Pan's Labyrinth



Original Spanish title: El laberinto del fauno.

Imagine Alice in Wonderland meeting The Boy in The Striped Pyjamas, then joined by The Wind That Shakes the Barley with a sizable portion of The Brothers Grimm thrown in.

You'll get...

Pan's Labyrinth, a dark, modern-day fairy tale, complete with fairies, Secret Tests Of Character, and monsters -- not all of them supernatural.

It's set in 1944, just after the Spanish Civil War (a favorite period for Mexico-born Guillermo del Toro, the film's writer and director), with Spain's democratically elected socialist government overthrown by the Falangists (Spanish Fascists or "National-Catholics") and the new government attempting to weed out the last traces of La Résistance. The story centers on Ofelia, an only child whose widowed mother Carmen has agreed to marry the ruthless Captain Vidal to provide for them. In turn, he expects her to bear him a son.

Ofelia and her mother are taken to a villa in the mountains near an old labyrinth (the titular Faun's one) to be near Captain Vidal for the birth while he hunts down rebels. She is quickly taken into a Changeling Fantasy about how she is secretly princess of the underworld fairy kingdom, lost to humanity for many ages. The Faun and his labyrinth were one of many made by her father, the King of the Underworld, as gateways in the hope she would return.

As she undergoes trials to prove her soul is uncorrupted by living among humans, so do the rebels, her mother, and her nursemaid and only friend Mercedes.

Warning, this film is a Tear Jerker. A profoundly disturbing Tear Jerker, as well as a great source of horror. For those of you who missed the R rating ...this fairy tale is very definitely not for children.

It is notable that many squicks and nightmares were induced by this movie due to the advertising as "family friendly". Especially in Europe, trailers shown only mentioned the fantasy parts. The fact that it takes place during Franco's regime is completely ignored, as is every mention of gruesomeness. Rated everything from 12+ (France, Japan, Iceland, Taiwan) to 21+ (Singapore) in cinemas.

""You won't be the first pig I've gutted, motherfucker.""
 * Action Survivor: Ofelia.
 * Anyone Can Die: By the end of the film
 * Astral Checkerboard Decor
 * A Tragedy of Impulsiveness: If Ofelia had not eaten those two grapes, the fairies' deaths could have been avoided, in addition to a lot of other bad things.
 * Audible Sharpness: During the shaving scene and during the scene with the eyeless man, first a key, then the knife
 * Badass: The film has plenty of them, but there's a surprising one when

