Years after rediscovering the magic of his childhood friends, Christopher Robin has built a quieter life with his family. But when his daughter, Madeline, begins struggling with the pressures of school and feeling forgotten by her always-busy father, something stirs deep in the Hundred Acre Wood.
One misty morning, Pooh finds a familiar note drifting from the sky — a drawing from Madeline, wishing she could “run away to someplace simple.” Believing she’s in danger or lost, Pooh, Tigger, Piglet, Eeyore, and the whole gang set out to find Christopher once again.
Meanwhile, Christopher returns to the old Wood only to discover a strange change:
a hidden glen has appeared, a place none of the friends remember. This enchanted area seems to shift and reshape itself, as though responding to the feelings of whoever enters.
When Madeline accidentally wanders into the glen through a dreamlike doorway, she becomes trapped inside its ever-changing maze of memories — both joyful and painful. To save her, Christopher must face the parts of growing up he’s buried away: fear of failing, fear of forgetting, and fear of not being enough.
With Pooh’s gentle wisdom, Tigger’s chaotic courage, and his daughter’s belief in him, Christopher learns the truth:
It’s not childhood you lose — it’s the courage to revisit it.
In the end, father and daughter rediscover the magic of slowing down, holding on, and being present for the ones who love you unconditionally.