

The saddest thing about all this is that no one seems to make films like Labyrinth anymore. Titles like The Neverending Story, Flight of the Navigator and Who Framed Roger Rabbit? captured my imagination and filled me with aw, and with time found their way to my ever growing DVD collection, as did Jim Henson's Labyrinth, the latest addition to my nostalgic bundle of joy. Growing up as a child in 1980's New York, I remember being inspired by many fantasy and science fiction films, that eventually led me to start writing short stories myself (from there to my current occupation of journalism the road was quite short, BTW). Soon Sarah teams up with the coward goblin Hoggle, the beast Ludo and the knight Didymus and his dog Ambrosius in her journey.

Sarah repents and asks Jareth to give Toby back but the Goblin King tells her that she has to rescue her brother before midnight, otherwise Toby will be turned into a goblin. 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. Toby does not stop crying and Sarah wishes that her brother be taken by the Goblin King. The teenager Sarah is forced by her father and her stepmother to babysit her baby brother Toby while they are outside home.

A 16-year-old girl is given 13 hours to solve a labyrinth and rescue her baby brother when her wish for him to be taken away is granted by the Goblin King.
