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4 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars This one's for the true fans
If you're a true fan, you'll really like the ending. Sadly, a lot of people won't get it because they're really fixated on the possibility of a hot Sarah/Jareth fairytale romance. Instead of giving into the fans, the author stayed true to Henson's theme which is: "Grow up, but never stop dreaming." :)

When Sarah came of age, she began to retreat from her...
Published 18 months ago by Mercedes Narvaez

versus
13 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Forbes neither understands Labyrinth nor the mythic heroine's journey
As a couple of other reviewers pointed out Forbes also does the cardinal sin I've seen far too many times of taking one of the very few mythic heroine journey stories made in the west and and gives it over to a lackluster male character who was just intended to be a plot device. American male comic and cartoon writers in particular cannot seem to stand having a female...
Published 13 months ago by Keri


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13 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Forbes neither understands Labyrinth nor the mythic heroine's journey, January 1, 2011
By 
Keri "Librarian" (Kentucky, United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Return to Labyrinth Volume 4 (Jim Henson's Return to Labyrinth) (Paperback)
As a couple of other reviewers pointed out Forbes also does the cardinal sin I've seen far too many times of taking one of the very few mythic heroine journey stories made in the west and and gives it over to a lackluster male character who was just intended to be a plot device. American male comic and cartoon writers in particular cannot seem to stand having a female character be the center of a mythic or heroic journey story- re the appalling American adaption of CLAMP's Card Captor Sakura: Cardcaptors- which turned Sakura into a secondary character in her own series and turned Li, the secondary male character and Sakura's rival/eventual love interest into the main character.

The female mythic journey ends, as even most male Japanese manga writers know, with the heroine together with the one she is in love with, and the bond between the two takes on a magical, spiritual as well as sensual romantic tone. (Despite the many issues with the Twilight series- especially a bad message for girls about being traditional and very passive, Myer at least has some understanding of the end of the heroine's mythic journey- this is why the series is so popular with American girls and women.) Forbes really dropped the ball, missing not only the mythic journey meme but even dropping the ball and grossly copping out the the occasional steps he made toward getting the movie story and getting Sarah's version of the mythic heroine's journey.

Then there is Toby himself, he is a dull, lackluster character who Forbes even admits is a fictionalized version of his teenage self, and even admits the character is lackluster. In other words Forbes committed another writer cardinal sin- made a Gary Stu (the male version of Mary Sue)character the absolute center of the story.

One can hope if the Henson estate ever makes a movie sequel to Labyrinth they do not base it on this lackluster offering, and actually pay attention to the mythic heroine's journey and have Sarah be the lead that she is should have been in any sequel. Frankly, Toby shouldn't have even been involved with this sequel, except maybe similar to how Keisuke (Miaka's older brother) was to Miaka in Fushigi Yuugi.
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22 of 27 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars More Like Fanfiction Than the Scion of a Classic, August 5, 2010
This review is from: Return to Labyrinth Volume 4 (Jim Henson's Return to Labyrinth) (Paperback)
This story had quite a bit of potential - there were many plot elements that I truly liked. And that is the very reason why I'm so disappointed with way this series concluded. I did my best at being patient, and put up with many things I felt did not fit the spirit of Labyrinth, hoping that this investment would at least pay off in some way at the end. But, I can't find it in my heart to accept that this story is in any way connected to the Labyrinth universe - I regret feeling that, but it's true.

Here are more specific reasons why, but please be warned, there are spoilers:

1. Lack of character development in the protagonist - Toby adds very little substance to the story and is not a character readers can connect with in any significant way. I held on to hope that by the fourth book, he would have been a complex character with hopes, dreams, and desires quite like his sister did in the movie, but he seems little more than the same angsty teenager that can be found in plenty of other stories. He doesn't even fulfill his role as the main character - he does not resolve any of the final conflicts, specifically with the main antagonist Mizumi. All he does is create problems that the supporting characters have to overcome, meanwhile whining about why HIS life is so difficult. I don't know why Sarah even bothered trying to rescue him in the movie - she should have let Jareth turn him into a goblin after all - no doubt he would have been more useful in that form than the one he's in now.

