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ABOUT THE STORY
From the imaginations of best-selling author Neil Gaiman and
director Matthew Vaughn comes “Stardust,” the enchanting tale of a fallen star
who crashes into a magical kingdom – and turns out to be no ordinary meteorite
at all, but a beautiful, imperiled woman chased after by an incredible array of
seekers who want or need her secret powers. From wicked witches to power-mad
princes, from flying pirates to dueling goblins, each person who encounters the
star has his or her own agenda, but they all desire just one thing: her heart.
The result is a rip-roaring tale of true love and high adventure that mixes and
matches all the grand themes and imagination-sparking elements that have ever
caused anyone of any age to fall in love with fairy tales. “Stardust” begins in
the sleepy English village of Wall, so named for the cobblestone wall that has,
for eons, kept the villagers safely apart form the supernatural parallel
universe that lies just on the other side. It is here that young Tristan Thorne
(CHARLIE COX) makes a wild-eyed promise to the prettiest girl in the village
(SIENNA MILLER), whose heart he hopes to win: that he will bring her back a
fallen star. Now, in order to make good on his promise, Tristan will have to
cross the forbidden wall and enter a mysterious kingdom lit by unending magic
and unfolding legends of which he will quickly become a part.
In this fantastical realm known as Stormhold, Tristan discovers
that the fallen star is not at all what he expected but a spirited young woman
(CLAIRE DANES) injured by her cosmic tumble. Now, she is in terrible danger –
sought after by colossal powers including the King's (PETER O'TOOLE) scheming
sons for whom only she can secure the throne; and a chillingly powerful witch
(MICHELLE PFEIFFER) desperate to use the star to achieve eternal youth and
beauty. As Tristan sets out to protect the star and bring her back to his
beloved on the other side of the wall, his journey will bring incredible
encounters with a pirate captain (ROBERT DE NIRO) and a shady trader (RICKY
GERVAIS), among other surprises. But if he can survive by his wits and the
strength of his newfound love, Tristan will also uncover the secret key to his
own identity and a fate beyond his wildest dreams.
Paramount Pictures Presents In Association with MARV Films A
Matthew Vaughn/Lorenzo di Bonaventura Production, A Matthew Vaughn Film
“Stardust” starring Claire Danes, Charlie Cox, Sienna Miller, Ricky Gervais,
Jason Flemyng, Rupert Everett, Peter O’Toole, with Michelle Pfeiffer and Robert
De Niro. The film is directed by Matthew Vaughn from a screenplay by Jane
Goldman & Matthew Vaughn based on the novel written by Neil Gaiman and
illustrated by Charles Vess. The producers are Matthew Vaughn, Lorenzo di
Bonaventura, Michael Dreyer and Neil Gaiman. The executive producers are David
Womark, Kris Thykier, Peter Morton and Stephen Marks. The director of
photography is Ben Davis. The production designer is Gavin Bocquet. The editor
is Jon Harris. The costume designer is Sammy Sheldon. The music is by Ilan
Eshkeri. This film has been rated PG-13 for fantasy violence and some risqué
humor.
About The Production
“You can’t cross the wall, nobody crosses the wall.”
-- Victoria to Tristan Thorne
In the magical land of Stormhold, just on the other side of the
everyday Victorian village of Wall, a blazing star has fallen from the sky.
This star is no ordinary meteorite but a beautiful young woman whose long
tumble through the cosmos has instantly left her in peril – her secret powers
now chased after by an incredible array of seekers. From a love-struck young
villager who needs the star to win his beloved; to a ferociously wicked witch
determined to gain back her eternal youth; to a covetous prince who will stop at
nothing to beat out the competition for his father’s throne; to a supernatural
series of spell-casters, goblins and even a flying pirate – everyone the star
encounters has an agenda, some good, some evil, yet they all desire just one
thing: her heart. The result is “Stardust,” a rip-roaring romantic adventure
that mixes and matches all the grand themes and imagination-sparking elements
that have ever caused anyone of any age to fall in love with fairy tales.
Unfolding on both sides of a parallel universe separated by only
a thin barrier of stone, “Stardust” reveals just how amazingly close the
familiar and the totally fantastic can be to one another. Starring an
extraordinary cast of exciting newcomers, rising stars and Hollywood legends –
including Charlie Cox, Claire Danes, Robert De Niro, Sienna Miller, Michelle
Pfeiffer, Jason Flemyng, Henry Cavill, Ian McKellan, Rupert Everett, Peter
O’Toole, Ricky Gervais, Nathaniel Parker, Sarah Alexander, Kate Magowan, Melanie
Hill and Joanna Scanlon – “Stardust” is this summer’s most original escape into
enchantment.
