Shrek

"The greatest fairy tale never told."

A CGI-animated tetralogy by Dreamworks Animation loosely based on a 1990 book about an ogre in a fairy tale land, who just wants to live in his swamp undisturbed, but is dragged against his will into fighting for the fate of entire kingdoms.

In the first movie (2001), Shrek is driven into conflict with Lord Farquaad, who banishes all magical creatures from his kingdom, forcing them to seek refuge in Shrek's swamp. He teams up with an annoying talking donkey named Donkey, and is forced to rescue Princess Fiona (Cameron Diaz) for him so Farquaad would give him the swamp back. However, Fiona's previously-unknown curse, and Shrek falling in love with her, disrupt Farquaad's plans to become a king by marrying a princess.

In Shrek 2 (2004), Fiona, now an ogress and Shrek's wife, travels with him to the kingdom of Far Far Away, ruled by her parents. Meanwhile, Prince Charming, who was supposed to rescue Fiona instead of Shrek, desires the kingdom for himself, helped by his mother, the Fairy Godmother. He first tries to dispose of Shrek by deploying Puss-in-Boots, a famous ogre hunter, but the cat ends up becoming friends with Shrek and Donkey. After Shrek drinks a potion that temporarily makes him and Fiona human, the Fairy Godmother makes Charming pose as the human Shrek.

In Shrek the Third (2007), King Harold dies, leaving the ogre couple as his successors, and Shrek, unable to accept this fate, leaves Far Far Away to search for another heir to the throne, a teenage loser named Arthur Pendragon. Meanwhile, Prince Charming rallies various fairy tale villains and organizes a coup, taking over Far Far Away, and Fiona (pregnant with Shrek's kids) assembles her own team of fairy tale princesses to confront him.

In Shrek Forever After (2010), Shrek, now a domesticated family man, longs for the days when he felt like a "real ogre" and is duped into signing a pact with the smooth-talking dealmaker Rumpelstiltskin. Shrek suddenly finds himself in a twisted, alternate version of Far Far Away, where ogres are hunted, Rumpelstiltskin is king and Shrek and Fiona have never met. Now, it's up to Shrek to undo all he's done in the hopes of saving his friends, restoring his world and reclaiming his one True Love.

Notorious for its humor, both witty and slapstick, for turning everything we knew from fairy tales upside-down, and for a ridiculously modern feel of its medieval fantasy setting. The first film's huge success (combined with it easily outdrawing the Disney Animated Canon entry Atlantis the Lost Empire, which opened a month later) convinced Dreamworks that 2D is dead, and scrapped their 2D films all together, "apologized" for them, and even convinced other executives in the same idea, paving the way for all films thereafter—it is unclear if 2D films will regain top priority again. It was the first film to win the Academy Award's Best Animated Feature category. Shrek and its sequels are Dreamworks' defining hits, "Fiona's Theme" plays during the studio's Vanity Plate in all their animated films now, and the character of Shrek is now their unofficial mascot.

Adapted into The Musical, which opened on Broadway in 2008 and has since closed and launched a United States tour. There is also a Christmas Special, Shrek the Halls, and a Halloween Special, Scared Shrekless. Another film, entitled Puss in Boots was released in 2011. It is set before the events of Shrek 2, and chronicles the backstory of Puss in Boots. It's worth to note that the film is "ogre-less". Guillermo del Toro is the executive producer. Universal Studios features Shrek 4D, which is set immediately after Shrek and Fiona's wedding and details a ghostly Lord Farquaad's attempt to get Fiona back.

Now has a fledgling character sheet.


Tropes used in Shrek include:

