The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy: Difference between revisions

no edit summary
(Added tropenamer section)
No edit summary
 
(12 intermediate revisions by 6 users not shown)
Line 1:
{{work}}{{Multiple Works Need Separate Pages}}
{{work}}
[[File:HHguide.jpg|frame|[[Great Big Book of Everything|The handiest dandiest guide around.]]]]
 
Line 6:
'''Don't Panic!'''
 
A'''''The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy''''' is a franchise of different media, all telling variations on the same story by [[Douglas Adams]].
 
To boil it down to the essentials, Arthur Dent, a fairly normal if feckless Earthling, wakes up one Thursday and, after a series of confusing events, is spirited away from Earth by his friend, Ford Prefect, right before [[Earthshattering Kaboom|the planet is destroyed]]. He then hooks up with Zaphod Beeblebrox, former President of the Galaxy, current fugitive, and all-around cool guy; Marvin the Paranoid Android, a sarcastic and chronically depressed AI; and Tricia McMillian, AKA Trillian, [[The Chick]] and the only other human being left. Zaphod is on a quest to find The Truth, and everyone else gets pulled along for the ride.
Line 14:
The first version was the radio series, ''[[The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy (radio series)|The Hitchhikers Guide to The Galaxy]]''. The first series was broadcast on [[The BBC|BBC Radio]] in 1978, with another series coming not long after, and a Christmas episode linking them. This material went on to become the foundation of the first two books. However, it has several bits not seen in any later version, including the full-length "Shoe Event Horizon" story. After Adams's death, three more series were broadcast, adapting the plots of the last three books.
 
Next came the book series, ''[[The Hitchhikers Guide to The Galaxy (novel)|The Hitchhikers Guide to The Galaxy]]'', probably the best-known version. Originally, it adapted the plots from the radio series, but took off afterwards, becoming five novels in all. The novels vary widely in tone and subject matter, and the fifth book in particular didn't seem to please anyone, [[Creator Backlash|even its own author]]. Adams said near the end of his life that he wanted to do a sixth which might round things out more nicely, but this was [[Author Existence Failure|cut short by his sudden death]]. Specifically, he was believed to have been [[Retool|retooling]] an in-progress [[Dirk Gently]] novel into a new Hitchhiker's story; a few reconstructed chapters were published as part of the ''Salmon Of Doubt'' anthology book. A sixth book by [[Eoin Colfer]], entitled ''And Another Thing...'' (not to be confused by [[And Another Thing|a character dispensing important info just as they're about to leave]]) was published on October 12, 2009.
 
The books, in order, are:
 
* ''[[The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy/The Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy|The Hitchhiker's Guide to The Galaxy]]''
* ''[[The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy/The Restaurant At The End of The Universe|The Restaurant Atat Thethe End of Thethe Universe]]''
* ''[[The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy/Life, The Universe And Everything|Life, The Universe, Andand Everything]]''
* ''[[The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy/So Long, And Thanks For All The Fish|So Long, Andand Thanks Forfor All Thethe Fish]]''
* ''[[Young Zaphod Plays It Safe]]'' (short story)
* ''[[The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy/Mostly Harmless|Mostly Harmless]]''
* ''[[The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy/And Another Thing|And Another Thing...]]''
 
 
Line 33:
In 2005, a big-budget Hollywood movie version, ''[[The Hitchhiker's Guide to The Galaxy (film)|The Hitchhikers Guide to The Galaxy]]'', came out. The script was based on a previous Adams-written script, and contained several new ideas by him, including the POV Ray and the Vogon homeworld. Reviews were mixed, with some appreciating the wit and ideas, while others grumbled at the lack of a real narrative backbone and slightly lethargic pacing.
 
The series has also been adapted into stage shows, albums, comic books, and even a version printed on [[In -Joke|a towel]]. There is also a website, created by Adams himself and originally run by the BBC, called [http://www.h2g2.com H2G2].
 
-----
Line 43:
 
