He awakens a big giant who reaches up and extinguishes the sun, and has all the stars come down. But then he brings everyone to a new and better Narnia by a magic door.
As Aslan explains at the end of Dawn Treader, there is a way to Him from all worlds, even without wardrobes and rings. Aslan is Jesus, and Narnia is the Kingdom of God. You can enter the Kingdom of God at any time by repenting of your sins, asking for forgiveness and letting Jesus be your friend.
Aslan
Warning; this answer contains spoilers. Do not read any further if you don't want to know. Actually, all four pevensies and their parents die because of a train accident. When they die, the pevensies go to Narnia and the world of Narnia ends. When the Narnian world dies, Aslan sends them to Aslan's Country where Lucy is reunited with Mr Tumnus and the other animals she met when she first discovered Narnia. In the real world, yes, the pevensies are dead, but in Narnia the four glorious kings and queen live forever. Long live Aslan!!!
Susan is not present in the last Narnia book, "The Last Battle," because she has become obsessed with trivial and materialistic things, losing her faith in Narnia and Aslan. This ultimately causes her to no longer be included in the story's conclusion.
The White Witch brings eternal winter to Narnia with her spell, causing the land to be frozen and lifeless. This plunges Narnia into a state of despair and suffering until Aslan arrives to bring an end to her tyranny and restore balance to the land.
In the beginning of The Chronicles of Narnia, the land of Narnia is under the rule of the White Witch, who has plunged the land into a perpetual winter. The animals and creatures of Narnia are living in fear and longing for the return of the true king, Aslan, to restore peace and end the oppressive rule of the witch.
The Chronicles of Narnia take place in the fictional land of Narnia, which is a magical world created by the author C.S. Lewis. Narnia is filled with talking animals, mythical creatures, and various magical elements.
Jill and Eustace are flung into Narnia one second before (in our world) they end up in a trauin accident. Lucy, Digory, and Polly are with them. Edmund and Peter are waiting on the platform, and get hit bu the train, die, and go to Narnia.
The White Witch ran away in Narnia because she was defeated by Aslan and his forces in the battle and was ultimately killed by Edmund. Her reign of tyranny and evil was brought to an end, and she knew she could not continue to rule Narnia.
Well, that depends on whether or not you're going with the actual book or what the book represents. For the actual book, Aslan is important because he is the leader of the force resisting the White Witch, and is also awesome. With the second option, the Chronicles of Narnia is symbolism for the New Testament, and Aslan is Jesus. So you would say that Jesus was important in the New Testament, wouldn't you?
Mr. Tumnus got turned into stone by the White Witch, but Aslan came back and brought him back at the end of the movie, so no, he didn't die. Mr. Tumnus is dead by the time the children come back to Narnia in the second film because hundreds of years have pasted and he probably died in war but that was not in Narnia 1
When the Pevensie children enter Narnia, they are wide-eyed and innocent: innocent of the reality of evil, and innocent about who and what Aslan really is. By the end of the Chronicles, Peter, Edmund and Lucy have not only gained knowledge about Aslan, his sacrifice and his triumph over evil, but it is presumed that they have emerged into a whole new world where they recognise Aslan is really Christ, the one who offers eternal life. Clear "chrysalis" symbolism is also seen when Eustace Scrubb becomes a dragon in "The Voyage of the Dawn Treader". A most obnoxious and greedy character at the beginning of the book, he is literally transformed when Aslan painfully peels away layers and layers of Eustace's dragon scales and skin, until there is nothing but a small, naked, scared little boy who emerges, with a whole new understanding of himself and aslan.