Nostalgia In The Princess Bride Succeeds By Classic Genres

Improved Essays
Princess films are beloved classics that range from the beloved Disney franchise, to live action films such as the Princess Diaries, to historical tales as those seen is polish films. No matter what the format or genre these films typically contain recurring scenes. The film The Princess Bride offers a new comedic approach to this classic genre. While scholars have explored how princess films are able to succeed through the use ideas such as historical nostalgia or nationalism, The Princess Bride succeeds by using nostalgia in a unique way. Through the use of comedic devices such as mistaken identity, absurdity, and good old-fashioned slapstick comedy, The Princess Bride is able to parody the traditional princess film. In doing so it is able …show more content…
One recent study focused the mixing of types of historical nostalgia in the “timeless” Disney princess films. Rebecca Do Rozario argues that Disney bases their films on the nostalgia of “neatly order patriarchal realms”(Do Rozario 35), but Disney’s continuing success has stemmed from its ability to play on the nostalgia of other time periods. In the film, Snow White(1937), the princess is portrayed as a “1920/’30s starlet with a flappers haircut” who is helping the “working class dwarfs”(38). Similarly, In the film Sleeping Beauty(1959), Do Rozario describes Aurora as a “prototype Baby Boomer” who is “uninterested in the affairs of the king”(39). Her exploration of the role of nostalgia expands on the traditional studies of the princess and offers new insight into the mixing of nostalgia from different time …show more content…
In this scene, the hero, Westley, has no control over his arms and legs. He has to be dragged around the castle by his companions Inigo and Fezzik. As the scene progresses, he gradually regains control over his limbs and at the end of the scene he manages to defeat Prince Humperdink by merely raising his arm and pointing a sword at him. The use of parody here is a play on the nostalgic scene of a princess movie in which the prince bravely fights a nearly unbeatable enemy to rescue the princess. However, in this rendition of the princess film, the prince isn’t the hero and this dissonance between the expected scene and the scene that is portrayed is what creates the humor. The near drops of the hero, as well as his slouched and limp posture, create a little bit of physical comedy that is ever prevalent in slapstick films. This comic nature of this scene has even inspired the creation of a board game based on the film titled “Storming the Castle.” The parody of a classic princess scene is essential to the success of the

Related Documents

  • Improved Essays

    At the end of the movie, all of the knights were running toward the French castle ready to destroy, however, a police car showed up, stopped them, and took King Arthur. This is an incident that would not have actually occurred in the Medieval times because there were no police back then nor would they have cared about a battle. The movie was making fun of how the men were to be brave and carry on their mission except two police cars stopped them hundreds of knights and then stole their leader in battle. The code of conduct of knights was highly stressed in the medieval times.…

    • 835 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The Princess Bride book and movie have various differences and similarities, but overall the main concept portrays the same story. The book version incorporated crucial scenes that compose the plot, and a more extended explanation of the story. However, in the movie, some of these scenes were not included which refrained essential information out of the storyline and affected the audience by making it more challenging to stay on track. Both versions of the movie and book got the story across individually, but showed it in different ways, having similarities and differences.…

    • 644 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Timeless, witty, and stupid in the best possible way, Monty Python and the Holy Grail continues to captivate audiences 41 years later. The Medieval spoof is layered with jokes ranging from potty humor to complex attacks on monarchy and social classes, all within a span of three minutes. It is safe to say that almost anyone, young or old, educated or not, or male or female would give this movie a four or five stars. The plot follows and rewrites an ancient legend we all know well, King Arthur and his pursuit of the Holy Grail. While the technical aspects aren’t anything awe-inspiring, they bring a certain element of rawness to the film’s overall goofy feel.…

    • 178 Words
    • 1 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The third of Newton’s three laws of motion states, “For every action there is an equal and opposite reaction.” It describes each action as having an equally important reaction, which creates a sense of balance. This law, although meant to be about the physical world, applies to The Knight’s Tale. The author, Chaucer, decided to create a symmetrical story with each important action in the first half, having a corresponding action in the second half. This balance creates a perfect storyline because the plot is evenly distributed from the beginning to the end.…

    • 1022 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Decent Essays

    The main them I found were Chivalry/heroism - In the Middle Ages the knight were deemed to represent the height of chivalry and heroism. Monty Python mocks this chivalry and heroism by presenting Arthur's knights as the antitheses of their medieval counterparts. Violence - What makes violence funny? How does Python make us laugh at a limbless knight or at slaughtered wedding guests?…

    • 164 Words
    • 1 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The Princess Bride is a compelling novel that retains your interest by telling enthralling tales of revenge, love, despair, and hate. It includes most of the typical stereotypes that is found in your average fairytale, but it is far from your average classic fairytale with its ever-present plot twists. Each character has a downfall, and none of them are completely valiant and selfless. Each character has a captivating motive behind their actions. A typical hero is not included in the story despite the many heroic actions that are fulfilled throughout the story.…