The inspiration for the film’s epic chase after an unexpected fallen star
began with one of today’s most visionary and bestselling authors: Neil Gaiman,
whose award-winning works span from novels to comic books to screenplays, each
marked by a limitless sense of imagination and penchant for spinning memorable
tales. In 1997, Gaiman published Stardust, a fireside-style fairy story that
unfolded in a four-book DC Comics miniseries, featuring breathtaking
illustrations from Charles Vess. When it was released a year later in book
form, Stardust hit the bestseller lists and was named as one of the best novels
of the year.
Among both critics and readers, the story drew comparisons to
“The Princess Bride” and “The Neverending Story” with its mix of humor and
magic, not to mention its whole-cloth creation of an original enchanted kingdom
where a shooting star could be a stunning young woman who inspires an ordinary
village boy to become the heroic young man of his dreams. The story quickly
became that very rare thing: a modern classic fairytale. “I set out in the
beginning to tell a story about a young man who goes after his heart’s desire
only to discover it isn’t his heart’s desire,” says Gaiman of the novel. “I
started with that one idea in my head and followed that all the way to the end –
and was very proud when I got there that the story did exactly what I had set
out for it to do.”
While Gaiman may have set out simply to spin a great yarn, once
it hit the light of day and won over fans of all ages, Stardust seemed destined
for the big screen. From its initial publication, there was talk of what an epic
cinematic experience the tale could become in our contemporary era of high-tech
movie-making and special effects. But, intriguingly, it took the passion of an
indie director best known for his skill with the visceral and the gritty,
Matthew Vaughn, to make this fantastic world come to life on screen with all its
simple storybook charm intact.
Vaughn had earlier come to the fore as the producer of the
fast-paced, fun-loving, influential British action comedies “Lock, Stock and Two
Smoking Barrels” and “Snatch,” and made an acclaimed directorial debut with the
clever gangster thriller “Layer Cake” featuring Daniel Craig in the role that
helped to win him the iconic part of James Bond. Although the far sweeter,
fairy tale territory of Stardust was a complete change of gears for Vaughn, he
had been hooked by the story in mere moments of reading. Like all of Stormhold,
Vaughn was quickly seduced by the meteoric beauty and all the characters who
would use her in one way or another to fulfill their desires.
“I thought it was one of the most wonderful, original stories I’d
ever read,” he recalls. “And as a director, I’m mainly interested in telling
stories, which seems like a forgotten art in modern movies. This was clearly a
story that was meant to be made as a film.”Inspired by the magic Gaiman had
created on the page, Vaughn sought out the writer’s blessing. For his part,
Gaiman had so far resisted handing out the rights to Stardust, but couldn’t help
but have his mind changed by Vaughn’s obvious love for the material and
exuberantly creative ideas. “Most of all, I trusted him,” says Gaiman. With
Gaiman backing him, Vaughn next set out to draft a screenplay adaptation that
would make the writer’s characters come to flesh-and-blood life on the screen.
He started by taking Gaiman’s advice to seek out the British
novelist/screenwriter Jane Goldman, who has been celebrated as one of England’s
most inventive new writers for her novel Dreamland, and served as the presenter
of the popular UK television series “Jane Goldman Investigates,” in which she
explored the enigma of the paranormal, from ghosts to ESP. Gaiman hoped that
Goldman would bring her innate sense of romance, mystery and humanity to the
story, while Vaughn would contribute an overarching creative vision for how the
many-stranded quest to possess the star Yvaine could unfold at a blistering pace
in two hours of visually stunning screen time. The partnership unfolded in just
that way. “Our goal in the adaptation was to keep the story as faithful to the
book as possible while, at the same time, making it more cinematic and using a
bit of our own poetic license to ensure that audiences will have a fantastic
ride,” Vaughn explains.
Goldman notes that the duo focused on providing, with no holds
barred, all the storytelling pyrotechnics any fairy tale lover ever lusted after
– but also inserted a few more down-to-earth observations about life, as the
best fairy tales always do. “Inside this incredible adventure are a lot of
ideas about identity and fitting in and following your heart, which I think are
things that everyone can relate to in real life,” she says. The story’s
ultimate mix of the relatably real journey of a young man coming of age blended
with the fantastical tale of witches, ghosts and dashing royalty all trying to
kidnap a mystical fallen star with a razor-sharp wit paid off. When Neil Gaiman
read the first draft of the screenplay, his support for the project grew even
stronger. “It was thrillingly exciting for me because it was quite good,” he
says. “It was funny and scary and had a very filmic quality to it.” Gaiman now
joined forces with Vaughn and Goldman to develop the screenplay even further –
each pushing the other’s imaginations to a further edge.
