The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe
The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe (2005)

The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe

1/5
(36 votos)
6.9IMDb75Metascore

Detalles

Elenco

Errores

When Edmund is rescued he has a big cut on his lip.

When Queen Jadis and Aslan go into the tent for their meeting it is a smaller cut, and when they come out it is bigger again.

Near the end of the movie, Lucy gives Edmund the potion that is able to heal any wound.

His major injuries are healed, but the cuts on his lip and face remain.

When Santa gave Lucy the potion, he told her that putting the potion on any wound would heal it.

When she gave the potion to Edmund she gave it orally, so it would heal his internal wounds.

When Lucy first arrives in Narnia, and sees the lamp post.

She touches it with one hand, but when she hears Mr.

Tumnus coming, she's touching the post with the other hand.

In the opening scene when the Germans are bombing London, the shot of the sky shows that it is very cloudy.

However, when Peter and Edmund are running after retrieving the photo, the planes are clearly visible and are not masked by any clouds.

When Edmund meets the White Witch, Ginaarbrik forces Edmund onto the ground.

He has snow in his ear.

In the next shot it is gone, then it comes back again.

When he stands up, the snow is gone again.

In the final battle with the Witch, Jadis first stabs Peter through the middle of his sword arm and the grass is green.

When the shot is cut back to Peter and Jadis, the sword is only going through the chain mail on the upper part of his arm and the grass is brown.

The coaches of the train on which the Pevensie children travel have Great Western Railway colors and lettering.

The engine, No.

7802 Bradley Manor, is painted and lettered for British Railways, which did not form until 1948, after the war ended.

When Lucy is talking to Tumnus after entering Narnia for the first time, she touches the lamp post which is covered by snow.

Her fingerprints in the post change positions many times.

When Lucy opens the wardrobe for the first time, three moth balls fall out.

The camera backs off and you see all three of the moth balls stop in plain sight.

Lucy turns around and then steps into the wardrobe.

When the camera backs off again (showing Lucy closing the wardrobe door) the moth balls are gone.

Peter's label changes position during the back and forth while talking with Mrs.

Macready.

When entering Narnia, Susan has a hairpin in her hair on the right side of her head.

A few shots later the hairpin is gone.

When the kids meet Mr.

Beaver, Peter and Susan are holding hands on Peter's arm.

In the next shot, they let go but in the shot after that, they are holding hands on his arm again.

The position of Mr.

Tumnus's dropped packages on the ground.

When Lucy first enters Narnia and meets Mr.

Tumnus she hides behind the lamp.

When she comes out from behind it she has snow up the front of her dress to her waist, in the next shot she only has snow at the hem of her dress.

When Edmund first enters Narnia and falls on the ground, his hair is flared out when he is lying in the snow, but perfect in the next shot as he begins to stand up.

When Edmund is eating Turkish Delights after meeting the White Witch, the food changes hands (right-left-right) several times, and the powdered sugar on his clothing and mouth change position between shots.

When the children are running around in the house trying to find a hiding place while playing hide and seek, Lucy's dress changes from purple to brown.

When Peter is fighting the Witch and turns around to see Aslan, he has a cut on his right side of his face, above his eye.

The blood had run down past his eye.

When Lucy heals Edmund the blood trickle is smaller.

When Lucy pulls back the tree branches to enter Narnia for the first time, her hair is curled inward.

When she feels the snow and looks around, her hair is curled outward.

Then when she looks up, it is inward again.

When Susan, Lucy and Peter find Edmund lying on the ground (after the battle), Susan is sitting to the side to Edmund's head and proceeds to take off his helmet.

In the next shot, Edmund's head is resting on Susan's knee.

When the Pevensie children are playing cricket, the ball hits Edmund and bounces to his right.

A second later Susan picks it up from behind him and to his left.

Peter's sword can be seen bending multiple times throughout the movie as though it was made of aluminum or rubber.

After the fox has just been turned to stone, The White Witch slaps Edmund on the right side of his face, but later on in the film, he has a bruise on his left side and nothing on his right.

During the coronation scene after they have all been crowned they sit down on their thrones.

Afterwards there is a zoom in on all of their faces, but when they zoom in on Peter's face he is clearly still standing in front of his throne not sitting in it.

When entering the camp there are two long shots of the three, in the first shot Susan has knee socks on, in the second of the shots it looks as if she had no knee socks.

