Ladyhawke (1985)

Movie · 1985 · Adventure, Comedy, Fantasy · 2h 1m · PG-13 · English

Curator score: 4.0/10 (85.7K ratings)

No force in Heaven will release them. No power on Earth can save them.

Overview

Captain Etienne Navarre is a man on whose shoulders lies a cruel curse. Punished for loving each other, Navarre must become a wolf by night whilst his lover, Lady Isabeau, takes the form of a hawk by day. Together, with the thief Philippe Gaston, they must try to overthrow the corrupt Bishop and in doing so break the spell.

Ratings

Director

Richard Donner

Production

Warner Bros. Pictures, 20th Century Fox

Cast

Matthew Broderick, Rutger Hauer, Michelle Pfeiffer, Alfred Molina, John Wood, Leo McKern, Ken Hutchison, Giancarlo Prete, Loris Loddi, Charles Borromel, Massimo Sarchielli, Nicolina Papetti, Alessandro Serra, Venantino Venantini, Nanà Cecchi, Gregory Snegoff, Benito Stefanelli, Omero Capanna, Giovanni Cianfriglia, Nello Pazzafini

Curator Review

Verdict

A charming, offbeat 80s fantasy-romance with striking atmosphere, memorable leads, and a genuinely singular tone. Its synth-heavy score and slightly awkward third act are part of the appeal for many viewers, even if the film’s style can feel dated or uneven.

Best for

  • fans of romantic fantasy
  • viewers who enjoy 80s genre oddities
  • people who like moody, pastel medieval visuals
  • audiences open to campy but sincere adventure
  • fans of Michelle Pfeiffer or Rutger Hauer

Skip if

  • you want polished modern fantasy
  • you dislike 80s synth scores in period settings
  • you need fast-paced action throughout
  • you’re allergic to tonal weirdness or melodrama

Overview

Ladyhawke is one of those fantasy films that feels like it arrived from a slightly alternate timeline. It has the bones of a medieval quest, but what lingers most is the romantic curse at its center and the film’s dreamy, almost music-video atmosphere. The result is less about world-building than mood: moonlit forests, pastel skies, and a love story stretched across impossible forms.

Worth noting

Richard Donner keeps the film moving with a light touch, balancing adventure, comedy, and yearning without ever fully settling into one lane. Matthew Broderick gives it a sly, nervous energy, while Rutger Hauer and Michelle Pfeiffer supply the tragic grandeur that the premise needs. The film’s reputation has only grown because it’s so distinctively itself, even when it’s a little awkward or overextended.

Bottom line

The Alan Parsons Project score is the movie’s most divisive flourish, but it also helps make Ladyhawke unforgettable. It’s a fantasy that doesn’t try to be timeless; it’s proudly, weirdly of its era. If that combination of sincerity, romance, and 80s excess sounds appealing, it’s an easy recommendation.

Top Letterboxd reviews

liv (4.5★) · 505 likes

idk why you’re all pretending the electronic soundtrack is a bad addition, as if a medieval fantasy movie with 80s synth isn’t the sexiest combination ever put to film

Georgia Coley (3★) · 424 likes

mom: “oh we should watch Ladyhawke, I have fond memories of watching that in high school” me: “it looks kinda cheesy tho” mom: “believe me it’s not, you’ll love it” dad: “honey this is gonna be one of those movies you think was better than it is, it won’t age well” mom: “oh just shuddup and give it a chance” 2 hours later me: dad: mom: “oh I didn’t remember all that stuff” me: “well...I guess it coulda been worse”

Gregory Joseph (4★) · 317 likes

Low-fantasy hang-out. Even the sword duels are paced, stretched out. The sky is always pink, and everything is generally pastel and diffused. Powell and Parsons' shameless score is peplum, it's dub, it's fusion, it's fanfare, anything. There are shots in this movie, whoa there are shots... like, Michelle Pfeiffer in a red riding hood, lying in a shallow ice grave of pine boughs next to Rutger Hauer's black wolf body, duh lit by pink dawn sunlight.

3apu_ (3★) · 293 likes

Sir, the truth is, I talk to God all the time, and, no offense, but He never mentioned you.

FilmApe (2.5★) · 226 likes

I have settled on two possible one sentence reviews of this film. Choose the one you like the most. 1. What, was Guywolfe taken? 2. Ferris Bueller's Medieval Day Off

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Topics

80s fantasy, romantic adventure, medieval setting, curse, transformation, synth score, campy tone, quest, pastoral visuals, cult classic

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