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7,1/10
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LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaEustace, along with a new companion named Jill Pole, is brought back to Narnia. The pair are told by Aslan they must search for King Caspian's missing son, Prince Rilian.Eustace, along with a new companion named Jill Pole, is brought back to Narnia. The pair are told by Aslan they must search for King Caspian's missing son, Prince Rilian.Eustace, along with a new companion named Jill Pole, is brought back to Narnia. The pair are told by Aslan they must search for King Caspian's missing son, Prince Rilian.
- Nominato ai 5 BAFTA Award
- 5 candidature totali
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Recensioni in evidenza
This is much better than the BBC's earlier forays into Narnia, partly due to the book it's based on. It's set in the bare, unpopulated wastes to Narnia's north, so the drab scenery is not a defect. Nor is the absence of extras. Puddleglum, C.S. Lewis's best Narnian creation, is played by Tom Baker, who fits the role as well as anyone on Earth. In general the acting is better in `The Silver Chair' than it was earlier on. Direction is crisper, costumes are more convincing: everything has improved. I have commented harshly on `The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe', and most of those comments apply here as well, but never to the same extent. This is actually okay television. Of course, an adaptation of the Narnia books should be much more than that.
I'm not to fond of writing long reviews. I like to keep things short, so this will be a quick one.
This one is amazing! Ever since I had been watching it on VHS as a toddler and eventually watching it on DVD, I've always loved this one and I don't think I need to say that Tom Baker steals the show as Puddleglum.
This one is amazing! Ever since I had been watching it on VHS as a toddler and eventually watching it on DVD, I've always loved this one and I don't think I need to say that Tom Baker steals the show as Puddleglum.
Mty son (7 years old) lovs this one and all of the series. I like this one in particular, largely because of Tom Baker's brilliance.
I just have a question for anyone who has watched it.
Did anyove notice that Puddleglum says the magic word (ie f*ck)?
In the scene where he gets drunk and he is picked up by the fat lady giant, Puddleglum makes some incomprehensible protests. Among this, pretty clearly, he says the magic word. My 7 year old first noticed this and told me. I told him he must be wrong. But I watched/lisstened to the offending bit and I had to tell my son that he was right. It was one of the funniest things i've ever seen / heard.
Anyway, Tom Baker is brilliant as always and he can do no wrong in my eyes.
I just have a question for anyone who has watched it.
Did anyove notice that Puddleglum says the magic word (ie f*ck)?
In the scene where he gets drunk and he is picked up by the fat lady giant, Puddleglum makes some incomprehensible protests. Among this, pretty clearly, he says the magic word. My 7 year old first noticed this and told me. I told him he must be wrong. But I watched/lisstened to the offending bit and I had to tell my son that he was right. It was one of the funniest things i've ever seen / heard.
Anyway, Tom Baker is brilliant as always and he can do no wrong in my eyes.
I've grown up watching this and the other three Narnia movies (TLTW&TW PC & TVotDT). I fell in love with them. As far as adaptations go, they were wonderfully done. The child actors used did a great job of portraying Eustace and Jill, and Caspian at the end. it was all brought together wonderfully, and when watching it, you can almost believe that you will entr Narnia yourself. i wish they could've done all 7.
This is the best one. However, I will say that these movies never have achieved that sense of wonder and amazement that I feel the books always have. But, when the 2005 version came out, and I watched it, I was FLOORED! The 2005 version is better than all of the BBC TV presentations put together. The 2005 version holds your attention throughout, even in the parts when they are just playing hide-and-seek or talking about Aslan, and has that sense of wonder and amazement correctly portrayed throughout, also. Tom Baker was good as Puddleglum- he gives the best performance! But when I read the book, I pictured him to be, well, to be like he was in the illustration that is in my edition of the Silver Chair- taller and thinner, and smoking his pipe most of the time. But otherwise, Tom Baker is "quite up to snuff". When the queen is bitten by the snake, she does not look very concerned, or very hurt, or very worried about screaming for help, or very worried about dying, for that matter. And I thought Pole would be a lot prettier. In the scene where Puddleglum is "drunk", it was not nearly as funny as it was in the book. In the movie, that scene was humorous. In the book, that scene was laughable, hilarious, and I just about died laughing the first time I read that page in the book, and I just about die laughing every time I read it.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizBarbara Kellerman, who plays the Green Lady, previously played the White Witch in The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe (1988). This has led to the popular misconception that the two characters are the same person. In the book, it is merely suggested that the Green Lady is one of the Northern Witches.
- BlooperWhen Prince Caspian appears as his younger self in Aslan's country, Eustace recognizes him immediately, even though this is not the same Prince Caspian Eustace met on the Dawn Treader. The actor is the younger version of Caspian from Book Two. One must assume Sam West was not available for such a small cameo appearance.
- Citazioni
Puddleglum: Not a man! Not a frog! A Marshwiggle!
- Curiosità sui creditiAs the credits roll, we see moments from other movies in the series. (This is the final movie in the series.)
- Versioni alternativeSome releases do not have the final credits rolling to the background of different scenes throughout the entire Narnia series. In the 2002 DVD release the credits roll instead to an image of the silver chair.
- ConnessioniFollows The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe (1988)
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paese di origine
- Lingua
- Celebre anche come
- Der silberne Sessel
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Herstmonceux Castle, East Sussex, Inghilterra, Regno Unito(rebuilt Cair Paravel)
- Aziende produttrici
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
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By what name was The Silver Chair (1990) officially released in India in English?
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