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Don Wilson: Orson, what's the title of this picture you're making? —The Jack Benny Program, March 21, 1943
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Epic Movies are movie movies. These movies are what make Hollywood Hollywood. These movies are so big they need italic emphasis. These movies are what we think of when we think of the stars getting out of limousines to walk down red carpets while being shot by the paparazzi and entering rooms with grand staircases and lit by chandeliers. The grand, gigantic, sweeping, glossy, flamboyant spectacles that define and are the triumphs of the film industry. The scope of these Greatest Stories Ever Filmed and the amount of time and money invested in them means that only one comes along every few years. 5 years in the making! 3-and-a-half hours long! Two intermissions! $200,000,000 budget! 50,000 cast members! All-Star Cast! A+ list actors! Oscar Bait to the core! Coming soon to an IMAX theater near you! These are the War and Peaces and Moby Dicks of cinema. If they were books, they'd be Doorstoppers (especially if they're adapted from books that are Doorstoppers.)
In short, the direct inversion of the B-Movie.
Often, these movies are somewhat hammy and contrived. But that's precisely why they're so successful and why one enjoys watching them. They evoke the feeling of reading one of aforementioned great novels of our time. They are representations of quintessential human fantasies and fables. Such movies are usually darlings of critics and audiences alike. However, if things get too hammy, the movie crosses over the line from charming to silly, and critical reception of them can be lukewarm at best and scathing at worst (such was to be the fate of the ambitious but ineptly executed Caligula and Cleopatra - and even modern films like Waterworld).
An Epic Movie should have a) dramatic ambitions of some sort and b) epic scope. If a movie is artistically ambitious, but focuses on a small number of characters, it probably isn't an Epic Movie. Exceptions are rare: Das Boot and 2001: A Space Odyssey are possible examples of films with a claustrophobic setting that are epic in scope.
Genres especially prone to epic treatment include Sword and Sandal, Historical Fiction, High Fantasy, Space Opera. Failed attempts are often a rich source of Narm and So Bad It's Good. See also Doing It for the Art, Loads and Loads of Characters, Costume Porn, Scenery Porn.
Not to be confused with a Summer Blockbuster. While superficially similar, that is a separate and distinct offshoot often playing in the same genres. Though it might have a similarly huge budget and scale, it usually isn't as plot-heavy or artistically ambitious. A good way to think of it would be "Summer Blockbuster meets Oscar Bait."
Not all Oscar Bait is this: A period drama may count, if it involves a war at some point, but probably not a dark drama about the mind of a killer or three generations of people living in a house. Generally speaking, a Disaster Movie or Giant Monster film is a type of Summer Blockbuster that is not described as "An Epic". It may be "epic" in the Totally Radical sense, or an "event movie" due to visuals alone — terms which generally describe any Summer Blockbuster, but that is different. These are event films by definition, due to subject matter that merely demands such treatment. Epicosity must ensue, so the list is necessarily limited.
These tend to come in waves, egged on by some new technology that makes the studios feel the go-see-a-movie-in-a-theater business model is threatened. Radio in the '30s, TV in the '50s and home video in the late '70s/early'80s all sparked waves of Epic Movies, and now it's digital downloading's turn.
Not the same thing as a Big Damn Movie, which is an adaptation that ups the stakes for the characters from an existing show.
Also not to be confused with Seltzer and Friedberg's Epic Movie, which is this genre In Name Only.
- 1900
- 2001: A Space Odyssey
- Akira
- The Alamo (both the 1960 John Wayne directed version and the 2003 version with Billy Bob Thorton as Davy Crockett.
- Alexander Nevsky
- All Quiet on the Western Front
- Apocalypse Now
- Apocalypto
- Armageddon
- Around the World in Eighty Days
- Asura's Wrath: a rare attempted Video Game example of this.
- Australia
- Avatar
- The Avengers
- The Battleship Potemkin
- Ben-Hur
- Beowulf
- The Big Trail The 1930 epic western that was supposed to turn John Wayne into a star but it flopped and instead stalled his career until Stagecoach nine years later.
- The Big Country
- The Birth of a Nation, Trope Maker / Ur Example
- Braveheart
- A Bridge Too Far
- The Bridge on the River Kwai.
- Cabiria
- Caligula - Possibly the only epic move, certainly the only one with Malcolm McDowell, Helen Mirren, Peter O'Toole and Sir John Gielgud, to contain unsimulated hardcore sex.
- Cleopatra
- Citizen Kane
- Cold Mountain
- Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon
- The Dark Knight
- Das Boot
- Duel In The Sun
- Dune
- Doctor Zhivago
- El Cid
- Empire of the Sun
- The English Patient
- Enter the Dragon
- Gandhi
- Gangs of New York
- Gettysburg
- Giant
- Gladiator
- The Godfather I & II
- Godzilla (The original Japanese film.)