When Lucy, Peter, Susan and the Beavers are just coming out of the tunnel, just before Lucy falls, her coat is on, then when she falls and they have a close up of her, her coat is off.

When she is walking with Peter and Susan her coat is back on again.

In the beginning, when the German airplanes are bombing London and Edmund and Peter are in the garden in front of their house, you can see the shadows of the airplanes on the ground.

This is not possible because it is night and there is no light above the airplanes that could cause those shadows.

On the contrary, searchlights tried to discover those airplanes from below pointing into the sky.

If there was a light above the airplanes strong enough to create shadows, they would be moving much faster.

When Susan goes to practice her bow Lucy joins her.

Lucy then throws her knife at the target and hits the bullseye dead on.

When the camera pans back to Lucy with a big grin on her face you can see her knife tucked safely away in its sheath.

When Aslan jumps at the White Witch just before she can kill Peter, the Witch can be seen starting to fly backwards as if struck before Aslan's front paws actually touch her.

In the railway station, the train is stationary in several shots when it is supposed to be moving.

The doors are alternately open and closed in these same shots.

In some shots, the train's billowing smoke column disappears entirely.

At one point just before the children get on (and we see the captiondirected by 'Andrew Adamson' (qv)), the train simply vanishes for a short time during the shot overlooking the station.

During the coronation, Mr.

Tumnus places a crown on Lucy's head.

The front of the crown rests about 1 inch from her hairline.

(Where her hair meets her forehead.

) As the shots go back and forth between Lucy and Tumnus the crown gets closer to the hairline, resting just above her forehead and back again.

When Peter finds the note about the capture of Mr.

Tumnus, he pulls it down off the nail, ripping the top edge of the paper.

In a following shot the top edge of the paper can be seen fully intact, then ripped again.

When Susan and Lucy are riding on Aslan's back to the castle, he is traveling at a great speed, but they are sitting upright and their hair is hanging down as if they were sitting still.

When Edmund follows Lucy into the wardrobe, Lucy closes the door to the wardrobe, then as Edmund walks into the room the door is shown slightly open, then it is closed again when he goes to open it.

At the beginning of the movie and all throughout Lucy's hair is red.

Near the middle of the movie her hair starts getting progressively darker, especially after meeting Aslan at the camp.

When she is crowned her hair is completely dark.

When they show the older version of her she has red hair and when she falls out of the wardrobe she has red hair.

It stays red for the rest of the movie.

When Tumnus walks Lucy through the snow to his home, Tumnus should be leaving hoof prints, but leaves 'James McAvoy' (qv)'s boot prints instead.

At the beginning of the battle, Jadis appears from behind the hill with all her troops, stopping close to an upper natural "step" in front of her.

Later, she orders her bears to move, but we don't see her falling - the step is gone.

The Pevensies observe blackout rules poorly.

They have no blast tape on the windows, no blackout curtains, they open their curtains with the lights on, they leave lights on while they open the back door, etc.

Then they are still in the house while the planes are going over.

The war sirens went off when planes were spotted a couple of miles from the city itself, so the family should have had plenty of time to get out the house into the air raid shelter.

Even though moments of terror make it hard to observe rules, it was precisely this terror that made Londoners obey the rules so strictly.

When Lucy closes the spare room door, the sound is of a modern tube latch striking a faceplate.

But the door shown has an old-fashioned cupboard latch, which would sound different when closing.

Near the end, Professor Kirke says that one can get into Narnia is only when not looking for it.

This was already disproved by Lucy's second entry into the wardrobe, when she went there with Narnia in mind.

Every other time the lore holds true.

Aslan does not leave footprints when he walks on the beach.

When Lucy's mother is pinning the ID to her coat,you hear her say "You warm enough?" Her lips move with it, but after Lucy nods, she says "Good girl," but you don't her her mouth move.

Toward the film's end, when Peter, Susan, Edmund and Lucy walk alongside Aslan toward the end of the film in order to be crowned, there is a brief side shot where someone other than 'William Moseley (I)' (qv) is playing Peter.

When Susan, Peter, and Lucy are traveling down the river, Lucy begins to fall off the ice.

Peter helps her get back on and 'Georgie Henley' (qv)'s double is seen acting as Lucy.

When Peter starts counting for hide-and-seek, you can hear Edmund say "What?!".

But, his lips aren't moving- he's staring at Peter and Lucy in shock.

Many of the Narnian animals "speak" like different animals.

