![]() ![]() It has now been over a decade since Voyage, and no one particularly remembers Eustace Scrubb, or what he was like before Narnia changed him. After all, the book itself is set only a few months after its predecessor. The Silver Chair was written to follow Voyage as closely as possible. ![]() In the books, these are potent themes when read in juxtaposition to the stories before it - but for an audience that hasn’t experienced The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, Prince Caspian or Voyage of the Dawn Treader, it might be hard to understand why the characters are feeling what they’re feeling, and even make sense of the tragedy of Caspian’s family. Eustace comes in expecting the magical land his cousin spoke to him about, the Narnians struggle with what the future holds, and Caspian literally dies. A huge element in the story is a sense of disenfranchisement with what Narnia has come to. It’s hard to imagine how a The Silver Chair movie would bring in a new audience.
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