- Gone with the Wind
- The Great Escape
- Greed, a 1925 silent film directed by Erich von Stroheim, is an early example, with an early cut that ran nine and a half hours, but was eventually re-edited to 140 minutes and later "restored" to a four-hour running time. In any case, it's the cinematic equivalent of a Doorstopper.
- Greystoke: The Legend of Tarzan
- The Hallelujah Trail
- Hamlet, the Kenneth Branagh version. (Most other filmed versions take their cue from Laurence Olivier and are far too claustrophobic to qualify.)
- Harry Potter and The Deathly Hallows, so much they had to split it into two films.
- Heavens Gate: an infamous example of an Epic Movie that did poorly at the box office.
- Hells Angels
- Hero
- How the West Was Won
- Inception
- Independence Day
- Intolerance
- Its a Mad Mad Mad Mad World and 1941 are rare comedy examples.
- Ivan the Terrible
- Kingdom of Heaven
- King Kong. (Peter Jackson version.)
- The Last of the Mohicans
- The Last Samurai
- Lawrence of Arabia
- The Legend Of Suriyothai, Queen of Thailand produced, intended 8-hour length, Coppola re-edit, and battle elephants.
- The Lion King (Arguably the most popular animated version.)
- The Longest Day
- The Lord of the Rings, taken as one film, is nine and a half hours long. The extended editions are more than eleven.
- Love Exposure. Four hours cut down from six hours.
- The Matrix Revolutions more so than the original movie, which was an origin / setpiece story.
- Metropolis
- Master And Commander: The Far Side of the World
- Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind
- Once Upon a Time in America
- Once Upon a Time in the West
- The Passion of the Christ
- The Patriot
- Playtime, Another comedy example. Just look at the sets!
- Pirates Of The Caribbean: At World's End, among Pirates films thanks to Cerebus Syndrome.
- Pirates Of The Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest would count as well.
- The Princess Bride
- Princess Mononoke is one of Anime's biggest examples.
- The Prince of Egypt is probably {Western Animation's biggest attempt to emulate this genre.
- Quo Vadis
- Ran
- Raiders of the Lost Ark
- Red Cliff - Chinese historical epic, Divided for Publication in English.
- The Right Stuff
- The Robe
- Saving Private Ryan
- Schindler's List
- Seven Samurai
- Spartacus
- Star Wars
- Steamboy
- The Sound of Music
- Superman
- The Greatest Story Ever Told
- The Ten Commandments
- The Thin Red Line
- The Tree of Life
- Titanic
- The Towering Inferno
- Tron, which was basically Ben-Hur In A Computer. Tron: Legacy debatably fits the trope as well.
- Troy
- The Unknown Soldier
- Waterloo
- Waterworld
- West Side Story
- War and Peace (both the American and the Soviet version)
- Wings of Honneamise Royal Space Force
- The Wizard of Oz
Miniseries:[]
- Roots
- Band of Brothers
- Game of Thrones
- The Pacific
- Stephen Spielberg's Taken
- Stephen King's The Stand
- V — (original series)
- Lonesome Dove
- Shogun
Parodies and fictional examples:[]
- Asterix and Cleopatra is heralded on its cover as "The Greatest Story Ever Drawn — 14 litres of Indian ink, 30 brushes, 62 pencils, 1 hard pencil, 27 erasers, 1984 sheets of paper, 16 typewriter ribbons, 2 typewriters, 366 pints of beer went into its creation."
- The book's live-action adaptation ended up being a textbook Epic Movie, with a budget that showed in every corner of the screen and famous actors all over the place...
- History of the World Part One by Mel Brooks.
- Life of Brian 's overblown title sequence is a parody of this.
- Blown Away in Terry Pratchett's Moving Pictures.
- Epic Movie, er... by name at least. It's actually just a spin-off of Scary Movie.
- The Radioactive Man movie adaptation in The Simpsons is intended as this.
- The Lost Skeleton of Cadavra parodied this in their trailer for the film.
- The Film within the film in Tropic Thunder parodies this, as well as being an example itself (an $80 million budget for a comedy is quite high)
- Parodied in the tagline of Scott Pilgrim vs. the World: "An epic of epic epicness".
- In the Cerberus Daily News, mention is made of one of these. What, exactly, happens in it is not said, but production required hiring out a Mass Relay.
- For those still wondering, This video helps explain the phenomenon of epic historical war epics.
Comment: From what movie is the scene with the battle elephants? |
- The Horribly Slow Murderer With the Extremely Inefficient Weapon is a Real Trailer, Fake Movie for a horror one of these.
Narrator: A major motion picture event, twelve years in the making, filmed on five continents, with a running time of over nine hours. |
- Lights, Camera, Curses! is set at a film studio where a classic Epic Movie (Pharaoh) from the 1930s is being remade. Whether the remake is also Epic, or whether it tanks, depends on how easily Nancy solves the case.
- The characters of Soviet animated short Film, Film, Film are trying to make a grandiose Russian history drama in the vein of Ivan the Terrible.