
The NeverEnding Story II: The Next Chapter
1990 • Adventure, Drama, Family, Fantasy • PG
Once again, Bastian is transported to the world of Fantasia which he recently managed to save from destruction. However, the land is now being destroyed by an evil sorceress, Xayide, so he must join up with Atreyu and face the Emptiness once more.
Runtime: 1h 29m
Why you should read the novel
Loved The NeverEnding Story II? Go to the source. Michael Ende’s The Neverending Story offers a far richer, stranger, and more lyrical journey through Fantastica, with layers of myth, philosophy, and unforgettable imagery you won’t see on screen.
The novel deepens Bastian’s transformation, exploring imagination, memory, and identity with nuance. Ende’s chapters unfold like dream-quests, each wish reshaping the world and revealing the cost of self-invention. It’s a timeless fantasy classic that rewards teens and adults alike.
If you enjoy classic fantasy with heart and depth, read The Neverending Story in English. Discover the complete characters, themes, and episodes the movie only hints at—and experience the original magic as the author intended.
Adaptation differences
The NeverEnding Story II adapts selected elements from the second half of Michael Ende’s novel but simplifies scope and tone. The film centers on a straightforward good-versus-evil plot and introduces movie-only side characters, while the book presents an expansive, episodic odyssey through Fantastica (called Fantasia in the films) with meditative, sometimes darker themes.
Bastian’s character arc is the biggest change. In the book, each wish costs a memory and gradually turns him vain and power-hungry, culminating in a painful rift and even a duel with Atreyu. The movie keeps Bastian essentially noble and compresses the memory-loss idea into a lighter, more reassuring coming-of-age thread.
Xayide is also transformed. Ende portrays her as a subtle manipulator commanding empty suits of armor—a symbol of hollow desire—who nudges Bastian toward self-importance. The film reframes her as a more conventional villain engineering the Emptiness and is resolved through a swift, wish-powered climax, omitting the novel’s intricate moral reckoning, AURYN’s guiding inscription Do What You Wish, and Bastian’s quest for the Water of Life.
Worldbuilding is greatly reduced on screen. The novel features many pivotal episodes and locales that never appear in the movie—such as the City of Old Emperors and Dame Eyola’s orchard—while the Childlike Empress’s role is more profound in the book. Readers will find a broader, more philosophically resonant narrative that the adaptation condenses into a simpler adventure.
The NeverEnding Story II: The Next Chapter inspired from
The Neverending Story
by Michael Ende