    • 679 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Decent Essays

    Types of Woman in Romantic Comedies Who Are Not Real” by Mindy Kaling explores the typical roles female usually plays in romantic comedies and the reasoning for her love of the genre. Kaling, an actress herself has depicted in seven categories the cliché roles every romantic comedy has. The comedic under tone she uses to explain why the movies are so fake in showing an un realistic representation of a women in movies, with no character development outside the set role. Kaling explains the unrealistic types of women in seven cliché roles that appear in every other romantic comedy. Some of the roles are more farchctch than other.…

    • 313 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Superior Essays

    Slapstick comedy has been around for ages; it adds a way of grabbing the audience’s attention, but some critics may say that it can lead to unoriginal comedy. Maslin states," Chevy Chase finds a good way to hurt himself, the board that whacks him in the chin is liable to strike again," this being one of the funniest slapstick scenes in the film. When Clark Griswold scurries to get help from his family, who don’t seem to hear Clark yelling. Clark steps on a loose board, hitting himself in the face several times before finally reaching the window. He is already too late to get help.…

    • 1818 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Decent Essays

    There has been a lot of violence throughout time, but there never has been violence to where people cry of laughter. In the film of Monty Python there was an astounding scene which got the audience's complete attention. Who has ever heard of a limbless Black Knight who wanted to quarrel with King Arthur? Earlier towards the beginning of the film they had a scene where a man going town to town gathering dead people, dead or alive. During this medieval time the Bubonic Plague was growing intense since there was a lack of good hygiene in water and people.…

    • 299 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Improved Essays

    This scene begins with a king telling his son that he needs to marry the daughter of a rich lord, so the king can acquire more land, even though the son says he rather sing than marry. The prince shot a note outside, were Sir Lancelot the Brave found, and rushed to the castle, where he disrupts the marriage, killing many merry goers and eventually rescues the prince. This scene is targeting how knights think that to obtain a goal or solve a problem is by murdering people, like the Crusades, or the many feudal wars that happened between different kings and lords. Monty Python would be making fun of this is because, like mentioned early, violence in today’s society is looked down upon, unless it is necessary, which is the opposite of how the knights acted. Another thing being targeted is courtly love, which is the custom of forcing two people to marry, just for the benefit of others; a man was only allowed to love his wife, while the wife was allowed not to love her husband, and could fall in love with other men.…

    • 1186 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    In history, King Arthur was a figure that was commonly characterized as being honorable, honest, loyal, chivalrous, and valiant. He was known to be a powerful leader whom his knights looked up to. Throughout several scenes in the movie, the knights are making fun of King Arthur and continually mocking him. Poking fun at the known authority of King Arthur is one way that the film is able to be comedic. The audience expects the knights to respect and look up to the power of King Arthur, but they certainly do not.…

    • 1432 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    For centuries, folklore has defined different cultures around the world. Many of these tales have been adapted into mainstream media for children by companies such as Disney. Unsurprisingly, Disney leaves out a lot of the original stories. The fairy tales from the Brothers Grimm and Hans Christian Andersen are meant to express topics involving the loss of innocence that young ones are not expected to know. Amidst modern literature, Joyce Carol Oates’s inserts similar connotations in her 1966 short story “Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been.”…

    • 1202 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Fantasy is a beloved and popular genre from books to movies. Lots of cartoons consist of fantasy characteristics. In 1997 famous cartoonist, Hayao Miyazaki, released a historical fantasy anime film titled Princess Mononoke. It was released in Japan on July 12, 1997 and then on October 29, 1999 in the United States. Princess Mononoke is a movie about a prince who gets involved in the struggle between the forest gods, a mining colony, and the wolf princess, San.…

    • 997 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The Romantic Comedy genre is one of the most popular yet overlooked genre in the film industry. The cheesy dialogues, witty behavior, sexual tension, heart melting monologues and the friction between the main two characters in a romantic comedy film, is what makes this genre so loved and cherished. According to most people, the romantic comedies are viewed as ‘guilty pleasures’. In his book Boy Meets Girl Meets Genre, Jeffers McDonald disagrees with that statement by saying that “the appeal to audiences of such films in more complex, especially if the viewer inhabits a position where conflicting pulls of realism and fantasy operating” (McDonald 2007).…

    • 874 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Introduction Frozen from Disney, with a worldwide box office more than $1.2 billion, it is not only proclaimed to be the first ‘princess’ movie to enter the list of top 10 grossing animated films, as well as the first animated film in these years. The characters and music are culturally omnipresent worldwide (Maryam & Yalda, 2015). After the movie was released, Disney continued to promote it with smart marketing strategies by seizing every opportunity. Catchy soundtracks and a well-conceived storyline, high demand for merchandise and accelerating popularity with DVD and digital downloads are some of the reasons people are still talking about Frozen (Beth, 2014). In this paper, I would like to explore the three main features of this film in…

    • 1143 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays