Based on a Great Big Lie: Difference between revisions
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{{trope}}
{{quote|''"Hello. I'm Leonard Nimoy. The following tale of alien encounters is true. And by true, I mean false. It's all lies. But they're entertaining lies. And in the end, isn't that the real truth? The answer is...no."''|'''[[Leonard Nimoy]]''', ''[[The Simpsons]]'', "The Springfield Files"}}
If books and movies could wear pants, ''these'' would be on fire.
[[Ripped from the Headlines|Basing a book]] on a [[Real Life|true story]] is a handy way to get some publicity for a project. But hey! Why not save time and effort by cutting out the middleman? Just come up with your own, entirely fictional story and ''tell'' everyone that it actually happened. Who's going to find out?
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Everyone who visits [http://www.imdb.com/ IMDb], for a start.
The best case scenario is that you get a wry chuckle from your fans and a nod in a couple of papers. A worse case scenario is that some folks get together and sue you for selling the story to them under false pretenses. The ''worst'' case scenario is when your supposedly true story is actually very close to someone else's ''actual'' true story, and you end up losing every penny of your profits in a humiliating lawsuit because nobody believes your sudden recantation. Best solution? Just say that it's fiction all along.
You could argue that the very premise of this trope exists because [[Viewers are Morons]]. It's generally taken for granted that [[Kayfabe|just about everyone over the age of six realizes that fictional media is not real]], and that any attempt to replicate an actual event within a fictionalized framework - no matter how painstaking the effort - is inevitably going to fall short. But in a heavily suburbanized era where so many people in post-industrialized countries are sheltered from so much of reality, it's probably inevitable that they'll think of docudramas as being as real as it can get.
Compare [[Very Loosely Based on a True Story]]. Contrast [[Roman à Clef]].▼
▲Compare [[Very Loosely Based on a True Story]]. Contrast [[Roman à Clef]]. Not to be confused with a [[Big Lie]].
{{examples|page=works based on a great big lie}}
== [[Film]] ==
* The original ''[[
* ''[[Fargo]]'' is supposedly based on a true story. It isn't. [[The Coen Brothers]] (eventually) tried to weasel their way out of this by saying that everything in the movie was meant to be interpreted as fiction, ''including the blurb at the beginning that claimed it was based on a true story''. Another lie they fed the media was that there was a news report in 1987 about a businessman who planned on having his wife fake-kidnapped for ransom money, but the police caught him before he could make his plan come to fruition, and the Coens asked themselves "what if he ''had'' succeeded?" On the special features on the 'Fargo' DVD, the Coens claim they were afraid nobody would have believed the crazy plot they came up with any other way.
* The horror movie "''[[The Strangers]]''", about a masked trio of psychopaths who stalk, terrorize, and eventually murder(?) a newlywed couple in their new home, is supposedly based on a true story, but it was primarily inspired by an incident from the director's childhood in which a pair of "strangers" came to the door, and were later found to be breaking into houses if no one was home when they knocked. It also took cues from an actual set of murders, but they were absolutely nothing like the plot of the movie - while staying in a cabin in a resort town, a woman in her thirties, two of her children, and a friend of one of the children were mysteriously bludgeoned and stabbed to death. Those murders were never solved, but they also never involved newlyweds in their first marital home or masked psychopaths.
* ''Hidalgo'' is based on the actual stories of Frank
* ''[[The Amityville Horror]]'' is supposedly based on a true story. However, the book containing said "true story" was admitted by its writer to have been at least somewhat exaggerated. Debate still rages as to which parts of the book really happened.
* [[The Haunting In Connecticut]] purports to be based on a true story. However, Ray Garton, the author of the book that the film (and a [[Discovery Channel]] documentary) was based on, has admitted that the "true story" was a fabrication. He has said that none of the family members could get their story straight, and that they were dealing with alcoholism and drug addiction at the time, which may have affected their judgment. When he pointed this out to Ed and Lorraine Warren, the case investigators (who, not coincidentally, also investigated the Amityville case), they reportedly told him, "Make it up and make it scary."
** Ed and Lorraine Warren themselves are (were in Ed's case) self professed demonologists. Opinions may differ in terms of their reliability when it comes to cases, [[Paranormal State|shows]], and other investigators such as [[Ghost Hunters|Jason Hawes]] that they have been involved with.
* As a result of [[Executive Meddling]], ''[[Alien Abduction Incident in Lake County]]'' was billed as being based on actual events, against the wishes of the director.
* ''King Arthur'' is billed as the true historical story of [[King Arthur]], but instead is little more than a "remix" of the popular Arthur mythos. Whether there was a historical Arthur at all remains a matter of fierce historical debate, and there are several potential candidates for the basis of the character, none of which bear more than a surface similarity to the movie's Arthur. It's not exactly a success as a "true historical story" either - the entire movie is [[Did Not Do the Research|one]] [[Hollywood History|long]] [[The Theme Park Version|historical]] [[Anachronism Stew|inaccuracy]]. Heck, the title character himself lived about 300 years ''before'' the movie is supposed to take place.