2. Story structure - many storylines did not even get fleshed out - like another reviewer stated, the lizard characters seemed like they had their part to play, but we never got to find out what that was. And strangely enough, the characters spent more time trying to stop Jareth's plans than those of the real antagonist, Mizumi. I expected that Jareth would create some friction for the good guys, but it seemed like the conflict he created actually dwarfed the tension caused by the antagonist. Maybe some readers won't be as bothered with these things as I am, but I feel that the plot would have been better if it followed some of the fundamental rules that are necessary for having a sound story structure.

3. The love story - this is perhaps the most disappointing aspect of them all, not just because I rooted for Jareth and Sarah, but because fans have been strung along for years with this manga, only to have an ending that poorly mimicked that of the movie. In the movie, the reason Sarah didn't get together with Jareth made sense and fit her "coming of age" story, but in the manga, it seemed so contrived. Somehow, Toby, as genius and brilliant as he is, managed to convince her to give up the chance to spend the rest of her life with the man of her dreams and devoted childhood friends. So much time was spent trying to get Sarah to reclaim her dreams and desires, only to have her stow them away at the end, choosing to become a fantasy writer in the ordinary world instead. Surprisingly, Sarah prefers to write about fantasies rather than actually live them out, something that doesn't even fit the theme of this story.

The one thing that has consistently remained a positive attribute is the cover art. Kouyu Shurei does an excellent job with this one, and I truly wish that I could have seen more of her artwork in this manga.

I'm sorry to seem harsh with this review - if this were another manga, I would have been more tolerant with the constant mishaps of this series, but Return to Labyrinth isn't based off of just any story. Labyrinth is a beloved classic that people have loved for more than twenty years. Jim Henson created something special, and such a magical story like this that's treasured by so many people should be treated with the utmost respect and care. But unfortunately, I feel like this manga is not befitting of the Labyrinth title.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Medicore, worth a read if you're a fan, but nothing special, September 19, 2010
This review is from: Return to Labyrinth Volume 4 (Jim Henson's Return to Labyrinth) (Paperback)
Return the the Labyrinth Vol. 4 is not the worst manga ever, but it is mediocre at best. If you have the first 3, you'll probably want to buy/read this just to complete the set.

Long story short, Return to the Labyrinth has fallen into the same trap many other sequels have - rehash the same story with a few new names but no real new substance. Several storylines are hastily, lazily, poorly wrapped up. We're told, rather than shown the meaning behind the events. And the writer seems to think taking lines directly from the movie, and using them in the sequel is cute. It's not. It's usually not. It only works if done in a kitchy way, such as how Phineas and Ferb episodes have a few variations on phrases that are used in most episodes, or Jack's rum-focused lines in POTC. If you overdo it, or try to have it really mean something significant, as the writer does in this book, it just looks cheap and lazy.

The art is not Labyrinth-worthy. Why they didn't have the person who did the covers (which were awesome) do the whole book, I don't know. The actual story-art is roughly on par with something in the weekday comics. Not to say simplistic comic drawings are bad - the Peanuts style is simplistic but iconic. But Peanuts and other such comics are attempting something different. The Labyrinth is a place that should be intricate and beautiful. Even the ugly goblins and such are not ugly in a lazy way - they have lots of detail. And hey, the artist can draw better than I can, but it's just not "Labyrinth." They really should have made sure the art was worthy of the story.
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7 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Disappointing!!!, August 4, 2010
This review is from: Return to Labyrinth Volume 4 (Jim Henson's Return to Labyrinth) (Paperback)
Sooo not only were we strung along for three books of ugly art and mediocre storytelling, but we were all denied the ending we have been waiting for. It's basically another lame coming of age story where the author inserted a male character because he didn't have the talent to continue the story of the female. Jareth is also completely out of character at the end. I regret wasting my money and being severeley disappointed. If you have to torture yourself, however, stop at the nice part near the end and make up your own ending...you will be much happier that way :(
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9 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Disappointed but I love the series over all, August 5, 2010
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This review is from: Return to Labyrinth Volume 4 (Jim Henson's Return to Labyrinth) (Paperback)
Twice in the manga a line is used that I feel was a justification. 'There are two types of fantasies. Ones where it's pure fantasy and takes place in another world like Lord of the rings or someone from the 'real world' learns a life lesson and can bring nothing back with him.' This point bothers me above all else.