Series-wide

  • Accent Adaptation: The Mexican dub rendered Puss's Gratuitous Spanish as Castillian, and Donkey's Ebonics as a Mexico City accent.
    • The Spanish dub substitutes Puss' generic Spanish accent for a thick Malaga accent (Banderas is from Malaga). Keep in mind Banderas voices Puss in the English, Spanish, and Mexican versions.
  • Acrofatic: Shrek—and all ogres—are exceptionally nimble and agile for their size.
  • Action Girl: Princess Fiona.
    • She gets it from her mother, who is now a Retired Badass (she can smash through a wall with her head with no problem even in her old age).
  • Adaptational Villainy: Played straight and inverted for different characters. The Big Bad Wolf is one of the heroes (and, in the third film, so is one of the Ugly Stepsisters) while some traditionally malevolent fairytale creatures like Dragon and the ogres are for the most part sympathetic. On the other hand, Red Riding Hood is a thief while Lancelot and Guenevere are both Jerkasses who mistreat a young King Arthur, and Geppetto, far from the benevolent father figure he is usually depicted as, is seen turning in Pinocchio.
  • Adapted Out: The Musical version had two practical examples:
    • The UK version omitted the Magic Mirror, Lord Faraquaad gets all his much needed information from the Gingerbread Man. Plus, some of the fair tale characters were also removed and replaced with ones that are more recognizable to the Uk audiences.
    • Community theaters had the Magic Mirror cut, mainly because they cannot afford special effects, like motion capture.
  • Ambiguously Gay: Prince Charming.
  • Anachronism Stew: Pretty much the defining trait of Shrek's world, ranging from most characters speaking with American accents in medieval Europe, to featuring characters from stories set in different eras, to restaurants and retail outlets suspiciously similar to those in modern times. The list goes on and on.
  • Arbitrary Skepticism: Several instances. For example, In Scared Shrekless, Donkey refuses to believe that Farquaad's ghost haunts Duloc castle. Even though he has in fact seen and interacted with Farquaad's ghost.
  • Ascended Extra: Many of the fairy tale characters from the first film get gradually more important as the films go on. They are specifically the Gingerbread Man, Big Bad Wolf, the Three Little Pigs, and Pinocchio. Dragon also becomes more important, and Mavis the Ugly Sister in the second film becomes quite important in the third.
    • This even occurs for the villains. Captain Hook makes an appearance playing piano in the Villain Bar in the second film, before making a more prominent appearance in the third. And Rumpelstiltskin briefly featured in the third (albeit with a completely difference appearance), before going on to be the Big Bad of the fourth.
  • Babies Ever After: The ogrelings, whom the fourth film reveals to be named Fergus, Fearghal and Felicia.
  • Badass: Most notably Fiona and Puss in Boots, and especially Shrek himself.
  • Bad Guy Bar: The second and third movies have a straight example featuring fairy tale bad guys. "The Poison Apple Bar" features Captain Hook on piano.
    • It also has signs saying "Unhappy Hour" and "We Reserve the Right to Behead Anyone".
  • Beneath the Mask: Fiona at the beginning of the movie acts like a stereotypical Disney Princess with Shrek. However, she slowly reveals herself as an Action Girl who fights dirty, much like Shrek.
  • Beta Couple: Donkey and Dragon.
  • Beware the Nice Ones: Prince Charming.
  • Big Damn Heroes
  • Big Little Man: Our first glimpse of Lord Farquaad involves him striding dramatically along a corridor, camera focused on his face or body at a strange angle, then when the camera and scenery go still, he's revealed to be maybe half the height of the guards.
  • Bitch in Sheep's Clothing: Fairy Godmother.
  • Black Comedy: A few scenes, notably the king's death in Shrek the Third.
    • Alternate-universe Puss eating alternate-universe Gingy.
    • The exploding bird in the first movie... whose eggs are used for breakfast.
  • Bland-Name Product: Aside from the mandatory WcDonald's, you also have "Farbucks Coffee".
    • And "Burger Prince" and "Banana Kingdom". And much, much more.
    • And Friar's Fat Boy, a play on the family restaurant chain Big Boy. (At the time, Big Boy restaurants were named after the franchisee, such as Bob's Big Boy or Frisch's Big Boy.)
  • Bridge Logic
  • Broken Ace: Prince Charming parodies this trope. Instead of Knight in Shining Armor on the outside, self-loathing mess on the inside, he's Failure Knight on the outside and pure juvenile mama's boy on the inside.
    • You have to admit he's a pretty good stage director, considering he got that entire thing set up in like a day.
  • Canon Discontinuity: Rumpelstiltskin in Shrek the Third and Rumpelstiltskin in Shrek Forever After.
    • There's a similar case in the original Shrek. Who's that right at the end turning the onion and mice into a carriage?Hint: It's the Fairy Godmother.
    • Maybe the fourth movie's Rumpelstiltskin was the actual trickster from the fairy tale and the third movie-version was simply some random guy who played on everyone's assumption of Rumpelstiltskin's appearance?
    • One might guess that they just forgot what they did in the previous movie only 4 years ago, but comments in the DVD special features of Shrek Forever After indicate that it's more likely they hoped the audience did.
  • Card-Carrying Villain: Any Big Bad in each movie, except Farquaad.
  • Cat Stereotype: Puss-in-Boots is a swashbuckling, wisecracking orange cat.
  • Cheated Angle: When Puss in Boots is introduced in Shrek 2, his upper and lower halves are separated. The scene is dark enough that you can't see it, but they wanted the head and boots farther apart than they would actually be.
  • Chekhov's Gunman: The Muffin Man. First mentioned briefly by Gingy in the first movie, then is enlisted in first sequel to help Shrek stop Fiona from kissing Prince Charming in time by baking a giant version of the Gingerbread Man. And shows up in the last sequel baking the birthday cake for the Shreklings.
  • Cultural Translation: The Polish dub of the Shrek movies are full of Polish pop-culture references. For example Donkey sings the theme song of a Polish TV drama when Shrek decides to go to the Potion Factory in Shrek 2. Donkey also generates much Actor Allusion to the known actor voicing him.
  • Cute Kitten: Repeatedly Invoked by Puss-In-Boots, using his cute kitten eyes.
  • Cute Monster Girl: Fiona. Considering how much she resembles her mother, Felicia looks likely to grow up to be one of these too.
  • Damsel in Distress: Subverted with Fiona, lampshaded with the other Fairytale Princesses.
  • Dance Party Ending: All the Shrek films love this trope. Taken to even greater levels in the DVD releases, which include bonus 'dance party' epilogues such as the first film's 'Swamp Karaoke Party' and the second's parody of American Idol.
  • Dark Reprise: The Duloc puppet song in Scared Shrekless, which manages to be less creepy than the original (though Gingy would say otherwise).
  • Deadpan Snarker: Shrek, big time. Often lost on Donkey, much to his irritation.
    • Rumpelstiltskin in the fourth movie, soooo much.
  • Deconstruction: Of the entire Fairy Tale genre. The Ogre is the hero, the nobleman is a Prince Charmless, and the princess grows out of her dependence on stereotypes and settles happily into the life of an ogress. She also knows martial arts. And that's just from one movie.
  • Disney Creatures of the Farce:
    • Fiona looks like she'll have a typical 'Snow White' moment... but the bird explodes because she hit a high note (or rather, missed the high note). She then cooks its eggs for breakfast.
    • Snow White herself starts to have a 'Snow White' moment in the third movie. She then sends the mob of animals she gathered charging after some guards.
  • Dissimile: Shrek's attempted "Ogres are like onions" simile in the first film.
  • Double Entendre:
    • The running gag in the first movie -- "Do you think maybe he's compensating for something?" Kids think it refers to his height. Adults think it refers to his... length.
    • Not to mention the constant use of the word "ass" to mean a literal donkey but in phrases where it usually means the human buttocks. "Nobody likes a kissass." "I have to save my ass." "You still look like an ass to me."
  • Everything's Better with Sparkles: The crew called them Disney Sparkles.
  • The Evil Prince: Prince Charming in Shrek the Third.
  • Face Heel Turn: The whole series is about this - stereotypically bad characters turning into heroes and secondary heroes, dropping their facades of jerkishness and so on.
  • Fantasy Counterpart Culture: Modern-day America.
  • Fantasy Kitchen Sink
  • Flippant Forgiveness: "All right, Donkey. I forgive you...for stabbing me in the back!"
  • Fractured Fairy Tale
  • Friend to All Living Things: Two of them, both parodied.
  • Gasshole: Shrek, Fiona, and to all appearances, all ogres.
  • The Genie Knows Jack Nicholson: Explains why Hooters can exist in a pseudo-fairy tale environment, as well as a vast majority of the Schizo-Tech.
  • Genre Savvy: "This is the part where you run away."
  • Gentle Giant: Shrek.
  • Getting Crap Past the Radar: All Dreamworks films are fond of this.
  • Gratuitous Spanish: Puss in Boots.
  • The Grinch: Shrek in Shrek the Halls.
  • Groin Attack: Happens to Shrek once a movie.
  • Hair Flip: Prince Charming does this on multiple occasions.
  • Half-Empty Two-Shot: Used twice to show how alone Shrek and Fiona feel after their big fight. Fiona is shown sitting at an otherwise unoccupied table, with the table in the center of the shot. This is immediately followed by Shrek sitting at his table, on the opposite side (from the camera's perspective).