When the screenplay was finally complete, the man who then came
long to put the feature film into fast forward was producer Lorenzo di
Bonaventura, who, perhaps not surprisingly, was also involved in taking the
beloved Harry Potter from novel to motion picture blockbuster and family
classic. Di Bonaventura was instantly impressed with the film’s vision. “The
script was an extraordinary piece of material that successfully intermeshed many
different tones,” he says. “There was romance, there was drama and there was
laugh-out-loud humor. Most of all, there was the story of a boy becoming a man
and falling in love even as he also overcomes pirates, witches, megalomaniac
princes and all kinds of wonders.”
Di Bonaventura also felt the joyfully playful yet wrenchingly
suspenseful film was entirely unlike any other epic fantasy of recent history.
“Stardust” might take place in the realm of epic adventure but it brings in
elements of realism and comedy we haven’t really seen much in this genre,” he
comments. “I love ‘Lord of the Rings’ and ‘Narnia,’ but this film doesn’t have
that sense of earnestness and the characters don’t take themselves as seriously.
It’s very unique and fun.” Di Bonaventura notes that, although the film became
a star-studded, globe-trotting production, it was always driven at its core by a
more independent spirit. “Matthew Vaughn and Jane Goldman both come from an
indie background so the film became a very distinctive combination of big
filmmaking techniques and independent filmmaking spirit,” he says. “With this
film, Matthew had a chance to bring his vibrant, indie aesthetic to a much
larger canvas.” Summing up, di Bonaventura adds: “A lot of alchemy went into
creating this magical movie, starting with Neil’s book to Matthew and Jane’s
script and then on to the wonderful performances.”

A HERO, A STAR
AND THE PRETTIEST GIRL IN THE VILLAGE
“Stardust” is filled to the brim with enchanted, cursed,
questing, hilarious and altogether larger-than-life characters – so there was
little doubt from the beginning that the film would need to conjure up a cast
with its own magical talents. In the end, the filmmakers could hardly believe
the good fortune they had in the ensemble they assembled. “To have a film in
which you have Robert De Niro showing a side of himself that’s never been seen
before, Michelle Pfeiffer delivering a wonderful star turn, Claire Danes
delivering another of her phenomenal performances, Charlie Cox, a new face who
is going to be a major star, as well as the legendary Peter O’Toole and the
hilarious Ricky Gervais, was a wonderful experience,” says director Matthew
Vaughn.
The casting all hinged on finding a young actor to embody the
story’s central hero, Tristan Thorne, who grows up as a bit of a bumbling lad in
the tiny English village of Wall, only to discover he is destined for incredible
adventures beyond its borders and his wildest dreams. To play Tristan, the
filmmakers plucked a relative newcomer who was ready for his breakthrough role:
Charlie Cox, who was previously seen in “The Merchant of Venice” with Al Pacino,
“Casanova” with Heath Ledger and Sienna Miller and in “Dot the I” with Gael
García Bernal, had never had a leading role, especially one with so many
opportunities, including the chance to fall in love with Siena Miller and Claire
Danes and cross swords with Robert De Niro. “For Tristan, we wanted someone who
could start out a bit more awkward and become truly handsome, dashing and
courageous along the way, someone with a sense of innocence and a sort of naïve,
single-minded drive,” notes producer Lorenzo di Bonaventura. “Matthew had a
very clear point-of-view of what he wanted and Charlie came along as the
favorite very early in the process.” Cox remembers auditioning “again and again
and again” for the role, at first not realizing he was expanding on Vaughn’s
idea of the character with each progressive performance. “Usually, an actor
auditions once, gets the part and then works out the character, but we actually
developed the character during the audition process,” Cox notes. “As it turns
out, that was a huge advantage because, as soon as I got the role, I already
knew Matthew and I were going in the same direction.” To play the role, Cox
knew he would have to allow the audience to believe in this young man when he is
being thrust into completely improbable adventures. “You have to have the
audience believe in this world where a woman can be a star, where there are evil
witches and magical spells, so you really have to bring your performance up a
little, because these are obviously not everyday occurrences,” Cox explains.