The original Wonderful Wizard of Oz book was not a dream and in the books Dorothy and her family eventually move to Oz. And what about 10th Kingdom? Wolf came back to New York with Virginia FROM the fantasy world.

And the 'there are two types of fantasies' I feel diminishes the whole genre. We should not forget subgenres like urban fantasy and future-fantasy or historical fantasy or multiverse-fantasy. There's more to fantasy than Alice in Wonderland stories.

Sarah and Jareth obviously really do love each other so why didn't she stay to become his Queen?

Toby's learned lesson should have had no bearing on what happened with Sarah. Also the way his lesson was conveyed felt forced and reminiscent of an 'I learned something today' speech. The romantic part of me wanted to see Jareth and Sarah go off together as it was implying until Toby's 'enlightening' speech.

Mizumi's portrayal was completely inconsistent and I got mixed signals about what I was supposed to feel toward her. I felt there was no reason Moulin had to die. It did not make sense. The lizards were anti-climatic.

I almost get the impression that Jake T. Forbes had another ending in mind and very abruptly was told he couldn't do that or changed his mind about what he was going to do. The end did not feel right somehow. It wasn't satisfying like the film. It felt like half this volume was trying to justify what was to come. It did not make sense to me.

I defended this manga series against those that doubted a sequel could be done. I actually loved Volume 1. I didn't care for this one.

I am sorry if I am being harsh in my review. I can't give this five or four stars the way I did with volume 3 and 1 (I particularly loved those and the Jareth flashback in volume 2). I fully understand Jake's limits because Return to Labyrinth and because he had to remain to true to the source material.

It wasn't so much that Jareth didn't end up with Sarah that bothered me (though the romantic in me did want to see them together). The part of the manga that bothered me above all else was the downplaying of fantasy fiction. it's repeated twice in the fourth volume that there are "two types of fantasy," He even goes as far as to have it that this was something Sarah told Toby when he was little. As a lover of fantasy, to see this said twice bothered me. There are many, many types of fantasy. The Dresden Files for example are urban fantasy with faeries, trolls, vampires, werewolves, wizards, and the like existing in our world and the books are almost entirely set within the confines of our reality with the fantastical sprinkled in.

Also the stories where you go into a strange other world and learn a life lesson aren't exclusively about only gaining a life lesson. That was something started with Alice in Wonderland and popularized with the film version of The Wizard of Oz. In the original Oz books Oz was a real place and Dorothy and her family eventually moved there. Then there's 10th Kingdom where Virginia took Wolf back to New York with her from The 9 Kingdoms. There's no set rule that all you can bring back with you is a life lesson and I felt this volume treated this particular point like it was something written in stone. It was the boxed-in and very limited quality of this repeated implication of there only being two types of fantasy that bothered me as a fantasy lover. There's Urban fantasy like The Dresden Files, Steampunk fantasy like League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, life lesson fantasy like Labyrinth and Alice in Wonderland and the film version of The Wizard of Oz, then there's life Lesson where you can take something back with you or stay in the world where you learned the lesson such as Virginia taking Wolf back with her in 10th Kingdom and Tony, also in 10th Kingdom, staying behind in the fantasy world or the original Oz books, completely other fantastical world fantasy like Lord of the Rings, Historical fantasy like Merlin, futuristic fantasy, Science-fantasy like Warenouse 13 and Special Unit 2.

I was disappointed to see the genre so completely limited by Sarah, a character who was supposed to have been a fantasy lover. This part of the story, which was pressed twice, is the part that haunted me above all else. This hurt the story for me. It also felt like someone announcing 'Okay, people. There are only two ways this can go and here's why.' I'm not comfortable with stories that insist on explaining in advance why it has to end a certain way. To me it takes away from the story rather than enhances it.

I am glad that Toby learns that reality and fantasy are intertwined though.

Another issue I had was Hana (A small pixie faery) was obsessed with the wings that had been plucked off her back by goblins. Toby tries to give them back at the end of Return to Labyrinth but accidentally gives them to stank, her little Yeti she'd been riding instead. And she says 'Good enough!' Good enough!? When she's been upset about them through the books. That's like a person whose lost their legs suddenly can get them back and the person aims wrong and their wheelchair sprouts legs instead. But that's okay!? Was that supposed to be funny?

