Menu
The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader Poster

The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader

Return to magic. Return to hope. Return to Narnia.
2010 | 113m | English

(174654 votes)

TMDb IMDb

Popularity: 6 (history)

Details

This time around Edmund and Lucy Pevensie, along with their pesky cousin Eustace Scrubb find themselves swallowed into a painting and on to a fantastic Narnian ship headed for the very edges of the world.
Release Date: Dec 02, 2010
Director: Michael Apted
Writer: C.S. Lewis, Christopher Markus, Stephen McFeely, Michael Petroni
Genres: Family, Fantasy, Adventure
Keywords based on novel or book, lion, magic, epic, anthropomorphism, dragon, king, turns into animal, fantasy world, snowing, sea voyage, quest, high fantasy, isekai, father son relationship, brother sister relationship, based on young adult novel, good versus evil
Production Companies Fox 2000 Pictures, Walden Media, C.S. Lewis Company
Box Office Revenue: $415,686,217
Budget: $155,000,000
Updates Updated: Jul 31, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

Full Credits

Name Character
Georgie Henley Lucy Pevensie
Skandar Keynes Edmund Pevensie
Ben Barnes Caspian
Will Poulter Eustace Scrubb
Anna Popplewell Susan Pevensie
William Moseley Peter Pevensie
Simon Pegg Reepicheep (Voice)
Liam Neeson Aslan (voice)
Tilda Swinton White Witch
Laura Brent Liliandil
Gary Sweet Drinian
Terry Norris Lord Bern
Bruce Spence Lord Rhoop
Bille Brown Coriakin
Colin Moody Auctioneer
Shane Rangi Tavros
Arthur Angel Rhince
Arabella Morton Gael
Rachel Blakely Gael's Mum
Steven Rooke Faun
Tony Nixon 1st Mate
David Vallon Slave Trader
Jared Robinsen Intake Officer
Roy Billing Chief Dufflepud
Neil G. Young Dufflepud #2
Greg Poppleton Dufflepud #3
Nicholas Neild Dufflepud #4
Nathaniel Parker Caspian's Father
Daniel Poole Young Man
Mirko Grillini Telmarine Sailor
Ron Kelly Steward
Laurence Coy Photographer
Douglas Gresham Slaver #1
Michael Maguire Slayer #2
Catarina Hebbard Gael's Aunt
Tamati Rangi Minotaur
Lucas Ross Handsome Soldier
Megan Peta Hill Pretty Young Nurse
David Sachet Trader
Ross Price First Mate
Name Job
Michael Apted Director
C.S. Lewis Novel
Christopher Markus Screenplay
Stephen McFeely Screenplay
Michael Petroni Screenplay
David Arnold Original Music Composer
Nina Gold Casting
Dante Spinotti Director of Photography
Laraib Atta VFX Artist
Vincent Sieber Production Executive
Allan Poppleton Fight Choreographer, Stunt Coordinator
Isis Mussenden Costume Design
Rebecca Cohen Set Decoration
Jose Ludlow Line Producer
Jessie Thiele Post Production Producer, Post-Production Manager
Christine King Casting
Barry Robison Production Design
Ian Gracie Art Direction
Marco Niro Art Direction
Mark Robins Art Direction
Daniel Fotheringham Animation
Sean Button Stunts
Hugo Dominguez Visual Effects
Yannick Honore Animation
Gabriele Zucchelli Animation Supervisor
Ben Parkinson Casting
Micheal Flaherty Production Executive
Ben Baker Post Production Supervisor
Sagar Bhanushali Post Production Assistant
Brendon 'Moose' Boyd Unit Manager
Victoria Cadiou Production Supervisor
Richard E. Chapla Jr. Production Manager
Ian Nobby Clark Unit Manager
Jennifer Cornwell Unit Production Manager
Vikas Gandhi Assistant Production Manager
Monica Hada Post-Production Manager
Douglas Jones Executive In Charge Of Production
Lindsay McFarlane Unit Production Manager
Liz Richards Post-Production Manager
Christopher Russell Post Production Supervisor
Jonas Thaler Executive In Charge Of Post Production
Tom Williams Executive In Charge Of Production
Deborah Antoniou Second Assistant Director
Bish Bishop Additional Second Assistant Director
David Cain Assistant Director
Breeze Callahan Assistant Director
Brendan Campbell First Assistant Director
Lindsay Gough On Set Dresser
Erin Lander Third Assistant Director
John Mahaffie Second Unit Director
Stuart Morrice Assistant Director
Jaesung Oh Additional Third Assistant Director
Matt Schulman Assistant Director
Greg Spiller Second Assistant Director
Jo Suna Third Assistant Director
Joshua Watkins Second Second Assistant Director
Peter McLennan Assistant Director
Alex Anstey Assistant Editor
Victoria Sullivan Script Supervisor
Charlie Nott Electrician
Daniel May Art Direction
Erika Takacs Stunts
Sharelle Starr Stunts
Melanie Peyton-Smith Stunts
Deirdre Naughton Stunts
Lena Grzegolec Stunts
Janine Bryson Stunts
Renee Bowen Stunts
Brittany Baldwin Stunts
Jade Amantea Utility Stunts
Craig Clarke Visual Effects Supervisor
Rick Shaine Editor
Karen Murphy Art Direction
Jonathan Fawkner Visual Effects Supervisor
Jeff Okabayashi First Assistant Director
Stephen Dunlevy Stunts
Stuart Thorp Stunts
Angus Bickerton Visual Effects Supervisor
David Russell Storyboard Artist
Name Title
Andrew Adamson Producer
Mark Johnson Producer
Douglas Gresham Executive Producer
Cort Kristensen Producer
Philip Steuer Producer
Todd Cogan Executive Producer
Perry Moore Executive Producer
Cary Granat Co-Executive Producer
Haroon Saleem Executive Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 55 76 42
2024 5 64 78 42
2024 6 64 104 44
2024 7 64 87 42
2024 8 64 109 43
2024 9 51 81 40
2024 10 64 132 44
2024 11 58 95 45
2024 12 56 78 47
2025 1 56 68 47
2025 2 43 59 8
2025 3 16 53 3
2025 4 8 10 6
2025 5 6 7 5
2025 6 6 8 5
2025 7 6 7 5
2025 8 7 10 6
2025 9 10 17 6
2025 10 7 8 6

Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2025 10 331 733
Year Month High Avg
2025 9 501 705
Year Month High Avg
2025 8 211 605
Year Month High Avg
2025 7 335 792
Year Month High Avg
2025 6 442 750
Year Month High Avg
2025 5 449 752
Year Month High Avg
2025 4 192 702
Year Month High Avg
2025 3 197 687
Year Month High Avg
2025 2 199 733
Year Month High Avg
2025 1 200 684
Year Month High Avg
2024 12 546 796
Year Month High Avg
2024 11 353 780
Year Month High Avg
2024 10 305 523
Year Month High Avg
2024 9 882 929
Year Month High Avg
2024 8 746 875

Return to Top

Reviews

FarSky
N/A

In the immortal words of Col. Kurtz, "The horror...the horror." Marlon Brando wasn't speaking of this film, of course, but rather the horrors of the Vietnam War. The sentiment remains applicable. When I write reviews, I do try to give at least a modicum of context, be it a history of the film its ... elf, predecessors to its place in cinema history, or my general feelings on the type of film. In this case, I've just referenced Francis Ford Coppola's classic take on Joseph Conrad's "Heart of Darkness," Apocalypse Now. What does that have to do with Dawn Treader? Nothing, and I couldn't be happier. Why? Because it's distracted my mind with thoughts of a far, far better film. Allow me my few moments of happiness before I have to rifle through the dark filing cabinet of my mind to marshal my thoughts on this atrocity.\ What went so wrong here, you may ask? We'll start with the history of this franchise. I do not have the highest opinion of this series. We started out with the most famous of C. S. Lewis' Narnia cycle, The Lion, The Witch, and the Wardrobe. I don't know...perhaps if we hadn't been in the middle of such a fantasy film renaissance, I would have found it more palatable. Instead, coming on the heels of Peter Jackson's generation-defining Lord of the Rings trilogy, and the high class and quality of the Harry Potter franchise, that weak take on a book series that didn't thrill me as a child struck me as a cheap, childish appetizer compared to the magnificent feasts audiences had already been served, their stories facile, their acting (aside from a typically great Tilda Swinton) either poor or phoned-in (Paging Mr. Neeson, your paycheck is waiting for you). SHREK co-director Andrew Adamson was the helmer of both Wardrobe and Caspian, and I had hoped those film's failings were due perhaps to his inexperience as a director of live-action. The first film of course wore its Christian allegory on its sleeve (Lewis, for all his writings, never managed to find the definition of "subtle"), and it found favor with the churchgoing crowd, whose turnout afforded it a huge box office windfall. The second film was more of a straight actioner (in the vein of Star Wars Episode I, which is to say the supposed action was mired in a swamp of facile and achingly dull political machinations), and didn't find purchase with the same demographic, and box office returns were disappointingly low. Disney, who had financed the films, saw the writing on the wall, and dropped the series. That should have been the end of it. Until 20th Century Fox stepped in. Now, let's remember: Fox doesn't have the best track record with adapting beloved fantasy series into films (a moment of silence for the tragedies that were The Dark is Rising and Eregon, please). Hiring Michael Apted as the director seemed to be bucking the trend of shoveling out crap. Apted isn't really known as an action, fantasy, or epic film director, but he showed promise with the last Pierce Brosnan/James Bond film, The World is Not Enough (I'll not blame him for Denise Richards'...nuclear physicist...sigh). Still, director in place, 20th Century Fox and Walden Media cobbled together another Narnia adventure, and the results were predictably terrible. Honestly, I wish I hadn't expected a poor film going in. Because this film not only met but exceeded my expectations of terrible, and it's not because I was pre-judging it. It's because it was simply that bad. The plot is nonsensical, randomly shunting characters from one loosely-connected vignette to the next, with hokey dialogue and dire predictions of eeeevil standing in for actual menace or intrigue. It's a shaggy dog road trip story, waterlogged on a boat, and I found myself half an hour in wishing