"Ferreiro: Why are you so sure that the baby is a boy?
 * Captain Vidal may be an asshole, but the man stitches his own face and walks off the fact that he's been stabbed, and later, drugged.
 * Berserk Button: If one is to, one will provoke a level of wrath one would not expect to see from Mercedes.
 * The Faun really hates being disobeyed, especially when it results in the death of his fairy pets.
 * Better to Die Than Be Killed:
 * Bittersweet Ending:
 * Big Damn Heroes:
 * Blood From the Mouth:, overlapping with Deadly Nosebleed, and Captain Vidal, but in his case it's justified, because
 * Blood Knight: Captain Vidal
 * Blood Magic: The plant that the Faun gives Ofelia to heal her mother requires a few drops of fresh blood daily in order to work.
 * At the end, the Faun tells Ofelia that.
 * Break the Cutie: Having fun yet, Ofelia?
 * Brick Joke: The lottery ticket.
 * Broken Masquerade
 * By the Eyes of the Blind: The Faun, even when in plain sight, can only be seen by those who "know where to look" and are ready to believe. (Or so says Word of God Guillermo del Toro on the DVD Commentary.)
 * Changeling Fantasy an early scene even emphasizes that Ofelia is Left Handed, a feature of changelings from folklore.
 * Chekhov's Gun: The knife Mercedes rolls up in her dress after cutting potatoes.
 * And the sedative the doctor leaves on Ofelia's mother's bedside.
 * Child Eater: The Pale Man. This is made very clear just from looking at his lair, which includes among other things his collection of children's shoes.
 * Word of God says that the Pale Man was visually inspired by a movie poster (from the Phantasm film) of a woman with hands in front of her eyes, partially transparent so that the eyes were still visible. And the rest of the creature was supposed to resemble a morbidly obese man who had lost his fat and muscle mass during the endless years of sitting paralyzed in front of the cursed banquet, according to rumours partially inspired by Guillermo del Toro himself after a vigorous diet.
 * Clock King: Captain Vidal
 * Co-Dragons: Garcés and Serrano to Vidal.
 * Cold-Blooded Torture: Captain Vidal likes to do this on his captives, most of the time to extract information, but other times not.
 * Coup De Grace
 * Crapsack Only by Comparison: It is indicated that our world is a Crapsack World compared to the other one early on. Later footage subverts this, or at least makes you wonder about the priorities of the one doing the comparison.
 * Dark Is Not Evil: The various . It's humans you should watch out for. On the other hand, there's also the Pale Man.
 * Death by Childbirth: Carmen
 * Denied Food as Punishment: Ofelia.
 * Determinator: Captain Vidal. This is also after he is nearly gutted, stabbed repeated times, and drugged.
 * Confirmed by Word of God.
 * Development Hell
 * Died Happily Ever After:
 * Died in Your Arms Tonight:
 * Doomed Moral Victor: Ofelia, paralleling the CNT-FAI in the actual Spanish Civil War.
 * Doomed New Clothes: Genre Savvy Ofelia tries to avert this trope. It doesn't work.
 * Down the Rabbit Hole
 * Environmental Symbolism: From the obvious (the tree the frog resides under is shaped like a ram's head) to the more subtle (the bannisters in the house also have ram's heads, and the headboard of the mother's bed has details shaped like ram's horns
 * Alternately, you have to assume a variation on the idea that the Faun and the faeries are in one world, and everybody else is in another and the only reason Ofelia can see them is because she belongs to both worlds. Either that or you go down the pathway of delusions and schizophrenia.
 * You can go with the latter if you choose to ignore the various supernatural happenings, including a wall of bushes magically opening and closing for a little girl, leaving a grown man unaware to where she went, the fact that the mandrake root actually made her mother better before she burned it just to prove "there is no magic" (and subsequently died), probably some others and at least one of a flying baby before a Complete but logical Monster and the townspeople with torches and forks.
 * Establishing Character Moment: For Vidal - "It's the right hand." And if that didn't convince you, him stomping two suspected rebels' faces in and then repeatedly shooting them, hopefully will.
 * Everyone Has Standards: The faun pretty much loses his shit when he finds out Ophelia got his two fairy buddies eaten by the Pale Man.
 * Everything's Better with Princesses
 * Eyeless Face (combined with Eyes Do Not Belong There): The Pale Man has his eyes in his hands. Gah!
 * They're on his plate first... And then he puts them in the empty sockets in his hands... Gah! indeed...
 * And lest we forget: Captain Vidal + Sunglasses = Devil. (then again, Captain Vidal - Sunglasses = Devil too, so yeah)
 * Face Palm: The faeries (and us in the audience) when Ofelia eats the grapes.
 * The Fair Folk
 * Fairy Tale
 * Famous Last Words: appears to have given much, much thought to his last words.
 * Fantasy Forbidding Mother: Ofelia is chided for reading too many fairy stories when she's supposed to have outgrown them.
 * Fauns and Satyrs
 * Faux Fluency: Doug Jones, the Faun, actually learned his lines and Ofelia's lines in phonetic Spanish, despite speaking none of the language. His voice was dubbed over anyway ... but still!
 * Extra (if belated) Visual Effects of Awesome kick in for those who don't realize until after watching the movie the Faun's voice is dubbed.