“It was a real challenge to find the balance between constantly raising the
stakes and yet keeping it as real as possible. It was hard work and it was also
a lot of fun.” Tristan starts out wanting one thing and one thing only: to win
the heart of the village beauty, Victoria. In his besotted yearning for
Victoria, he makes the promise to journey across the great brick barrier that
surrounds Wall into the forbidden realm beyond to bring back a fallen star. “I
don’t think Tristan really considers what this will entail when he makes the
promise,” laughs Cox. “He has no idea what he is going to see or experience on
the other side of the wall, but he intends to stand by his word.” When Tristan
does find the fallen star inside a massive crater within the magical land of
Stormhold, she turns out not to be the asteroid he would have found in Wall, but
a ravishing young woman, Yvaine, who has turned her ankle in her cosmic fall.
From the second he sees her, sparks fly between them. “They really don’t get
along well in the beginning,” Cox admits. “They’re both kind of pissed off with
each other and yet they desperately need each other, so they bicker and argue
until, slowly, they begin to trust each other.” That trust takes Tristan
completely by surprise as he begins to fall head over heels for Yvaine. “The
fun part is that Tristan falls in love long before he realizes he’s in love,”
Cox muses. “He’s in denial and he doesn’t want to believe it’s true, but he
just can’t escape it. As he figures out his own heart, you start to see the
character come into his own.”
As Tristan and Yvaine journey through Stormhold towards Wall,
they encounter all kinds of dangers and threats, including the pirate Captain
Shakespeare, which precipitated a scene in which Cox actually had to swash and
buckle with none other than the Academy Award®-winning actor Robert De Niro.
Little in his previous professional work could have prepared Cox for this
unusual and nerve-wracking event. “It was a bizarre, yet wonderful,
experience,” comments Cox. “Robert De Niro and I got together for a few days
before filming and that was a good way to get to know each other and start
figuring out the sword-fighting sequences. As it turns out, it was a really
good fight!” Cox also found himself in a wild duel with three-time Academy
Award® nominee Michelle Pfeiffer. “She’s playing this ugly, scary witch so it
was pretty crazy to see her in that kind of role, but I found her to be a truly
lovely person and the moments I had on screen with her were brilliant,” he says.
As for Danes, Cox comments: “We had a fantastic time working together and
became quite good friends along the way.”
Danes portrays Yvaine, one of the film’s most challenging
characters in that she is an utterly fantastical being – not an ordinary human
woman at all, but a fallen star from the heavens now under great threat in
Stormhold. The filmmakers chose Danes as one of very few actresses they felt
was capable of walking that razor-thin line between the wildly cosmic and the
down-to-earth. “Claire is an impeccable actress,” says di Bonaventura of the
Golden Globe-winning star who first came to the fore in the acclaimed television
series “My So-Called Life” and went on to deliver stand-out performances in a
wide range of films including “Romeo + Juliet,” “The Hours” and, most recently,
“Shopgirl” with Steve Martin. “We needed someone with really strong acting
chops to take Yvaine from this sharp-tongued character to the center of the
fairy tale romance, and Claire brings that across as no one else could. She has
the rare ability to just disappear into every role she takes on. Of course,
Claire’s character represents the one thing everybody in the film wants: her
heart.”As a huge fan of Neil Gaiman, Danes was enthusiastic right from the
get-go. She had previously voiced a role for the critically acclaimed animated
feature “Princess Mononoke” for which Gaiman wrote the screenplay, and even
wrote the forward to Gaiman’s graphic novel Death. “Stardust,” she felt, was
wonderfully true to what she loves about Gaiman. “His writing is so full of
imagination, wit and feeling – he’s very special,” says Danes. “And this story
is unique among his works, it’s colorful and rich and full of humor.”An even
bigger draw for Danes was the way Yvaine is drawn in the screenplay. “She’s a
riot,” says the actress. “I knew it would be a real challenge to try to render
a star as a human being, but it was definitely a fun one.” Danes admits that at
first Yvaine is the very opposite of shiny and inspirational. “She’s quite
angry when she crashes into the crater,” she observes. “You know, she’s been
hurled out of the sky, has hit the ground very painfully and is almost
immediately kidnapped by some silly young man she has no patience for – so
naturally, she’s in a bit of a bad mood. But the fun part is watching her real
personality unfurl as the story goes on.” Ironically, Danes aimed throughout to
keep her portrait of the star quite, well, grounded. “She’s really written as a
very amusing and accessible person, so I concentrated on bringing out what I
thought were her very common, relatable circumstances – especially her desire
for her home and her unexpected feelings for Tristan,” she explains. However,
Danes confesses there was nothing common to her about doing scenes with Robert
De Niro as an unconventional pirate. “It was really fun to have pirates
involved because it’s such a classic fantasy motif to escape into – but I did
have to pinch myself when I realized I was being dragged across the floor of a
pirate ship by Robert De Niro,” she laughs.
