Stardust (film)

A 2007 film adaptation of Neil Gaiman's book of the same name. While certain liberties were taken, it remains a very faithful adaptation. A young man sets out to find a fallen star for the girl he's in love with, only to find that the "star" has become human...and that three evil witches want to capture her.

Starring Charlie Cox, Claire Danes and Robert De Niro, the film is said to remind viewers of The Princess Bride. Although the movie contains a different ending from the book, it's successful at playing straight many of the often clichéd fantasy elements in an intelligent and entertaining way.

"Yvaine: But of course! Nothing says "romance" like the gift of a kidnapped injured woman!"
 * Abduction Is Love: Tristan starts out trying to force Yvaine to come back to England with him to show her to Victoria, then the two subsequently fall in love.
 * Yvaine also gives us this gem, about when she's abducted for love...

"Tristan: Couldn't you have done that earlier?"
 * Action Mom: Una knows how to drive a carriage.
 * Adaptation Distillation: The movie goes in a different direction from the book, introduces numerous changes in both the plot and the characters. However, it's not a bad story by any means.
 * Adaptation Dye Job: In the book, the eldest of the Lilim has black hair and wears red. In the movie, Lamia has blonde hair and wears green.
 * Adaptation Expansion: The Lightning Pirates get a brief mention in the book, but have a significant plot in the movie.
 * All-Star Cast: Oh yes- Robert De Niro, Michelle Pfeiffer, Clare Danes, Ricky Gervais, Mark Strong... Heck, even The Narrator is Sir Ian McKellen, and Peter O'Toole has a One-Scene Wonder as the King of Stormhold.
 * Author Appeal: The director of the movie, Matthew Vaughn, liked the original story so much that he thought it could be a movie a lot like The Princess Bride.
 * Awesome Moment of Crowning: Tristan gets the throne and his queen while his mother, father, and Capt. Shakespeare look on approvingly.
 * Badass Grandpa: The old man guarding the Wall apparently has had a lot of time to practice (having been there for 80 years).
 * Berserk Button: You really shouldn't betray Septimus, or mock him for that matter.
 * Big Bad Ensemble: Lamia and her sisters are a Big Bad Triumvirate, plus the various competing princes. By the end, though, Lamia is the last villain standing, so she probably takes precedence as the Big Bad.
 * Big No: Lamia yells this when Tristan and Yvaine escape her, using the Babylon candle.
 * Blue Blood: Literally true, in this version.
 * Blonde, Brunette, Redhead: Lamia and her sisters.
 * Camp Gay: Captain Shakespeare of the Caspartine
 * Cast from Hit Points: Lamia. Well, more "Cast From Youth," as each spell she uses drains a little bit of the good looks she got from eating the last of the previous star.
 * Chuck Cunningham Syndrome: Tristran's foster mother and his younger half-sister Louisa are not in the film.
 * Media Research Failure: Many reviews of the movie mention the Lightning Pirates as an example of ways in which the movie was different from the book, claiming that they do not appear in the book at all. This is untrue, it's just that what happens on their ship is glossed over in the book.
 * The film does invent some attributes: the seamen in the book were not pirates, just fishermen of a sort. And their captain was not an (admitted) transvestite.
 * Death by Adaptation:  actually survives the book.
 * Decoy Protagonist: An inversion, a Decoy Villain. Septimus seems like he should become a major problem for the heroes
 * Played straight with Tristan's father at the beginning - although he is important. To get the real protagonist, he and go into the back room and have fun...
 * Deleted Scene: Several that change the tone of the story. A scene at the ending establishes Tristan and Yvaine as a Mayfly-December Romance, with Yvaine outliving Tristan by a long time.
 * Department of Redundancy Department: "You'll always be our Captain, Captain."
 * Eleventh-Hour Superpower: Yvaine's. Lampshaded:

