By Chris Wong — Watched hundreds of movies. Noticed they all follow the same pattern. Could not unsee it.
Last updated: May 2026
A young person lives an ordinary life. They receive a call to adventure. They refuse at first. Then they meet a mentor. They cross into a new world. They face tests. They make enemies. They hit rock bottom. They rise. They return home changed.
This is the Hero’s Journey. It is the story pattern behind Star Wars. The Lord of the Rings. Harry Potter. The Matrix. Almost every hero movie you love follows this structure.
Not because Hollywood is uncreative. Because this pattern works. It speaks to something deep in the human brain.
What Is the Hero’s Journey?
The Hero’s Journey is a storytelling template identified by scholar Joseph Campbell. He studied myths, legends, and religions from around the world. He found the same pattern everywhere.
Campbell called it the monomyth. He outlined 17 stages. Most modern movies use a simplified version of about 12 stages.
You have seen it hundreds of times. You just did not know it.
The 12 Stages of the Hero’s Journey
| Stage | What Happens | Example (Star Wars) |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Ordinary World | Hero’s normal life before the adventure | Luke lives on a moisture farm. Boring. |
| 2. Call to Adventure | Something disrupts the ordinary world | R2-D2 carries a message from Leia. |
| 3. Refusal of the Call | Hero is afraid or reluctant | Luke says “I can’t get involved.” |
| 4. Meeting the Mentor | Hero meets a wise figure who helps them | Obi-Wan Kenobi. |
| 5. Crossing the Threshold | Hero leaves the ordinary world | Luke goes to Mos Eisley. Leaves Tatooine. |
| 6. Tests, Allies, Enemies | Hero faces challenges, makes friends and foes | Cantina fight. Han Solo. Darth Vader. |
| 7. Approach to the Inmost Cave | Hero prepares for a major challenge | Approaching the Death Star. |
| 8. The Ordeal | Hero faces their greatest fear | Obi-Wan dies. Luke watches. |
| 9. The Reward | Hero gains something (power, knowledge, an object) | Luke uses the Force to guide his shot. |
| 10. The Road Back | Hero faces consequences. The journey home is not easy. | Escaping the Death Star. |
| 11. The Resurrection | Hero faces a final test. They are transformed. | Luke trusts the Force. Destroys the Death Star. |
| 12. Return with the Elixir | Hero returns home with something to share | Celebration. Han gets paid. Luke is a hero. |
Not every movie uses every stage. Some combine stages. Some skip stages. But the arc remains the same.
Why This Pattern Works
It mirrors human development.
Childhood (Ordinary World). Leaving home (Crossing the Threshold). Struggling to find yourself (Tests). Hitting bottom (The Ordeal). Growing up (Resurrection). Coming home as an adult (Return). The Hero’s Journey is growing up, disguised as an adventure.
It creates emotional investment.
You see the hero refuse the call. You remember times you were afraid. You see them struggle. You root for them. When they win, you feel like you won too.
It provides structure without rigidity.
The stages are flexible. A hero can be male or female. The mentor can die. The reward can be knowledge instead of treasure. The pattern adapts.
Recognizing the Hero’s Journey in Popular Movies
| Stage | Star Wars (1977) | The Matrix (1999) | Harry Potter (2001) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ordinary World | Tatooine farm | Office cubicle | Under the stairs |
| Call to Adventure | Leia’s message | “Follow the white rabbit” | Hogwarts letters |
| Mentor | Obi-Wan | Morpheus | Dumbledore (Hagrid first) |
| Crossing the Threshold | Leaving Tatooine | Taking the red pill | Platform 9 ¾ |
| Tests, Allies, Enemies | Cantina. Han. Vader. | Training programs. Cypher. | Sorting. Draco. Ron. Hermione. |
| The Ordeal | Obi-Wan dies | Neo is killed (then reborn) | Nearly dies facing Voldemort |
| Resurrection | Luke trusts the Force | Neo sees the code | Chooses Gryffindor, faces evil |
| Return | Celebration | Phone call. “I’m going to show them a world without you.” | Goes home, but is changed |
Once you see it, you cannot unsee it.
Subversions of the Hero’s Journey
Some movies deliberately break the pattern.
| Movie | How It Subverts |
|---|---|
| Uncut Gems (2019) | The hero does not learn. Does not grow. Dies at the end. |
| No Country for Old Men (2007) | The villain wins. The hero dies off-screen. |
| Inside Llewyn Davis (2013) | The hero ends where he started. No transformation. |
These movies work because they break expectations. They rely on you knowing the pattern. Then they pull the rug out.
Why This Matters for Watching Movies
Once you know the Hero’s Journey, you start noticing it everywhere. Not just in movies. In books. In video games. In your own life.
You start to see the patterns. The call to adventure. The refusal. The mentor. The ordeal.
It does not ruin movies. It deepens them. You see the craft behind the story.
The Bottom Line
The Hero’s Journey is not a formula. It is a pattern. It describes the stories humans have been telling for thousands of years.
Star Wars used it. The Matrix used it. Harry Potter used it. Your favorite movie probably uses it too.
Not because they are copying. Because the pattern works.
Now go watch something. See if you can spot the stages.
About the author: Chris Wong has watched too many movies. He sees the Hero’s Journey everywhere. He cannot turn it off.
This article is for entertainment purposes. The Hero’s Journey is a tool, not a rule. Break it if you know what you are doing.





