The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian - videos, teasers and stills from filming

All videos, teasers and footage from the filming of the film "The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian"
The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian (2008)
Timing: 2:30 (150 min)
The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian - TMDB rating
6.63/10
6717
The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian - Kinopoisk rating
6.947/10
174710
The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian - IMDB rating
6.5/10
239000
Watch film The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian | Original Trailer
Original Trailer
English
2:32

What's left behind the scenes

  • The film is based on C.S. Lewis's novel “Prince Caspian” (Prince Caspian: The Return to Narnia, 1951).
  • The total number of wardrobe items sewn for the lead actors: 1042.
  • The total number of wardrobe items, including helmets, masks, footwear, and gloves, made for King Miraz, his lords, and the warriors of the Telmarine army – 3722.
  • The number of metal rings used to create one chainmail for a Telmarine warrior – 2184. A total of 850,000 such rings were used.
  • 70 people worked on the costumes. The actors and crew of “Prince Caspian” came from 15 different countries, including the Czech Republic, New Zealand, the USA, the United Kingdom, Australia, Canada, Germany, Poland, Slovenia, Spain, Mexico, Italy, and France.
  • The number of continents that director Andrew Adamson visited when choosing locations for filming is 5. The main filming locations are New Zealand, the Czech Republic, Slovenia, and Poland.
  • The Barrandov Studios in Prague, where the main sets for 'Prince Caspian' were built, has in recent years become a popular location for filming Hollywood movies such as 'Casino Royale' and 'The Bourne Identity'.
  • Richard Taylor from the New Zealand Weta Workshop designed nearly 600 pieces of weaponry for the defenders of Narnia and the Telmarine warriors. This number includes 200 halberds and spears, 200 rapiers, 100 swords, 250 shields, and 55 crossbows. Taylor also designed soft shields and special harnesses for use in key battle scenes involving horses.
  • The production designer for 'Prince Caspian', Roger Ford, has been working in film for over forty years, but the sets for King Miraz’s castle, built at the Barrandov Studios, are the largest he has ever constructed. The castle sets covered 1858 square meters, and its appearance was partially based on images of the French castle of Pierrefonds, located near Paris. 200 carpenters, plasterers, and painters spent 15 weeks building this castle. In the final version of the scenes with the castle, computer graphics specialists tripled the size of the image. The wooden bridge where one of the final battle scenes of 'Prince Caspian' unfolds was built on the Soča River, in the resort town of Bovec, Slovenia. 20 engineers and builders participated in the construction of the bridge, working on it for an entire month. Roger Ford, when designing the bridge, was based on drawings of the bridge that Julius Caesar built across the Rhine during the war with the Germans. To realize Ford's plan, engineers temporarily changed the course of the Soča River.
  • The London Underground station from which the Pevensie children begin their journey in 'Prince Caspian' is not actually in London. Ford built realistic sets of the London Underground at the Henderson Studios, in northern New Zealand.
  • Makeup artist Howard Berger worked with a team of 50 makeup artists and conducted 4,600 individual makeup sessions during filming.
  • Actor Warwick Davis spent three and a half hours each day applying makeup to transform into the black dwarf Nikabrik.
  • Warwick Davis is the only actor to have played in two versions of 'The Chronicles of Narnia' adaptations. In 'Prince Caspian' he plays the black dwarf Nikabrik, and in the 1989 BBC television adaptation of 'Prince Caspian,' he played the valiant mouse Reepicheep. In the new film 'The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian,' Reepicheep is entirely created using computer graphics.
  • Director Andrew Adamson searched for over a year for the right actor for the role of Prince Caspian, and he found 26-year-old British actor Ben Barnes just 3 weeks before filming began.
  • Throughout the filming of 'Prince Caspian,' 1,100 lunches were prepared daily for the actors and crew. The total number of lunches prepared during filming was 200,000.
  • Cornell John, who played the centaur Glenstorm, had to master spring stilts, which were later transformed into horse legs using computer graphics.
  • In the book, Caspian is 13 years old, in the film he is 17, and the actor who played Caspian was 26 years old.
  • The film is based on C.S. Lewis's novel "Prince Caspian" (Prince Caspian: The return to Narnia, 1951).
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