r/labyrinth

Something that has always annoyed me

I have loved this movie ever since I was a kid & still watch it all the time but I always get annoyed at the part at the end when Sarah's parents get back & the dad yells "Sarah, are you home?" Like it's midnight & she was babysitting,, did you expect her to go out & leave an infant all alone? 🤣 Does this small detail annoy anyone else or am I just weird?

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u/melimel307 — 18 hours ago
▲ 398 r/labyrinth

'Ello!...1:1 polymer clay sculpt

I'm a polymer clay sculptor and decided to make the Ello worm for the 40th anniversary. Ive used dyed feathers and tine for his fluff and some brushed cotton for the scarf. I orginally sculpted this from polymer clay and then made a silicone mold so i can cast resin versions for a few friends. All hand-painted and 1:1 scale.

Hope you enjoy!

u/HugoFallen — 24 hours ago
▲ 304 r/labyrinth

Officially finished Jareth!

I might clean up/detail the vest a little more and add his necklace as well! But for now I’m calling it good. My thumbs are so sore from sewing the faux leather.

u/Ginger_Kaiju — 1 day ago
▲ 35 r/labyrinth+2 crossposts

Labyrinth screenings at indie theaters

Hi! I'm the writer of the BOWIE graphic novel and this year and next year I'm hosting Labyrinth (and other Bowie film) screenings across the U.S. at arthouse theaters.

So far, I've gone to Milwaukee, Houston and Chicago, with upcoming screenings in Ft. Wayne, Los Angeles, San Francisco, New Orleans, and Franklin, IN.

My question for you is, what indie theater near you should I be contacting next about a Bowie screening?

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u/sonofstev — 1 day ago
▲ 483 r/labyrinth

Day of Remembrance: Jim Henson

Today - May 16, 1990 - marks the anniversary of Jim Henson’s passing.

What has always stayed with me isn’t just what he created, but how he created it. There’s a kind of quiet intentionality in his work where even the smallest details feel like they belong to a real, fully lived-in world: strange, funny, theatrical, melancholy, comforting, and deeply sincere all at once. He understood that fantasy wasn’t escapism from emotion, but a way inward to embrace them.

These photos are from the set of Labyrinth, but what they really show is something bigger: a director who treated imagination as something physical. Built. Handled. Shared.

His magnum opus, Labyrinth, was his vision brought to life - an outer world and inner world carefully crafted and refined to feel like it existed somewhere just offscreen, waiting for others to step into. Even now, decades later, his work still feels alive in a way that most media doesn’t. Not manufactured. Not cynical. Alive.

That’s a legacy that doesn’t fade... 🥲

u/Knathan_the_Knight — 4 days ago
▲ 919 r/labyrinth

Couldn't afford the jacket that's for sale so working on my own

Mid process! Can't wait until it's finished. Can't think of how to add Hoggle or Sir Didymus. Any ideas?

u/damechou — 7 days ago