* In a very similar vein to ''King Arthur'', the makers of movies such as ''Troy'' and ''300'' make a big deal about the historical content, which, in reality, is minimal at best. The glaring violence toward epic mythology and written history would be sufferable if people like Zack Snyder didn't insist on their accuracy, and yet in the case of ''300'' there's the [[Unreliable Narrator]] thing. So which are we supposed to believe? In both cases, however, with even the most rudimentary knowledge of classical history and literature one can recognize that the movies are mostly [[In Name Only]] adaptations (at best) of whatever the original work is.
** The ''300'' example is pretty tricky to pin down, especially since Snyder himself has been both inconsistent and somewhat cavalier in claims of accuracy. Between him, Miller, and various other involved personnel, the idea ''seems'' to be that the events as depicted are knowingly exaggerated, subjective and the result of an [[Unreliable Narrator]], but the broad history and the thematic content are intended to be accurate- which is generous, but still- and that the film is intended to give an ''impression'' of the events, rather than an accurate depiction. It's about the myth of Thermopylae, in short, rather than the battle ''per se''.
** It's also worth noting that, for all it's inaccuracy and exaggeration, some scholars have commented that it is at least roughly consistent with the contemporary traditions of heroic fiction; for example, while the Greeks historically fought in an unbroken phalanx, they often depicted themselves fighting in a more heroic melee, as in the film. Even if it's nonsense, it's the sort of nonsense which the Spartans themselves would probably have appreciated, so that's something.
* Back in the 70s, the very first "snuff" film ([[Sarcasm Mode|imaginatively]] entitled ''[http://www.agonybooth.com/snuff/ Snuff]'') purported to depict the actual on-camera murder of an actress. Despite all the controversy that was stirred
** That, coupled by the fact that the snuff footage looked ''unbelievably'' fake. [http://www.agonybooth.com/recaps/Snuff_1976.aspx?Page=9 See for yourself].
* ''[[The Blair Witch Project]]'' does this deliberately and plays it to the hilt. In fact, this is common with the [[Found Footage Films]] genre.
* In a similar vein for the older ''[[Cannibal Holocaust]]'', the advertising of it as real footage caused so much outrage that its director was arrested and dragged to court - on charges of murder - and once there he had not only to admit it was all a great big lie but show the actors to the judge to prove that they were all alive and well. This was ''further'' complicated because, as part of their contractual agreements, the actors were legally obligated to keep away from the public eye for a full year, in order to help hype the movie. A second deal nullifying the first had to be struck with the studio before the actors were allowed to testify.
* ''[[The Last Samurai]]'' is based on an odd amalgamation of the historical Satsuma rebellion and the part played in the earlier Boshin war by French officer Jules Brunet. The [[Anvilicious]] "guns vs swords" plot is particularly ironic, considering that even the real "last samurai" of the Satsuma rebellion openly embraced modern weaponry for the tactical advantages it offered. The decline of the samurai class in real life came about in a much slower and less dramatic fashion and there were certainly no embittered American Civil War heroes involved.
** It also borrows heavily from other fictional works, such as ''[[Dances
* The mockumentary ''[[Im Still Here|I'm Still Here]]'' presents Joaquin Phoenix's breakdown as fact; in reality, it was just the filming of the movie. Phoenix and director Casey Affleck simply [[Enforced Method Acting|didn't tell anyone]].
* ''[[Amadeus]]'' was based on an apocryphal tale Salieri, a contemporary of [[Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart]], went mad late in his life and confessed to killing Mozart. It is a matter of historical record that Mozart died during a long period of illness, but confoundedly, the film accepts both of these stories as true, and sets about to tell a story about how a man can murder someone else with a disease. After that premise, all the other errors on Mozart's life seem insignificant, but are still quite numerous: His mother-in-law is depicted as a harsh shrew when in fact they got along famously; Salieri being depicted as his arch-rival when in fact the two were at least respectful competitors, if not actual friends; the Requiem Mass being commissioned by Salieri (Mozart never did find out who the anonymous patron was, but we know now); and Salieri helping to compose the Requiem (it is unknown how much of the piece Mozart finished, but whoever finished it, Mozart or someone else, it certainly wasn't Salieri).
** The historical inaccuracies are intentional - quite simply, Shaffer and Forman did not want to write a faithful biography of Mozart, but they used it just as a premise. You can see the research as the movie depicts a number of aspects of Mozart as accurate.
* Similar to ''Fargo'', ''[[Dude, Where's My Car?]]'' begins with the statement "The following is based on actual events" and proceeds to tell a completely made up story. In this case, however, it's a story that no one could ever believe was true, making the opening just another joke instead of an attempt to trick people.
** Well, if you consider them to be the actual events happening in the heads of two loser stoners, [[Fridge Brilliance|it makes more sense]].
* Peter Jackson's ''Forgotten Silver'' is a truly stunning example of the trope. Jackson claimed to have discovered his neighbor was the widow of Colin MacKenzie, an early 20th century filmmaker who invented many revolutionary processes but was also extraordinarily unlucky and ended up completely obscured by history. His goal with the film was explicitly to make people think it was real, and to this end he got such notable figures as Harvey Weinstein and Leonard Maltin to participate, as well as coming up with a story, including explanations of how MacKenzie could have done so much and remain unknown, that's just plausible enough that people would want to believe it.
