Limestone, with a dash of quartz. Very tasty. Where I come from in the north we used to have exquisite gourmet rocks, only now they're all gone. Near my home there used to be a beautiful lake, but then it was gone. Not even a dried up lake, not even a hole. A hole would be something. No, it was nothing. And the nothing got bigger and bigger. No lake anymore and then finally no rocks. Nothing.
In The NeverEnding Story (1984) the first thing we learn about Bastian is that his mother's died and he's trying to escape. From his father, from his school and from the real world that has erased her. So he disappears into a story but finds a world that’s already ending.
Fantasia isn’t a magical kingdom under threat from a villain. It’s a crumbling place full of tired creatures, bad news, and the slow seep of despair. The threat isn’t conquest. It’s erasure. And the grief and despair hits early.
Artax's death is the moment we often remember as the emotional breaking point, but it’s only the beginning. It’s a child’s first lesson in helplessness: that love isn’t always enough to pull someone through. And the Swamp of Sadness lets you watch it happen. Slowly and quietly without a last minute reprieve.
What Bastian painfully learns is that he can’t go back to before his mother died. He can't even go back to who he was when he first opened the book.
So he's forced to experience the agony of grief: of having to push forward and carry on, whilst yearning for the path back. He watches Fantasia disappear through Atreyu’s eyes, as its inhabitants fall before the Nothing.
The Rockbiter’s final words teach him there was nothing anyone could have done to prevent the inevitable:
“I couldn’t hold onto them. The Nothing pulled them right out of my hands. I failed.”
His sorrow isn’t theatrical, it’s flat and exhausted. It's the grief of someone who thought strength could protect the people he loved but learned otherwise.
When the world finally breaks it takes even Atreyu with it and leaves Bastian alone in the dark, with a ghostly Empress and a grain of sand. It's the last piece of a story he has to carry: a memory for him to protect.
Because that's all grief leaves you with.
A memory that gives you just enough space to hold an image or a feeling.
Enough to revisit when it hurts too much. Enough to say their name and make it the spell that conjures them up, if only for a moment. And as much as we wish it could, Fantasia doesn’t return. Not really.
It’s not the same world. Bastian sees Atreyu again. He sees the Rockbiter, the Snail-Rider, even Morla, but they don’t speak. There’s no reunion. No new words. No new adventures. It’s like visiting a memory trapped in amber: vivid, familiar, but ultimately untouchable.
Even the final jubilant scene where Falkor and Bastian scare the bullies in the real world - that's taken away from us too. As the credits roll, an unfamiliar narrator tells us Bastian had more adventures before returning to the real world and the bubble suddenly pops. It was never real.
But... maybe that’s the point?
It might be a fantasy but Bastian doesn’t stay lost inside it. It's not an escape, it's resolve - he can't bring Fantasia back but he can bring the courage he found there into the real world.
So he faces what scares him and keeps going. And we, as children, suffered and hurt with him. But we also watched him return - changed. Stronger.
Ultimately, the NeverEnding Story isn't a fairytale: it’s the story of how you survive without the person you love.
And how you learn to hold the idea of them with you - while you carry on for the ones who still need you.
Because you know that one day, they'll have to continue on without you. Day by day, step by step, we all move forward - living our own tiny part of a neverending story. - Mom
Big strong hands were used to draw this NEVERENDING STORY tribute which you can buy a poster of. Don’t let the sadness get to you; hang this up in your home. Before The Nothing comes and makes it all disappear.
“Oh, my little friends… The little man with his racing snail, the Night Hob, even the stupid bat. I couldn’t hold onto them… The Nothing pulled them right out of my hands. I failed…”
Concepts of characters from the Neverending Story novel.
The Will-o-the-whisp (Blubb) did not appear in the movie, a shame. I understand Mr. Ende's anger at the movie (which I also hate), but it would be a good idea with today's CGIs to think about a couple of movies about the book...