Title: The Adaptation: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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== [[The Musical]] ==
== [[The Musical]] ==
* ''[[Evil Dead]]: The Musical''
* ''[[Evil Dead]]: The Musical''
* ''[http://www.fellowshipthemusical.com Fellowship! The Musical]''
* ''[https://web.archive.org/web/20170610091451/http://www.fellowshipthemusical.com/ Fellowship! The Musical]''
* ''[[Legally Blonde (theatre)|Legally Blonde: The Musical]]''
* ''[[Legally Blonde (theatre)|Legally Blonde: The Musical]]''
* ''[[In Case You Forgot Who Wrote It|David Warrack's]] Rob Roy - The Musical''
* ''[[In Case You Forgot Who Wrote It|David Warrack's]] Rob Roy - The Musical''

Revision as of 23:37, 12 September 2018

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When a work is adapted into a different medium, there is a tendency to subtitle that work with the format of the new adaptation. For example, a TV show called Bob And Alice, when adapted into a movie, will be called Bob and Alice: The Movie.

Because this is an uncreative and predictable method of naming something, it's a good sign that the adaptation is a cheap tie-in product knocked out to ride the coattails of a more popular work (this is especially true of things adapted into video games). This is not necessarily true, however, and just as frequently the system is simply used as a way to disambiguate different works in a franchise.

This is a fluid trope. Sometimes, if an adaptation becomes more popular than the original work, it'll drop the subtitle, while in other cases, if a new adaptation is produced, a show that didn't originally have a subtitle will have one added on. Many times, these are even added on by fans.

Colon Cancer is a frequent result of this trope, especially if an adaptation of an adaptation is made. Take, for example, this gem: Star Trek: The Next Generation: The Manga.

Compare Trope 2000, Super Title 64 Advance. Contrast Oddly-Named Sequel 2: Electric Boogaloo. See also The Foreign Subtitle.

Examples (listed by medium):

Parodies

The Animated Series:[1]

The Comic Book or The Manga:

The Game or The Board Game:

The Movie: (see also, The Film of the Book)

The Musical

The Next Generation: (and similar names)

The Series

Other

  1. Animated "The Series" go here too.
  2. Had the previous unrelated live-action series by Filmation not existed, the show likely would have invoked this trope in the U.S. as well.
  3. You just did