* ''[[Picnic
* ''[[Scary Movie]] 4'' used the words "Based On True Events" at the end of its trailer as a parody of all of the horror movies that use this trope.
* The first ''Return of the Living Dead'' opens with "Everything in this story really happened. None of the names or locations or events have been altered."
* ''[[Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy]]'' mocks this tendency with its introductory text: "The following is based on actual events. Only the [[Dissimile|names, locations, and events]] have been changed."
* ''[[Plan 9
** And the even more convincing disclaimer "Can you prove it didn't happen?" Take THAT, skeptics!
* The original ''[[The Last House
* The sci-fi/horror movie ''[[The Fourth Kind]]'' has, as its tag line, the claim that the movie is "based on actual case studies," and even claims to include actual footage of alien abductions. [[Blatant Lies|Guess]] [http://io9.com/5397359/the-fourth-kind-is-a-hoax what?]
* ''[[The Men Who Stare
** Actually, Project Stargate (yes that was its name) worked surprisingly well—the remote viewings were almost 1/9 more accurate than wild guessing. It was cancelled because conventional spying is a ''hell'' of a lot more accurate than that, and nobody was sure if they could ever get the remote-viewing more accurate than "11% better than a wild guess". The Soviets had a similar project at around the same time, with similar results, leading many to conclude that ESP may well exist, but even if it does, it's not particularly useful.
** The movie is a fictionalization of a fairly well documented journalistic book.
** That assurance was followed immediately by a scene of a very strait-laced military man calmly and deliberately stepping away from his desk and running head-on into a wall for no apparent reason. We find out why later on, but right at the moment it's just a jarring juxtaposition with the reassurance, since it's exactly the kind of thing that's so hard to imagine.
* ''[[Paranormal Activity]]'' uses, along with several other formulas from films like ''[[The Blair Witch Project]]'', the claim to be a real event.
** They both get the slight excuse that large portions of the movies were unscripted (usually stage directions along the lines of "You're stressed out after two days of weirdness; GO!") and quite often the actors had no idea what things were about to happen (or IF they were about to happen) to get [[Enforced Method Acting|more accurate reactions]] out of them. The events DID happen, just not quite the ''way'' you might think...
* [[The Boat That Rocked]]
* ''[[Battleship Potemkin]]'' is a purportedly historical film that depicts a massacre that, in truth, never happened: the records are scarce and conflicting, and eyewitnesses were unreliable and confused. It is, however, known, that spirits in the city were running high at that moment, and there ''were'' several demonstrations that, by some accounts, including a British consul and ''The Times'' reporter, were put down using armed troops, but no massacre. Of course, Eisenstein wasn't making a documentary, he was making a ''propaganda flick'', so he took really great liberties with the
** It is said that after seeing the movie, the person who was shooting at that area came to the police (he lived in USA then) and confessed about a murder.
* ''Sunset'': "It's all true, give or take a lie or two."
* In-movie example: in the classic John Ford western ''The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance'', [[Jimmy Stewart]] told the story in [[Flash Back]] to a biographer, and revealed that it was [[John Wayne]], not him, who killed the outlaw Liberty Valance. The biographer tore up his notes at that point. His words to Stewart ''are'' this trope distilled to its essence.
{{quote|
* ''[[Blood Sport]]'' is supposedly based on an actual secret, underground fighting competition, told from the perspective of American martial artist Frank Dux. (It even shows the supposed records he set at the end.) The fact that NOBODY has ever stepped forward and claimed to have even heard of this tournament should tell you something. It's likely that Dux came up with the "to the death" angle to get around this little detail: "Of course nobody's said anything, they're all dead but me!"
** It's actually much funnier than that. Disregarding all the other massive problems with the 'martial artist' Dux, he made two very interesting claims about the Kumite (the 'tournament' he 'fought' in): the fights were to the death and that he fought 52 opponents to claim the title. Think about it first: {{spoiler|fights to the death would imply a elimination-type tournament, where the number of fights grows exponentially to the number of stages; i.e., for him to have fought 52 opponents in a 'to the death' style tournament, the total number of fighters involved would have been 2^52 or 4,503,599,627,370,496. Note that this is roughly 50,000 times ''the current population of the entire planet Earth''.}}
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* There's an obscure film that not only has a "this is all true" message at the beginning but also makes the claim ''in its title''. The film is called ''China Cry: A True Story'' and even [[IMDb]] [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0101578/ reports it as "based on a true story"], despite it having unlikely divine intervention incidents, being based on the [http://www.amazon.com/China-Cry-Nora-Lam-Story/dp/0840731876/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1274571493&sr=1-1 autobiography] of the woman who's the main character, [http://www.iclnet.org/pub/resources/text/cri/cri-jrnl/web/crj0090a.html and apparently not being] [http://books.google.com/books?id=syUupeVJOz4C&pg=PA328&dq=lam well supported by evidence].
