The Fantastic Trope of Wondrous Titles

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

There's a tendency in media to create very long titles full of rare (or fake) multisyllabic words that paint a picture of whimsy, fun, and adventure, especially when the work is set in the past. This is almost a Dead Unicorn Trope as most of the titles are homages to works that never existed at all. It's often associated with pseudo-Victorian throwbacks and Steampunk.

Not to be confused with (but may overlap with) Character Name and the Noun Phrase. A sub-trope of Long Title. See also The Adjectival Superhero.

Examples of The Fantastic Trope of Wondrous Titles include:

Anime and Manga

Comic Books

  • The Grievous Journey of Ichabod Azrael (and the Dead Left in his Wake).

Fan Works

Film

Literature

Live-Action TV

  • Stephen Colbert claimed that Felicity Huffman and William H. Macy starred in The Splendiferous Zeppelin Escapades of Filliam H. Muffman.
  • Mr. Show and the Incredible, Fantastical News Report
  • Subverted in a series of Saturday Night Live skits with Michael Palin about a supposed Charles Dickens novel, The Wretched Birth, Miserable Childhood, Agonisingly Painful Adolescence, and Appallingly Vile and Degrading Death of Miles Cowperthwaite.

Music

  • Music from the unrealized film script Dusk at Cubist Castle, debut LP of The Olivia Tremor Control. To a lesser extent, the band's name (and the loosely-structured "Elephant 6 Collective" of bands, of which they are a member) are also examples of the trope.

Video Games

Web Comics

Web Original

Western Animation