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6[[caption-width-right:349:The show: Mundane SliceOfLife.\
7[[Anime/DoraemonFilmSeries The movies]]: Heroic action/adventure.[[note]]From ''Anime/DoraemonNobitaAndTheSpaceHeroes''.[[/note]]]]
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12
13This trope refers to the habit of [[TheMovie movies based on TV shows]] casting the main characters as being involved in a dramatic plot, ''particularly'' when nothing remotely similar happens in the series itself. This can be as big as the world or as small as recess, just so long as it is made "epic". Oddly enough, often seems to involve neighborhoods being torn down to build shopping malls.
14
15Due to the fact that nearly all movie adaptations use this trope to some degree (after all, it's easier to keep up an epic tone across a 90-minute movie as opposed to a 13-52 episode season), examples shall be limited to things that involve a large change in dynamic.
16
17Can sometimes overlap with SummerBlockbuster, but is distinct from an EpicMovie, which is inherently [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin epic]] to begin with. SequelEscalation is a similar phenomenon.
18
19----
20
21!!Example subpages:
22
23[[index]]
24* BigDamnMovie/WesternAnimation
25[[/index]]
26
27!!Other examples:
28
29[[foldercontrol]]
30
31[[folder:Advertising]]
32* ''Ernest'' series:
33** ''Film/ErnestGoesToCamp'': A character originally created as a goofy commercial spokesman has to save the summer camp from -- you guessed it -- a CorruptCorporateExecutive.
34** ''Film/ErnestScaredStupid'' repeats the concept, where Ernest must save his town or the world from an evil troll.
35** In ''Film/ErnestGoesToJail'', Ernest has to save the bank he works at and his friends from a robber who looks like him.
36** And ''Film/ErnestSavesChristmas'' where Ernest has to, [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin well]], [[SavingChristmas save Christmas]].
37* Spoofed with an ad often seen in theaters which appears to depict the ''Advertising/MAndMs'' characters in a [[RealTrailerFakeMovie movie trailer]] for a Big Damn Movie involving espionage, acrobatics, and defusing bombs. Then someone's cell phone goes off, revealing the trailer to actually be a NoTalkingOrPhonesWarning. Red storms away in disgust at the realization that there's not really going to be a movie.
38[[/folder]]
39
40[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
41* ''Manga/CaseClosed'': This mystery series can often have chase scenes, but they're always of a much smaller scale. The films are more akin to action-packed adventure summer blockbusters like ''Film/DieHard'': Not only is there still the VictimOfTheWeek, but in solving the movie cases Conan generally has to get through giant set pieces that in turn yield several amounts of property damage and enough explosions that would make Creator/MichaelBay proud.
42* ''Anime/CowboyBebop'': While it was already action-packed, the TV series primarily focused on the five main characters just trying to earn enough to get by. The movie ups the stakes considerably as it has the Bebop crew fighting to stop a bio-terrorist from annihilating all of Mars.
43* ''Manga/CrayonShinChan'' is a slice-of-life manga/anime about a DirtyKid and his family and friends. Every movie is about said kid and his friends and family saving their town, country or even the world.
44* ''The Disappearance of Literature/HaruhiSuzumiya'' (based on the book of the same name) has Kyon hopping through time to SetRightWhatOnceWentWrong when someone re-writes the world.
45* ''Manga/{{Doraemon}}'': The regular manga and TV series is about the mundane daily life of [[ThisLoserIsYou the 10-year-old loser protagonist]], his [[RobotBuddy robotic cat]] who tries to help him be less of a loser, and his other elementary school friends in suburban Tokyo. However, the series' [[Anime/DoraemonFilmSeries movies]] (based on official manga, albeit) will always be huge epic adventure stories (often set in elaborate sci-fi/mythological/high fantasy/pre-historic locations) and the main characters are inevitably portrayed as the [[TookALevelInBadass brave action heroes]]. It’s even a bit of a joke in the massive online Japanese fanbase just how much the protagonists become cool plucky action {{Kid Hero}}es when they’re in a movie.