The badgers make guinea pig sounds.

Cheetahs, leopards, tigers and a lioness snarl like cougars.

When Aslan is resurrected, Lucy takes out her dagger.

Aslan tells her to put it away.

In the next shot her dagger is sheathed even though she never sheathed it.

When Lucy reaches the upstairs hall of the house and is looking for a hiding place, she tries the first door, which is locked.

The second door is unlocked and she enters the room.

The problem is that the room has windows on both walls.

This would be impossible if the first door really led to a room.

After Peter and Susan climb off the iceberg and discover Lucy is missing, Peter does not take his sword out of the iceberg.

When Lucy rejoins them, you can see the iceberg with Peter's sword in it floating next to the bank they are on.

When they move on, Peter still does not take his sword from the iceberg.

However, in the next scene, he is seen sheathing it.

When the children are in the tunnel underneath the Beavers' house, Peter is carrying a torch and Susan is carrying a lantern.

However, when they emerge from the tunnel, neither the lantern nor the torch is in sight.

When Lucy and Susan are playing in the water, they are barefoot.

They get out and the wolf surprises them, they run up a tree, they are wearing sandals.

After Peter kills the wolf, but he is still laying under it, the girls jump out of the tree barefooted again.

Lucy got back her handkerchief from Mr.

Beaver in the beginning, but Mr.

Tumnus returns it to her again in the end, when they see Aslan walking away on the shore.

Box Office

FechaÁreaBruto
7 May 2006 USA USD 291,709,845
30 April 2006 USA USD 291,706,092
23 April 2006 USA USD 291,685,219
16 April 2006 USA USD 291,615,165
9 April 2006 USA USD 291,478,741
2 April 2006 USA USD 291,171,963
26 March 2006 USA USD 290,611,900
19 March 2006 USA USD 289,847,008
12 March 2006 USA USD 289,178,946
5 March 2006 USA USD 288,795,853
26 February 2006 USA USD 288,193,914
19 February 2006 USA USD 287,153,504
12 February 2006 USA USD 284,742,799
5 February 2006 USA USD 281,934,379
29 January 2006 USA USD 277,867,308
22 January 2006 USA USD 271,852,138
15 January 2006 USA USD 264,020,859
8 January 2006 USA USD 247,777,824
1 January 2006 USA USD 225,703,346
25 December 2005 USA USD 165,135,135
18 December 2005 USA USD 113,169,644
11 December 2005 USA USD 65,556,312
19 February 2006 UK GBP 43,641,024
12 February 2006 UK GBP 43,239,634
5 February 2006 UK GBP 43,008,986
29 January 2006 UK GBP 42,569,767
22 January 2006 UK GBP 41,684,522
15 January 2006 UK GBP 40,341,293
8 January 2006 UK GBP 38,280,667
1 January 2006 UK GBP 32,958,815
25 December 2005 UK GBP 24,677,956
18 December 2005 UK GBP 17,204,598
11 December 2005 UK GBP 8,884,111
25 November 2011 Worldwide USD 745,013,115
5 February 2006 Netherlands EUR 4,953,840
25 December 2005 Netherlands EUR 635,979
5 January 2006 Norway NOK 25,355,070
25 December 2005 Russia RUR 87,007,642
12 March 2006 Sweden SEK 85,533,278
5 March 2006 Sweden SEK 85,389,752
26 February 2006 Sweden SEK 84,794,739
19 February 2006 Sweden SEK 83,666,747
12 February 2006 Sweden SEK 82,480,780
5 February 2006 Sweden SEK 80,349,903
29 January 2006 Sweden SEK 77,962,243
22 January 2006 Sweden SEK 75,888,537
FechaÁreaBrutoPantalla
11 December 2005 USA USD 65,556,312
11 December 2005 UK GBP 8,884,111 498
3 March 2006 Argentina USD 35,824 61
6 January 2006 Australia USD 2,920,017 422
9 December 2005 Austria USD 595,178
23 December 2005 Belgium USD 672,690
9 December 2005 Brazil USD 2,733,147 480
9 December 2005 Europe USD 22,211,421 2192
23 December 2005 Finland USD 268,025
23 December 2005 France USD 8,051,406
9 December 2005 Germany USD 5,058,014
20 January 2006 Hong Kong USD 249,266 43
30 December 2005 Iceland USD 53,457
23 December 2005 Italy USD 2,186,378
25 December 2005 Netherlands EUR 538,783 176
30 December 2005 Norway NOK 5,253,066
8 January 2006 Philippines PHP 18,066,000 102
25 December 2005 Russia RUR 78,306,886
6 January 2006 South Africa USD 388,527 103
9 December 2005 Spain USD 3,954,610
23 December 2005 Sweden USD 1,281,169
9 December 2005 Switzerland USD 665,630
13 January 2006 Turkey USD 563,179
FechaÁreaBrutoPantalla
7 May 2006 USA USD 1,791 11
30 April 2006 USA USD 3,724 28
23 April 2006 USA USD 33,655 96
16 April 2006 USA USD 74,464 186
9 April 2006 USA USD 184,534 288
2 April 2006 USA USD 350,327
26 March 2006 USA USD 501,655 418
19 March 2006 USA USD 542,977 432
12 March 2006 USA USD 241,620 224
5 March 2006 USA USD 390,806 366
26 February 2006 USA USD 711,645 589
19 February 2006 USA USD 1,734,892 955
12 February 2006 USA USD 2,073,356 1,302
5 February 2006 USA USD 3,072,090 1,716
29 January 2006 USA USD 4,504,990 2,170
22 January 2006 USA USD 6,236,570 2,757
15 January 2006 USA USD 12,809,767 3,224
8 January 2006 USA USD 15,643,135
1 January 2006 USA USD 33,712,024
25 December 2005 USA USD 31,692,295 3,853
18 December 2005 USA USD 31,837,683
11 December 2005 USA USD 65,556,312
19 February 2006 UK GBP 146,948 277
12 February 2006 UK GBP 165,455 342
5 February 2006 UK GBP 312,646 365
29 January 2006 UK GBP 649,708 422
22 January 2006 UK GBP 941,370 459
15 January 2006 UK GBP 1,370,174 467
8 January 2006 UK GBP 2,132,346 489
1 January 2006 UK GBP 2,994,438 527
25 December 2005 UK GBP 2,843,353 525
18 December 2005 UK GBP 4,798,576 512
11 December 2005 UK GBP 8,884,111 498
5 February 2006 Netherlands EUR 128,629 175
25 December 2005 Netherlands EUR 538,783 176
25 December 2005 Russia RUR 78,306,886
12 March 2006 Sweden SEK 174,703 48
5 March 2006 Sweden SEK 306,528 48
26 February 2006 Sweden SEK 330,324 45
19 February 2006 Sweden SEK 543,140 88
12 February 2006 Sweden SEK 1,852,676 73
5 February 2006 Sweden SEK 1,078,809 91
29 January 2006 Sweden SEK 1,852,676 129
22 January 2006 Sweden SEK 2,833,620 158