Providing romantic competition for Danes is another rapidly
ascending star, Sienna Miller, who most recently portrayed “It Girl” Edie
Sedgwick in the film “Factory Girl,” and made an early splash with a small role
in Vaughn’s “Layer Cake.” She came to the role, she says, because it sounded
“like a very light-hearted, fun role,” adding, “Victoria is sort of the catalyst
for this whole adventure.”Miller also enjoyed having the chance to reunite with
Charlie Cox, who played her brother in Lasse Hallström’s romantic comedy
“Casanova.” “We go way back and he’s fantastic so it was great to work with him
again,” she says. “The film’s really got so many great people in it – from
Robert De Niro to Michelle Pfeiffer to Ricky Gervais – it’s lots of familiar
faces in very different, fun roles.”

PIRATES, WITCHES, MERCHANTS and PRINCES
While the heart of “Stardust” is the journey of Tristan and
Yvaine, it would require a large and vastly talented supporting ensemble to fill
that journey with the proper humor, drama and surprises. From the start, the
filmmakers knew that one of the most vital roles to cast would be that of
Captain Shakespeare, the rugged pirate who sails the open skies, but closely
guards a secret. The idea was to go with someone completely unexpected and
against the grain. “We decided to look for someone who would be recognized
right away as an indisputable tough guy, which makes Captain Shakespeare even
more surprising as a character,” explains producer di Bonaventura. “We went
through a long list of people but Bob kept coming up because I’ve done a number
of movies with him and he’s such a tremendous actor. We also thought that since
Stormhold is such an exotic place where anything can happen, why couldn’t we
have a pirate with the essence of a colorful New Yorker?”To everyone’s extreme
delight, De Niro was game to take on the unlikely role. “Bob came in and simply
said ‘let’s go for it,” di Bonaventura recalls. “Matthew had a very clear
vision of how to use Bob in a fun way, from the haircut to the clothing to
keeping his New York accent. It was a pleasure for everyone involved.” For
Vaughn, Gaiman and Goldman, De Niro’s decision to join the cast was their own
fantasy come true. Says Gaiman: “We always hoped to have a big star in the
role, and in our wildest dreams we thought maybe even a Robert De Niro. But it
was amazing that it actually happened. He took the role of Captain Shakespeare
and made it so much bigger and meatier than we ever imagined.”
An equally thrilling piece of casting came with the addition of
one of Hollywood’s most acclaimed and beloved leading ladies, Michelle Pfeiffer,
as the eternal-youth-seeking witch Lamia. Although Pfeiffer played a modern-day
sorceress in “The Witches of Eastwick” opposite Jack Nicholson, this role would
take her much deeper into true fairy-tale territory. The fact that Pfeiffer has
taken very few screen roles recently made it all the more exhilarating. “It’s a
real treat to see Michelle again in a role where she is ripping up the screen,”
says di Bonaventura. Screenwriter Jane Goldman was especially gratified to see
Pfeiffer bring the character of Lamia to life in all her colorful shading. “I
was so excited to hear that Michelle had liked the script and especially that
she had responded to the idea of witches being in pursuit of youth and beauty –
with that being what ultimately destroyed them,” Goldman says. “Michelle was
just so perfect. She’s such a beautiful woman but she plays a scary old witch
brilliantly as well. It’s a great testament to her skill because she’s not a
cartoon witch by any means. She brings a real intelligence and depth to Lamia.”
Joining Pfeiffer as Lamia’s fellow coven, Mormo and Empusa, are British
actresses Joanna Scanlon (“Notes on a Scandal”) and Sarah Alexander (“I Could
Never Be Your Woman”). For Matthew Vaughn, the key to the witches of “Stardust”
was keeping them as far from the clichés of pointy hats and hook noses as he
possibly could. On the contrary, Lamia, Mormo and Empusa are a gaggle of
once-supremely glamorous ladies lamenting the loss of their all-important
youthful appearances and desperately in need – both literally and figuratively –
of a heart.