* The epilogue of ''[[The Toolbox Murders]]'' states the film was based on a true story, though near the end of the credits the usual "this was fiction, all resemblance to anything real is just coincidental" disclaimer is shown.
* After all the hijinks of ''[[Silent Movie (
* An interesting example is ''[[Enemy
* ''[[The Seven Percent Solution]]'' states that it is the "true story" of what happened during Sherlock Holmes's legendary "Great Hiatus" from 1891-94. Then the title card goes on to state, "Only the facts are made up."
* The film adaptation of ''[[The Hunt for Red October]]'' inverts this by providing a disclaimer at the beginning of the film to the effect that "According to repeated statements by both Soviet and American governments, ''nothing'' of what you are about to see ''ever'' happened." The audience is quite pointedly left to draw their own conclusions.
* Done in-universe in ''[[
* The majority of the film ''[[JFK]]'' is entirely made up, with the only real events being the assassination and the Clay Shaw trial (which was an affront to justice). Perhaps the worst was that of the crucial 'smoke from the Grassy Knoll', none of the rifles used would emit any visible smoke.
* An example of a film's producers trying to enact the ''[[No Such Thing as Bad Publicity]]'' Trope ''on purpose'' was the 1976 low-budget exploitation film, ''[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snuff_(film) Snuff]]''. The director - one Allan Shackleton - edited a South American slasher movie, giving it an even gorier ending, and then billed it as "The film that could only be made in South America... where life is CHEAP", implying that this was an actual [[Snuff Film]]. Which was false advertising. He went so far as to put out false newspaper clippings that reported a citizens group's crusading against the film and hired people to act as protesters to picket screenings. This didn't have the desired result, because even compared to other grindhouse movies, the film was... bad, and the special effects were so poor that it was easy for most viewers to discern that the killings in the movie were ''not'' real. Shackleton eventually admitted to the hoax, even providing dated pictures of the actress to prove she was alive and well.
== [[Literature]] ==
* Little Tree{{context}}
* In the 1970s, the book ''The Holy Blood And The Holy Grail'' (retitled ''Holy Blood, Holy Grail'' in the United States) claimed to reveal the truth about a relationship between Jesus and Mary Magdalene that was hidden in various Renaissance paintings. It was later revealed to be completely fictional, but not before hundreds of thousands of people had been conned.
▲* In the 1970s, the book ''The Holy Blood And The Holy Grail'' (retitled ''Holy Blood, Holy Grail'' in the United States) claimed to reveal the truth about a relationship between Jesus and Mary Magdalene that was hidden in various Renaissance paintings. It was later revealed to be completely fictional, but not before hundreds of thousands of people had been conned.
** That book heavily inspired ''[[The Da Vinci Code]]'', which caused an identical resurgence in public interest. Amusingly, the authors of the first book sued Brown for plagiarism, but it was pointed out that [[Morton's Fork|either they claim that the book is true, thus destroying their own case, as you cannot copyright history and facts; or that it was false, thus destroying whatever credibility they had and losing anyway as you can't copyright ideas. Needless to say, they lost.]] ''Holy Blood, Holy Grail'' got a name drop in [[The Da Vinci Code]], as one of Teabing's resources on the Grail yet many people seem to squall about the book being "ripped off" [[Complaining About Shows You Don't Watch|without ever noticing]] its acknowledgment within the book that apparently ripped it off so entirely. The ideas posited in ''Holy Blood, Holy Grail'' were essentially used as a [[MacGuffin]] in the story, as various Holy Grails so often are. The mistake [[Dan Browned|Dan Brown]] made was the same mistake the authors of ''Holy Blood'' made, which was claiming it was all based on fact instead of what could amount to [[Epileptic Trees]].
* This is part of the plot in ''Mike Nelson's Death Rat!'' (by [[
* Lucian's ''[[True
** It's also a wonderful piece of satire. Lucian was apparently annoyed by contemporary historians who reported just about everything they heard or read as facts, in response he wrote a "true" story that was as ludicrous as he could imagine.
* There are some that actually believed that ''[[Kensukes Kingdom]]'' really was based on Michael Morpurgo's childhood. Made all the worst by the epilogue, where he writes about "himself" going to meet Kensuke's grandson after writing the book. Really, Michael?
* James Frey's ''[
* German author Karl May (1842-1912) is best known for his stories about [[Author Stand In|'his']] travels through the American West and the Middle East long before he actually visited the US and the Orient in person. (Today that's no longer a major issue, but some of his contemporaries took it less well at the time.)
* ''[[House of Leaves]]'' plays with this, with the framing manuscript claiming to be a critical analysis of a documentary that the editor of the manuscript assures us doesn't really exist, about a photojournalist who documents footage of his very strange {{color|blue|house}}...
* There's a story that still pops up every once in a while, based on a pamphlet written by a woman in the 19th century, detailing the horrific abuse she supposedly endured at the hands of the Mormons in Salt Lake City. Apparently she was held prisoner inside the temple and used as a sex slave, until one day she managed to escape by jumping out of an upper window into the Great Salt Lake and swimming to safety. For those unfamiliar with local geography, the temple is at the center of the city, and the lake is more than 30
** The book ''[
*** According to some, Maria Monk was actually a brain-damaged woman [[Kick the Dog|tricked by her publishers or ghost writers into telling these lies.]] They profited from her "experience" and left her destitute.
