The NeverEnding Story III (1994)
Genre:
Adventure / Family / Fantasy (more)
Plot Outline: A young boy must restore order when a group of bullies steal the magical book that acts as a portal between Earth and the imaginary world of Fantasia. (more)
User Comments:
So bad it's bad
(more)
User Rating:
        
2.5/10 (1,225 votes)
bottom 100: #44
Also Known As: Neverending Story III: Return to Fantasia (UK) The Neverending Story III: Escape from Fantasia Unendliche Geschichte III - Rettung aus Phantasien, Die (Germany)
Runtime:
Germany:95 min / UK:100 min / USA:95 min
Country:
Germany / USA
Language:
English
Color:
Color
Sound Mix:
Dolby Digital
Certification:
Australia:G / Germany:6 / Portugal:M/12 / Spain:T / UK:U / USA:G / Canada:PG (Manitoba/Ontario) / Canada:G (Nova Scotia/Quebec)
Goofs:
Continuity: Position of the papers and files Bastian drops.
(more)
Quotes:
Urgl:
Your body's gone.
Engywook, Male Gnome:
Well, your body went years ago.
(more)
Awards:
1 nomination
(more)
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User Comments:
13 out of 13 people found the following comment useful:-
So bad it's bad, 4 December 2005

Author:
kylopod ([email protected]) from Baltimore, MD
When this film showed up on the cable listing, I had a sudden urge to
see it even though I knew it was probably going to be terrible. The
original was such a staple of my childhood, yet had such an incomplete
ending, that I was intensely curious to see what they would do with
another sequel. Besides, I knew that it could not possibly be worse
than "The NeverEnding Story II."
Boy, was I wrong.
"The NeverEnding Story III" has rightly earned its place among IMDb
voters as the 79th worst movie of all time. It is so bad that, in
writing this review, I risk making it sound like it's worth watching,
sort of like "Plan Nine from Outer Space." I assure you, this film is
in no way in the Ed Wood category of being so incompetently done that
it becomes enjoyable to watch. Those moviegoers who take pleasure in
seeing cinematic disasters should be forewarned about this one, lest
they never again be able to erase from their memory Rockbiter's
gravelly-voiced version of "Born to be Wild," played in a video
sequence early in the film and again during the end credits.
No, I am not joking.
The second film does have its admirers, and as much as I hated it, I
sort of understand where they're coming from. At least that film had a
legitimate purpose, to tell the second half of the novel which the
first film had neglected to do. But now the story is finished, so the
third film has to make up its own reason for being, with an even
shabbier budget than that of the second film. So it concocts a story
that allows us to see as little of Fantasia as possible. Here, a series
of magical mishaps causes a bunch of creatures from Fantasia to be
transported into the real world. These include Falkor the luck dragon,
a baby rockbiter about the size of a fountain statue, and a talking
tree. (Falkor, who must have gotten a lobotomy sometime between the
second and third film, will chase after a "dragon" at a Chinese
festival.) What we do see of Fantasia makes the place seem a lot
smaller than I had ever imagined. Almost all of the scenes there take
place in the empress's chamber in the Ivory Tower, though there is also
one sequence where we get to see Rockbiter's home (just what I've
always wanted to do!) with Mama Rockbiter and of course the previously
mentioned Baby Rockbiter sitting in front of a large stone TV set.
Needless to say, the inhabitants of Fantasia seem to possess quite a
bit more knowledge of Earth than they did in the first film. When the
gnome describes Bastian as "not exactly Arnold Schwarzenegger in the
muscle department," we're reminded how much more enjoyable the film
would probably be if Schwarzenegger were actually in it.
The cause of these events is that a gang of school bullies steals the
book and discovers that it gives them the power to wreak havoc on the
inhabitants of Fantasia. Strangely, these modern kids never seem
surprised that magic exists. Think how long it took in the first film
for even imaginative, ten-year-old Bastian to become convinced of the
book's supernatural qualities. These bullies, much older and more
concrete, never go through such a skeptical period. And later, when the
Auryn falls into the hands of a teenage girl, she treats it with about
the same level of awe as if she got hold of her parents' credit card.
There are actually some familiar actors in this mess. Mr. Koreander is
played by the British character actor Freddie Jones, Bastian is played
by the kid from "Free Willy," and the main bully is played by a
relatively young Jack Black, who now probably would like to do with
this film what George Lucas wants to do with the "Star Wars Holiday
Special."
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