In one of the film’s funniest roles is the beloved comic Ricky
Gervais who rose to international prominence with the runaway hit British comedy
series “The Office” and was recently seen in the family hit “Night at the
Museum.” Gervais plays Ferdy the Fence, a merchant who will buy and sell
absolutely anything on earth – or beyond – and brings a modern comic sensibility
to the proceedings. “Ricky Gervais is so funny and so cool, he adds something
wonderful to the story,” says Gaiman.
Another notable star who joins the proceedings is Rupert Everett,
the handsome British stage and screen actor who has demonstrated his versatility
in such films as the Oscar®-winning “Shakespeare in Love,” the Hollywood
romantic comedy “My Best Friend’s Wedding” and as the “unprincely” Prince
Charming in “Shrek 2” and “Shrek the Third.” In “Stardust,” Everett goes to
town with the part of Secondus, The King’s ruthlessly ambitious son, who intends
to win the Kingdom for his very own. Everett sums up the production in just a
few key words: “It’s got epic evil, epic love, epic fantasy and great actors
all over!”
Rounding out the cast of magical characters is the award-winning
star of the stage Melanie Hill as the curse-wielding Ditchwater Sal and Kate
Magowan, another rising British actress who appeared in Michael Winterbottom’s
“24 Hour Party People,”as her alluring captive Una. In another choice role is a
true living legend: Peter O’Toole as the imperious King, who wants to give his
kingdom away to his most rightful heir before his imminent demise – just the
kind of kingly performance that the eight-time Academy Award® nominee can make
utterly convincing. And last but not least is two-time Academy Award® nominee
Ian McKellen, serving as the tale’s resonant narrator.

DRESSING UP A FAIRY TALE
For the actors, the process of getting deeper into these
magic-filled characters was helped along by getting into their costumes, which
transported them into a world just beyond the borders of reality. “Stardust”
costume designer Sammy Sheldon, who has designed the clothes for such films as
the sci-fi epic “V For Vendetta,” the cross-dressing comedy “Kinky Boots” and
the fantasy comedy “The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy,” focused on creating a
clear divide between the sleepy citizenry of Wall and that far wilder,
uninhibited denizens of Stormhold.
“Everything in Wall is very neat and folksy, whereas Stormhold is
full of color and quite exotic, eclectic and, of course, filled with magic,”
says Sheldon.
Among Sheldon’s favorite outfits are those of the wicked witches
who have long been waiting for a star such as Yvaine to fall to earth in the
hopes of using her to attain immortal youth. At director Vaughn’s suggestion,
Sheldon went completely in the opposite direction of the usual hooded,
black-enshrouded film witch cliché. “Our witches have a much more exotic,
ethnic feel to them. I kind of based them in the Renaissance period. They wear
jewel-like colors – green, red and purple – which are then topped off with a bit
of black,” she explains. “They are truly like three dark jewels.”
Michelle Pfeiffer’s character, Lamia, wears an outfit inspired by
her name, which originates from a Greek mythological figure who is half snake,
half woman. “Her serpent-like qualities are reflected in the colors we used –
greens, golds and blacks,” says Sheldon. “There is a heaviness to her costume
that emphasizes her large, dark impact on the world around her.”
By contrast, for the film’s introduction to the star, Yvaine,
Sheldon aimed for an ethereal style that would seem truly not of this earth.
“Yvaine was a challenge because she’s not a human being, so you don’t want to
put her in something that feels like traditional clothing. Ultimately, we used
something that was more like a shroud with a very metallic quality to it so that
she looks like she’s part of the molten place that she’s landed in,” says
Sheldon. “The fabric is a Valentino silk so it’s also very beautiful and when
Claire Danes walks in it, it flutters in the wind.”Later, Yvaine is given an
electric blue dressing gown by none other than Captain Shakespeare. “We used
blue because we felt that if Yvaine was faced with a row of dresses, she would
be drawn to something the color of the sky,” explains Sheldon. “That dress
becomes a part of her transformation into more human feelings.”
As for Captain Shakespeare himself, Sheldon had a blast taking
him from a lightning pirate’s grubby swashbuckler’s uniform to a completely
opposite persona in the privacy of his own cabin. Sheldon also cleverly
designed all the pirates’ clothes in such a way as to prevent them from
conducting the deadly electricity they collect. “They don’t wear any metal, of
course!” comments Sheldon, “and we also gave them things like ‘Wellies’ for
their feet and rubber gloves for their hands, anything that might help to keep
them from being electrocuted.”