* ''[[Dangerous Liaisons
* In-universe example: Jim Butcher's series of Harry Dresden novels claim that ''Dracula'' was indeed
* Then there's the Holocaust memoir "[
* Jerzy Kosinski's ''[
** The author even was accused of being a Holocaust profiteer by Polish people (and the book [[Banned in China|was banned for more than 20 years in Poland]]), since some parts ''heavily'' resembled Holocaust pornography among other stuff.
* ''The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar'' by [[Roald Dahl]] claims to be a true story, only with a few names changed. Given that the title character exercises clairvoyant powers, it's reasonable to assume that he did not exist by ''any'' name.
* Similar to the James Frey controversy, JT Leroy was actually the pen name of a middle-aged woman, Laura Albert, whose fictional persona was of a young transgendered prostitute. Albert even hired her sister-in-law to make public appearances dressed up in drag in order to portray a post sex change Leroy. (Try not to think about that one too hard.) Her first novels about underage gender dysphoric sex workers from the Deep South were presented as being at least vaguely autobiographical. Of course, it should be noted that even though it's Based On A Great Big Lie, this doesn't stop ''The Heart Is Deceitful Above All Things'' from being really, really good.
* [
** Armistead Maupin, one of the many authors taken in by the hoax, wrote ''The Night Listener'' about the experience. However, it's a roman a clef, and the first-person narrator, a Maupin [[Author Avatar|stand-in]], says several times that he's been known to embellish the truth. Very good book about this trope. (''A Rock and a Hard Place," on the other hand, isn't very well-written, particularly once you realize that its author is NOT an 11 year old.)
** The case was so polemic that [
* The book ''The Third Eye'' by 'Lobsang Rampa' allegedly tells the experiences of a Tibetan lama. It was eventually revealed to be written by a Devon plumber called Cyril Hoskin who had never been to Tibet in his life.
** Hoskin subsequently insisted that "Rampa" was a walk-in spirit that had taken over his body. As shown by the "Talk" page on his Wikipedia article, some people still believe this.
** Subverted in that it appears Hoskin himself genuinely and sincerely believed what he was saying.
* The ''[[Flashman]]'' books are all supposedly based on rediscovered memoirs written by the title character. This device (coupled with the impressive amount of research [[George Macdonald Fraser]] put into every volume) led more than one critic to believe they were the real deal.
* The book ''Michelle Remembers'', perhaps the most (in)famous alleged written account of Satanic Ritual Abuse, though helping to stir up the SRA witch hunt of the 80s/90s, has now been widely discredited. Mostly by many healthy doses of [[Fridge Logic]] - for example, a supposedly nonreligious 5-year-old having the presence of mind to rebuke Satanists with a cross, an 81-day ritual that summons the Devil himself during which none of the Satanists apparently need to eat, use the bathroom, or show up at work, and a fatal car wreck that strangely didn't turn up in a newspaper that reported on wrecks of even less serious nature at the time. One of the worst parts is that the titular Michelle (who later divorced her husband to marry the psychologist she was relating all of this to) blames her involvement in the abuse on her mother, who died of cancer when Michelle was 14. [https://web.archive.org/web/20060525161207/http://www.witchvox.com/va/dt_va.html?a=cabc&c=whs&id=4349 This] article gives a detailed analysis of the book.
** ''Michelle Remembers'' was hardly the only book that factored into the "Satanic Panic" of [[The Eighties]]. Two other books that led the scare were Laurel Rose Willson's ''Satan's Underground'' (under the name Lauren Stratford) and Mike Warnke's ''The Satan Seller''. The former spoke of being brought up as a "baby breeder" by a Satanic cult, giving birth to babies to be used in sacrifices or [[Snuff Film|snuff films]], while the latter was about serving as a "Satanic high priest" before coming to Christianity. Both books [https://web.archive.org/web/20130320055536/http://www.holysmoke.org/sdhok/side.htm were] [https://web.archive.org/web/20131029141200/http://www.holysmoke.org/sdhok/warnke.htm exposed] as frauds by the evangelical magazine ''Cornerstone'', which pointed out that the dates and events given by the authors didn't line up with school and hospital records, among other inconsistencies. Willson later reappeared as "Laura Grabowski", claiming to be a survivor of Auschwitz-Birkenau and a victim of [[Mad Doctor|Dr. Josef Mengele]]; this, too, was exposed as a fraud when a Jewish group investigated her claims.
* The prologue to the original novel of ''[[The Phantom of the Opera]]'' has the author going into great detail about the "research" he did about the Opera Ghost, including digging through archives and interviewing some of the characters, claiming the story to be true. Two bits are verifiable: there was indeed an underground lake under the Paris Opera House and there was allegedly an accident in 1896 involving a falling chandelier that killed one person. Oh, and of course the real opera house provides the setting. But the rest is fabrication.
