It’s hard to believe now, but The Princess Bride, like The Wizard of Oz before it, was not an enormous success in its original theatrical run. But over time, and thanks to home video and repeated airings on television, it has become one of the defining motion pictures of a generation, a romantic, witty and thrilling fantasy classic. The main story is fairy tale simplicity itself: a captive princess-to-be, a band of roguish outlaws, a dashing pirate, scary monsters, an epic swordfight and an evil prince to be vanquished. True love overcoming impossible odds. Rob Reiner directs it all perfectly, thanks to an exceptional screenplay from William Goldman, adapting his own novel, that gives even the smallest characters an unforgettable personality and dialogue that will never cease to be quoted. “Hello. My name is Inigo Montoya. You killed my father. Prepare to die.” “As you wish.” “Inconceivable!” “Mawiage…”
But what makes The Princess Bride the greatest fantasy film, with The Lord of the Rings out of the equation at least, is the deceptively simple framing device. Peter Falk visits his sick grandson, Fred Savage, and against his wishes – the kid would rather be playing video games – reads him a timeless tale of fantasy and wonder. Initially unmoved, Falk skips the boring parts with all the love and exposition, getting right to “the good stuff,” echoing generations of storytelling evolution to keep fairy tales relevant to young audiences. And by the end, appreciating the power of fiction to truly move us, the boy not only wants to hear about the mushy kissing stuff, he wants his grandfather to read it all over again.
Fantasy stories will never die. They espouse the greatness in humanity through a universal symbology. Like The Princess Bride itself, their power will be rediscovered over and over again, changing just enough to keep new audiences enthralled, but keeping the important messages – the actual “good stuff” – intact, for as long as stories are told and retold. The old classics will live on, new classics will be made, and the magic will live on. Just like these films.