The Princess Bride (film)/YMMV

"Buttercup... the princess bride, the most perfect, beautiful woman in the history of the world!"
 * Adaptation Displacement: Many who can quote the movie from end-to-end don't even realize there is a book.
 * In the introduction to more recent printings of the book, William Goldman says flat-out that if you are picking it up for the first time, it's probably because you've seen the film.
 * It says quite a bit when on the wiki pages where this is mentioned, it usually goes under "Film" rather than "Literature".
 * Awesome Music: The ending song performed by Willy DeVille.
 * Complaining About Shows You Don't Watch: Many guys hear the title and instantly scoff, refusing to ever watch it. This attitude is actually matched by the initial attitude of the boy in the framing device.
 * Complete Monster: Sadistic, torture-loving psychopath Count Rugen, described in the book's blurb as "the evilest character of all," even more than Big Bad Humperdinck.
 * Cult Classic
 * Ensemble Darkhorse: Inigo Monotya. Also Miracle Max and his wife.
 * Girl Show Ghetto: To compensate for the feminine-sounding title, some DVDs have a cover that puts the Dread Pirate Roberts in the front and center and emphasizes action in the synopsis.
 * Ho Yay: Humperdinck and Count Rugen anyone? And Inigo and Fezzik.
 * It Was His Sled:.
 * Magnificent Bastard: Westley demonstrates moments of being one.
 * Mary Sue: Buttercup is described as such in the 25th anniversary issue of the book.


 * Memetic Mutation: Many!
 * Hello. My Name Is Inigo Montoya. You Killed My Father. Prepare to Die.
 * You Keep Using That Word. I do not think it means what you think it means.
 * Have fun Storming the Castle!
 * And so on...
 * Narm Charm: The entire goddamn film. Completely intentional, of course.
 * Nightmare Fuel:
 * The Pain Machine.
 * The old lady. Boooo!
 * Older Than They Think:
 * Parodied in the book, with an explanation that a scene with Fezzik and Inigo going on minor quests to save Westley was 'cut' because it seemed like a ripoff of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, even though the 'original version' came out first. (Unfortunately, the film cut out even a mention of the "deleted scene," which made Fezzik's possession of a holocaust cloak -- which he acquires for that scene -- seem very out-of-left-field.)
 * In the film he gets the cloak from Miracle Max.
 * Vizzini saying "All aboard!". The book notes that this was before trains, but the saying actually comes from carpenters loading lumber, and this was well after carpenters.
 * The Woobie: Fezzik. Not so much in the movie, but after learning that in the book his parents forced him into wrestling at the age of nine and threatened to leave him forever if he wouldn't fight, you start to feel sorry for him.