  • Happily Married: It's not always smooth sailing, but Shrek and Fiona definitely love each other. The same goes for Donkey and Dragon.
  • Headless Horseman: One of the patrons of the Poisoned Apple in the second film, and part of Charming's army of villains in the third.
    • He also got a DUI during the second movie. Shrek and Co. plow into him while he's taking a field sobriety test. Touching the nose he doesn't have.
  • Heroes Want Redheads: Fiona.
  • High on Catnip: In Shrek 2, guards capture Shrek and friends and one finds a bag of catnip on Puss-In-Boots' person. Puss denies that it's his.
  • Hollywood Kiss: Shrek and Fiona.
  • Horseback Heroism: Spoofed with Prince Charming.
  • Huge Guy, Tiny Girl: Shrek & human!Fiona in the first film and inverted with Dragon & Donkey, Fiona & Farquaad. The second has Charming and his mum, inverted with Harold and Lillian even BEFORE he's changed back...
  • Improbable Species Compatibility: Donkey and Dragon, which leads to some of the most adorable mutant babies in film history.
  • Incredibly Lame Pun: Frequent from Shrek, but Donkey never gets them. Also a lot of the names of shops.
  • Informed Attractiveness: Shrek when he becomes a human in the second film. He's definitely handsome, but not quite at the level where every female characters start fawning over him.
  • Ink Suit Actor: Although this has become attributed to Dreamworks Animation movies in general. See the picture on the trope page.
  • Instant Awesome, Just Add Dragons: Dragon likes to pull the Big Damn Heroics.
  • Insult Friendly Fire
  • I Taste Delicious: In a recent advertising campaign.
  • Jerkass: Lord Farquaad in Shrek and Lancelot as well as his friends in Shrek the Third.
  • Jerk with a Heart of Gold: Shrek.
  • Killed Off for Real: King Harold in the third film. Mama Bear in the first; note the rug in Farquaad's room (unless the dance along is canon), Lord Farquaad, Fairy Godmother.Prince Charming's fate at the end of the third film is rather unclear, but it's possible he's dead too.
    • According to Shrek 3D, Farquaad is still alive in Dragon's belly.
  • Knight in Shining Armor: Charming and Lancelot, both subverted.
  • Knight in Sour Armor: Shrek is crude, hot-tempered and cynical, but nearly always manages to do the right thing, especially for people (and donkeys) that have proven they're able to see past the idea of "big, stupid, ugly ogres".
  • Lady and Knight: Subverted all to hell.
  • Large Ham:
    • Lord Farquaad and Prince Charming also have their moments (Charming especially during the climax of Shrek the Third: "With soft and bouncy haaaaaaaaiiiiiiir!").
    • Puss in Boots has his moments. Witness this immortal line from the fourth movie: "Feed me...if you dare!"
    • Rumpelstiltskin.
    • A non-talking example in Shrek 2: As a troupe of trumpeters from Far Far Away make their grand entrance into Shrek and Fiona's swamp, concluding their performance as they reach Shrek's hut, one of the trumpeters within the troupe decides to continue on, giving an over-the-top, show-stopping performance that leaves Shrek, Fiona and Donkey confused and the herald that has an invitation for the two quite clearly annoyed.
  • Larynx Dissonance: Larry King and Regis Philbin as Evil Stepsisters. Yes, these two.
  • Lost in Translation: In some versions, like the Norwegian one, Shrek is called a "troll". This is because of there not being an equivalent to the word "ogre" in their vocabularies.
  • Magitek: Shrek's magical TV-mirror, among many other examples.
  • Man Child: Prince Charming in Shrek 2.
  • Massive Multiplayer Crossover
  • Match Cut: A number of complex CGI-aided examples.
  • Meaningful Name: "Shrek" is the Yiddish word for "monster", derived from the German word "shreck", meaning "terror" or "fright".
    • Also, "Farquaad" is a slightly-slurred mispronunciation of an obscene term for an unpleasant person.
      • This one gets a lampshade in a FoxTrot comic, where Paige tries to convince Peter (who works at the theater) to let her into the movie for free. She starts describing the cast ("Shrek and Fiona and the evil Prince..."); Peter interrupts, saying there's no way he'll let her do that, and in the last panel she finishes her sentence ("...Farquaad.") while shooting him a death glare.
      • Farquaad was actually named after one of the quadrangles in Notre Dame University, where many of the filmmakers graduated - allusions to it can be found throughout the movies. The quadrangle was situated far away, i.e. a "far quad".
  • Misunderstood Loner with a Heart of Gold: Shrek both uses and subverts this trope. On the one hand, he turns out to have a heart of gold. On the other hand, he's still an ogre, and proud of it.
  • The Mockbuster: Not one of the movies themselves (though it wouldn't be surprising if one was floating around), but the characters star in Gameloft's iOS game Shrek Kart.
  • The Napoleon: Lord Farquaad in Shrek.
  • Neutral Female: Subverted.
  • Nice Job Fixing It, Villain: Farquaad inadvertently greatly upset the plans of all three villains who came after him by sending Shrek to rescue Fiona.
  • Non-Human Sidekick: Technically, Shrek himself is non-human, but Donkey and Puss qualify nonetheless.
  • Non Sequitur Thud: After the Queen headbutts her second wall.
  • Numbered Sequels: Played with for the third and fourth ones.
  • Odd Couple: Shrek and Donkey, later Shrek and Fiona, and later still Shrek and Arthur.
  • Odd Name Out: According to Word of God, the dronkeys' names are Eclair, Bananas, Peanut, Parfait, Coco and... Debbie...
  • Official Couple: Shrek and Fiona.
  • Precision F-Strike: Notably for a kids' film - Donkey's "Chicks dig that romantic crap!" in the first movie.
  • Prince Charmless: Prince Charming in Shrek 2.
  • Psychopathic Manchild: Prince Charming in Shrek the Third.
  • Puppy Dog Eyes: Puss-in-Boots. Spoofed in the third film when Puss tries this while in Donkey's body and fails to do anything.
  • Redhead in Green: Fiona. The fact that at the end of the first movie she becomes an ogress permanently and gains green skin as well doesn't help matters.
  • Sapient Steed: Donkey! Who only functions as a steed for half of the second movie and a part of the fourth, but still.
  • Schizo-Tech
  • Sequel Reset: The first movie literally ended with Happily Ever After, but the sequels have been putting that off ever since. The second film reveals there was in fact an actual Prince Charming that was supposed to break the curse on Fiona, and that her royal parents are still around; the action picks up after the lovers' honeymoon as they're forced to meet her parents, causing another go-round of problems regarding Shrek's self-esteem. The amusing new characters as well as ones who got expanded roles helped mitigate this for audiences, but reaction to the third film (where Shrek now has to get out of being king if he ever hopes to live out his life in the swamp, and the loose end of 2 involving Prince Charming's fate is brought up) suggests the formula is wearing thin. And the fourth movie does a total reset with Time Travel.
  • Serkis Folk: The entire cast.
  • Shout-Out: Lots of them, mostly to Disney, though the giant gingerbread man is named "Mongo" as a tribute to Blazing Saddles and there's a lot to other fantasy stories and films.
  • Shutting Up Now
  • Sorry I Left the BGM On: This happens 3 times in Shrek the Third. The first is when the music during the king's funeral turns out to be singing frogs. The second is when Shrek and Artie are about to have a heart-to-heart talk, and Merlin turns on the music for mood. Finally, the dramatic music during a fight scene is actually Captain Hook playing on the piano.
    • Inverted, kinda, in Shrek 2. The Fairy Godmother starts singing "Holding Out for a Hero", then the dramatic rescue begins, with the song as BGM. But she's still singing throughout as it switches between dance and rescue.
    • The Christmas Special Shrek the Halls does with a sound effect: the "squealing kettle" noise that accompanies Shrek losing his temper is revealed to be an actual squealing kettle.
      • Heck, it even shows up in the original film: When Shrek's rescued Fiona and the group is journeying back to Lord Farquaad's castle, they get waylaid by Robin Hood. Cue fight scene. A lively accordion piece quickly starts up, holds a note during a Matrix-style Orbital Shot (where (mostly) everything stops in place), and stops again as Fiona knocks out Friar Tuck, who was playing the instrument.
      • The first film also has Fiona's Theme playing while Farquaad is admiring Fiona's image. It then turns out the music is coming from the Magic Mirror itself.
  • Sudden Sequel Death Syndrome: King Harold in Shrek 2 has a good example of a non-death Heroic Sacrifice, as he throws himself in the path of the Fairy Godmother's wand to save Shrek and Fiona, which reflects the spell and turns the Fairy Godmother into bubbles. The result is that his previous 'happy ending' is removed and he is turned back to the frog he was. But he's still alive at the end of the movie, and his wife doesn't mind his being a frog at all. Unfortunately, within the first act of Shrek the Third, King Harold, well, croaks.
  • Summon Backup Dancers: The furniture song in Shrek 2.
  • Take That: Some see the film as Jeffrey Katzenberg's Take That to Disney, after being fired.
  • Torches and Pitchforks: In the opening scene of Shrek, the ogre is obviously used to angry mobs coming to drive him out of his hut, as he easily scares one of them off, even prompting them at one point, "This is the part where you run away." He later hangs a lampshade on it when speaking to Donkey.

