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Commencez une toute nouvelle aventure alors qu'un jeune garçon retourne dans un monde merveilleux sur les ailes de son imagination.
Bastien doit à nouveau surmonter des difficultés à l'école et dans ses rapports avec son père. Une fois de plus il cherche refuge et consolation dans l'Histoire sans fin, un livre précieusement conservé par l'antiquaire Coreander. Bastien est transporté au pays fantastique où il retrouve ses vieux amis et la petite impératrice. Mais il y a aussi les méchants, la cruelle sorcière et ses séïdes qui veulent détruire le monde de l'imagination.
Avis de la communauté (7)
A horrendous abomination, The Neverending Story II: The Next Chapter soils the memory of the original. When Fantasia is faced with a new threat called the Emptiness the Childlike Empress calls on Bastian for help once again. Bereft of wonder and imagination, there’s no heart to this tale. The acting is terrible, as is the voice work, and the sets look incredibly cheap. And though the characters are familiar, Atreyu, the Rockbiter, Falkor, and the Childlike Empress, they’re pale shadows of their former selves with no charisma. The Neverending Story II: The Next Chapter tries to recapture the magic of the first film, but it ends up being a poor imitation with no substance.
One of the worst movies I have ever seen.
Unfortunately, the second part of the Neverending story is not up to par with the first part. Still an OK movie, but mostly for fans.
A forgettable follow-up. Given that 'The NeverEnding Story II: The Next Chapter' released six years after the original, has no cast carryovers aside from Thomas Hill and is missing prior director Wolfgang Petersen, it isn't exactly a surprise to see it fall far adrift of the great 1984 movie. The effects for the likes of Falkor aren't that different to before, though with voice actor Alan Oppenheimer missing the character doesn't stand out at all really - I did mention in my review of the first film that I felt Oppenheimer was a major reason for its success, his absence here only proves that. Donald Arthur doesn't quite do as well. For those onscreen, Jonathan Brandis' performance is actually solid enough - but what lets things down is his dialogue, a lot of which feels unnatural. Kenny Morrison, as Atreyu, is probably the only performer that puts in a showing that is on similar level to their counterpart from the preceding feature. With all that the case, I can't quite class this as good. I will say that I wasn't begging for the credits to come at any point, I just wasn't all that invested either. A standard 6/10 flick, for me.
Very poor sequel to the original film. A disappointment.