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

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

The beloved masterpiece comes to life.
2005 | 143m | English

(446865 votes)

TMDb IMDb

Popularity: 23 (history)

Details

Siblings Lucy, Edmund, Susan and Peter step through a magical wardrobe and find the land of Narnia. There, they discover a charming, once peaceful kingdom that has been plunged into eternal winter by the evil White Witch, Jadis. Aided by the wise and magnificent lion, Aslan, the children lead Narnia into a spectacular, climactic battle to be free of the Witch's glacial powers forever.
Release Date: Dec 07, 2005
Director: Andrew Adamson
Writer: Andrew Adamson, Ann Peacock, Christopher Markus, Stephen McFeely, C.S. Lewis
Genres: Family, Fantasy, Adventure
Keywords saving the world, sibling relationship, witch, based on novel or book, self sacrifice, winter, cupboard, beaver, lion, fairy tale, epic, surrealism, battle, based on children's book, fantasy world, duringcreditsstinger, 1940s, high fantasy, isekai, based on young adult novel, faun, good versus evil, admiring, embarrassed
Production Companies Walt Disney Pictures, Walden Media, C.S. Lewis Company
Box Office Revenue: $745,013,115
Budget: $180,000,000
Updates Updated: Jun 20, 2025 (Update)
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

Full Credits

Name Character
William Moseley Peter Pevensie
Anna Popplewell Susan Pevensie
Skandar Keynes Edmund Pevensie
Georgie Henley Lucy Pevensie
Liam Neeson Aslan (voice)
Tilda Swinton White Witch
James McAvoy Mr. Tumnus
Jim Broadbent Prof. Digory Kirke
Ray Winstone Mr. Beaver (voice)
Dawn French Mrs. Beaver (voice)
James Cosmo Father Christmas
Judy McIntosh Helen Pevensie
Kiran Shah Ginarrbrik
Elizabeth Hawthorne Mrs. MacReady
Michael Madsen Maugrim (voice)
Patrick Kake General Oreius
Shane Rangi General Otmin
Brandon Cook Boy on Train
Cassie Cook Girl on Train
Morris Lupton Train Conductor
Rupert Everett Mr. Fox (voice)
Philip Steuer Philip (voice)
Shelly Edwards Distraught Mother
Susan Haldane Distraught Mother
Margaret Bremner Distraught Mother
Jaxin Hall Soldier
Terry Murdoch German Pilot
Katrina Browne Green Dryad
Lee Tuson Rumblebuffin the Giant
Sonya Hitchcock Hag
Elizabeth Kirk Hag
Felicity Hamill Hag
Kate O'Rourke Hag
Lucy Tanner Hag
Tiggy Mathias Hag
Gregory Cooper Faun
Richard King Faun
Russell Pickering Faun
Ben Barrington Centaur
Charles Williams Centaur
Vanessa Cater Centaur
Allison Sarofim Centaur
Alina Phelan Centaur Archer
Stephen Ure Satyr
Sam La Hood Satyr
Bhoja 'BK' Kannada Red & Black Dwarf
M. Ramaswami Red & Black Dwarf
Zakiuddin Mohd. Farooque Red & Black Dwarf
Praphaphorn 'Fon' Chansantor Red & Black Dwarf
Ajay Ratilal Navi Red & Black Dwarf
Doungdieo Savangvong Red & Black Dwarf
Nikhom Nusungnern Red & Black Dwarf
Cameron Rhodes Gryphon (voice)
Jim May Vardan (voice)
Sim Evan-Jones Wolf (voice)
Douglas Gresham Radio Announcer (voice)
Noah Huntley Peter (Older)
Sophie Winkleman Susan (Older)
Mark Wells Edmund (Older)
Rachael Henley Lucy (Older)
Name Job
Jim May Editor
Roger Ford Production Design
Kerrie Brown Set Decoration
Paul Tobin Art Department Manager
Larry White Animation
Sean Button Stunts
Yuhon Ng Animation
Julie D'Antoni Digital Producer
Ian Blum Animation
Pippa Hall Casting
Ian Gracie Supervising Art Director
Jeffrey Thorp Art Direction
Penny Kerr Art Department Assistant
Pavla Prunerova Art Department Coordinator
Elaine Kusmishko Assistant Art Director
Martin Hampl Construction Foreman
Tom Butt Greensman
Leigh-Alexandra Jacob Lead Painter
Alex Doyle Painter
Marc Fishman Conceptual Illustrator
Anneke Bester Sculptor
Stewart Burchall Standby Painter
Lee Allison First Assistant Camera
Don McCall Key Grip
Steve Ball Grip
Phil Bray Still Photographer
Nikki Gooley Makeup Designer, Hair Designer
Tracy Reeby Hairstylist
Vivienne MacGillicuddy Key Hair Stylist
Tomáš Kuchta Makeup Artist
David Matusek Cableman
Stuart Allen Carpenter
Bob Mercier Digital Effects Supervisor
Val Crawford Makeup Effects
Jonas Thaler Post Production Supervisor, Post-Production Manager
Gerard Beckingsale Propmaker
Pip Steel Property Master
Raymond Chen Sequence Supervisor
Berj Bannayan Software Engineer
Jeannette Cremarosa Sound Recordist
Kat Stephens Special Effects Coordinator
Ryszard Janikowski Stunt Coordinator
Vikas Chirate Systems Administrators & Support
Dee McClelland Telecine Colorist
Tim Coddington Unit Production Manager
Michael Gaylin Visual Effects Editor
K.C. Hodenfield First Assistant Director
Anthony Harris Color Timer
David V. Butler Dialogue Editor
Tony Slack Electrician
James M. McEwen Gaffer
Karen Murphy Art Direction
Colin Cunningham Lighting Artist
Salar Saleh Lighting Supervisor
Douglas Jones Executive In Charge Of Production
Ben Wood Production Coordinator
Andrea Chadimová Production Manager
Richard E. Chapla Jr. Production Supervisor