 * It means that the Faun's Mouth Flaps line up beautifully, meaning that his wonderfully deep voice is seamless. So, Doug Jones, you rock.
 * It gets even more awesome: Not only did he need to learn Ophelia's lines so he would know when to speak, but he couldn't hear the actress because the servos in the costume were so loud.
 * Finger-Twitching Revival: The Pale Man.
 * Follow the White Rabbit: On the way to her new home, she follows a big bug to find a pagan-esque statue in the woods, later she follows the same bug to find the large stone structure in the labyrinth by her house, and the Faun.
 * Food Chains: Don't eat the food on the table means, don't eat the food on the table. (Though, since it was wartime, it was likely that Ofelia hadn't eaten or seen fresh fruit in a long while. And she had been sent to bed without supper, so was more hungry than usual)
 * Also, you know, the fruit was forbidden.
 * Forbidden Fruit
 * Foregone Conclusion: The film opens with Ofelia, lying on the ground, with
 * Fractured Fairy Tale
 * Frogs and Toads: For her first task, Ofelia must retrieve a golden key out of a giant toad's stomach.
 * Genre Savvy: Ofelia. When she's not Wrong Genre Savvy.
 * Glasgow Grin: Vidal gets half of one . He stitches it himself.
 * Good Is Not Nice: Going along with Dark Is Not Evil above, the Faun is frightening and downright mean at times, but he's on Ofelia's side.
 * Grievous Bottley Harm: In a horrific scene,  with a bottle.
 * Many audience members had been expecting a Gory Discretion Shot but the fact that there wasn't one didn't disturb people nearly as much as how perfectly calm Vidal was while doing it.
 * Grotesque Gallery: The Pale Man.
 * Guess Who I'm Marrying
 * Also worth mentioning,
 * No love for the
 * Hero of Another Story: Pedro, the leader of the rebels.
 * Humanoid Abomination: The Pale Man.
 * Humans Are Bastards: Mostly just the Fascists though.
 * I Cannot Self-Terminate: Vidal orders Dr. Ferraro to treat the wounds of a rebel he is torturing so that he can be tortured some more. The man begs Dr. Ferraro to kill him, and Ferraro obliges by giving a lethal injection.
 * I Have Many Names: The Faun.
 * Imaginary Friend: All the fairies might (possibly) be in Ofelia's imagination.
 * Infant Immortality:
 * Inkblot Test: The foreshadowing towards  Would also go into What Do You Mean Its Not Symbolic.
 * Inverted Trope: According to Word of God, in this movie, set in Falangist Spain,  This is nearly the opposite of pretty much any normal fairy-tale.
 * Perhaps best summed up in the last words of
 * Ironic Nursery Tune: Averted.
 * Played straight when Mercedes hums Ofelia a lullaby as
 * It Got Worse: * Shudder*
 * Jerkass: When he finds out that, the faun shouts at Ofelia and says he's abandoning her for disobeying him over that one. Ofelia is understandably hurt and confused.
 * Her disobedience lead to the It's understandable that he would be pissed, especially considering
 * On the other hand, the ending implies that the faun's cruelty is something of an act -
 * Just Following Orders: Subverted.
 * Kick the Dog
 * Kill Him Already: Mercedes' should probably have  to avert the Bittersweet Ending, However, according to Word of God:
 * Mercedes was also shown to be a very gentle person who was clearly scared and nervous for most of the movie.
 * La Résistance - the rebels of course
 * Overlaps somewhat with The Remnant, since by the time the movie takes place (1944) the Republicans had already lost the war, and there were only a few isolated pockets of resistance remaining.
 * Let's Get Dangerous: Mercedes at first comes off as a fairly meek woman,, and she considers herself a coward. Then,.
 * Living Labyrinth
 * Lost in Translation: When the Captain welcomes Ofelia and the pregnant Carmen to the villa, he says "Bienvenidos" to them, the Spanish form of "welcome" that one would use in addressing multiple people when at least one is male (you'd say "Bienvenidas" to two women). This would instantly telegraph to a Spanish-speaking audience whom he really cares about (especially since the baby's sex is still unknown).
 * Considering the Captain's character, it's likely meant to give the impression that he's sure the baby is a boy. In his mind, he's convinced he's too strong to have made anything but a boy. At least, that's the impression this troper got.
 * La Résistance - the rebels of course
 * Overlaps somewhat with The Remnant, since by the time the movie takes place (1944) the Republicans had already lost the war, and there were only a few isolated pockets of resistance remaining.
 * Let's Get Dangerous: Mercedes at first comes off as a fairly meek woman,, and she considers herself a coward. Then,.
 * Living Labyrinth
 * Lost in Translation: When the Captain welcomes Ofelia and the pregnant Carmen to the villa, he says "Bienvenidos" to them, the Spanish form of "welcome" that one would use in addressing multiple people when at least one is male (you'd say "Bienvenidas" to two women). This would instantly telegraph to a Spanish-speaking audience whom he really cares about (especially since the baby's sex is still unknown).
 * Considering the Captain's character, it's likely meant to give the impression that he's sure the baby is a boy. In his mind, he's convinced he's too strong to have made anything but a boy. At least, that's the impression this troper got.