Shrek: I'm an ogre! You know, 'Grab your torch and pitchfork!' Doesn't that bother you?

    • Also lampshaded in the sequel, when Shrek and Fiona step out of their carriage in Far Far Away and are revealed to be ogres. Shrek sees some pitchforks in the crowd and gets nervous, commenting "Let's go before they light the torches."
    • And in the fourth movie, Shrek and family are celebrities, so people mob now to ask him to sign their torches and pitchforks.
  • True Beauty Is on the Inside
  • True Love's Kiss: Subverted twice.
  • Ugly Guy, Hot Wife: Famously averted with Shrek and Fiona; parodied with Donkey and Dragon. Cos she breathes fire, geddit?
  • Ugly Guys Hot Daughter: A rare gender reversal with the stout, homely looking Fairy Godmother being mother to the handsome Prince Charming.
  • Ugly Hero, Good-Looking Villain: This trope is used in the first two movies: While Lord Farquaad isn't exactly good looking, he does play upon Shrek's ugliness to try to incite villagers against him. The second provides a better example, with the Fairy Godmother and her son Charming as good-looking villains opposing Shrek.
  • Villain Song: Of course Shrek subverts it every way it can. The main villain of Shrek 2 gets not one, but two songs: The first one is the self-titled "Fairy Godmother Song", a cheerful upbeat ditty about how she wants to help everyone; the second comes complete with an ominous orchestra and backing choir... except the song in question is "Holding Out for a Hero".
    • Prince Charming also gets a song in Shrek the Third, set to a musical that was set up as an excuse to publicly execute Shrek. Lord Farquaad didn't have a bona fide villain "song" (except in The Musical, of course), but he has a menacing leitmotif in the first movie, played upon his first appearance.
  • Wrong Genre Savvy: When locked up in her tower and guarded by a dragon, Princess Fiona believes that a handsome hero riding a noble steed will save her and slay the dragon. Though she's right about being rescued, her handsome hero turns out to be an ogre, his noble steed turns out to be a donkey instead of a horse, and instead of slaying the dragon, the dragon falls in love with his steed. This is a bit justified as fighting the dragon would result in the dragon killing them easily with her fire breath.
  • Yandere: The Bride of Gingy in Scared Shrekless.
  • You Didn't Ask

Shrek

  • Adaptation Expansion: Adapted from a children's book approximately 500 words long; almost nothing in the movie other than the characters of Shrek and Donkey -- who appeared for only one page as a random encounter—actually came from the book.
    • As did Princess Fiona since at the end of the book Shrek meets a princess ogre (Fiona) who is even uglier than he is.
    • Also, the dragon made a brief appearance under totally different circumstances, and the role of the Knight from the book and Lord Farquaad from the film are suspiciously similar—both are Jerkass versions of characters who would usually be the good guy in fairy tales, who end up acting as the primary villain.
  • Arson, Murder, and Jaywalking: Given the source, one of the lines from one of the Three Little Pigs.

Pig: He Huffed, and he Puffed, and he...signed an eviction notice.