Comentarios

First time I saw it in the theater I was blown away. I fell in love with the Narnia world and the characters and the creatures.

Among some of the best movies I have ever seen. The Visuals are phenomenal for 2005.

I only decided to watch 'The Lion,The Witch and the Wardrobe' as it was showing on BBC1 This Evening (Boxing Day) and the family were all sat down to watch it...I was convinced from the very start that I would not find a great deal to like in The Film, but had nothing better to do so gave it a whirl....

I don't think I've ever used the phrase, "a movie everyone can enjoy" to describe a movie, but I'll do it here. OK, done.

It is true that my relationship with the Narnia universe is rather haphazard since I have read half the book on which this movie is based, i have watched Prince Caspian and afterwards I saw this movie which was judged correctly as a suitable one for Christmas.This movie along with Lord of the Rings and Harry Potter have done the most to popularize elements of the mythology of Northern European peoples as well as public school British culture than anything else.

Based on the classic novel by CS Lewis, four London children are sent to a professor's country home in order for protection during World War II. There they find a magic wardrobe which leads to a mystical land called Narnia, which is being ruled by an evil witch.

A wonderful movie. The characters are beautifully made from a well chosen characters.

Obvious attempt by Disney to cash in on the sudden popularity of the fantasy genre in the wake of the fantastic Lord of the Rings movie trilogy. The trick seemed simple: take a book from a well known fantasy series and adapt it into a sweeping epic of a film, and build an easily exploitable franchise around it.

The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe (2005): Dir: Andrew Adamson / Cast: Tilda Swinton, James McAvoy, Skandar Keynes, Georgie Henley / Voices: Liam Neeson: Fascinating Christian allegory based on the C.S.

Comentarios