Vidal: Don't fuck with me."

" Tell my son the time his father died. Tell him.
 * The Faun (and later the Fairy court) use the vosotros (2nd person plural) form when adrressing Ofelia, rather than tú. Not only does add a bit of atmosphere to the characters, since this sort of address was the norm in medieval Spanish, but it also overlaps with the Royal We.
 * The Lost Woods
 * Magical Girl Queenliness Test
 * Magical Realism
 * Maybe Magic, Maybe Mundane: Are the fantasy creatures real, or the product of a lonely girl's imagination? (Although, according to Word of God, )
 * Meaningful Name: Girls named Ofelia don't tend to have happy endings.
 * Milky White Eyes: The Faun has these when Ofelia first meets him, though as the movie progresses they become more normal. Whether this is of any significance isn't stated, although it's notable that the Faun seems to de-age in other ways as the film nears the climax, signaling his growing power.
 * Never Say "Die": Also, never say "pregnant."
 * Although Ofelia's "sick with baby" comment is such an apt expression under the circumstances.
 * Never Trust a Trailer: The trailers used for the US release 1) Gave no clue that the actual film was in Spanish, and 2) made it look like a Narnia-type family fantasy. FAMILY FANTASY. REALLY.
 * Driven home on the cover of the DVD, which promises that the movie is "on the same altar of High Fantasy as The Lord of the Rings trilogy", and throws another mention of The Lord of the Rings on the back of the cover, obviously trying to make whoever buys it believe that the movie is going to be just like it. If anything it's more of an Urban Fantasy.
 * Offscreen Teleportation
 * Our Fairies Are Different: They disguise themselves as insects.
 * Playing Against Type: Much of the cast. Sergi López (Captain Vidal) and Alex Angulo (Doctor Ferreiro) had been considered lightweight comedic actors. Maribel Verdú (Mercedes) had played mostly sexpots, and her most famous role (at least in the English-speaking world) had been Luisa Cortés in Y tu mamá también.
 * Plucky Girl: Ofelia.
 * Point That Somewhere Else: It doesn't actually work. Captain Vidal aims his pistol at a wounded revolutionary, who weakly pushes it away once, twice, then rests his hand over the barrel. Vidal shoots him in the head, through his hand.
 * Psycho for Hire
 * Rage Against the Reflection: Captain Vidal.
 * Rags to Royalty
 * Red Eyes, Take Warning: The Pale Man, adding to the already existing eye horror.
 * Reverse Mole: Mercedes and Doctor Fereiro.
 * The Revolution Will Not Be Vilified: The band of guerrilla fighters in the hills.
 * True, for the most part. But they're not completely idealized. Most notably, they have a subtle moment that's pointed out by Word of God in the DVD Commentary:
 * Subtle? That's considered a war crime.
 * The Falangists had shown no mercy to them, so they obviously weren't inclined to give any back. Also, it's not as if they could take prisoners, and fighting without uniforms as they do is also considered a war crime.
 * Technically.
 * Right Place, Right Time, Wrong Reason: Seriously. The Chessmaster couldn't've planned a better strategic turn of events than that.
 * Mercedes, so the rebels were waiting for her there for a reason.
 * Rule of Scary
 * Rule of Three: Three tests to prove her worth. Three items to be collected. Three times Ofelia goes to the Labyrinth, three times the Faun comes to her in her room. Three doors made with chalk. Three fairies. You get the picture.
 * Scenery Porn: One of the most visually stunning movies in recent years.
 * Secret Test of Character: Towards the end, when  to return to the fairy kingdom and escape her very enraged
 * Schmuck Banquet: The Pale Man's cursed feast.
 * Shoot the Shaggy Dog: Almost certainly applies if you can't accept that the magic is real.
 * Shamed by a Mob: Captain Vidal near the end of the movie.
 * Shout-Out: In the commentary, Guillermo del Toro points out many shoutouts to Charles Dickens, Stephen King, several surrealist painters, and many others.
 * Shut UP, Hannibal: Towards the end of the movie...

