| Cast overview, first billed only: | |||
| David Bowie | ... | Jareth | |
| Jennifer Connelly | ... | Sarah | |
| Toby Froud | ... | Toby | |
| Shelley Thompson | ... | Stepmother | |
| Christopher Malcolm | ... | Father | |
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Natalie Finland | ... | Fairy |
| Shari Weiser | ... | Hoggle | |
| Brian Henson | ... | Hoggle / Goblin (voice) | |
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Ron Mueck | ... | Ludo / Firey 2 / Goblin (voice) |
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Rob Mills | ... | Ludo / Firey 3 |
| Dave Goelz | ... | Didymus / The Hat / The Four Guards / Left Door Knocker / Firey 3 (voice) | |
| David Alan Barclay | ... | Didymus / Firey 1 (as David Barclay) | |
| David Shaughnessy | ... | Didymus / The Hat / The Four Guards / Goblin (voice) | |
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Karen Prell | ... | The Worm / The Junk Lady / Firey 2 |
| Timothy Bateson | ... | The Worm / The Four Guards / Goblin (voice) | |
Teenager Sarah is forced by her father and her stepmother to babysit her baby brother Toby while they are outside home. Toby does not stop crying and Sarah wishes that her stepbrother be taken by the Goblin King Jareth. Out of the blue, Toby stops crying and when Sarah looks for him in the cradle, she learns that her wish was granted and the Goblin King Jareth has taken him to his castle in the Goblin City in the middle of a labyrinth. Sarah repents and asks Jareth to give Toby back; but the Goblin King tells her that she has to rescue her brother before midnight. Soon Sarah teams up with some allies. Will they rescue Toby in time? Written by Claudio Carvalho, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
I recently had the pleasure of watching this movie with three kids who had (to my shock and dismay) never seen it before. It turned out to be as good, if not better, as I remembered. The story is reminescent of the original, printed page (very dark) Grimm fairy tales. The special effects are still special, and the characters are unforgettable. Seriously, don't miss it.
This is one of the very few childrens' movies that is smarter and better than what has unfortunately become "normal" for the genera. The reverse evolution in childrens' films is heartbreaking, as kids don't deserve to be talked down to so often in movies. I grew up on films like "Labyrinth", "the Neverending Story", and "the Secret of NIMH", and I still count them among my favorites. In the 80's they gave us cinematic filet mignon, and today's kids are getting Spam.