  • Ascetic Aesthetic: Duloc.
  • Astonishingly Appropriate Interruption
  • Beast and Beauty: Shrek and Fiona in the first movie, subverted.
  • Berserk Button: Shrek whistles for Dragon to give Lord Farquaad his Just Desserts just one second after Fiona got threatened.
  • Broken Aesop: The whole point of the first film is "It doesn't matter what you look like, it's what inside that counts"... which doesn't stop an army of "short" jokes at Farquaad's expense (not to mention suggestions that he may be Compensating for Something), or the fact that in the end Fiona ends up in the shape that will be the most appealing to Shrek.
    • Fiona's transformation could be viewed as one more physically compatible with Shrek. Let's just keep in mind that Fiona's human head would fit in Shrek's mouth (which was pointed out in the DVD commentary during the Almost Kiss). Then again, we have the Donkey and Dragon pair-up... which is equally disturbing and might just qualify for the 'what's inside that counts' to an extreme.
    • Whatever's inside Farquaad is persecuting all fairy tale creatures and uprooting them from their homes. He's earned the right to be made fun of.
  • Comedic Sociopathy: Shrek and Fiona making nearby animals into balloons for each other and then letting them float away, and allowing a tree donkey is walking on to snap back and fling him away.
  • Compensating for Something: The first movie includes this as a Parental Bonus joke with Shrek saying this to Donkey.

Shrek: (while looking at Lord Farquaad's huge castle) "Do you think he's maybe compensating for something?"

    • Kids take away the meaning of compensating for being short, and adults take away the other.
  • Complaining About Rescues They Don't Like: Fiona is this trope for a lot of the first movie. Shrek didn't slay the dragon first. Shrek can't recite a poem. Shrek needs to save his ass. Shrek won't take off his helmet. And the worst part, to Fiona: Shrek was sent to rescue her for someone else.
  • Curse Cut Short/Last-Second Word Swap: From the Robin Hood song:

"I like an honest fight and a saucy little maid"
What he's basically saying is that he likes to get--PAID!

    • Not to mention the Disney-esque "Welcome to Duloc" song.

"Please keep off of the grass"
"Shine your shoes, wipe your--(bend over and turn around, exposing butt-cracks) FACE!"

Donkey: I don't get it, Shrek. Why didn't you just pull some of that ogre stuff on him? You know, throttle him, lay siege to his fortress, grind his bones to make your bread? You know, the whole ogre trip.
Shrek: Oh, I know. Maybe I could have decapitated an entire village, put their heads on a pike, gotten a knife, cut open their spleens and drink their fluids. Does that sound good to you?
Donkey: Uh, no, not really, no.

Farquaad: Ugh, it's hideous!
Shrek: Well, that's not very nice. It's just a donkey.
Donkey: Huh?
Farquaad: Indeed.

Fiona: There's an arrow in your butt!
Shrek: Huh? Oh, would you look at that.

  • Minsky Pickup: Robin Hood's song.
  • Mirror-Cracking Ugly: Shrek's mirror can't withstand his smile.
  • Moral Dissonance: see "Comedic Sociopathy" above.
  • The Napoleon: Lord Farquaad.
  • Offscreen Teleportation: Rather subtle because the distances involved were so small, but in the scene where Donkey and Shrek are arguing underneath the moon, Donkey demonstrates an unusual knack for getting in Shrek's face no matter which way the ogre turns.
  • One Side of the Story: The movie pulled off a two-sided version of this. Shrek half-overhears a conversation between Fiona and Donkey, but misses the most significant part: that Fiona turns into an ogre at night. The next day Shrek and Fiona both assume that Shrek heard the whole conversation and each jump to a false conclusion.
  • Outrun the Fireball: In the first movie, Shrek, Donkey, and Fiona use this trope as they reach the bridge leading away from the dragon's castle, and the dragon takes one last shot at them with her fiery breath.
  • Parental Bonus: Farquaad is a caricature of Disney CEO Michael Eisner; see also Meaningful Name and Double Entendre above.
  • Punctuated! For! Emphasis!: "Ogres. Are not. Like cakes!"
    • "I live alone! My swamp! Me! Nobody else, understand?! Nobody! Especially useless! Pathetic! Annoying! Talking DONKEYS!!!"
  • Radial Ass-Kicking: Happens with Fiona and the Merry Men as well as the wrestling scene in the arena.
  • Rage Against the Reflection: Fiona in the first film, upon seeing her ogre reflection in a bucket of water.
  • Reason You Suck Speech:

Donkey: (to Shrek) You know, with you, it's always "Me, me, me!" Well, guess what?! Now it's my turn! So you just shut up and pay attention! You are mean to me, you insult me, you don't appreciate anything that I do! You're always pushing me around or pushing me away!
Shrek: Yeah? Well, if I treated ya' so bad, why did you come back?
Donkey: 'Cause that's what friends do. They forgive each other!
Shrek: Alright, Donkey, I forgive you... for stabbing me in the back!

