Within seconds of the movie starting, differences are already seen between the book and the movie. Although the movie was amazing and received very good ratings, it is obvious that the writers chose to not make the movie resemble the book several times throughout the movie.
This angered many who moved the book, but to the larger crowd, they did not really care. Both the book and the movie have great qualities in their own separate ways, but why not point out the differences?
The book and the movie both set the opening scene as in the middle of World War 2, but the movie goes even further into detail, providing the viewers with the suspense and action of the kids running for cover into a bomb shelter, whereas the book simply mentions that the kids have to leave because of the war. Their mother sends them to live with the professor where they meet Mrs Macready, the housekeeper. She has three assistants, Ivy, Margaret, and Betty, of which are mentioned in the book but do not exist in the movie.
Lucy discovers Narnia while exploring the house with her siblings, but in the movie she discovers it while playing hide and seek. Lucy meets Mr Tumnus and he drops his parcels on the ground out of fear. In the movie, Lucy helps him pick them up, but in the book she watches him …show more content…
She becomes confused, because she has been gone for hours, but not to them. She then tells them of Narnia and they all explore the wardrobe, but find nothing. In the book, she returns and yells that she has returned, confusing the rest. They explore the wardrobe and find nothing. Lucy's second visit happens later that night when she can not sleep, but in the book she returns during a game of hide and seek, where Susan is seeking rather than when Peter was in the movie. Edmund follows her in both