Kimberly Harris ADR Supervisor
Fiona Ewen Boom Operator
Ethan Holzman Assistant Sound Editor
Richard Beggs Supervising Sound Editor, Sound Designer
Heather Gross Sound Effects Editor
Malcolm Cromie Sound Mixer
Carlos Aldana 3D Animator
Richard Baneham Animation Supervisor
Pablo Arteaga Digital Compositors
Dennis Webb I/O Supervisor
Jason Durey Special Effects Supervisor
Douglas Bloom Visual Effects
Monty Phillips Visual Effects Coordinator
John Clinton Visual Effects Producer
Carlos Arguello Visual Effects Supervisor
Aaron Easterbrooks Motion Capture Artist
Tony Johnson Production Sound Mixer
Václav Frank Assistant Makeup Artist
Cristina Patterson Contact Lens Painter
Ryan Pollreisz Assistant Production Manager
Emma Hinton Second Second Assistant Director, Second Assistant Director
Katie Flannigan Third Assistant Director
Justine Muxlow Assistant Property Master
Clayton Ercolano Construction Buyer
Russell Hoffman Head Greensman
Tane Griffin Set Painter
James Beihold Storyboard Artist
Laura Graham ADR Editor
Dave Hibbert ADR Mixer
Brendon Morrow ADR Recordist
Jeff Okabayashi Second Assistant Director
Keith Rogers Additional Sound Re-Recordist
John T. Cucci Foley Artist
James Ashwill Foley Mixer
Natalie Doherty Sound Assistant
David Bach Supervising Dialogue Editor
Hauk Olafsson Special Effects Assistant
Ryan Hartnett Special Effects Technician
Brian Ducharme VFX Artist
Jim Milton Visual Effects Assistant Editor
Scott Behrnes Visual Effects Production Assistant
Chris Anderson Visual Effects Production Manager
Andrew A. Paules Visual Effects Technical Director
Felix Pomeranz Data Wrangler
Giselle Brewton Second Assistant Camera
David Washburn Layout Supervisor
Delio Tramontozzi Lead Animator
Kenton Hulme Assistant Editor
Everette Webber Digital Intermediate Editor
Andrew Smith Project Manager
Greg Maloney Compositing Supervisor
Andrea Maiolo Creature Technical Director
Andy Sheng Effects Supervisor
Wilmer Lin Matchmove Supervisor
Rodrigo Estrada Alday Matte Painter
Jeffery Beeland Pipeline Technical Director
Rpin Suwannath Pre-Visualization Supervisor
E.M. Bowen Production Assistant
Rahul Galwankar Rotoscoping Artist
Terry Porter Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Jim Berney Visual Effects Supervisor
Brigham Taylor Production Executive
Amy Wright Set Painter
Janusz B. Czech Production Manager
Beth DePatie Unit Production Manager
Marianna Rowinska Production Supervisor
Philip Steuer Unit Production Manager
Maciej Wojak Production Manager
Simon Ambridge First Assistant Director
Maria Czech Assistant Director
Vojta Hlavicka Assistant Director
Katie Hutchinson Third Assistant Director
Gene Keelan Third Assistant Director
Jiří Ostrý First Assistant Director
Frantisek Rezek Second Assistant Director
Tony Simpson Second Second Assistant Director
Mary Soan First Assistant Director
Anton Steel Second Assistant Director
Rpin Suwannath Second Unit Director
Terri Kilmartin First Assistant Director
Jo Warren Second Assistant Director
Amand Weaver Third Assistant Director
Dean Wright Second Unit Director
Craig Seitz 2D Supervisor
Daniel Perez Ferreira Visual Effects Technical Director
Sarah Rose Third Assistant Director
John Rayner Special Effects
Andrew Adamson Director, Screenplay
Donald McAlpine Director of Photography
Isis Mussenden Costume Design
Ann Peacock Screenplay
Christopher Markus Screenplay
Stephen McFeely Screenplay
Harry Gregson-Williams Original Music Composer
Sim Evan-Jones Editor
Liz Mullane Casting
Jules Cook Art Direction
Howard Berger Prosthetic Makeup Artist
Neville Page Creature Design
Henrik Tamm Visual Effects Art Director
Daniel Birt Set Dresser
C.S. Lewis Novel
Dayna Grant Stunt Double
Pablo Holcer Compositing Lead
Phil Neilson Second Unit Director
Tami Lane Prosthetic Makeup Artist
Dean A. Zupancic Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Dean Wright Creature Design
Bill Westenhofer Visual Effects Supervisor
Scott Farrar Visual Effects Supervisor
Mark Taylor Second Assistant Director
Vincent Sieber Production Assistant
Daniel Falconer Sculptor
Boyd Steer Negative Cutter
Chris Castaldi Additional Second Assistant Director
Sala Baker Stunts
Tomasz Karnowski Steadicam Operator
Aaron Cowan Visual Effects Production Manager
Gail Stevens Casting
Stuart Thorp Stunts
Name Title
Philip Steuer Producer
Perry Moore Executive Producer
K.C. Hodenfield Associate Producer
David Minkowski Producer
Mark Johnson Producer
Andrew Adamson Executive Producer
Douglas Gresham Co-Producer
Matthew Stillman Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 141 165 119
2024 5 142 165 113
2024 6 143 229 112
2024 7 162 212 108
2024 8 171 262 133
2024 9 155 218 118
2024 10 172 295 124
2024 11 163 234 130
2024 12 197 243 149
2025 1 259 468 177
2025 2 253 363 50
2025 3 78 242 4
2025 4 40 48 33
2025 5 30 40 26
2025 6 29 33 25
2025 7 25 28 23
2025 8 23 23 23

Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2025 8 719 817
Year Month High Avg
2025 7 167 588
Year Month High Avg
2025 6 99 584
Year Month High Avg
2025 5 143 584
Year Month High Avg
2025 4 130 549
Year Month High Avg
2025 3 83 490
Year Month High Avg
2025 2 120 497
Year Month High Avg
2025 1 122 489
Year Month High Avg
2024 12 172 525
Year Month High Avg
2024 11 76 562
Year Month High Avg
2024 10 473 739
Year Month High Avg
2024 9 443 676
Year Month High Avg
2024 8 397 732

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Reviews

r96sk
9.0

Long bloody title, but a great film no doubt. I had seen <em>'The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe'</em> before but hadn't watched it for years and years, I remembered the vast majority though - it's a memorable film after all. There's a great battle scene in there, some ... fun characters and strong effects. It's a tad too long, but not by much. It has a nice charm to it also, as they set up Narnia excellently. The quartet of children are very well cast, all four of them suit their roles to a T. Georgie Henley is sweet as Lucy, while William Moseley and Anna Popplewell fulfil the roles of Peter and Susan comfortably. Edmund, meanwhile, is of course annoying, but Skandar Keynes does a good job portraying him. Elsewhere, Tilda Swinton and Liam Neeson are terrific casts as the White Witch and Aslan. Both do great, especially Swinton. James McAvoy, Ray Winstone, Michael Madsen and Rupert Everett are smart choices too. I've, as far as I'm aware, never seen the two sequels so very much look forward to seeing what they have in store for me. They'll do well to match this first film, that's for sure.