** What fell in real life was the counterweight of the chandelier, not the chandelier itself. Still, many of the book's characters are [[No Celebrities Were Harmed]] versions of real people who lived in Paris at the time. Some scholarly fans have claimed that everything in the book save for the Phantom himself was based in real experiences, though that most likely is still a gross exaggeration.
* ''[[Harry Potter and
* The book ''[[The Men Who Stare
* Horace Walpole originally passed off ''[[
* Several books purporting themselves to be the ''Necronomicon'' have been published over the years, cashing in on the infamy of [[
** Many [[Cthulhu Mythos]] stories are told in the form of diaries, discovered manuscripts, and obscure ancient texts. Faux scholarship is part of the fun.
* A children's book called ''The Pushcart War'' claimed it was based on a true story. While certain events are implausible (like attacking trucks with pea-shooters), it's theoretically ''possible''...until you realize that the copyright date is before the time that the events in the book supposedly take place.
* Averted by Bernard Cornwell's ''The Warlord Chronicles''; notable in that, although they are written as a relatively realistic take on the Arthurian mythos, Cornwell cheerfully acknowledges that they are entirely fictitious. He suggests that the broad sweeps of the story provide a viable mock-up of what ''could'' have happened, but based purely on his own speculation, and are heavily tempered by narrative demands and [[Rule of Cool|whatever he thought would make a good story]]. Ironically, despite all of this, it is ''still'' altogether more realistic and historically accurate than the above film which actively touted itself as such.
* Lorenzo Carcaterra's ''Sleepers'' purported to be a nonfiction account of how he and three of his friends were sent to reform school for a year, where they were viciously abused by the guards. A decade later, two of the friends killed one of the guards but were acquitted of murder because they were prosecuted by the third friend, who intentionally lost the case with the help of a false alibi provided by a priest. However, none of the details provided by Carcaterra corresponded to any real-life murder case that has been identified, and Carcaterra's records from the Catholic school he attended in his youth have no indication of him ever having been sent to reform school, or even being absent for as many as four consecutive weeks.
** No real murder case on ''Manhattan'' has been found to correspond with the one featured in the book but Carcaterra states in the opening that it didn't take place on Manhattan in real life. The book also claims the school records for Shakes and his friends were altered before the trial to make it seem like they hadn't been gone for any long period of time. This doesn't mean the story is true though.
* ''[[Go Ask Alice]]'', a rather infamous anti-drug book, offers the compelling tale of a young suburban girl who is sucked into the world of drugs and eventually ends up dead. Ostensibly the real diary of a teenage girl, it was, in fact, entirely fabricated by "editor" and youth counselor Beatrice Sparks. Sparks has also released a series of other "true diaries" in the same vein as ''Go Ask Alice'', but dealing with different subjects, such as AIDS (''It Happened to Nancy''), and teen pregnancy (''Annie's Baby'', among others). [http://www.snopes.com/language/literary/askalice.asp It was also debunked on Snopes.]
** Also infamous was ''Jay's Journal'', which was about Satanism. It was such a lie that Sparks got ''sued by the real Jay's family'' (actually, a boy named Alvin Barret). They also wrote a book about how horrible and false ''Jay's Journal'' was and sponsored a rock opera based on their testimony.
* Happens in-universe in Albert Sanchez Pinol's ''[[Pandora In The Congo]]''. The protagonist writes down a murder suspect's story of what really happened when he went to Congo with two noblemen. No, he didn't murder them. They were killed in a war with an underground race called "tektons." The suspect then blocked off the passage connecting the tektons' underground world to ours, [[Saving the World]], and returned to civilization alone. The story is published and everyone believes it, leading to the suspect going free. {{spoiler|Except not a word of it is true and he really did murder the noblemen.}}
* ''Misha: A Memoire of the Holocaust'' was written by Misha Defonseca. She said when she was 4, her Jewish parents were sent in a concentration camp during World War II, she crossed whole Europe to go back home, and [[Raised
** You can argue that the surprising part is that the lie was exposed only after the movie was released. There was a small conference by a Polish Holocaust survivor, years before the movie was done. He exposed the book as a lie, just because [[Did Not Do the Research|Jews in Poland didn't have to wear yellow stars on chest]], but blue ones on the arm.
* ''[[The Princess Bride (
** Goldman adds to this mythology as the novel is reissued in new editions. Basically, publishing the unabridged version (or Goldman's own sequel) has been stymied by a vengeful pack of Florinese lawyers fighting over the unspeakably complicated Morgenstern estate.
*** Amusingly, at least one library lists the novel under the "S. Morganstern" pen name, and gives its length as five hundred pages.
* John Hodgman's ''[[The Areas of My Expertise]]''. From the preface:
{{quote|
* ''[[Bravo Two Zero]]'', the memoirs of former SAS trooper and Gulf War veteran "Andy McNab", ended up becoming a severe embarrassment to the British Army thanks to this trope. First, another member of the squad — Chris Ryan, now a minor TV personality in the vein of [[Ray Mears]] — chimed in with his own memoir, painting McNab as a ''very'' [[Unreliable Narrator]] and blaming him for the mission's disastrous end. Another SAS veteran flew out to Iraq in 1993, retraced as much of the squad's route and interviewed as many witnesses as he could find, and discovered that both of them were equally guilty of inflating their stories. If they were exaggerating for the sake of a good story this would be bad enough, but they were apparently less than truthful during their debriefing sessions as well. Unfortunately, by the time this became generally known there were [[Follow the Leader|half a dozen other "true accounts"]] of the SAS in the Gulf War that showed equal regard for fact-checking. Peter Radcliffe, then-Regimental Sergeant Major of the SAS and the only Gulf War veteran of the Regiment to publish his memoirs without a pseudonym, devotes an entire chapter to the whole wretched business.
