The "Young and Healthy" number in 42nd Street featured lots of outfits trimmed with white fox, with the main object of the singer wearing a wrap and and skirt.
Bram Stoker's Dracula has several, particularly worn by Mina. Her blue dress had lots of darker blue embroidery on the sleeves and bodice, and a skirt with loads of fabric bunched up different ways at the front and back. Her red dress was even more bunched up in the back, with lots and lots of frills, ruffles, and pleated hem. Her green day dress had leaf-like trimming on the cuffs and collar, and the back of the skirt was folded repeatedly to give an appearance of alternating green and white diamonds. Lucy also got a few, like her white dress with the puff sleeves and loads of lace, and her funeral dress with the massive neck ruff.
Use in an interesting way in the film Diane. Diane de Poitier's dresses are opulent, but Catherine de Medeci's dresses are more so. Until one day, to show her favor with the king, Diane shows up in a dress just as grand. Even the ermine trim on the skirt is identical to one on the dress Catherine is wearing at the same time.
The outfits in the 1984 Dune film are pretty elaborate. Much of the ladies' dresses were based on renaissance gowns, hoop skirts, trimmings, collars and all.
Miranda Frost's ice-themed dress in Die Another Day, with lots of fringe on it looking like little icicles. Then just throw on the white fur wrap to complete the look.
Queen Elizabeth in Elizabeth: The Golden Age is adorned by an astonishing sequence of unbelievable confections. Some were in what the producers cheerfully admitted were wholly historically improbable colours, just to look cool.
Giselle's would-be wedding dress in Enchanted has Giant Poofy Sleeves, lots of lace petticoats, a frilled underskirt, ribbons, and butterfly decorations.
Nancy's actual wedding dress to Edward is also pimped out, with smaller poofy sleeves, bows, and ruffles.
Gone with the Wind has several, most worn by Scarlett. Her first dress is a frilly white one with green ribbons. Another dress is a white one with black trimming and an ermine muff. One is all red, including the loads of feathers, that Rhett makes her wear to a party. Vivian Leigh even got a special dress made just for the Atlanta premiere, that was black velvet, had a white ermine neckline, and puff sleeves made of ermine tails. Then of course there is the green Curtain Clothing dress.
In the Ginger Rogers film Lady In The Dark, she wears a dress with a mink skirt and loads of jewels on the top and lining the skirt. She had to wear an altered version for a dance sequence in a later scene (the skirt was just lined with red fabric), so it wasn't too heavy to dance in.
Mae West wore many fancy dresses in her film, with varying amounts of lace, frills, sequins, and fur, with fur often edging the hem of the skirts, which few actresses could pull off as gracefully as she could.
Both the 1930s and 2000s versions of Marie Antoinette. The dresses have various amounts of ribbons, frills, feathers, fur, and jewelry.
The Queen wears a red peacock-themed dress with hanging sleeves, white lace on the cuffs, flared out shoulders, white peacock feathers embroidered on the sleeves and bodice, a white collar with the fabric given a feathered cut, and a white peacock tail as a second collar (that's detachable).
Other dresses for the Queen include a golden-orange dress with a trimming of gold leaves embroidered all over it, lots of diamond and heart-shaped decorations each with a gold sun in the middle of them, ruffles on the neckline, and puff sleeves.
Another dress is a yellow dress with hanging sleeves and a huge neck ruff.
Then there is her white wedding dress◊ with the fabric on the bodice and skirt bunched and cut to look like lots of leaves, and large gauze sleeves.
Then there is her blue dress with a lace collar, sleeves bunched and ruffled to almost make giant poofy sleeves, gold undersleeves, and a gold Giant Waist Ribbon.
In Pirates of the Caribbean, Elizabeth gets two of these. One in the first two movies until she becomes a stowaway, then again, to some extent, when she is on Sao Feng's ship.
Buttercup gets herself a stunning white, lace number towards the end of The Princess Bride. (The book seems more intent on making fun of this trope.)
Ozma's dress at the end of Return To Oz, which was based on the outfits John R. Neill drew for her in the original books. It has lots of gauze, beads, flower-like trim at the bodice, and feather-like trim at the shoulders.
Some worn by Carol Heiss in Snow White and the Three Stooges. One is a white skating dress◊ loaded with sequins, has white fur trimming the top (in the style of high middle age dresses), topped by a dainty Cool Crown, and temporarily includes an white ermine muff with a bunch of tails in the front.
Claudia's rather spectacular dress that she wears at the ball in Snow White A Taleof Terror. She is annoyed when her husband doesn't say anything about it.
The skating dresses worn by Sonja Henie in her movies.
That Lady In Ermine had a few, particularly one with a lot of frills, gold trimming, and a crinoline skirt that had nothing underneath to show her legs.
It starts with their blue dresses for the "Sisters" number that have the tops covered in lace and the skirts are several layers of gauze.
For the "Mandy" numbers, Judy wears a white dress that has red gloves, the top decorated with sliver brocade, and a gauzy detachable Showgirl Skirt.
For the "Love, You Didn't Do Right By Me" number, Betty wears a long, black dress that has a flared hem and white glittery gloves.
And of course both wear their spectacular Happy Holidays Dresses at the end. The dresses are red satin with white fox fur trimming on the skirt and a white fox muff, with Betty also wearing red fur-trimmed gloves gloves and red ribbons in her hair, and Judy wearing a short red fur-trimmed cape and white fur hat.
The super puffy pink dress Glinda wears in The Wizard of Oz, with huge sleeves and a massive bells skirt made of loads of gauze.