Special Edition Title: Difference between revisions

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A variation on a show's usual [[Title Sequence]] for a special event. Does not cover the regular evolution of a title sequence from season to season. Likely to occur in conjunction with [[Something Completely Different]]. Can also be applied to the [[Ending Theme|ending sequence]], if the show has one (e.g. [[Anime]]).
 
Also done in movies with company logos -- especiallylogos—especially Warner Brothers. See [[Logo Joke]] for that.
 
Compare to [[Couch Gag]] and [[Evolving Credits]], which can often evolve the entire title sequence and thus fulfilling aspects of this trope as well.
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** Also, in Season 4's "Bollywood Homicide", the song picks up a distinctly Eastern sound; most of the theme song was sung in Hindi, and the actors' names appeared in Hindi text which then switched to English letters.
** The sixth season episode "The Amazing Psych-Man & Tap Man, Issue #2" is done with the theme redone in a heroic orchestral style and the opening sequence in comic-book panels, specifically an homage to the opening sequence of ''[[The Cape (2010 TV series)|The Cape]]''.
* Done in the two [[Something Completely Different]] episodes of ''[[News Radio]]''. The one set [[Recycled in Space|in space]] had [[Standardized Space Views]] instead of the usual [[Establishing Shot|Establishing Shots]]s of New York City. The ''Titanic'' parody had an Irish folk version of the theme over sepia-tone shots of people salvaging artifacts with the actor's pictures on them.
* The ''[[Just Shoot Me]]'' episode "My Dinner with Woody" had the titles done in the style of the credits of Woody Allen movies (plain white text over black).
* The ''[[Babylon 5]]'' episode "The Corps Is Mother, The Corps Is Father" used a credit sequence with Psi Corps insignia in place of the usual Babylon 5 shield.
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** Though this is only borderline "special"; during this part of the show's run, the shorter form was always used when the show was first aired, to leave more time for commercials. However, the full opening had been back for a few episodes.
*** If anything, it was more of a [[Take That]] at the Sci-Fi Channel's much-maligned decision to remove the full-length [[Title Sequence]].
* ''[[Jekyll]]'' did this for the finale -- changingfinale—changing the title of the show itself.
* One episode of ''[[Clarissa Explains It All]]'' has her Brother, Ferguson take over the role of [[Breaking the Fourth Wall]]. The credits change the name of the series to Ferguson Explains It All.
* Episode 26 of ''[[Monty Python's Flying Circus]]'' has a [[Double Subversion]] of this: an announcer says the Queen might be watching, but the opening titles will proceed as usual; they don't.
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** ''Double'' also did special openings in a story arc centering on an ''[[American Idol]]''-style TV show, replacing half of the standard opening with footage of the theme song's performers (who play judges in those episodes) performing the theme on the "Idol" stage.
** The 'movie footage in the opening' thing has become a tradition since Decade started it. ''OOO'' did it three times (for Movie Wars Core, Let's Go Kamen Riders, and OOO Wonderful) and ''Fourze'' has done it for Movie Wars Megamax. The movie footage is never the same in any two episodes, though. ''[[Super Sentai]],'' on the other hand, only movie-ifies end titles..
* ''[[Mighty Morphin Power Rangers]]'' had a miniseries, ''Mighty Morphin Alien Rangers'', where the the entire world (Rangers included) was under a time-reversal of 10 years, leaving the Rangers as powerless kids (as they didn't have their powers yet back then), so aliens stood in for them until they managed to find the [[Reset Button]] (and [[Power Rangers Zeo|new powers]], since the bad guys managed to destroy the Power Coins while the rangers were unable to fight). It featured a [[Special Edition Title]] with a special edition theme song, "Go, Go, Alien Rangers!"
* One of the later episodes in Season 5 of ''[[Lost]]'' had, rather than its normal opening sequence with the "LOST" logo flying at the camera, a similar sequence on a starfield, and then the Enterprise flew by to promote the [[Star Trek (film)|2009 Star Trek film]], also released that year.
* The final episode of ''[[The Prisoner]]'' has the same end credits, but the opening credits replace the famous normal opening with a long helicopter shot over the Village, accompanied by a different theme music (actually written as the second half of the theme and only broadcast once before, as part of the incidental music in "Do Not Forsake Me, Oh My Darling"). This was probably because it was the second half of the show's only two-part story. It was also the first time that it was publicly revealed that the show was filmed at Portmeirion, which had previously been kept secret to heighten the in-show mystery of the Village's location - although ironically the Portmeirion location was not used in the last four episodes.
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** The final episode of Season 3, which takes place in a future that probably won't occur ([[It Makes Sense in Context|it makes sense in context...mostly]]), has a gray background and yet again different "cutting-edge" sciences, such as cryptozoology, chaos structure, and (to underscore [[Bad Future|how terrible the "prime" universe has become in 15 years]]) hope and water.
** The 4th season episode "Letter of Transit" takes place in a futuristic fascist dystopia. As well as images of barbed wire walls and faceless masses, the "Fringe concepts" include "Imagination", "Due Process" and "Freedom".
* ''[[The Office]]'' episode ''"The Michael Scott Paper Company"'', has all other characters removed except for Michael, Pam, and Ryan -- theRyan—the only employees of the Michael Scott Paper Company, filmed in their office only. The post-Super Bowl episode added specific shots of secondary characters in groups of two or three rather than the usual text only credit.
** In the first episode after Michael Scott's departure, the last shot of the opening montage (Michael adjusting the Dundee Award on his desk) is replaced with a similar shot with his replacement, Deangelo, adjusting one of his kachina dolls.
* One episode of ''[[The State]]'' began with David Wain explaining that all of the group's members have different specialties. His is editing, and though he gets less recognition for it, it is surprisingly good at letting you express yourself. Cut to a version of the opening titles in which Wain's credit is repeated over and over and the other cast members are only featured for a fraction of a second.
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** The episode "What Ever Happened to SpongeBob?" replaced "SpongeBob SquarePants" in the theme with "WhoBob WhatPants".
* Another show with a special title for Christmas was ''[[Codename: Kids Next Door]]'''s "Operation Naughty", with the normally-white background turned green, snow falling over the titles, and the title decorated by Christmas lights [http://i15.photobucket.com/albums/a391/Numbuh4fan/Naughty/OperationNAUGHTY005_0039.jpg (see here)]. That episode also had a [[The Teaser|teaser]]. Only "Operation End" and "Operation Knot" had a [[Cold Opening]] before this, and those were much shorter than the one in "Naughty".
* ''[[Animaniacs]]'', ''[[Tiny Toon Adventures]]'', and ''[[Pinky and The Brain]]'' all had special openings for their respective [[Christmas Episode|Christmas Episodes]]s, in which jingle bells played with the music and snow fell over the titles. Also, the latter two had specially themed lyrics.
* As a [[Mind Screw]], the producers of ''[[The Venture Brothers]]'' did the opening to the season 2 premiere... without the titular brothers. [http://www.teevee.net/archive/2006/09/boy-idiots-mad-scientists-and.html Source.]
** The first episode of the third season was all about the villains, and thus the credits featured their silhouettes in place of the expected titular brothers.
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