-----
{{franchisetropes}}
{{tropelist|This whole bunch of stuff provides examples of:}}
* [[Absolute Xenophobe]]: The Krikkiters, who on becoming aware that there was a universe outside their dust cloud decided that it all had to go.
* [[The Ace]]: Zaphod, [[Zig-Zagging Trope]].
* [[Achievements in Ignorance]]: Invoked. To fly, one must aim at the ground and miss. To miss you have to distract yourself at the last moment. Then once you've achieved flight, you have to avoid thinking about how this is impossible or gravity will notice you, hard.
* [[Added Alliterative AppealAlliteration]]: Big Bang Burger Bar
** Except it's called The Big Bang Burger Chef in the radio series.
* [[Advertised Extra]]: Trillian, in the radio series.
Line 105:
* [[Crapsack World]]: No one seems to mind blowing up a planet and the legal system seems broken. [[Played for Laughs]].
* [[Creator Breakdown]]: Regarding the [[Downer Ending]] of ''Mostly Harmless'' and the mixed-to-negative reaction from fans, Adams conceded, "I just had a thoroughly miserable year, and I was trying to write a book against that background." He intended a sixth book to give the series a better conclusion, but succumbed to [[Author Existence Failure]] first.
* [[Cross -Cultural KerfuffleKerfluffle]]: A minor, comical example. During the section explaining how scientists view of the Babel Fish has allowed for the final proof of the non-existence of God, it is said how one can then go on to prove black is white and promptly get run over at the next zebra crossing. In Britain and many other countries, black-and-white stripped "Zebra Crossings" are the equivalent of the (often yellow or parallel lined) American "Crosswalk". Americans, when reading the joke, usually imagine the term as an equivalent to a "Deer Crossing" (that is to say, a place where ''zebras'' cross) which makes for an equally humorous, though widely different joke.
** There's an in-story example, where a casual throwaway remark Arthur makes regarding his lifestyle leads to an interstellar war of gargantuan proportions <ref>from the perspective of the participants; both sides ultimately invade Earth and their forces are swallowed by a small dog</ref> breaking out.
** The Ford Prefect was a small car Ford manufactured and sold in England, but not America. Adams regularly commented on how Americans were completely unaware of a joke they weren't getting.
*** Other countries that did translate it had to find ways of getting around the problem. Usually by renaming him "Ford Escort".
*** The TV series partially averts it by showing a list of names Ford considered using, most of the rest being much more recognizable, at least getting across the impression that he's named after something real. The movie lampshades it by Ford referring to Arthur meeting him by saving him from being run over when he tried to shake hands with a car (which he now explains, having revealed himself to be an alien, he had mistaken for the dominant life form on Earth).
<!-- %% All Crowning Moments go on their respective subpages. -->
* [[Divide by Zero]]: The second book states a theory which basically says that if anyone finds out the meaning of life, then the universe will end and reboot as something even harder to explain. (Another theory says that this may have happened.) ''Life, The Universe, And Everything'' later [[Hand Wave|handwaves]] away The Ultimate Question and Answer Of Life, The Universe, And Everything as causing such an event if anyone found out both.
* [[Does Not Understand Sarcasm]]: Ford, occasionally.
Line 123 ⟶ 122:
* [[Earn Your Happy Ending|Earn Your Happy Entire Book]]: Arthur was due the huge break life gave him in ''So Long''. Too bad it didn't stick. (Though it does in the radio version.)
* [[Earth Is the Center of the Universe]]: Averted at the beginning of the first book, then played straight for the rest of the series.
** An odd example of this trope. While the Earth is important to the mices' plans, what ''are'' those plans? To go on the talk show circuit and get rich. The only version of the Ultimate Question we learn is nonsense. When another character learned universal Truth by another method, it [[Go Mad Fromfrom the Revelation|drives some people mad]], but has more to do with frogs than universal epiphanies and isn't mentioned again in any of the following books. There is a Ruler of the Universe, and he doesn't live on Earth. All things considered, Earth is more important to the universe in this series than it seems in [[Real Life]], but it's still an absurd, farcical, nearly [[Crapsack World|crapsack]] universe full of [[Shaggy Dog Story|Shaggy Dog Stories]], so nothing is all that important.
* [[The Eeyore]]: Marvin.
* [[Electric Instant Gratification]]: In the radio series and in ''Mostly Harmless.''
Line 175 ⟶ 174:
* [[Human Aliens]]
* [[Humans Are Morons]]: Arthur Dent, the only human left alive (except for Trillian), is constantly being referred to as an ape or otherwise put down as a moron (mainly by Zaphod, though he isn't exactly bright himself.)
** Well, humans ARE''are'' only the third -most -intelligent species on Earth, behind [[Sapient Cetaceans|Dolphins]], who are second-most-intelligent.
* [[Humans Are Their Own Precursors]]: Modern humans are revealed to be descended from the most useless members of the Golgafrinchams, an ancient extra-terrestrial race. {{Spoiler|Turns out they weren't ''entirely'' useless, the rest of the race [[Death by Irony|died without them]].}}
* [[Hyperspace Is a Scary Place]]: Travel through hyperspace is described as "unpleasantly like being drunk." "What's so unpleasant about being drunk", you say? Ask a glass of water.
* [[I'll Take Two Beers, Too!]]: Zaphod ordering Gargle Blasters. And Ford ordering six pints of bitter in the first book.
* [[The Infinite]]: As a speed you can move at it is played for all the absurdity it is worth with the Infinite Improbability Drive. Where you can move at infinite speeds but only if the destination is really improbable.
* [[Informed Obscenity]]: The word Belgium, while on Earth the name of a [[Belgium|a country]], is elsewhere a very foul expletive. See [[Pardon My Klingon]] below.
* [[Insignificant Little Blue Planet]]: Probably the most famous example, but Earth actually doesn't stay that way for long. See [[Earth Is the Center of the Universe]] for more details.
* [[It Runs on Nonsensoleum]]: The Heart of Gold and the Bistromathics drive, among other things.
Line 325:
 
{{reflist}}
[[Category:index{{PAGENAME}}]]
[[Category:FranchiseCult Classic]]
[[Category:Franchise IndexFranchises]]
[[Category:Notable Quotables]]
[[Category:Franchise Index]]
[[Category:Trope Overdosed]]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, The}}
[[Category:index]]
[[Category:The Hitchhikers Guide To The Galaxy]]
[[Category:Franchise]]
[[Category:Pages with comment tags]]