Movie · 2001 · Comedy, Family, Romance · 1h 55m · G · English
Curator score: 1.3/10 (185.2K ratings)
She rocks. She rules. She reigns.
Overview
A socially awkward but very bright 15-year-old girl being raised by a single mom discovers that she is the princess of a small European country because of the recent death of her long-absent father, who, unknown to her, was the crown prince of Genovia. She must make a choice between continuing the life of a San Francisco teen or stepping up to the throne.
Ratings
Curator score: 1.3/10
IMDb: 6.4/10
Rotten Tomatoes: 49%
Metacritic: 52
TMDB: 7.0/10
Director
Garry Marshall
Production
Bottom of the Ninth Productions, Walt Disney Pictures, BrownHouse Productions
Cast
Anne Hathaway, Julie Andrews, Heather Matarazzo, Caroline Goodall, Héctor Elizondo, Robert Schwartzman, Erik von Detten, Patrick John Flueger, Sandra Oh, Mandy Moore, Sean O'Bryan, Kathleen Marshall, Kimleigh Smith, Mindy Burbano, Elizabeth Gudenrath, Bianca Lopez, Tamara Levinson, Lenore Thomas, Erik Bragg, Meredith Shevory
Where to watch
Disney Plus
Curator Review
Verdict
A warm, crowd-pleasing makeover fantasy with real charm, strong comic timing, and an unusually affectionate mother-daughter core. It’s light and predictable, but the performances and wish-fulfillment energy make it an enduring comfort watch.
Best for
fans of early-2000s teen comedies
viewers who like makeover and coming-of-age stories
family audiences looking for a feel-good movie
people who enjoy royal-fantasy wish fulfillment
fans of Julie Andrews or Anne Hathaway
Skip if
you want sharp satire or realism
you dislike predictable rom-com plotting
you’re not in the mood for earnest sentimentality
you prefer edgy teen movies over wholesome ones
Overview
The Princess Diaries is one of those studio comedies that knows exactly how to be lovable. It turns a familiar fairy-tale setup into a breezy coming-of-age story, anchored by Anne Hathaway’s awkward-to-confident transformation and Julie Andrews’ impeccable poise. The movie is funny, glossy, and emotionally easy to root for, even when you can see every beat coming from a mile away.
Worth noting
What gives it staying power is the sincerity. Mia’s embarrassment, grief, and self-doubt feel recognizably teenage, and the film treats her growth as more than just a makeover. It also has a surprisingly sweet mother-daughter dynamic and a genuinely appealing sense of friendship, even when the script leans hard into broad comedy.
Bottom line
It’s not especially subtle, and some of the early-2000s teen-movie humor is very of its moment. But as a comfort watch, it works because it’s generous, polished, and full of iconic little moments that people still quote years later. If you want a feel-good royal fantasy with heart, this is an easy yes.
Top Letterboxd reviews
deah (3★) · 11534 likes
LILLY MOSKOVITZ WAS THE FAKEST FRIEND EVER HONESTLY FUCK THAT BITCH
allison (5★) · 11043 likes
that bitch lilly telling mia she should GET OVER HER DAD DYING after TWO MONTHS... electric chair
samantha (4★) · 9381 likes
feminism didn’t exist until mia hit that baseball directly at josh bryant
sree (4★) · 6298 likes
"no one can make you feel inferior without your consent"
fucking words to live by
mila (4★) · 4931 likes
julie andrews knighted the bus driver to get out of legal trouble. an icon