Mercedes: No, he won't even know your name.

"


 * Sliding Scale of Idealism Versus Cynicism: This movie simultaneously pits the two ends of the scale against each other..
 * Soft Glass: Subverted in a scene early on which has Captain Vidal smashing a man's face in with a wine bottle. The bottle doesn't break.
 * He's using the bottom of the bottle, which is usually the thickest part, especially when it comes to wine bottles.
 * The Southpaw - Ofelia, in that it is a subtle sign that she actually is a changeling
 * Spiritual Successor: Word of God identifies this film as the second in a loosely connected trilogy started by The Devil's Backbone and to be concluded with a ghost movie set in the 70s.
 * Theme and Variations Soundtrack
 * Theme Tune Cameo
 * The Ophelia
 * Too Dumb to Live: Ofelia, in ignoring the warnings of the fairies, during her disastrous face-off against the Pale Man. Though, in following the fairy tale motif, it was faerie food which is almost always glamoured to make it seem like irresistible, Impossibly Delicious Food.
 * That, and it's supposed to show how she doesn't blindly obey orders, unlike Captain Vidal. It was just unfortunate that this was done via a test that anyone Genre Savvy with fairy tales could recognize.
 * It's also worth noting that immediately before, she only found the right hiding place by following her own will and not listening to the fairies.
 * YMMV. Ofelia likes fairy tales, and the movie is set up like one. In some fairy tales (but not all), the main character will fail to listen to advice, or do something they were told specifically not to do--and no clear reason is given. In some cases the tale ends here, otherwise the main character must do something to redeem themselves in the eyes of their quest-giver. So Ofelia is just acting in accordance with the fairy-tale princess that she believes she is--or else she can't act any other way because she IS a fairy-tale princess.
 * To the Pain
 * Torture Always Works: Vidal seems to think so, but it's ultimately subverted.
 * Unperson:
 * Vader Breath: The Pale Man.
 * What the Hell, Hero?: Ofelia and the grapes.
 * As noted under Too Dumb to Live, Ofelia is just acting like a character in a fairy tale.
 * Wicked Stepmother: Father actually, Vidal to Ofelia. But "wicked" is a bit too mild.
 * Would Hurt a Child: Captain Vidal.
 * Wouldn't Hurt a Child:
 * Wrong Genre Savvy: Almost all the real-world characters, but Carmen (Ofelia's mother) most of all.
 * Vomit Indiscretion Shot: When the giant toad pukes up its insides.
 * You Watch Too Much X: According to her Wrong Genre Savvy mother Carmen, Ofelia reads too many fairy tales.
 * Or maybe Right Genre Savvy mother, we never find out for sure...