desperately that the characters would all get scurvy and die. The plot's so thinly-sketched that I may as well not even try to recount it here, but it has something to do with two of the kids from previous films being once again pulled into Narnia at absolute random, with no thematic or plot reason for any of the nonsense in the first place. Once there, our cast is rounded out with their exceptionally annoying cousin, and despite no one knowing quite what's going on, they stumble upon the titular character of the second film, Prince Caspian, and join him on his completely random quest to recover seven old friends of his long-dead father who disappeared for some reason, and no one knows why. So they fight an island made of evil. Good wins, evil is defeated, the end. Please, let it be the end. Listen: I love fantasy. I love science fiction, I love horror, I love all of the outré genres, the fantastic, the unreal. It fascinates me, and I love wrapping myself in the trappings of the genre like a favored blanket, letting their comforting warmth wash over me in waves of escapism and nostalgia. But this half-assed bunch of hokum had me rolling my eyes, with the stilted dialogue and the hastily-sketched characters and the nonsensical plot and the ARGH it's too much. The icing on this crap cake was the ham-handed, in-no-uncertain-terms Christian allegory with which the film beat the audience over the head with all the grace, power, and strength of an industrial-size sledgehammer. Yes, the evil was SIN. And Aslan is JESUS. Who exists as a lion in an alternate universe or something, apparently. Who pulls children into this alternate universe at random for...no apparent reason whatsoever (the film explicitly states that it's "to know Him (Aslan i.e. Jesus, in case you didn't already pick up on that) better," but if that's the case, why just these four kids? What's the thematic point of this? Why were the elder kids now judged worthy of not having watery allegory poured down their throats again? What did these kids learn at the end of this film that made them better people? ARGH again. I cannot even begin to catalogue the problems with this series, from either the internal "logic" of the series or the external logic of the human brain. Doing so only hurts my head. Remember how I said the second film in the series lacked the ham-fisted Christian allegory of the first? Well, 20th Century Fox apparently recognized the church-going demographic was what made the first film such a success, and had them ramp up the religious content from "allegory" to "explicit yelling at the audience and rubbing its nose in it like it's a puppy who peed on the carpet." This sentiment struck me as wholly insincere, a manufactured "message" shoehorned in by a film studio who wanted nothing more than to reap the box office rewards of the first film which felt, though unsubtle, genuine in its intentions. I've seen films more poorly shot, more poorly acted, more poorly assembled. But this boring, useless, preachy slog with no purpose or point had me at the absolute end of my rope. Rare is it that I sit in a darkened theater constantly looking at my watch, biding my time, aching for the dross on the screen to end so that I simply don't have to endure it anymore. But that's exactly what happened with this film. Before anyone jumps on the obvious point of attack, let me say in no uncertain terms that I am Christian. But (and this is an exceptionally important point) just because a the message of a particular film/book/song/etc. is Christian doesn't make the work inherently good. Nor does criticism of the work in some way equal an anti-Christian sentiment. I often feel that works perceived as "Christian" get a free pass on quality because of their message, but quality doesn't work like that. Lowering one's standards results only in mediocre pablum like this continuing to be passed off for media conglomerates to make a quick, insincere buck. Do me a favor. If you've enjoyed these films, fine. I whole-heartedly disagree, but I'm certainly not going to tell you you're wrong for enjoying them. But I beg of you: Don't shut off the critical area of your brain just because something agrees with your worldview. Doing so is a disservice not only to yourself, but everyone else like you who has to suffer through trash like this.