Jun 23, 2021
MustachedMovieMan
10.0

In my last review (which you can find on my Letterboxd), I said _The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe_ was a "nearly perfect film." Well, I am here to say that with this viewing, to me, it is a perfect film. I used to always think this film was a sort of step below LOTR, and, while LOTR is inde ... ed a masterpiece of cinema, I don't regard this film as lesser. The movie is just pure magic! Every aspect of the movie (minus the CGI – which doesn't really hold up [except for Aslan] but is still serviceable) is even better with age! And I find myself moved emotionally by more things this time than I ever have watching this film. The score by Harry Gregson-Williams is just phenomenal. Especially "The Battle" – that goes without saying. But this time, part of the magic and nostalgia I was struck by was the musical piece that sounds like it's a song. The one that plays while the train is leaving London. (I found out it's actually about halfway into the track "Evacuating London.") That magical song, combined with the great camera work by Donald M. McAlpine and the appearance of the movie title makes for feelings of peak nostalgia and magic for me. Also, this film has one of the best opening scenes of all time. When Netflix (finally) remakes the films, I don't know how they can top this opening. – In fact, that's another thing about this movie: There are so many things that I don't think any remake could top. Liam Neeson as Aslan, Tilda Swinton as Jadis, the White Witch, and James McAvoy as Tumnus. – Oh, and, though he's not in the book, the centaur, Oreius (played by Patrick Kake), is so cool! Can't top that. Also, the costuming is excellent – especially for the White Witch – and the gryphons are so cool! The sound design on their shriek gives me chills (in a good way). And I can't go without saying that this is also an emotional story because of what the story represents, the symbolism of the story. Edmund represents us – represents me, a sinner. I who have walked in rebellion against God, and who am by nature opposed to God. And as such, I deserve the wrath of God, punishment that He would be fully just to give me. But Aslan represents Jesus Christ. Like Aslan sacrificed himself for Edmund, dying the death he should have died, Jesus sacrificed Himself in our stead, taking upon Himself the wrath of God we deserved, so that “if [we] confess with [our] mouth that Jesus is Lord and believe in [our] heart that God raised Him from the dead, [we] will be saved” (Romans 10:9), we “will not perish but have eternal life” (from John 3:16), and as a result of that faith, “we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ” (from Romans 5:1). ‭‭Ephesians‬ ‭2:1‭-‬10‬ > “[1] And you were dead in the trespasses and sins [2] in which you once walked, following the course of this world, following the prince of the power of the air, the spirit that is now at work in the sons of disobedience— [3] among whom we all once lived in the passions of our flesh, carrying out the desires of the body and the mind, and were by nature children of wrath, like the rest of mankind. [4] But God, being rich in mercy, because of the great love with which He loved us, [5] even when we were dead in our trespasses, made us alive together with Christ—by grace you have been saved— [6] and raised us up with Him and seated us with Him in the heavenly places in Christ Jesus, [7] so that in the coming ages He might show the immeasurable riches of His grace in kindness toward us in Christ Jesus. [8] For by grace you have been saved through faith. And this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God, [9] not a result of works, so that no one may boast. [10] For we are His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand, that we should walk in them.”

Nov 01, 2023
Geronimo1967
7.0

CS Lewis certainly had one heck of an imagination and it is rarely better exemplified than in this lovely fantasy adventure. Four wartime siblings are evacuated from London to stay with the reclusive "Professor Kirke" (Jim Broadbent) in the relative safety of the English countryside. Once they get t ... here, the housekeeper "Mrs. Macready" (Elizabeth Hawthorne) makes it quite clear that they are to be seen and not heard! Boredom sets in and thus a game of hide and seek seems sensible. "Lucy" takes refuge in an old wardrobe - a wardrobe that has a secret! Much to her astonishment, she finds herself in a snowy land with a single streetlamp and there meets "Mr. Tumnus" (James McAvoy) - a scarf-clad faun. She returns to her brothers and sister and after some convincing, they join her in the wardrobe and all discover the delights and dangers of "Narnia" meeting loads of new friends and a couple of not so nice wolves, too! This is the first of the adventures of the "Pevensie" children in this mysterious land where animals can talk and winter is perpetual under the control of the villainous "White Witch" (Tilda Swinton). They align with "Aslan" the all powerful lion (voiced by Liam Neeson) and have a battle royal to free the kingdom from her icy grip. The CGI isn't, to be honest, great. Indeed, some of the effects are a bit cheap and cheerful for 2005; but the story, settings and characterisations are great - as is Harry Gregson-Williams' eerie and gentle score.

Jul 20, 2024
RalphRahal
7.0

Rewatching The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardrobe reminded me why it’s such a timeless movie. It still gets me every time, especially the lullaby scene with Mr. Tumnus, played beautifully by James McAvoy, who is one of my favorite actors. Liam Neeson’s voice as Aslan is insp ... iring and adds so much gravitas to the character. But for me, the standout is Tilda Swinton as the White Witch. Her performance is chilling and commanding, making her one of the most memorable parts of the movie. The production is top-notch. The visuals are stunning, especially considering it was released in 2005, and they mostly hold up well even now. The costumes and set design are fantastic, capturing the magical and otherworldly feel of Narnia. The soundtrack is another highlight, adding emotional depth to key moments and making the experience even more immersive. Based on the beloved novel by C.S. Lewis, the film does a good job of sticking to the important plot points while making the story accessible to a new generation. Of course, no adaptation is perfect, but this one stands on its own as a great piece of fantasy storytelling. It’s not just a movie; it’s a journey into a world full of magic, courage, and redemption. This movie also feels like the perfect pick for the holiday season. It has that warmth and wonder that makes it ideal to watch with family at Christmas. The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardrobe remains a classic, and I can’t recommend it enough for anyone who wants to experience a bit of magic

Dec 17, 2024