Audiences will have to wait a few months longer to see “Narnia: The Magician’s Nephew,” with the release date pushed back from Thanksgiving to Feb. 12, 2027.
In addition to relaunching “Narnia” on the big screen and serving as writer-director Greta Gerwig’s first film since “Barbie,” “The Magician’s Nephew” also looks like the next step in Netflix’s relationship with theaters — and it’s going to be an even bigger step with the delay.
The company had previously said “The Magician’s Nephew” would play exclusively on Imax screens for at least two weeks before a Christmas streaming release. It would be an ambitious theatrical release by Netflix’s standards, but relatively limited compared to many other Hollywood blockbusters.
Now Netflix says “The Magician’s Nephew” will begin exclusive Imax previews on February 10, 2027, followed by a wide global release in theaters on February 12. (In Netflix’s words, it will be a “global event-oriented release.”) The film won’t start streaming until April 2nd.
The company’s announcement did not get more specific about which theaters will show “The Magician’s Nephew,” but Imax released a statement noting that the delay will allow the film to have “a full theatrical window,” so the major theater chains are unlikely to complain
In fact, AMC Theaters recently highlighted the success of its “Stranger Things” finale screenings and said it has plans for more collaborations with Netflix. At the same time, the streamer’s limited support for theatrical releases and its resistance to exclusive theatrical windows was reportedly a “dealbreaker” in negotiations with the creators of “Stranger Things,” who ultimately signed an exclusive deal with Paramount.
With a cast that includes Daniel Craig and Meryl Streep, “The Magician’s Nephew” adapts one of the later books in CS Lewis’s classic fantasy series – a prequel detailing the origins of Narnia.
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In Netflix’s announcement, Gerwig said she first read the book as a child when she “fell in love with the incredibly improbable but utterly brilliant concept of a cosmic lion singing the world of Narnia to life.”
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