A teenage girl obsessed with imagination and fantasy angrily wishes for her baby brother to be spirited away by goblins – only to discover goblins have done exactly as she asks. To rescue her brother she must make her way through an elaborate maze filled with bizarre creatures, and she must do it within thirteen hours if she wants to ever see her brother again.
Labyrinth is one of the most popular children’s films of all time. Since its release in 1986 it has become part of a select group of perennial favourites with audiences, re-discovered by one generation after another for its bold visual imagery, popular songs, and enchanting characters. The film itself marks a unique collision of talents between writers (including former Monty Python performer Terry Jones), director (Muppet creator Jim Henson), producer (Star Wars creator George Lucas) and stars (including iconic musician and actor David Bowie). The film tells a broadly familiar story, but it tells it in a comparatively unique and wonderful fashion.
You can read the full essay at the FictionMachine website here.
"We're being kept here to die" | The Ruins (2008)
"You do it because you're driven" | Speed Racer (2008)
"Trees and people used to be good friends" | My Neighbor Totoro (1988)
"Something new can come into this world" | John Carter (2012)
"This is true love" | The Princess Bride (1987)
"Its a thousand years to Christmas" | Something Wicked This Way Comes (1983)
"Well of course we talk, don't everybody?" | Singin' in the Rain (1952)
"A fuzzy blue Charles Dickens" | The Muppet Christmas Carol (1992)
"Let her be mine and mine alone" | The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1996)
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