I do love Return to Labyrinth. Volumes 1 and 3 are ones I've read multiple times and I love the flashback in Volume 2. But 4 didn't have the same charm.

Return to Labyrinth, in general, is a fun read but there are certain things in the fourth volume that I found dissatisfying. I don't think Moulin had to die. I felt Toby's lesson at the end came off a little forced. And though Jake may have wanted that the line 'There are two types of fantasy' to mean in regard to Toby's preference I did still feel it was unnecessarily limiting to the genre. As a romantic I had hoped for Jareth and Sarah to end up together but I understand that this would have shifted the view away from Toby and this was Toby's story but that doesn't change that I was disappointed. At least Jareth gave Sarah new dreams.

My theory from over a year ago, that an ablation could remain separate from the original source if that person replaced that missing piece with a new version of that which was lost, was true. I had noticed that every ablation was something that was regenerative like Hope and dreams. And the song As the World Falls Down held the clue for me to Moppet's survival 'In search of new dreams.' So I was at least happy to be proven right about that.

Someone reminded me of David Bowie's statements about Jareth. Bowie had said that Jareth rather reluctantly inherited the position of goblin king. And he would rather be somewhere like Soho so he's making the best of things.

I think Bowie imagines Jareth as being someone who would rather live in the human world as an Avant Garde singer or something at run down obscure night clubs and happy with that humble life, but he was thrown into the role of goblin king against his will. Part of why volume 4 of Return to Labyrinth doesn't feel right, I think, is because it contradicted Bowie's statements on Jareth's back story and how Bowie saw Jareth.

It's disrespectful to ignore Bowie's views of the character when he had such a huge hand in the conception of the version of Jareth we saw in the film. Those were his songs, he improvised many of the lines. But we're going to contradict him now in official canon in regard to why Jareth is goblin King? This doesn't feel right to me.

Return to Labyrinth Volume 4's plot in a nutshell:

Warning: Here there be spoilers.

(Warning, I know the plot is a little more complicated than this but I am simplifying it to reveal some of the weaker plot points).

Weak Point 1:

It turns out Sarah was allowing her dreams to wither and die because she had been rejected from Juliard so to save Sarah's dreams and Jareth's own Labyrinth (which was crumbling) he had Mizumi create Moppet out of Sarah's dreams. Absorb this. Sarah gave up on her dreams and was starting to let them die- the tenacious Sarah who refused to be defeated- was letting all her dreams die because of ONE rejection letter. Terrence Mann (the Broadway star) was once quoted as saying that if you give up after the first rejection that you don't REALLY want to be an actor at all. Surely with a Broadway star mother Sarah should have realized it wasn't all going to be easy!

Anyway, it turns out ablations can only be made from aspects of a person that the person doesn't really want to have anymore. So that's how Moppet came to be. But dreams can't be held captive for long or they die. So as an act of love Jareth released Moppet but not before erasing her memories of captivity... for some reason that has no real explanation at all...

Every day I find something else about Volume 4 that troubles me

above all else. Today I'm thinking of how Sarah was just letting her dreams die all because she wasn't accepted into Juliard. Her mother was a Broadway actress. Sarah would have known there could be rejections and also that you don't need Juliard to become an actress. Terrence Mann (Javert in the original Broadway cast of Les Miserables, Beast in the original Broadway cast of Beauty and the Beast, Rum Tum Tugger in the original cast of Cats (which Sarah had as a poster in her bed room in the movie), ...Chauvelin in Scarlet Pimpernel and currently in the Addams Family musical is one of the greats. And someone once told me that Terrence Mann could be quoted as having said that if you give up after the first rejection than you don't really want to be an actor. I'm really to believe that Sarah not only lectured Toby that there are 'two types of fantasy' (an insult to the genre) but also gave up on all of her dreams after one rejection to one of the hardest schools in the world to get into!? Whatever happened to the version of Sarah whose tenacity impressed Jareth? The girl who refused to give up when trapped in The Labyrinth where others had? I am to believe that after maybe three years she gave up on her dreams after one rejection after all that?! It doesn't make sense... It would have been easier for me to believe that Sarah realized acting was her mother's dream and not hers and Sarah CHOSE to be a teacher, not that it was something she did when she 'gave up on her dreams to let them die.'