"The King: Of my seven sons there are four of you today still standing - this is quite a break with tradition, I had twelve brothers- Septimus: And you killed them all for your throne before your father, the king, even felt poorly."
 * Enemy Mine: Sort of. At the end of the film we have a hero / villain team-up (between Tristan and Septimus) to take down a more dangerous villain (Lamia), but the two characters weren't enemies beforehand- in fact, they'd never met (though Septimus did beat up Tristan's mentor, Captain Shakespeare).
 * Everybody Was Kung-Fu Fighting: The 98-year-old Irish sheperd guarding The Wall is somehow proficient in Shaolin Kung Fu in spite of living in 19th to early 20th Century England all his life.
 * Evil Versus Evil: Toward the climax, Septimus vs Lamia.
 * Falling Chandelier of Doom: Subverted twice, then played straight.
 * False Soulmate: Victoria to Tristan.
 * Funny Background Event: When Tristan touches the ruby and becomes king the dead princes are set free. Six of them turn into white balls of light and go up, Septimus' on the other hand turns red and heads straight down.
 * Game Between Heirs: Before he dies, the king of Stormhold announces that his heir will be the one who manages to obtain a ruby he threw into the sky. But it all gets complicated when it crashes onto a star...
 * Gender Bender: The goatherd chap gets this treatment. At least Lamia was good enough to give him a decent rack.
 * Animorphism: Gets this as well - although maybe both at the same time.
 * Greek Chorus: The dead princes.
 * Hero-Tracking Failure: In the movie, during the final Boss Battle, Lamia hurls spells and makes rows of windows dramatically explode one after the other but seems persistently unable to hit the protagonists who are running away in a straight line, staying just in front of the explosions. They don't even get a scratch from the flying shards.
 * Arguably Fridge Brilliance. During that scene, when Yvaine and Tristan run away from the exploding windows, they run back towards the witches and away from the only door that they can escape through. So instead of hurting them, the witch just cuts them off and drives them back. Also she needs to cut out Yvaine's heart and eat it, and killing her with broken glass before it's cut out would probably reduce the quality. She' not trying to hit them, shes just terrorizing them For the Evulz.
 * Hidden Heart of Gold: Captain Shakespeare, he's also a not-so-secret Transvestite.
 * Hooked Up Afterwards:. Tristan's parents might count, though for them it's more that they've been reunited.
 * Hot Mom: Una, since she doesn't age as fast as a human.
 * Insurmountable Waist-Height Fence: In the film, the wall on the border of the magical land is only chest high, yet an old man guards a gap in it.
 * Possibly Fridge Brilliance. Who's to say you'd end up in the same place if you climbed over it than if you went through the gap?
 * Interspecies Romance: Stars and humans.
 * The Jimmy Hart Version: The section of Ilan Eshkeri's score (specifically from 3:05 onwards) that plays during the scene at the inn is very similar to Vampire Hunters from the 1992 film Bram Stokers Dracula. Particularly the bass string rhythm.
 * Large Ham: Robert De Niro as Captain Shakespeare
 * World of Ham really.
 * Long-Lost Relative: Una to the princes of Stormhold.
 * Macho Camp: Captain Shakespeare.
 * Made a Slave: Twice, to poor
 * Magical Underpinnings of Reality: On this side of the Wall, a star is a giant ball of gas and a falling star is a lump of rock and metal, but on the other side of the Wall stars are immortal women who float in the sky and shine at night (unless someone hits them and knocks them down). A fallen star crossing the Wall turns into a lump of rock and metal.
 * Man, I Feel Like a Woman: Bernard checks him/herself out after being transformed into a girl.
 * Meaningful Name:
 * The children of the Lord of Stormhold, Primus, Secundus, ... and so on. Una as well, Una meaning 'single' or 'one'.
 * The witches are named after demons from Greek mythology said in some myths to be daughters of Hecate, the goddess of witches.
 * Numerical Theme Naming: The children of the Lord of Stormhold, Primus, Secundus, ... and so on.
 * One-Scene Wonder: Peter O'Toole as the delightfully soft-spoken, black-hearted King of Stormhold, who has encouraged his seven sons to kill each other for years. He is disappointed that more than one of his sons is still standing when he's on his deathbed.


 * Ooh, Me Accent's Slipping: Michelle Pfeiffer's English accent often slips and sometimes completely vanishes.
 * Opposite Gender Protagonists: Tristan and Yvaine. The trope is used as a vessel for romance. Tristan initially sees Yvaine as a present for his lover Victoria, but he falls in love with Yvaine during their trip back to his hometown. Yvaine comments that, as a star, the violence and wars on Earth make her exhausted, but love gives her faith in the planet, developing the relationship between the two leads. This leads to Tristan rescuing Yvaine after she's kidnapped in the climax.
 * People Puppets: Of the corpse kind.
 * Phosphor Essence: Yvaine glows more brightly the happier she is.
 * The Pirates Who Don't Do Anything: Captain Shakespeare's Lightning Pirates don't actually pirate per se, but make a solid living poaching lightning from thunderstorms, so they may be merely The Pirates Who Do Something Else. The career paths of Shakespeare and crew still offer plenty of opportunities to evade the law (Lightning-Marshalls at that), to mass fortunes on the black market and for combat badassery on the high seas in the wild blue yonder, so their Pirate work resumes are still quite aglow.
 * Playing Against Type: Robert De Niro playing a gay pirate captain?
 * Pragmatic Adaptation: Presumably the book's Tristran was changed to the movie's Tristan because the latter is simply easier to say.
 * Prisoner of Zenda Exit: Septimus' escape from Captain Shakespeare's ship.
 * Prophecy Twist: Everyone knows that possessing the heart of a star is the key to living forever.
 * The Power of Love: In the movie's ending, anyway.
 * Reality-Changing Miniature: Lamia is able to use a voodoo doll to kill and then puppet his corpse to fight Tristan.
 * Soundtrack Dissonance: Seen in the scene where Septimus and his men ambush Captain Shakespeare's boat, in a massive fight, to the tune of the Can-Can.
 * Sky Pirate: Captain Shakespeare and his crew.
 * Spared by the Adaptation:
 * Spoiled Sweet: Victoria is a mild example since she's geniunely a stuck-up brat who is sweet to Tristan more out of pity than any strong feelings toward him. However, she does seem genuinely prepared to marry him towards the end, even though she's fallen for someone else.
 * Stealth Pun: . Whether or not this is true for all natives of Faerie is never addressed, so it counts.
 * Throwing Your Sword Always Works: Prince Septimus effectively lobs a sword near the end of the film.
 * Title Drop: Tristan brings Victoria a lock of Yvaine's hair, which has turned into stardust after crossing the wall. This does not happen in the book.
 * Training Montage: In the movie. Tristan gets a level in badass surgically injected into him by The Captain.
 * Vain Sorceress: Lamia wastes much of her power attending to her looks, which is kind of stupid, as she's casting from hit points, which... makes her look older. Her sisters immediately point this out to her.
 * What Do You Mean It's Not Awesome?: Who knew traveling scenes could be so dramatic?
 * Wooden Ships and Iron Men: Parodied to a wacky extent with the crew.