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The NeverEnding Story | Canadian First Time Watching | Movie Reaction | Movie Review | Commentary

Simone & George are reacting to The Never Ending Story for the first time! Canadians React! For unedited full length version go to https://www.patreon.com/Cinebinge Merch Store: https://www.cinebinge.ca Subscribe | Like | Share | Comment Early Access & Full Reaction available on Patreon! #moviereaction #moviereview #neverendingstory Instagram: @cinebingechannel Instagram: @simone.swan Movie Reactions: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLN1ts9cZbHakYDfILlxWOp8Rwm60i6s31 The Witcher Reactions: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLN1ts9cZbHakPpBOOSyThaEu9GBs7h5af Squid Games Reaction: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLN1ts9cZbHakSIA0kJIJkUmcxmms0m_Q0 Band of Brothers: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLN1ts9cZbHanBD7cksu-blgCyxZOJrgT0 Blind Playthrough: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLN1ts9cZbHan3qPNF7wNbOvo653VjhxOR

Comments

Happy Hanukkah

I really meant to watch this, but then I was convinced otherwise. :-P From Wikipedia: Ebert's co-host Gene Siskel said that the special effects and art direction were cheap-looking and that Falkor the luckdragon resembled the stuffed toy. He also referred to Noah Hathaway as a "dullard" and said that the film was "much too long", even after Ebert pointed out that the film was only 90 minutes. ... Vincent Canby panned the film as a "graceless, humorless fantasy for children" in a 1984 review in The New York Times. Canby's criticism charged that parts of the film sounded like 'The Pre-Teenager's Guide to Existentialism'. He further criticized the "tacky" special effects and that the construction of the dragon looked like an impractical bathmat.

Jinyatta

This movie and the Dark Crystal are among the most memorable films of my childhood

Bbb K

This movie is one of the many examples of how an utterly amazing book can be turned into frivolous trash when adapted to film. Beyond the psychological process of coming to terms with grief, the book itself takes the reader on a deeply spiritual journey. Many who have read Michael Ende's works know that he is not actually writing for young people, delving into some of the deepest explorations of the multi-varied meanings of existence, the nature of consciousness, and the relationship between language and the ways we construct the realities within which we live out a meaningful life.