When it came to the princes of Stormhold, who are numbered one
through seven, Sheldon had a lot of fun incorporating their individual numbers
into the details of their outfits. Here, too, the usual, staid princely
clichés of yore were avoided. Indeed, Matthew Vaughn had envisioned the
princes’ outfits as having a kind of “cowboy-esque, Sergio Leone style,” says
Sheldon. “So we came up with something that is very sort of swashbuckling and
sexy.”
As for the story’s hero, Tristan Thorne, his outfits begin in a
traditional, albeit slightly ill-fitting and awkward, Victorian style but become
more and more dashing as he progresses in his adventures through Stormhold
toward his ultimate destiny. It was important to both Vaughn and Sheldon that
Tristan’s outfits evolve with his character. “He grows as a man and becomes
very sexy and strong, the complete opposite of the way he was known in Wall
before he crossed the wall into Stormhold,” says Sheldon. “He becomes
considerably more dapper throughout.”
Once Sheldon had forged the extensive wardrobe for “Stardust,”
she had her team set about battering, beating and muddying up their ingenious
creations so they would feel truly lived in and worn, adding to the essential
believability of the fairy tale.
“’Stardust’ is a magical story, but my goal was not to just
create costumes that suit these fun characters but to help the audience really
believe in the existence of Stormhold,” Sheldon sums up.

VICTORIAN VILLAGES, WITCHES’ LAIRS AND LIGHTNING SHIPS
When it came to designing “Stardust,” the filmmakers couldn’t
have hoped for a richer starting place: the illustrations of Charles Vess, the
lauded fantasy artist who first created the distinctive world of Wall and
Stormhold in the original graphic novel with Neil Gaiman. Although it was clear
that the film’s sets could never look precisely the same as Vess’s stunningly
graceful and imaginative drawings, Vaughn asked his talented design and effects
teams to do their best to capture the spirit of his artistry. When Vess arrived
on the set, he was blown away by the tribute. “It’s a remarkable experience to
watch what you’ve drawn be expanded upon by so many talented artisans,” he
comments. “There were so many great new ideas, I often thought, ‘now why didn’t
we think of that?’” Gaiman expressed a similar sentiment. I loved that the
minute you are in Stormhold, you feel you’re walking into a world completely
different from the one you ordinarily live in,” the writer muses.
As part of his overall stylistic concept for the film, Vaughn
wanted to literally divide Wall and Stormhold into two different experiences –
each of which defies the usual expectations of fantasy and reality. “We had the
idea of carving a world for the film that is made up of two opposite halves,”
Vaughn notes. “We shot the sequences that take place in Wall in a very quaint
and fancy way and then we shot Stormhold in a far more modern, edgy style –
because I think people often forget that just because you are entering a fancy
world it doesn’t mean it has to be shot in a fancy way.”
Some of the film’s magic was borne organically from the film’s
far-flung, authentic locations – which Vaughn insisted upon. These include the
craggy, mossy realms of rustic Iceland and Scotland’s breathtaking, almost
supernatural Isle of Skye, two rare locations that lend the film’s landscape a
downright otherworldly ambience. “Iceland looks like no other place in the
world, so right away it gives you that magical feeling,” says di Bonaventura.
“Overall, the film was able to use very dramatic landscapes to lend the story a
series of tremendous backdrops as magical as the story.”
Helping to bring Wall and Stormhold even further to vivid life
was acclaimed production designer Gavin Bocquet, who is no stranger to the
fantastic and the epic, having previously collaborated with George Lucas on one
of Hollywood’s most beloved fairy tales of all, the second “Star Wars” trilogy.
When Bocquet read the screenplay for “Stardust,” it immediately grabbed him.