46* The ''Manga/Golgo13'' manga had Duke Togo traveling the world and working for and against the world's superpower nations while [[HistoricalInJoke changing the course of history]]. Still, the original movie (''The Professional'') had the father of one of his targets angry and powerful enough to send the combined forces of {{Eagleland}} -- the FBI, the CIA, the U.S. Military, and a CarnivalOfKillers -- against the lone wolf AntiHero.
47* ''Webcomic/HetaliaAxisPowers'': While the main characters are NationsAsPeople and they become involved in major world events, it’s still a 5 minute episode gag series adapted from a comic strip more focused on gags and maybe the occasional character development than any consistent plot. The ''Paint It White'' movie? It’s about an alien invasion of faceless white aliens threatening to turn everyone and everything into faceless white blobs.
48* ''Anime/LupinIII'':
49** The first ''Lupin III'' movie (''Anime/TheMysteryOfMamo'') had its BigBad playing above the Lupin gang's usual weight class. [=ICBMs=] were involved.
50** ''Anime/TheCastleOfCagliostro'' has WordOfGod from Miyazaki that it is the AdaptationDistillation of all of his ''Lupin III'' ideas that he has been using for the first series (and the two episodes from the second series).
51* ''Anime/Moomin1990'' is about weird creatures of Finnish imagination having cute (albeit sometimes scary) adventures in GhibliHills. The movie (''Comet in Moominland'') is about EndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt.
52* ''Manga/OnePiece'': Even though the Straw Hats do usually end up having to save entire nations and islands in the main series, a few of the movies still follow this trope. In ''[[Anime/OnePieceFilmStrongWorld Strong World]]'' the entire East Blue is a stake, and in ''[[Anime/OnePieceFilmZ Z]]'' the BigBad plans to [[spoiler: completely destroy the New World and everyone in it]]. The marketing reflected this: [[DistinctionWithoutADifference these two were titled 'One Piece Film', whereas the others used 'One Piece The Movie']]. The rest of the [[NonSerialMovie non-serial movies]] avert this somewhat, as the stakes and power of the villains are considerably lower than what most of the manga's story arcs build to.
53* ''Anime/PokemonTheSeries'': The series is pretty action-packed but [[TheMovie the movies]] tend to be more dramatic, the battles more agitated, and there always seems to be some sort of big dilemma involving the fate of the world.
54* ''Anime/PrettyCure'' has two types of movie -- one that tends to air alongside a season and another where multiple teams from each of the series team up with one another. They tend to have the Cures go up against an original villain, who generally isn’t part of the season's bad guys.
55* Long before the series itself underwent CerebusSyndrome, ''Manga/RanmaOneHalf'' was a series that mainly concentrated on the wacky martial-arts hijinks Ranma and company got into. The first movie has Akane getting kidnapped by a mystical Chinese fighter and leaving the rest of the cast going an an epic journey halfway across the country trying to rescue her.
56* Zigzagged with the ''Anime/SailorMoon'' movies. While the stakes aren't any higher than the show, the plots are more epic, minor characters like Tuxedo, Luna and Chibi-Usa get ADayInTheLimelight, and the villains aren't from the manga (although Creator/NaokoTakeuchi did [[GodCreatedCanonForeigner develop them]]).
57* The first ''Anime/YokaiWatch'' movie played things a bit more serious, similar to the tie-in episodes of the series but also adding something it lacked that the video games had: A BigBad who threatened the safety of both worlds. It helps that the plot is an abridged retelling of the second game, as it discloses the origin of the Yo-kai Watch.
58** The second movie also features a similar plot, most notably in the climax (after what it seemed the other scenes were more anthology-like) with [[MisanthropeSupreme Nurarihyon]] trying to depose Lord Enma and recalling the Yo-kai back to the Yo-kai World for it felt humans were corrupting the Yo-kai World. Thus, most of the focus Yo-kai, Nate, Hailey, and finally Lord Enma himself have to stop them. The plot was renditioned in ''Yo-kai Watch Blasters: Moon Rabbit Crew.''