Weak Point 2: I have already complained about this but I'll keep it short. A major plot point is foreshadowed through Toby saying that there are 'two types of fantasy stories.' And it turns out Sarah told him this. To me this is contrary to the idea of a true fantasy lover. A true fantasy lover would not generalize fantasy so far as to say 'There are two types of fantasy' which 'unintentionally' implies that there are only two types of fantasy. He doesn't use the word only but it felt like he might as well have.

Anyway, Jareth reveals the events to Sarah via a puppet show. While this is going on Mizumi has taken over the Labyrinth but still cannot will Jareth's heart.

Weak Point 3:

We are given a weak back story on how Jareth became the goblin King. Apparently Jareth and Mizumi were lovers but Jareth had no real interest in Mizumi because she was a passive, willing slave and that was not what Jareth really wanted. He wasn't interested in someone who was subservient and unimaginative. During their travels they end up in a swampy area for a while where Jareth is 'amused' by the goblins that inhabit it. While there Mizumi pleads for the chance to win Jareth's heart so Jareth creates his Labyrinth and tells her that if she solves it she can have his heart. Because the Labyrinth represents himself, his heart is the pathfinder (the very core of the Labyrinth).

The condition is if she fails to solve it she can't let any harm come to it because it IS a part of Jareth. (But... Um... wasn't she technically letting harm come to it in Volume 3?)

Also this contradicts what David Bowie has said about Jareth, that Jareth reluctantly inherited the role of Goblin King and would rather be down in Soho somewhere.

Bowie didn't just say that Jareth doesn't like being Goblin King. Bowie did use the words 'reluctantly inherited the title.' meaning he didn't become Goblin King by choice. Until Volume 4 I thought Jake was using what everyone involved with the original film wanted as a basis, it's easy to research what they all thought because it's right on the DVD. I can't disregard Mr. Bowie's views on his own character when he's one of the main forces behind the version of Jareth we know.

Not to mention this is a pretty silly origin for The Goblin King. They amused him so he settles down to be their king. That's like a kid going into his garden and seeing some Ladybugs. 'Oh, look! Ladybugs! I shall be their king!' It disrespects and ignores David Bowie's statements about Jareth and is painfully simplistic. I don't know how the Henson company could have approved this to be Jareth's official origin story and yet I know they did...

I am sorry. I do love the manga over all. Please know this. I can practically hear the melody for Shadow of a Dream and it's a beautiful song but volume 4 just didn't satisfy me for multiple reasons. The manga's back story for Jareth didn't take into account what Bowie said. He didn't just say that he doesn't like the role of goblin king but that he reluctantly inherited the title.

Weak Point 4: The lizards have almost no purpose at all. They just leave you going 'Well, that was kind of pointless.'

It turns out Moulin is an ablation of Mizumi's regret. And if you make the original source of the ablation feel or gain the attribute that the ablation represented than the ablation is free to be a separate being. Moulin forces Mizumi to feel regret without actually being a part of her so the two can exist separately however Mizumi kills her anyway in a plot point that doesn't really go anywhere except to show how cruel Mizumi can be. But in a later scene it's like the writing is trying to force us to feel for Mizumi. And it feels sort of bipolar.

Sarah seems to gain new dreams but for some reason or another still rejoins with Moppet and Moppet seems happy about this even though everything she was and all her memories are gone forever. So there was really no point at all in showing that an ablation can be made to exist as a real person away from it's host.

Jareth agrees to help set things right in The Labyrinth IF Sarah agrees to marry him. She kisses his forehead. That's the 'true loves kiss' in the prophecy, a little peck on the forehead.

Jareth sets things right and then reminds Sarah of her promise to marry him.

Weak Point 5: Toby's life lesson felt like an 'I learned something today' segment from South Park. It took up several pages and it felt sort of tacked on. Also I had thought the speech in Toby's play would prove to be important later on but it wasn't. It didn't have any significant purpose like Sarah's 'You have no power over me.' speech. But Toby's life lesson somehow leads to Jareth saying that everyone may go home.