“What I look for is a good story, not just a good design vehicle,” the designer
says. “And this was a very engaging story, a magical love story with great
storytelling, great characters and a great heart at its center.” Once he came
on board, Bocquet worked closely with Vaughn to find just the right mix between
realism and boundless fantasy in his designs, with the ratio changing as the
story traverses from sleepy Wall to the wild heart of Stormhold. “We begin in
Wall, which has a very chocolate-box, Victorian feel to it, the design of which
really is intended to establish the kind of sleepy, mellow life Tristan has
before his great adventure,” says Bocquet. “Matthew was very keen to make Wall
as archetypal of classical England as possible. So we did a lot of research,
looking through period photographs to get an idea of materials and textures.”To
stand in for Wall, the filmmakers utilized two inimitably charming, medieval
Cotswold villages: the Lake District village of Bibury, lined with natural stone
cottages and once described by the artist William Morris as “the most beautiful
village in England”; and the lushly wooded village of Castle Combe, which has
remained nearly unchanged since the 12th century, thanks to strict preservation
rules. The wall that protects Wall from the unknown territories beyond was kept
very straightforward – 200 feet of basic, dry stone structure, in keeping with
fairy tale simplicity. “One of Matthew’s really nice ideas for the film was
that if anything could be more simplified even in our fancy world than we should
do that,” Bocquet explains. “The wall isn’t meant to look like there’s
something spectacularly special beyond it. So our main challenge was just
finding a beautiful location for the wall between two forests.” Ultimately, the
wall was created in Ashridge Park, a woodland estate in England where sequences
of the “Harry Potter” films were also shot. “There, we found two un-manicured,
rough forests that peter out into this beautiful, meandering valley that
disappears around a corner,” says Bocquet.
But once the action moves to Stormhold, Bocquet was able to let
his imagination run wild, creating such outrageous structures as the King’s
Castle, which is surreally perched on a 6,000 foot high rock edifice.
“Stormhold had to have the atmosphere of a place Tristan could never have
imagined in his wildest dreams,” says the production designer. “But we also
didn’t want it to look like any other contemporary fantasy movies. I think
Stormhold really looks like no other place on earth or anywhere else.”The first
place audiences really get to know in Stormhold is the teeming market, bursting
with brilliant colors and strange, mystical wares. “The market was based on
different ethnic markets around the world, including North Africa, China and
India, but also imbued with that feeling of being in a parallel world, so it is
a little bit more extreme and edgy,” says Bocquet.
Even more fantastical is the Witches’ Lair, which stayed in
keeping with the film’s unconventional notion of decaying, glamour-obsessed
crones. To match that unique depiction, Bocquet designed the lair as a dark,
deteriorating, underground cathedral. “We had lots of meetings about the
Witches’ Lair, throwing many different ideas around,” recalls Bocquet, “but,
ultimately, Matthew’s thought was that the Lair should be a place that the
witches had designed when they had lots of power but that, over the years, had
become run-down and crumbling as they lost their magic,” he says. “That was the
inspiration for the interior. As for the exterior, like the King’s Castle, we
ultimately decided the exterior would be carved out of rock – very black
volcanic rock.”Says di Bonaventura of the Lair: “It’s a mix of half-Versailles,
half-Edgar Allan Poe – an extraordinary place where the witches seek immortality
and is also the perfect location for the film’s climactic finale.”
Perhaps the favorite set of all for cast and crew was Captain
Shakespeare’s flying “lightning ship.” Bocquet had his team build the full-scale
whimsical Victorian vessel on a soundstage at England’s famed Pinewood Studios
in front of a specially created, floating green screen – so that aerial images
of the ships’ cloud-bound flights could be added with CG afterwards. “The
lightning ship is a true one-off sort of design,” says Bocquet of his piece de
resistance. “We really wanted to move away from what people might expect –
since we are in Stormhold. We developed the idea around the mix of a big,
grubby, rusty industrial trawler and an elegant, sleek clipper ship, all
supported by this giant Victorian balloon and filled with electrical equipment
and technology that merges the Victorian with newfangled modern ideas. It’s
very much in line with the gritty, edgy look Matthew wanted for Stormhold.”
When it came to creating the film’s special effects, Vaughn
aimed to maintain that grittier feel by going for the whimsical and inventive
rather than the technologically sleek. He used some dazzling CG shots, working
with special effects supervisor Stuart Brisdon and the digital houses Double
Negative, The Senate and Baseblack, but also relied on the skills of
cinematographer Ben Davis, with whom he previously worked on “Layer Cake,” to
pull off some deliciously old-school-style in-camera effects. “We really
wanted to go back-to-basics as much as possible with this movie,” says Vaughn of
the film’s many practical effects. “It reminds me in a way of the old James
Bond films, which are still so entertaining because you have stuntmen doing real
stunts and you have these stunning real locations that add to the fun.” Relying
on whimsy over technology was all part-and-parcel of the film’s overall mission
to bring to life those intangible elements of fairy tales in which everyone of
all ages most wants to believe. Sums up di Bonaventura: “There are plenty of
visual effects to entertain the audience in ‘Stardust,’ but I think the real
magic of our movie is in the actors, the locations, the sets, the photography,
the costumes and, most of all, the storytelling itself.”
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