Adaptation Restoration: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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Over the past century or so of pop culture, viewers and readers have gotten used to watching bits and pieces of their favorite works [[Adaptation Decay|disappear -- or worse, mutate unrecognizably]] -- as they progress through adaptation after adaptation.
Content and concepts cut from the original live on in the adaptation(s). Contrast [[Adaptation Distillation]], [[Compressed Adaptation]] and (when a result of removed scenes) [[Adaptation-Induced Plothole]]. A method of [[Adaptation Expansion]]. Compare [[Refitted for Sequel]].


But sometimes, when they least expect it, something they thought was forgotten unexpectedly returns when a writer or producer who Gets It goes back to the original source and retrieves it.
MOD: The above is a decent Laconic subpage. This page needs a description...

And sometimes the restored content never made it as far as the original work -- cut for reasons of space, or budget, or [[Executive Meddling|because a suit somewhere didn't like it]]. Known only by rumor and/or "[[What Might Have Been]]" speculations, it was thought to be [[Lost Forever]] -- until a new adaptation suddenly pulls it off the scrap heap and thrusts it onto the stage.

This trope covers all manner of content which may have been abandoned -- for good reasons or bad -- as a work moved from one medium to another (or before its first release), but which then reappears unexpectedly after a move to yet another medium.

Contrast [[Adaptation Distillation]], [[Compressed Adaptation]] and (when a result of removed scenes) [[Adaptation-Induced Plothole]]. A method of [[Adaptation Expansion]]. Compare [[Refitted for Sequel]]. The opposite in many ways of [[Adaptation Decay]] and [[What Might Have Been]].


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Revision as of 15:52, 9 September 2019

Over the past century or so of pop culture, viewers and readers have gotten used to watching bits and pieces of their favorite works disappear -- or worse, mutate unrecognizably -- as they progress through adaptation after adaptation.

But sometimes, when they least expect it, something they thought was forgotten unexpectedly returns when a writer or producer who Gets It goes back to the original source and retrieves it.

And sometimes the restored content never made it as far as the original work -- cut for reasons of space, or budget, or because a suit somewhere didn't like it. Known only by rumor and/or "What Might Have Been" speculations, it was thought to be Lost Forever -- until a new adaptation suddenly pulls it off the scrap heap and thrusts it onto the stage.

This trope covers all manner of content which may have been abandoned -- for good reasons or bad -- as a work moved from one medium to another (or before its first release), but which then reappears unexpectedly after a move to yet another medium.

Contrast Adaptation Distillation, Compressed Adaptation and (when a result of removed scenes) Adaptation-Induced Plothole. A method of Adaptation Expansion. Compare Refitted for Sequel. The opposite in many ways of Adaptation Decay and What Might Have Been.

Examples of Adaptation Restoration include:

Advertising

Anime and Manga

Comic Books

Fan Works

  • Many a Game Mod and fanmade Recut exist that restores scenes.[context?]
    • MOD: Such as? If there are "many", then surely a few can be listed here.

Film

  • Many cut ideas, both filmed and unfilmed, made their way into the Star Wars Special Editions.

Literature

  • Novelizations of the Star Wars films include several deleted scenes. The Star Wars Expanded Universe has made repeated reference to events from deleted scenes like Luke's friends on Tatooine and talk of an "imperial academy" are the most frequently referenced.

Live-Action TV

Music

New Media

Newspaper Comics

Oral Tradition, Myths and Legends

Pinball

Podcasts

Professional Wrestling

Puppet Shows

Radio

Recorded and Stand Up Comedy

Tabletop Games

Theatre

Video Games

  • The spell Jolt was originally cut from the Pathfinder book Ultimate Magic and released as unsupported unofficial content on the official blog. The spell was included in Pathfinder: Kingmaker.

Visual Novels

Web Animation

Web Comics

Web Original

Western Animation

Other Media

Real Life