. They cannot handle being condescended to.
Ende’s Objection
Michael Ende hated the film. He felt the production had simplified his book into a conventional fantasy adventure, removed the philosophical depth, and turned a serious work about the imagination into a Hollywood picture about a kid with a book. He sued unsuccessfully to have his name removed from the credits. The published German title of his novel is Die unendliche Geschichte. The film’s English title was Anglicized to The NeverEnding Story. Ende objected to that too.
He had a point. The film is the first half of the novel. The second half, in which Bastian enters Fantasia in person and slowly loses himself in it because of the power the Childlike Empress gives him, is the part of the book that matters most. The film never adapts it. The two sequels are both bad and both ignore the source material almost entirely.
For Writers
Adapting only the first half of a longer work is a defensible choice that creates obligations. The NeverEnding Story film tells the first half of Ende’s book and ends on what reads as a triumph. The book continues for several hundred more pages and ends on something more complicated. The lesson is that partial adaptations are not neutral. They commit you to an interpretation of the source. If you take only the first half, you are arguing that the first half is the meaningful part. Ende disagreed with that argument. He was probably right.
Craft Note
Wolfgang Petersen directed and co-wrote. Adapted (in part) from Michael Ende’s 1979 novel Die unendliche Geschichte. Barret Oliver as Bastian. Noah Hathaway as Atreyu. Tami Stronach as the Childlike Empress. Music by Klaus Doldinger with the title song by Giorgio Moroder, performed by Limahl. Bavaria Film Studios production. Approximately twenty-seven million dollar budget, one of the most expensive non-Hollywood productions at the time. Released April 1984 in Germany, July 1984 in the United States. Approximately one hundred million dollar worldwide gross.
The Verdict
9/10. A great children’s fantasy film and a flawed adaptation of a great children’s novel. The practical effects work has not aged. The Artax sequence is permanent damage on multiple generations. The book is better. Watch the film. Then read the book.
FAQ
Is it faithful to the book?
Only the first half. Ende’s novel continues for approximately the same length again after Bastian enters Fantasia. The film stops at that point.
Why did Ende hate the film?
He felt the production had simplified the philosophical themes and turned his work into a generic Hollywood fantasy. He sued unsuccessfully to have his name removed from the credits.
How bad are the sequels?
The Next Chapter (1990) is bad. NeverEnding Story III (1994) is worse and stars a young Jack Black. Neither is connected to the source material.
Are the special effects still good?
The creature work has aged extremely well. The flying sequences with Falkor have aged less well due to bluescreen technology limitations.
What is the Nothing?
A metaphor for the absence of imagination. Fantasia is the world of imagined stories. The Nothing erases parts of Fantasia because people are no longer dreaming them.
Is the theme song really that famous?
Yes. The Limahl song was a hit on its own merits. The song has been covered, parodied, and used in dozens of subsequent productions including Stranger Things.
Should I watch this?
Yes. Foundational viewing for anyone who grew up in the 1980s and a reasonable introduction for younger viewers.