  • Reference Overdosed
  • Rescue Introduction: Shrek and Donkey meet Fiona when rescuing her from the tower.
  • Rope Bridge
  • Royal Decree: When Shrek first encounters the soldiers, they try to read him the prince's decree outlawing all fairy-tale creatures, but get intimidated by him looming over them.
  • Shipper on Deck: Donkey to Shrek and Fiona.
  • Snipe Hunt: Donkey is sent off to find a blue flower with red thorns to keep him from distracting Fiona and Shrek while they dealt with the arrow in Shrek's behind. Taken further as Donkey turns out to be colorblind. Donkey actually finds the flower, too, so it's uncertain Fiona was sending him to find something she expected he'd fail to find. She does say explicitly, though, that the flowers are "for getting rid of Donkey".
    • Heck, he doesn't just find the flower, he wanders through a whole copse of them, complaining that his task would be infinitely easier if he could discern color, and he only brings back the right flower because he grabs one - any one - in a panic when he hears Shrek yell. The other characters don't even react weirdly, making it a relatively subtle sight gag.
  • Speak Now or Forever Hold Your Peace: Spoofed in the first movie. Shrek goes to interrupt the wedding of Fiona and Farquaad, but Donkey tells him he has to wait until the priest does his "speak now or forever hold your piece" bit before barging in and shouting "I object!". On further investigation, they find they missed that part, so Shrek barges in anyway, just in time to create an Almost Kiss.
  • Standard Female Grab Area: After showing impeccable fighting skills early in the movie, Fiona can only call helplessly for Shrek when grabbed this way at her wedding. Granted, Farquaad does eventually put a knife to her throat but only after 20 seconds or so of her doing nothing while Shrek, who is also grabbed, actually fights back.
  • Subverted Rhyme Every Occasion: "Please keep off of the grass, / shine your shoes, wipe your... / ...Face!"
    • Which technically does rhyme with the line that follows: "Duloc is, Duloc is, Duloc is a perfect place!"
  • Sudden Musical Ending
  • Taking a Third Option: When Donkey is cut off on a small bridge segment by Dragon, he has two apparent options, neither of them good: He can jump (or fall) off into the lava, or be eaten. Instead, he seduces the dragon.
  • Theme Music Power-Up: Halfway through the wrestling match in Duloc, Joan Jett's "Bad Reputation" kicks in, and both Shrek AND Donkey start to kick ass and take names.
  • This Is My Side: Shrek and Donkey, at one point.
  • Tree Buchet: Shrek does this to Donkey in the first movie.
  • Turn Your Head and Cough: When Donkey learns that Shrek has been hit by an arrow, Donkey panics at the thought of Shrek dying from it and shouts irrelevant medical advice, including "keep your feet elevated", a plea for somebody to perform the Heimlich Maneuver, and (of course) "turn your head and cough."
  • Unfortunate Implications: In-universe example: When rescuing Fiona, he briefly stops for a moment and leaves Fiona. When questioning Shrek where he's going, Shrek responds that he's "got to save his ass". He was actually referring to Donkey, whose species is also referred to as "ass", but Fiona thought he meant he was going to chicken out and leave her behind, causing her to protest what kind of knight is Shrek, before Shrek mentions that he's a unique knight.
  • Wedding Deadline: Subverted.
  • What Happened to the Mouse?: So, um, what happened to Farquaad's kingdom?
    • And the refugees in the swamp?
      • In the Halloween Episode, they go back to Farquaad's kingdom to find it's now a ghost town.
      • Some of the refugees would reappear in later films (Pinocchio, the Three Little Pigs, Big Bad Wolf, Pied Piper).
  • You and What Army?: Inverted. Shrek says this to the leader of a group of soldiers, who turns around and sees that the rest of his troops had run away, leaving a lot of their weapons behind.
  • You Monster!: Gingy to Farquaad: "You're a monster!"

Shrek 2

  • Affably Evil: The Fair Godmother, apart from being just as disliking of ogres as everybody else in the world, on the whole is pretty nice - but it seems that's just her public facade.
  • Ambiguously Gay: Prince Charming. Being voiced by the openly gay Rupert Everett doesn't help. There is a huge Parental Bonus in the scene where he talks to his mother about his reluctance to marry Fiona. Apparently, he is not interested in women at all...
    • Some of Puss' lines make the viewer wonder as well, though that's more like Ambiguously Bi, since unlike Charming he does show interest in women.
  • Are We There Yet?: Donkey on the way to Far, Far Away at the beginning of the movie.

Shrek: The Land of Far, Far Away, donkey? That's where we're going! Far...FAR...away.

  • zap*

Pinocchio: I'm a real boy! ... [singing] I'm real, I'm real, I'm -

  • zap*

Pinocchio: ...Aww!

King: Excuse me, I'm looking for the ugly step-sister...?
[Doris turns around to show a woman whose face is remarkably male with poorly applied makeup]
King: Ah...there you are!

Shrek: We're not going, and that's final!
Cut to the last of the luggage being loaded

Queen: Harold!
Fiona: Shrek!
Shrek: Fiona!
King: Fiona!
Fiona: Mom!
Queen: Harold!
Donkey: Donkey!

  • Separated by a Common Language: The slightly, er- intellectually subnormal giant gingerbread man raises eyebrows in Scotland, where the word "mongo" is an extremely offensive pejorative term for someone who is mentally handicapped.
  • Shout-Out: Probably too many to count, but once to Garfield when Puss mutters into his milk "I hate Mondays."
  • Sitting Sexy on a Piano: The Fairy Godmother does this at one point.
  • Sorry I Left the BGM On: It turns out that the voice over narration describing Charming's quest is done by Charming while on the quest.
  • That Poor Cat: When the "Happily Ever After" potion takes effect on Shrek and he faints, we hear a cat howl... presumably because Shrek landed on Puss-In-Boots when he passed out.
  • Third-Act Misunderstanding
  • Took a Shortcut: In a non-video game example, Shrek, Donkey, and Fiona have to travel to the Kingdom of Far, FAR Away, which apparently takes an exceedingly long time. Yet when Shrek is arrested after drinking the Happily Ever After Potion, his whole gang back at The Swamp (where it's already getting dark) witness this on television and get to Far Far Away during the same evening, well before midnight.
    • Perhaps they rode in on Dragon, which would explain how she managed to show up at the end. Or it's not that far, but it took so long for Shrek, Fiona, and Donkey to get there because the carriage was so slow.
  • Victoria's Secret Compartment: From which the Fairy Godmother draws the Love Potion.
  • Villain with Good Publicity: Everybody loves the Fairy Godmother - she seems quite nice and she's very famous for her potions and happy endings.
  • White Stallion: Donkey, after drinking the Happily Ever After potion. It doesn't stick.
  • You Shall Not Pass: Puss-in-Boots holds off a pack of guards as Shrek rushes to stop the Fairy Godmother's evil plot, in payment of his debt to Shrek. He's not honestly in much danger from them, but that makes him holding them all off no less impressive, especially for a normal-sized housecat.

Shrek the Third

Cyclops: Who would have thought a monster like me deserved something as special as you?
Shrek: She's got your eye.

Donkey: We went to high school, then the boat crashed, and then we got bippidy-boppity-booped by the magic man!