* Greg Mortenson's ''[[Three Cups Of Tea]]''. He really did go to Pakistan and Afghanistan and try to build schools, but [https://web.archive.org/web/20120625185203/http://static.byliner.com/original/Three_Cups_of_Deceit_Jon_Krakauer_Byliner_Originals.pdf embellished his narrative] to [[H. Rider Haggard]] (or [[Doonesbury|Red Rascal]]) proportions, insulting his hosts in the process and blaming it all on the [[Funny Foreigner|Balti people's]] vague notions about time.
* Kathryn Stockett's ''[[The Help]]'', about a white woman's relationships with two black maids in the 1960s is an inversion of this. The book is fictional, but black maid Ablene Cooper is [http://abcnews.go.com/Health/lawsuit-black-maid-ablene-cooper-sues-author-kathryn/story?id=12968562 suing] the author because she claims one of the maids, Aibileen Clark is meant to be her. She was once the nanny for Stockett's brother. Cooper claims that the character has an uncanny resemblance to her, right down to a gold tooth.
* Liza Marklund co-authored a whole series of books together with a woman calling herself Mia, detailing the abuse and persecution Mia and those close to her suffered from her Muslim ex-boyfriend. The events in the books were claimed to be completely true with only names and places changed to protect those involved, and Marklund spent years using the books as proof in political debates. In 2008, Monica Antonsson wrote a book proving that the books about Mia are almost completely fictional. After trying to claim that Antonsson was lying, Marklund changed her tune and claimed the books were never meant to be taken as fact and were clearly fiction all along.
* Jordanian author Norma Khouri wrote ''Forbidden Love'', a memoir detailing her life in Jordan and her friendship with a Muslim woman who was murdered by her family in an honour killing for meeting a Christian man in secret. When an Australian literary critic did some digging and discovered that Khouri had not been in Jordan at all during the book's timeframe (and even got [[You Fail Geography Forever|certain locations in Jordan wrong]] and [[Did Not Do the Research|misrepresented their legal system]]), the publisher hastily recalled the book. Khouri admitted to taking some liberties with original story, but maintains that the book is still [[Based on a True Story]], despite all signs pointing to the contrary.
* Both a real example AND an in-universe example: ''[[The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn]]'' begins with the narrator (Huck) informing the reader that you won't know who he is unless you've read "a book by the name of ''[[The Adventures of Tom Sawyer]]''. Huck tells us the book was written by Mark Twain, "and he told the truth, mainly. there was things which he stretched, but mainly he told the truth." He then goes on to make the same claim about the story the reader is about to be told.
* Done for satirical effect by ''[
** Before the hoax was revealed in 1972, even President [[Lyndon B Johnson]] was fooled by it (and reportedly "[[Berserk Button|hit the roof]]" when he read it), and there remain [[Conspiracy Theorist|conspiracy theorists]] who believe that it actually ''is'' the real deal, claimed to be a hoax [[Parody Retcon|as a means of damage control]].
* ''The Protocols of the Elders of Zion'', a notorious anti-Semitic tract claiming to be the records of a meeting by a Jewish cabal plotting to [[Take Over the World]]. In reality, it was written by the Okhrana, the [[Secret Police]] of [[Tsarist Russia]], as a tool for starting pogroms with, and was later carried into western Europe and the US by White Russians in the wake of [[Red October]]. It was exposed as a forgery by ''[[British Newspapers|The Times]]'' of London in 1921, which revealed that large sections of the book were cribbed wholesale from a 19th century anti-Napoleonic tract. Even so, it was made part of the school curriculum in [[Nazi Germany]], and anti-Semites to this day cite it as "evidence" of a Jewish conspiracy.
* [http://www.cracked.com/article_17003_the-5-most-ridiculous-lies-ever-published-as-non-fiction.html Cracked.com has a whole article devoted to this.]
* The "autobiographical" works of Anna Leonowens, ''[http://www.archive.org/details/thesiamesecourt00leonrich The English Governess at the Siamese Court]'' and ''[http://www.archive.org/details/romanceharem00leongoog Romance of the Harem]'', on which the novel ''Anna and the King of Siam'', the musical and film ''[[The King and I]]'', and the film ''[[Anna and the King]]'' were all based on. Although in the West they were thought to be non-fiction, they were in fact outright lies. About the only verifiable details in them are that Anna Leonowens did in fact work as a teacher (and later as a language secretary) for King Mongkut of Siam, and that some of his children did remember her fondly (although they were distressed by the stories she had written about their family).
