In line with that mood, “Prince Caspian” provides not one but two elaborate battle set pieces that, taken together, make up a noticeable chunk of its 2-hour-and-18-minute length, pitting the polyglot Narnians, including dwarfs, centaurs, minotaurs, wonderful flying gryphons and intrepid fighting mice, against the endless hoards of an evil group called the Telmarines. Though it retains a kid-friendly PG rating and is directed with a surer hand by the returning Andrew Adamson, this film is noticeably darker in tone, even beginning with the piercing scream of a woman in childbirth. Lewis’ seven-volume Narnia series to be filmed by Walt Disney Pictures and Walden Media, “Prince Caspian” is both like its predecessor and different from it. The sequel to 2005’s hugely popular “The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe,” which was the first of C.S.
“THINGS never happen the same way twice,” Aslan the all powerful says in “The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian,”:-prince-caspian and although the lion king is referring to the ways of the world, he might be talking about this film as well.