  • Jerkass/Jerk Jock: Lancelot and his friends.
  • Paper-Thin Disguise
  • Poke the Poodle: When the villains attack Far Far Away, there's a montage of them "rearranging" the place. Cut to the cyclops ripping stamps off unsent letters and then cramming them back into the mailbox.
  • Poor Predictable Rock: A sponsored commercial for Sierra Mist plays off this trope, having Shrek using paper since he claims Donkey's hoof represents rock.
  • The Power of Rock: When Snow White unleashes the power of Led Zeppelin's "Immigrant Song", causing the forest animals to attack the Huorns guarding the city gates.
  • Psychopathic Manchild: Prince Charming.
  • Redemption Demotion: Dragon. While in the first film she is shown to have defeated many knights, and is barely defeated by Shrek, also eating Lord Farquaad at the end, she seems a lot weaker in Shrek the Third, only able to throw one of Prince Charming's mooks away before more of them capture her. They also subdue her easily with spears in the final confrontation.
    • Still... Dragon does end up supplying the coup de grace against Prince Charming.
  • Ribbon-Cutting Ceremony: Shrek, performing one of his duties as stand-in king, attempts to christen a newly made ship via the shattering of a wine bottle. Unfortunately, he accidentally pushes the ship off (by leaning on it awkwardly) before he can finish the ceremony. Desperate, Shrek hurls the champagne bottle at the newly-made ship, blowing a hole in it and causing it to catch fire somehow.
  • Show Some Leg: ...by one of the Ugly Sisters. Still works, though.
  • Sorry I Left the BGM On: two cases in succession. Merlin's porchlight apparently plays the classic "That's What Friends Are For"; and later on, Shrek and company are attacked by treants to background music by Captain Hook on the piano.
  • Sound Effect Bleep: The third film, twice when Fiona is trying to say she's pregnant, when Shrek chucks the horn over the side. A different, much deeper horn is then used to cover up a vulgarity from Puss.
  • Tempting Fate: "Someone better be dying!" Cut to King Harold on his deathbed.
  • Too Many Babies: A nightmare of Shrek's.
  • Totally Radical: "Help! I've been captured by an ogre who's trying to relate to me!!"
  • Wave of Babies: The inevitable extension of the Too Many Babies example.
  • The Worf Effect: Dragon. That weighted chain-net clearly had her name on it.
  • Your Costume Needs Work: Shrek passing for a mascot at Arthur's high school gets spun into a Chekhov's Gun.


Shrek Forever After

  • Action Girl: Fiona, and how!
  • Actionized Sequel
  • Alternate Universe: The fourth film's plot.
  • Ambiguously Gay: Cookie.
  • Axe Crazy: Rumpelstiltskin. Don't be fooled by the trickster shell. Deep down, he's really a homicidal sociopath.
  • Badass Army: The ogres.
  • Bad Boss: Rumpelstiltskin. He seems like a good one at first, letting his witches having a rave in his castle and all that. After Shrek escapes however, he drops all the niceness and starts threatening their lives, never mind that he was the one that pushed Shrek too far.
  • Bad Future: The premise.
  • Berserk Button: When Rumpelstiltskin explains to a chained-up Shrek exactly what the deal entails, Shrek goes NUTS, breaks through his chains, and tears up half the palace while escaping with AU!Donkey.
  • Bounty Hunter: The Pied Piper.
  • Bride and Switch: Played for Laughs during a montage in which Shrek dresses as a veiled bride at a man's wedding.
  • Bunny Ears Lawyer: An evil variant in Rumpelstiltskin and his obsession with wigs.
  • Chekhov's Skill: How to tie knots. ("The dragon goes under the bridge...")
  • Continuity Nod
  • Crazy Cat Lady: One of the witches at the beginning.
  • Creative Closing Credits / Credits Montage: Characters and clips from the previous three films are put together in a sequence.
  • Darker and Edgier: Somewhat, though to be fair the last two films had gotten progressively Lighter and Fluffier.
  • Double Entendre: At the beginning of the movie, Rumpelstiltskin tears out pages from a fairytale book in Pinocchio's bookstore. How will he pay? "Maybe we can make a deal for it, little boy." "Oh, I'm not a REAL boy!" Wait for it...wait for it..."...do you WANNA be?"
    • "My donkey fell in your waffle hole."
  • Empathy Doll Shot: A variant occurs, where Shrek finds his daughter's favorite doll apparently having fallen from one of his pockets. It has the same "Isolated doll" factor if the circumstances aren't identical to the norm.
  • Everyone Hates Mimes: "Oh great, after mimes magicians are my favorite people".
  • Exactly What It Says on the Tin: The subtitle ("The Final Chapter"). It is indeed "the final chapter" involving the titular ogre...which didn't stop Dreamworks from making a movie about Puss.
  • Fisher King: Rumpelstiltskin's luxurious palace surrounded by the barren fields and run-down city. This is likely due to simple greed as opposed to a magical connection between the king and the land though.
  • Good Costume Switch: The Pied Piper wears white in the Dance Party Ending. Maybe he was only evil in Rumple's world.
  • Hot Amazon: AU!Fiona. Definitely hot by ogre standards, and possibly hot from certain human viewpoints.
  • It's a Wonderful Plot
  • Kryptonite Factor: The exit clause is hidden inside the contract, revealed not in the small print—which at least some people would be smart enough to read, but by refolding the paper to reveal the hidden words (knowing Rumpelstiltskin's name as per the legend isn't enough, as everyone knows Rumpelstiltskin now he's king, so he had to get clever).
  • Lantern Jaw of Justice: Brogan.
  • La Résistance
  • Magically-Binding Contract: Written by a malicious Literal Genie. Don't sign them.
  • Magic Countdown: Rumpelstiltskin's sand timer, that measures the 'day' Shrek has before he'll vanish away forever if he doesn't get love's true kiss. When it first appears, only a tiny bit of sand has fallen, even though Shrek must have spent a good part of the day scaring villagers, getting captured, and being carried to Far Far Away.
  • Manipulative Bastard: Rumpelstiltskin. And how!!!!
  • Manly Tears: Shrek sheds a manly tear when he saw one of his triplets doll when he was in the alternate reality and he knew they're not there at all. That is the first time we ever see Shrek cry.
  • Metaphorgotten: Rumpelstiltskin makes a remark about how it's "time to pay the piper". Nothing happens. He then explains to one of the witches that he means literally pay, as he's a bounty hunter.
  • The Music Meister: The Pied Piper is a bounty hunter who uses his flute to capture his quarry by forcing them to dance.
  • Never Trust a Trailer: A commercial on TV (TV spot) makes it look like Donkey tries showing a trick where he shuts his eyes tight and they POP OUT THROUGH HIS NOSTRILS! He is actually at an ogre dinner, where they eat plates of eyeballs like fruit, and the trick he does actually doesn't involve his own eyes!
    • Additionally, the song featured in the trailers (Right Back Where We Started From) doesn't actually appear in the movie (though a version does play over the credits), and what is suggested to be a Disney Acid Sequence actually has an explanation.
    • The first TV spots that showed in the UK almost made it seem that the fat kid at the party (named Butterpants) was a sort of main character, and also had the roar scene from the party shortened down to:

Butterpants: Do the roar!
Shrek: I'd rather not...
Butterpants: Do it!
Shrek: *Roars*

    • There was a hint somewhere (the art book, maybe?) that Brogan (voiced by "Don Draper") would be Shrek's rival for AU!Fiona's love, but that never happens.
  • Nothing Is Scarier: When Shrek bursts through the trunk of the tree that used to contain his home, only to find... nothing but a few scurrying rats. That's when you really get the feeling of "Oh, my God, what has happened to the world?"
  • One-Scene Wonder: The little fat kid from the party. "Do the roar!"
    • Technically, he's in two scenes; when Rumpelstiltskin puts a bounty on Shrek's head, he and his father can be seen in the crowd of people with faux-Shreks.
  • Orphaned Punchline: Shrek when riding in Rumpelstiltskin's carriage.

Shrek: And the centaur said, 'That's not the half I'm talking about!'

  • Rant-Inducing Slight: Shrek goes crazy from all the events going on at the triplets' birthday party.
  • Reset Button: When Shrek and AU!Fiona share True Love's Kiss just as Shrek is fading from existence, the alternate-universe literally shatters around Rumpelstiltskin as all of the people within it disappear. When Shrek returns to the prime-universe, he was seen mid-roaring at the birthday party.
  • Running Gag: Perhaps it's a coincidence, but Rumpelstiltskin marks the third Shrek villain who is vertically challenged. This carries into Puss in Boots with Humpty Dumpty.
  • Scenery Gorn: The first view of the alternate-universe land of Far, Far Away—which has been transformed from a Hollywood-like, beautiful (if commercialized) oasis into a desert wasteland with Rumpelstiltskin's palace at the center. The "Far Far Away" Hollywood sign is mostly destroyed, too.
  • Schmuck Bait: Donkey just after visiting the dragon's keep.

Shrek: There's a stack of freshly made waffles in the middle of the forest! Don't you find that a wee bit suspicious?

  • Series Continuity Error: The Rumpelstiltskins in Third and Forever After are nothing alike. It's certainly not a Species Surname either because (thanks to a huge Art Shift) they don't even look like the same species.
    • The Pied Piper appears but for a second in a throwaway gag in the first film. Again... he looks nothing like how he does in the fourth film.
      • He probably Took a Level in Badass since Farquaad was still hunting fairy tale creatures. Then Rumpelstiltskin takes over...
    • In Shrek 2, we can see it takes days to go from Duloc to Far Far Away. However in Forever After, he travels the same distance three times within less than a day.
  • Shout-Out:
  • Slap Slap Kiss: AU!Fiona only starts warming to Shrek when they bash each other up during combat training.
  • Stealth Pun: That carriage park screams "Witch Trash".
  • 3D Movie
  • Toothy Bird: The giant goose.
  • Tsundere: AU!Fiona.
  • Twofer Token Minority: The Black/Gay chef Ogre.
  • Weaksauce Weakness / Super Drowning Skills: The witches dissolve in water. Oddly, the ogre resistance never takes advantage of this; it's just used by Rumpelstiltskin in a You Have Failed Me... moment.
  • We Want Our Jerk Back: The "jerk" here is the human race. The main theme of the first two movies is how badly Shrek is treated by humans. By the beginning of the fourth film, Shrek becomes annoyed at the humans treating him nicely and longs for the days when he would run about villages scaring them.
    • Nicely? They ran over his outhouse!
      • And they treated him like a circus attraction. Can you really blame him for getting tired of performing tricks for annoying kids every single day?
  • What Do You Mean, It's Not Awesome?: The Pied Piper teaches some witches a lesson by forcing them to break dance. Later he single-handedly defeats the Badass Army of Ogres with a full choreography and a conga line straight to Rumpelstiltskin's castle.
  • X Meets Y: The film's plot can be neatly summed up as It's a Wonderful Life - in the Shrek Universe.


Shrek the Musical

  • Adaptation Expansion: The extra half-hour that the film didn't have is used to elaborate on the backstories of Shrek, Fiona, and Farquaad, as well as give more focus to the Fairytale Creatures as characters.
  • Adult Child: Peter Pan, apparently.

Peter: Maybe if we all close our eyes and clap really hard!
Pinocchio: Oh, grow up!
Peter: I won't grow up!
Pinocchio: You're thirty-four and need a shave!

  • All There in the Manual: The Fairytale Creatures get a surprising amount of characterization, sometimes even a little backstory, in the behind-the-scenes webisodes and their individual profiles on the "Shrekster" website, most of which isn't given in the show itself.
  • Ambiguously Gay: From the sassy Donkey, to the prissy Farquaad, to the entire pride-anthem vibe of "Freak Flag", the musical is full of this trope.

Pinocchio: I'm wood. I'm good. Get used to it!

Pinocchio: We may be freaks, but we're freaks with teeth and claws and magic wands...and together, we can stand up to Farquaad!
Humpty-Dumpty: "We've got magic! We've got power!
Who are they to say we're wrong?
All the things that make us special
Are the things that make us strong!"

Farquaad: No father of mine would've abandoned me in the woods as a child!
Farquaad's Father: Abandoned you?! You were twenty-eight! And living in my basement!

Shrek: "Why me? Why me?
A simple answer would be fine
Won't someone please send me a sign?"
Donkey: Oh look, a sign! Yunita Pal Avenue straight ahead!

Gingy: It's time we do what we should've done a long time ago.
Gnome: Stop mailing all those sweet but slightly threatening fanletters to The Little Mermaid?

Shrek: I'm gonna be what they want.
I'm gonna be what they say
Hey world, I'll do it your way!
You're looking for a monster, it's your lucky day
I'll be what you want!"

Pinocchio: Man I tell ya, sometimes bein' a fairytale creature sucks pine sap!

    • Later, "Mother Hubbard!" is exclaimed in place of a certain other, specific swear.
  • Vocal Dissonance: The dainty-looking Sugar Plum Fairy speaks with a very deep, throaty voice.

    Not to be confused with Looney Toons, whose last name is pronounced "Shrek" but is spelled with a few more letters. No matter how much amusement the whole deal gives his mother.

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