** She was not the only, or even the primary, governess/teacher in the palace.
** The king certainly did not have a romantic relationship of any sort with her. In fact, he regarded her as a "difficult woman and more difficult than generality".
** The story of Tuptim, which Anna admits was "based on palace gossip", never happened. Unfaithful concubines in the time of Mongkut were simply dismissed.
** Anna herself was not all that she appeared to be. She took great pains to conceal from the world that she was half Indian, changing her name repeatedly (from her birth name of "Anna Harriet Emma Edwards" to "Anna Leon-Owens" and "Anna Leon Owens") and repudiating family members who could out her.
▲== [[Live Action TV]] ==
* Kids' show ''Wacaday'' had something very similar to this with its fictionalized historical fact segments, as they'd always [[Catch Phrase|remind you at the end]] that ''"We know it's true [[Hypocritical Humor|because we made it up ourselves!]]"''
* ''[[Lie to Me (TV series)|Lie to Me]]'' inverts this with a disclaimer at the beginning of each episode, stating that the events and characters of the series are entirely false. While nothing like any of the episodes has ever happened in real life, Lightman is based off of a real-life person, Dr. Paul Ekman.
== [[Music]] ==
* To promote Platinum Weird, Dave Stewart (from the Eurythmics) and Kara DioGuardi claimed that the songs were originally by a lost-to-history 1970s band of the same name, sung by (the fictional) Erin Grace. VH-1 even did a mockumentary on the
==
▲* To promote Platinum Weird, Dave Stewart (from the Eurythmics) and Kara DioGuardi claimed that the songs were originally by a lost-to-history 1970s band of the same name, sung by (the fictional) Erin Grace. VH-1 even did a mockumentary on the fake band.
* Ruggero Leoncavallo's opera ''[[Pagliacci]]'' is probably one of these: Leoncavallo said it was based on a court case that his father, who was a judge, presided over, and further claimed that he had the document to prove it. However, no such document, or indeed any corroborating evidence, has ever been found. It is now generally believed that Leoncavallo played the "true story" card to evade the charge of plagiarism.
* See ''Literature'' above for the dubious source of the supposedly-true story behind ''[[The King and I]]''.
== [[Video Games]] ==
* The Japanese ''Tengai Makyou'' comedy [[Role
* Similarly, the US/Europe release of ''[[Fatal Frame]]''/''[[Market-Based Title|Project Zero]]'' is advertised as being based on a true story. Charitably, it could be said to actually be based on something that ''might'', at one time, have been an urban legend in Japan.
* At the start, ''[[Armed and Dangerous]]'' says that it was based on a true story. Considering that this game includes a tea drinking robot, miniature black holes, and a land shark gun, among ''many'' other things, this was probably not supposed to be taken seriously.
==
* ''[[Cracked.com]]'''s Photoplasty contest [http://www.cracked.com/photoplasty_1050_26-inaccurate-movies-theyll-make-about-recent-history/ 26 Dramatic Movies They'll Make About Modern History] varies between [[Very Loosely Based on a True Story]] and this.
* This is actually parodied in the episode "Arrgh!" of ''[[Spongebob SquarePants]]''. SpongeBob and Patrick quickly come to believe their pirate quest is a scam (and that Mr. Krabs has gone [[Cloudcuckoolander]]) finding out the treasure map is just a game board they used earlier in the episode. Chance kicks in as they do find the treasure according to the map (the game board) with the remarks of SpongeBob saying "It really IS based on a true treasure map!" The Flying Dutchman comes in to take his treasure back, willing to share with SpongeBob and Patrick. But much to the dismay of Mr. Krabs, he only gains a piece from the game board, and gets replied "But it's based on a REAL treasure chest!" ▼
== [[Western Animation]] ==
▲* This is actually parodied in the episode "Arrgh!" of ''[[
** It's notable that this is rather Karmic, as it was a fight over the treasure (Patrick and SpongeBob wanted their shares, Krabs wanted it all) that woke up TFD in the first place.
* [[Tex Avery]] was fond of this trope. ''Drag-Along Droopy'' began with the disclaimer; "This is an absolutely authentic account of the grazing land battles of the sheep and cattle wars of the early west. We know this story to be true. It was told to us by--'''A TEXAN'''!"
* The story of ''[[Pocahontas]]'' used by Disney and others is pretty much entirely bunk despite it being billed in its original form (the writings of John Smith) as true. Researchers reviewing Smith's other works quickly realized he had a penchant for making up absolutely insane stories about himself and passing them off as fact (if taken as true, Smith was a demi-god of manliness and combat skill who found success, riches and sex wherever he went). Conveniently, the story wasn't published until after Pocahontas had died, leaving Smith's claims and exaggerations uncontested.
* ''[[The Ren and Stimpy Show]]'' episode "Son of Stimpy" (A.K.A, "Stimpy's First Fart") began with a voiceover declaring that "this is a true story that we made up".
* The ''[[Woody Woodpecker]]'' short "Under the Counter Spy" (a parody of ''[[Dragnet]]'') starts with the disclaimer, "The story you are about to see is a big fat lie! No names have been changed to protect anybody!"
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[[Category:The Shades of Fact]]
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