Jun 23, 2021
talisencrw
8.0

Growing up in the Canada in the 70's and 80's, I fondly recall vastly enjoying an animated version of Lewis' 'The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe' that was presented by Kraft on CTV. Now as a father of a son, I want to see with him the contemporary versions of the books I adored in my youth, though ... at present I greatly prefer the craftsmanship of cinema pre-1970. It never bothers me in the slightest, to the ire of my more obsessive-compulsive cinephilic friends, seeing films of series with complete disregard to their order (one of my friends nearly had a heart attack, when he discovered I had watched 'Spider-Man 3' without having previously watched films 1 and 2--don't even get me started about the 'Harry Potter' series...), so, especially curious about how one of my favourite contemporary directors, Michael Apted, would do in the realm of big-budget, CGI-intensive fantasy filmmaking (I expected a fish-out-of-water, like Lord Richard Attenborough helming 'A Chorus Line'), I gave this a shot. I enjoyed this more than 'Harry Potter' films I have seen, though it does stretch things from the literary works, but unfortunately, that seems to be the way things are, since film became less about artistry and more about business (just see at Toys R Us how many possible toys you can purchase, and similar commercial off-shoots, and I don't even consider this series a major player in this sort of area, because of its Christian undertones, which really doesn't mesh perfectly with selling tons of toys, though of course the realms aren't mutually exclusive, not by any stretch of the imagination). I think that Apted did a decent job, especially considering that yes, he is a fine director, but this isn't really his cup of tea. I distinctly feel that if these films are your comfort food, you won't be disappointed. I look forward to checking out the series' two preceding entries, and, though they left an opportunity for more films, which I believe wouldn't be from Lewis' works at all, it was a nice summation at its conclusion. Finally, it was great to see (or at the very least, hear) Tilda Swinton, Liam Neeson and Simon Pegg, they seem to be thrown in everything these days. I heartily salute their agents--they must have the very best in the business.

Jun 23, 2021
r96sk
6.0

I wouldn't class this as a good or bad film, it's in a weird sorta in-between to me. <em>'The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader'</em> is, comparatively, bad. It loses the vibe and all the intrigue that the first film has, as it continues the downward trajectory set by the other ... sequel. However, it's still just about got a decent adventure feel to it. Only two of the youngsters reprise their roles 'properly', those being Georgie Henley (Lucy) and Skandar Keynes (Edmund). I'd always prefer a cast to remain the same, but if I'm honest this doesn't miss William Moseley (Peter) and Anna Popplewell (Susan) all that much. That argument is helped by the arrival of a young Will Poulter as Eustace. He's great. Plot-wise is where it gets meh. I didn't care for it, even if I did like its swashbuckling nature. I can see many finding enjoyment with it, but for me it doesn't quite come out positively unfortunately - it's sluggish. The ship set also feels rather cheap. Not at all a bad film; one that was interestingly made without the involvement of Disney, Walden Media joined up with Fox instead. I just couldn't find enough entertainment in it.

Jun 23, 2021
Geronimo1967
7.0

Whilst this third in the adaptations of CS Lewis' "Narnia" stories is still enjoyable to watch; it's fair to say that it bears little resemblance to the original book and that is a shame. We only have two "Pevensie" children ("Lucy" & "Edmund") summoned back in this film alongside, accidentally, the ... ir cowardly but loudmouthed cousin "Eustace" (Will Poulter). They arrive just in time to be rescued from the middle of the sea by a passing King "Caspian" (Ben Barnes) on his ship "The Dawn Treader" and wonder why they have been recalled. We soon find out that they must all get to the "Lone Islands" before a green mist envelops the whole kingdom. We've plenty of action, battles, some mysterious invisible dwarves and even a wee bit of excess testosterone en route to quite an exciting conclusion. Insofar as it goes, the kids - now, really young adults - do well (Poulter is quite entertaining as their whinging, spoilt relative) as do Barnes and this time Simon Pegg takes over as "Reepicheep". The effects are definitely better, but they do need to be - the story isn't so good and struggles at times to get up any decent head of steam. It is still colourful and fun, though - but sadly demonstrative that the franchise has now run out of oomph!

Jul 20, 2024