Stardust

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Critics' Reviews

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Metascore
®
66
Generally favorable reviews
out of 100
'Stardust' Shines Sometimes
By John Hartl, Film critic, MSNBC

Matthew Vaughn's "Stardust" proves that a little whimsy goes a long way, especially when accompanied by special-effects overkill.

Still, if you're in an indulgent mood or if you've had it with wizards and witches and magic spells lately, you may warm to this fractured fairy tale, which gently mocks many conventions of the genre. While several scenes may test your patience, they're usually followed by an episode or two with just enough goofball charm to get by.

You know you're not exactly in Tolkien/Rowling land during the opening scene, a rather saucy prologue that establishes the origins of a baby named Tristan, who quickly grows up to be the hero of the movie.

Tristan is clearly intended as a star-making role for Charlie Cox, a young British actor who appeared in supporting roles in "Casanova" and "The Merchant of Venice." His bland good looks may suggest a minor player miscast in the central part, but Cox quickly establishes a tongue-in-cheek tone that wears surprisingly well during the two-hour running time.

He gets plenty of help from Sienna Miller as the heartless beauty, Victoria, who toys with the infatuated Tristan, and Claire Danes as a more innocent girl, Yvaine, who tries to drum some sense into the love-struck boy. (She is also, quite literally, a star who takes human form, but that's another story.)

MSN talks to 'Stardust' cast members

Peter O'Toole narrates the early scenes and eventually turns up, in full "Lion in Winter" mode, playing an aging king who must decide which of his worthless sons -- among them Rupert Everett and Jason Flemyng -- will take over once he's gone. The sons keep dying off and turning up as ghosts who gripe about the story line and behave like unruly audience members.

Also contributing to the cheeky tone are Ricky Gervais as a sneaky trader known as Ferdy the Fence and Robert De Niro as a closeted transvestite pirate, Captain Shakespeare, the supposedly monstrous captain of a flying ship that rescues Tristan and Yvaine.

Eventually the script, based on a graphic novel by Neil Gaiman and Charles Vess, turns into a showdown between Tristan and Yvaine and a ruthless witch, Lamia (Michelle Pfeiffer), whose frequent transformations suggest the vain queen in "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs," who wanted to be "fairest in the land."

It's at this point that Vaughn, who made his directing debut working with Miller and Flemyng on "Layer Cake," stops trusting his comic instincts and allows computer-generated effects to take over. If you've seen one wizard's battle, unfortunately, it's safe to conclude that you've seen, well, most of them.

The movie works best as a series of amusing moments: Lamia and her fellow witches doing their darnedest to top "Macbeth," the nerdy Tristan's rivalry with Victoria's smoother boyfriend, his father's advice about the vanishing nature of adolescent "popularity," the sarcastic running commentary of the dead brothers. The more fractured this fairy tale becomes, the more together it seems.

See also: Best of Michelle Pfeiffer

More movies on MSNBC 

Matthew Vaughn's "Stardust" proves that a little whimsy goes a long way, especially when accompanied by special-effects overkill.

Still, if you're in an indulgent mood or if you've had it with wizards and witches and magic spells lately, you may warm to this fractured fairy tale, which gently mocks many conventions of the genre. While several scenes may test your patience, they're usually followed by an episode or two with just enough goofball charm to get by.

You know you're not exactly in Tolkien/Rowling land during the opening scene, a rather saucy prologue that establishes the origins of a baby named Tristan, who quickly grows up to be the hero of the movie.

Tristan is clearly intended as a star-making role for Charlie Cox, a young British actor who appeared in supporting roles in "Casanova" and "The Merchant of Venice." His bland good looks may suggest a minor player miscast in the central part, but Cox quickly establishes a tongue-in-cheek tone that wears surprisingly well during the two-hour running time.

He gets plenty of help from Sienna Miller as the heartless beauty, Victoria, who toys with the infatuated Tristan, and Claire Danes as a more innocent girl, Yvaine, who tries to drum some sense into the love-struck boy. (She is also, quite literally, a star who takes human form, but that's another story.)

MSN talks to 'Stardust' cast members

Peter O'Toole narrates the early scenes and eventually turns up, in full "Lion in Winter" mode, playing an aging king who must decide which of his worthless sons -- among them Rupert Everett and Jason Flemyng -- will take over once he's gone. The sons keep dying off and turning up as ghosts who gripe about the story line and behave like unruly audience members.

Also contributing to the cheeky tone are Ricky Gervais as a sneaky trader known as Ferdy the Fence and Robert De Niro as a closeted transvestite pirate, Captain Shakespeare, the supposedly monstrous captain of a flying ship that rescues Tristan and Yvaine.

Eventually the script, based on a graphic novel by Neil Gaiman and Charles Vess, turns into a showdown between Tristan and Yvaine and a ruthless witch, Lamia (Michelle Pfeiffer), whose frequent transformations suggest the vain queen in "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs," who wanted to be "fairest in the land."

It's at this point that Vaughn, who made his directing debut working with Miller and Flemyng on "Layer Cake," stops trusting his comic instincts and allows computer-generated effects to take over. If you've seen one wizard's battle, unfortunately, it's safe to conclude that you've seen, well, most of them.

The movie works best as a series of amusing moments: Lamia and her fellow witches doing their darnedest to top "Macbeth," the nerdy Tristan's rivalry with Victoria's smoother boyfriend, his father's advice about the vanishing nature of adolescent "popularity," the sarcastic running commentary of the dead brothers. The more fractured this fairy tale becomes, the more together it seems.

See also: Best of Michelle Pfeiffer

More movies on MSNBC 

90
LOS ANGELES TIMES: Kevin Crust
Floating in on an airy breeze of dreams and true love, the lively adventure-romance Stardust offers that elusive quality summer movies are supposed to possess but rarely do -- total escape.Read Full Review »
90
Salon.com: Stephanie Zacharek
Imaginative and intricate, but it's also joyfully casual, maybe to the point of being a little messy in places. But even its flaws work in its favor.Read Full Review »
75
ReelViews: James Berardinelli
There's less whimsy to be found here than in "The Princess Bride," but the film is likely to appeal to the same group of older children and adults that appreciated Rob Reiner's classic.Read Full Review »
75
USA Today: Claudia Puig
Stardust lights up the screen with a splendid tale of heroism and romance.Read Full Review »
75
ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: Owen Gleiberman
It's the closest the movies have come in a while to the nudgy, knowing fairy-tale enchantment of "The Princess Bride."Read Full Review »
70
Washington Post: Ann Hornaday
Stardust has it all: sweetness, magic, lusty wenches, evil witches, tankards of mead, a gay pirate.Read Full Review »
70
The New York Times: Stephen Holden
Michelle Pfeiffer is Lamia, as deliciously evil a witch as the movies have ever invented.Read Full Review »
63
CHICAGO SUN-TIMES: Roger Ebert
It's a film you enjoy in pieces, but the jigsaw never gets solved.Read Full Review »
63
Philadelphia Inquirer: Steven Rea
Brings too much of EVERYTHING to the table: It's the cinema equivalent of a long, winding, run-on sentence.Read Full Review »
50
NewsWeek: David Ansen
Aims for a "Princess Bride" mix of whimsy and wonderment, the sardonic and the romantic, with only sporadic success. Both visually and narratively cluttered, the film diverts more than it enchants.Read Full Review »
See all Stardust reviews at metacritic.com »