2005. “The Chronicles of Narnia - The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe”
William Moseley as Peter Pevensie, the eldest of the four Pevensie children.
Noah Huntley as Adult Peter Pevensie, who has grown up as a king in Narnia.
Anna Popplewell as Susan Pevensie, the second-eldest child of the four Pevensie children.
Sophie Winkleman as Adult Susan Pevensie, who has grown up as a queen in Narnia.
Skandar Keynes as Edmund Pevensie, the third and second-youngest of the four Pevensie children.
Mark Wells as Adult Edmund Pevensie, who has grown up as a king in Narnia.
Georgie Henley as Lucy Pevensie, the youngest of the four Pevensie children.
Rachael Henley (Henley's real-life sister) as Adult Lucy Pevensie, who has grown up as a queen in Narnia.
Liam Neeson as the voice of Aslan, the great lion who was responsible for creating Narnia.
Tilda Swinton as the White Witch, who holds Narnia under an eternal winter without Christmas or Spring or Summer.
James McAvoy as Mr. Tumnus, a faun who at first works for the White Witch, but befriends Lucy Pevensie and joins Aslan's forces.
Ray Winstone as the voice of Mr. Beaver, a beaver who helps lead the children to Aslan.
Dawn French as the voice of Mrs. Beaver, a beaver who helps lead the children to Aslan.
Kiran Shah as Ginarrbrik, the White Witch's servant dwarf.
Jim Broadbent as Professor Digory Kirke, an old professor. He lets the children stay at his country estate during the war.
Elizabeth Hawthorne as Mrs. Macready, Kirke's strict housekeeper.
James Cosmo as Father Christmas. He gives Peter, Susan, and Lucy their Christmas gifts.
Michael Madsen as the voice of Maugrim, a wolf who is captain of the White Witch's secret police.
Patrick Kake as General Oreius, a centaur who is second-in-command of Aslan's army.
Shane Rangi as General Otmin, a minotaur who is second-in-command of the White Witch's army.
Morris Cupton as Train Guard, the guard of the train Peter, Susan, Edmund and Lucy ride.
Judy McIntosh as Helen Pevensie, the mother of the four Pevensie children.
Rupert Everett as the voice of Mr. Fox, a fox who helps the children along their way to Aslan.
Producer Philip Steuer voices Phillip, Edmund's talking horse.
After surviving an air raid during World War II, the Pevensie children (Peter, Susan, Edmund, Lucy) are evacuated from London to the country home of Professor Kirke.
During a game of hide-and-seek, Lucy discovers a wardrobe and hides inside, only to find that she has entered a magical winter world. Lucy finds a lamppost and encounters a faun named Mr. Tumnus, who invites her to his home and tells her that she is in Narnia. Tumnus puts Lucy to sleep by playing a flute lullaby, and when Lucy wakes up, he sadly explains that the White Witch cursed Narnia to eternally experience winter and never Christmas, and any humans encountered are to be brought to her. However, Tumnus instead sends her home, where Lucy finds hardly any time had passed, and her siblings disbelieve her story due to the normal state of the wardrobe.
One night, Lucy successfully returns through the wardrobe, but Edmund follows her. Edmund meets the White Witch, who claims to be queen of Narnia. Edmund tells her about his siblings and Tumnus, and the Witch offers him Turkish delight and kingship if he brings his siblings to her castle. After she departs, Edmund and Lucy reunite. Lucy informs Peter and Susan, but Edmund lies out of spite. When Peter and Susan bring the issue to Professor Kirke, he suggests Lucy is telling the truth.
While fleeing the housekeeper after accidentally breaking a window, the four siblings retreat to the wardrobe and enter Narnia. Peter berates Edmund for lying and forces him to apologize to Lucy. They discover that the Witch has taken Tumnus, and they meet a couple of talking beavers, who say Aslan plans to return and regain control of Narnia, and there is a prophecy that says if two sons of Adam and two daughters of Eve sit on the thrones of Cair Paravel, the Witch's reign will end.
Edmund sneaks off to visit the Witch, but she becomes furious that he came without his siblings. The Witch sends wolves to find the children, and Edmund is imprisoned, where he meets Tumnus. The children and beavers escape, and the Witch demands Edmund reveal their location. Tumnus defends Edmund, but the Witch reveals Edmund's treachery before turning Tumnus to stone.
While Peter, Lucy, Susan, and the beavers travel, they encounter Father Christmas, a sign that the Witch's power is weakening. He gives them tools to defend themselves - Lucy receives a cordial that can heal any injury, and a dagger; Susan receives a magical horn, and a bow and quiver of arrows; and Peter receives a sword and shield. After evading Maugrim's wolves due to the melting ice, the group finally reaches Aslan's camp, where he is revealed to be a noble lion who promises to help Edmund. Two wolves ambush Lucy and Susan, but Peter kills Maugrim, and some of Aslan's troops follow the other wolf to the Witch's camp and rescue Edmund.
The White Witch journeys to Aslan's camp to claim Edmund, but Aslan secretly offers himself instead. That night, as Lucy and Susan covertly watch, the White Witch kills Aslan, then deploys an army to slaughter Aslan's troops. Lucy and Susan send a warning, and Edmund persuades Peter to take command. In the morning, both armies violently clash, but Aslan is resurrected, citing magic beyond the Witch's understanding. Aslan takes Susan and Lucy to the Witch's castle to free the petrified prisoners. Edmund is mortally wounded while saving Peter from the Witch, but the reinforcements arrive and Aslan kills the Witch. Edmund is healed by Lucy's cordial, and the Pevensies are crowned King Peter the Magnificent, Queen Susan the Gentle, King Edmund the Just, and Queen Lucy the Valiant.
Fifteen years later, the Pevensie children, now young adults, pursue a white stag. They encounter the lamppost which Lucy first saw when she entered Narnia. After which they tumbled out of the wardrobe at roughly the same time and day they left, becoming children again. Professor Kirke finds the children, asking why they were in the wardrobe.
In a mid-credits scene, Lucy attempts to use the wardrobe, but Professor Kirke tells her he has also tried, and they will probably return to Narnia when they least expect it.