Weak Point 6: Remember how Hana was homicidal about getting her wings back? I imagine for a pixie to lose her wings it's like a singer whose tongue has been ripped out or a dancer whose legs are chopped off. It's rather important to them if they can get these lost and painfully removed appendages put back.

Hana was bitter and resentful about having lost her wings. She even poisoned the punch bowl at Jareth's ball in volume one of Return to Labyrinth. Well, Jareth gave Toby a magical crystal orb as a reward for helping him. So Toby goes to give Hana her wings (because he's 'learned to be responsible') but he misses and the wings end up on Stank, her small puppy-like variation on Ludo. And she says 'Good enough!' No, not good enough. Was that supposed to be funny? She was devastated about her wings being ripped off but she's okay because they're now on the creature she rides? That's like a man in a wheelchair but if the wheelchair sprouts working legs that makes it ALL better! This scene felt like a total fail to me.

So Toby learns his 'lesson' and Sarah goes on to become a children's book writer instead of 'just a teacher' because apparently you can't be fulfilled teaching others...

But Toby's somehow (though it's not really shown, it's told) learned responsibility. Sarah has dreams again. Jareth is king again. This is something I feared. It felt like an attempt to appease everyone and it appeased almost no one. Jareth and Sarah definitely love each other as proved by the anti-climatic true love's kiss but they didn't end up together, which was meant to appease those who didn't want them together but at the same time appease those that feel that there is true love between Jareth and Sarah.

So if that was true love's kiss (as the prophecy required) that means Sarah, for no reason at all, abandoned her one true love and not only is everyone okay with that but it's the ending her 'no longer selfish brother' preferred. Talking your sister (somehow) into leaving behind her true love seems pretty selfish if you ask me.

I like the manga in general, particularly Shadow of a Dream in Volume 3, but I don't like Volume 4 quite as much.
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8 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars As Tangled As The Labyrinth, August 5, 2010
By 
J Astin (Washington State) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Return to Labyrinth Volume 4 (Jim Henson's Return to Labyrinth) (Paperback)
First, I must address something - if you were expecting a perfect fairy-tale ending, you were hoping for too much. Just like in movie of The Labyrinth, the ending has a bittersweet tang. This can't wholly be the reason for the rating.

That being said, this book is muddled. If you were expecting a clear and concise conclusion to the manga, you will be disappointed. A lot happens, but you can't be sure of what it all ends up to be. The fate of a couple major characters, Moppet and Moulin, is not clearly shown, leaving you to guess whether or not they even survive.

Character reasoning is also tangled. Toby, given the chance to be the hero and stop being whiny, really doesn't. The Sarah/Moppet connection is confusing, and even Jareth is a bit flip-floppy, though he ends up looking good overall, even if he should be brought to task for a couple things, mainly STEALING SARAH'S DREAMS. It's vaguely addressed, but not with the rage Sarah would, or should feel.

On the plus side, we do get to see some more of the characters' histories; mainly Jareth, Mizumi, and Sarah. This is interesting and does help with the relationships. Though probably the biggest question, how Jareth came to focus on Sarah, is left unanswered.

The artwork is the same as the other books, so if you hated them, you'll hate this. The cover is amazingly gorgeous and more so in person. The guest art, as usual, is impressive.

To conclude, this book is too muddled, but if you have been following the series, it has enough nuggets of interest to make it worth buying. If you're not a hardcore Labyrinth fan, it may actually be better, as you'll be expecting less, but if you are - you'll get it anyway and find it lacking. Still, it deserves more than one star.
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3.0 out of 5 stars Decent series...Ending could have been better, January 19, 2012
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This review is from: Return to Labyrinth Volume 4 (Jim Henson's Return to Labyrinth) (Paperback)
I really liked the movie that this series is based on, but the plot of this follow up/spin-off just didn't cut the mustard. This movie will remain one of my favorites, mainly due to the serene lack of Computer Graphics, but this series is only good for those people who are REALLY into the movie. The love of the movie is what kept me from putting the book down in frustration, simply because the plot started to unravel and then it was as if the author just decided to stop, like he'd had enough or got bored. I felt this kind of series deserved a bit more attention to detail and maybe a longer plot. I saw it becoming an epic (maybe 12 volume) series, but then it went flat, fast.

