
Lucy and Edmund Pevensie are stranded in Cambridge, living in the house of their obnoxious cousin Eustace, while the grown-ups Susan and Peter are living in the USA with their parents. When a painting of a ship sailing on the sea of Narnia overflows water in their room, Lucy, Edmund and Eustace are transported to the ocean of Narnia and rescued by King Caspian and the crew of the ship The Dawn Treader. Caspian explains that Narnia has been in peace for three years but before ... (Full plot summary below)
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Lucy and Edmund Pevensie are stranded in Cambridge, living in the house of their obnoxious cousin Eustace, while the grown-ups Susan and Peter are living in the USA with their parents. When a painting of a ship sailing on the sea of Narnia overflows water in their room, Lucy, Edmund and Eustace are transported to the ocean of Narnia and rescued by King Caspian and the crew of the ship The Dawn Treader. Caspian explains that Narnia has been in peace for three years but before he took his throne back, his uncle tried to kill the seven lords of Telmar, who were the closest and most loyal friends of his father. They fled to The Lone Island and no one has ever heard anything about them. Now Caspian is seeking out the lords of Telmar with his Captain Drinian, the talking mouse Reepicheep and his loyal men. Soon, they discover that an evil form of green mist is threatening Narnia and the siblings and their cousin join Caspian in a quest to retrieve the seven swords of the seven lords of Telmar to save Narnia from evil.
Leave your thoughts about The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader.
| Daily Mail (UK)Christopher TookeyThe really good news is that if you're looking for a thoroughly enjoyable family outing this Christmas, you need look no further. This is a delight. |
| Metro Times (Detroit, MI)Jeff Meyers...it's instructive to consider the care and craft that has gone into each successive Potter film while Narnia offers up only ever-diminishing returns |
| Detroit NewsTom LongThe Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader is still very much a "Narnia" movie. In other words, it's filled with fantastical creatures, bloodless battles, quasi-mystical undercurrents and an unfortunate helping of hooey. |
| IGN MoviesJim VejvodaDawn Treader is far more reminiscent of the vibrant and optimistic The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe than of its dark and violent sequel, Prince Caspian. |
| Star-Democrat (Easton, MD)Greg MakiLacking a strong central narrative force, there is little sense of what is at stake. |
| Cinemaphile.orgDavid Keyes...rushes from the screen with ambition and color, excitement and thrill, and a relentless sense of optimism that catapults the story and its visuals to striking heights. |
| ABC Radio BrisbaneMatthew ToomeyThere's nothing really special about this latest instalment in the Narnia franchise but it finishes strongly and is worth a look. |
| Seattle TimesTom KeoghExcept for a few familiar faces, the uninspired, desperate-looking The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader doesn't bear much resemblance to its predecessors. |
| Entertainment WeeklyLisa SchwarzbaumI'm confounded by the fact that, aside from the Pevensie siblings and their nicely obnoxious cousin, absolutely everything and everyone aboard the Dawn Treader looks one-dimensional. |
| Vue Weekly (Edmonton, Canada)Brian GibsonQuaintly enjoyable enough in its own way. Until it's slowly sunk by a certain divine Lion, bringing along all his earnestness and preciousness. It's a ride, all dressed up as a child-hero fantasy quest, that's meant to lead us to one red-light moral. |