Chronicles Of Narnia Movies May 2026
So here’s to the Pevensies. To Reepicheep the valiant mouse. To the lamppost that never goes out. And to the quiet hope that someday, someone will open the wardrobe again—not for a reboot, but for a new beginning.
And yet… Dawn Treader has a quiet, melancholic beauty. It’s the first film without the older Pevensies (Peter and Susan are “too old” now—a heartbreaking Lewis rule the movie honors). Instead, we follow Edmund, Lucy, and their insufferable cousin Eustace, who gets turned into a dragon and learns humility. The scene where Aslan peels away Eustace’s dragon skin—painful, redemptive, literal—is the most Lewisian moment in all three films. chronicles of narnia movies
Still, Prince Caspian gave us the single best shot in the entire series: the four Pevensies, armor-clad, riding into dawn as the trees awaken. Pure Narnian majesty. By 2010, Disney had abandoned ship. Fox picked it up on a shoestring budget ($155 million, still sizable but slim compared to the first two). And you can feel the corners being cut. The CGI is patchy. The screenplay rushes through C.S. Lewis’s episodic voyage—Dufflepuds, Dark Island, the sea serpent—like a highlights reel. So here’s to the Pevensies
Timing. The Dark Knight had just rewired blockbuster expectations. More critically, Disney fumbled the release, moving it from Christmas to summer, where it competed with Iron Man and Indiana Jones . But the real issue? Faith. The film downplayed Aslan’s role (he shows up late, solves little) and leaned into battle-hardened medievalism. It was a 300 for families—and families weren’t sure they wanted that. And to the quiet hope that someday, someone