Please don't misunderstand me though. I will still recommend this to die hard fans of The Labyrinth, but not to general readers who kinda-sorta liked the movie. Kinda-sortas should just go watch the movie again, and learn to love it more, THEN come and read this series.
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3.0 out of 5 stars My score is actually me being generous..., September 3, 2011
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This review is from: Return to Labyrinth Volume 4 (Jim Henson's Return to Labyrinth) (Paperback)
Uck! Terrible, terrible! Did anyone involved in this book do research on Labyrinth in the first place?! I mean yeah they know what the labyrinth looked like, but that's not even half of what they needed to make a good series. I am disappointed in the ending in more ways than one, but that's not all of what was wrong. They drag Sarah into the story by reminding her of her dreams only to have her give them up again in the end?! What is that??? Sure, she says she needs them all in the end, but she still turns her back on what her dreams were in the beginning! To be an actress. And Toby....he didn't even finish saving the kingdom. He just whined and let everyone do his work for him. Of course, everyone should be able to choose their own destiny, and that may not have been what he wanted, but at least finish what you start! Ugh! I'm just disappointed on the whole series, though I gave scores of at least 3 stars. Jim Henson would be throwing a fit if he knew how this turned out. He may not have believed in absolute good or absolute evil (at least that's what I've read) but he would have done Labyrinth way more justice than this. I'm glad they didn't make this a movie if that's how it was all going to turn out! Not to say I wouldn't love a sequel MOVIE out of this, but it needs to follow the first movie more than this. Okay, I'm just going to end up repeating myself over and over so I'm going to stop now. Just....YUCK! The only good reason to read the 4th volume is if you already read the other 3, and that's not even a GOOD reason.
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6 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Don't judge a book by it's cover..., August 5, 2010
This review is from: Return to Labyrinth Volume 4 (Jim Henson's Return to Labyrinth) (Paperback)
because I'd by the manga for the cover alone. You can shove the content. I bought it, but I was afraid to read it after the scathing reviews. Halfway through I wanted to throw the book across the room. You can read better written (and not necessarily perfect ending) stories for free on line.
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6 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Didn't feel like it stayed true to the movie..., August 4, 2010
This review is from: Return to Labyrinth Volume 4 (Jim Henson's Return to Labyrinth) (Paperback)
To be honest, I wanted Sarah and Jareth to end up together. And because Jareth talked about rebuilding the Labyrinth if it would bring Sarah back, I thought that's what would happen.

But I was disappointed to find that Jareth's love for Sarah was selfish. In the movie, he was willing to be her slave. But in the end, all he wanted was revenge. Sure he wanted Sarah to "fear me, love me, do as I say, and I will be your slave." But I doubt he'd be willing to be anyone slave, unless he really wanted something.

And when Sarah says the final line, Jareth seems to accept defeat. Maybe he's sad that Sarah chose Toby over him, or maybe he knows that he's lost his chance with Sarah. Regardless, he seems to accept defeat.

When Toby was off in the Labyrinth, no one seemed to notice or miss him when he didn't show up for school. Wouldn't his mother at least call Sarah ?

Mizumi ? I hated her. She kills both of her daughters. She was bitter because she never got Jareth's heart ? What did Jareth ever do to indicate that he actually loved her ? I saw Mizumi as desperate.

Jareth treated Mizumi pretty badly. She loved him and he basically treated like an amusement of sorts. While her own actions were bad, Jareth used Toby to escape the contract.

In the manga, Jareth's, love is selfish. Had Sarah gone with him, I felt it would've been rushed. but because of how selfish Jareth was, Sarah might've been a good influence on him,. And she could've made the Labyrinth a better place.

To me, I'd wanted an ending where Sarah and Jareth keep in contact and have some sort of relationship that hints that they still might end up together someday, but also that Sarah proves that she's her own person.
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Return to Labyrinth Volume 4 (Jim Henson's Return to Labyrinth)
Return to Labyrinth Volume 4 (Jim Henson's Return to Labyrinth) by Jake T. Forbes (Paperback - August 1, 2010)
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