59** The third film is more subdued, though by using the combination of live-action and anime styles, it deals with a manner of Escapism for [[spoiler:the human BigBad Kanami, after a CarreerEndingInjury which halted her ballet-dancing promising future, tries to get to the animated world to dance forever (the flashback is even told in live-action, and it doesn´t pull any punches to show sadness), no matter if she makes a mess of the ''animated and real worlds'' by using a RealityWarping Whale Yo-kai to do so.]]
60** All of these pale with the fourth film: ''Anime/YokaiWatchShadowsideTheReturnOfTheOniKing'', set after a 30-year TimeSkip (Nate is no longer the hero, and he no longer can use the Yo-kai Watch, plus Enma has been dethroned and Kaira decided to destroy most of the watches) and having a DarkerAndEdgier tone as higher things are at stake: the Onimaro Virus infects people's mallice and one of the human main characters -Touma-, pulling on his DarkAndTroubledPast, is swayed to lead them (before his HeelFaceTurn), action scenes are more intense and the Yo-kai themselves look more fierce, and it also has TheHeroine -Natsume, who is the wielder of the new Yo-kai Watch -- redeeming Touma by showing [[YouAreBetterThanYouThinkYouAre he's loved by his parents and some kids wanted to be friends like him]]. Oh, and did I mention it has ''the'' single vilest BigBad of the franchise who [[spoiler:nearly kills ''the aforementioned two main characters''?]]
61** Taking cues from the fourth movie, ''Anime/YokaiWatchForeverFriends'', manages to do so despite its main characters only appearing in said movie and ''VideoGame/YokaiWatch4''. In succession: A poor boy named Shin,has his otherwise happy life struck down when his mother dies thanks to the machinations of Tamamo-no-mae; he latter attemtps suicide only to be saved by Itsuki, who hates Yo-kai; aided by a young Onmyoji named Tae and a seemingly weak Yo-kai named Suu-san, they use an ancient Yo-kai Watch (Yo-kai Watch Elda Zero) and three oddball Classic Yo-kai in order to take down Tamamo-no-mae, [[spoiler:only to find she was acting on orders from [[RoyalBrat Shien]] to harvest souls and obtain power to take the throne of the Yo-kai World by force; the heroes gain permission from Enma Gouen to enter the tournament in order to prevent so; but it turns to be NotJustATournament as an AncientEvil known as Soranaki corrupts Shien and eventually overtakes him; Itsuki takes a fatal blow in order to protect Shin and it turns out he was DeadToBeginWith and was using borrowed time from a deal with a Yo-kai in order to set things straight; his GuardianEntity, a Deva Yo-kai, gives him an even stronger Yo-kai Watch Elda, and with it the mentioned Classic Yo-kai attain a [[SuperMode Godside Form]]; Itsuki tries to reach to Shien, and [[FusionDance he becomes the Lord Enma we all know an love!]]; Soranaki flees to the human world and battles Yasha Enma, Genbu, and Byakko alongside Yamata-no Orochi and Asura (the Kenbumajin); when all seems lost, Suu-san [[SuperMode regains his true power, and he turns into Susanoo]] -who is a GuardianEntity formed from Shin's lost father -- and defeats Soranaki; and Enma decides to reborn in order to grow properly, becoming the Enma who appears from the second movie onwards]]. Yep, a tale of friendship and several revelations about characters from the OG and the Shadowside series.
62* ''Manga/YoureUnderArrest'' is a goofy anime about a couple of cops. It has its action scenes, and its drama, but it isn't as dramatic as other LovelyAngels series. TheMovie is dark, action packed, and deals with ''terrorists''.
63* ''Anime/YuGiOhTheDarkSideOfDimensions'' is even bigger than the previous movies, since it's meant to re-conclusively end the manga/anime's story.
64[[/folder]]
65
66[[folder:Asian Animation]]
67* ''Animation/PleasantGoatAndBigBigWolf'', where a group of goats outsmart a wolf who wants to eat them, has several [[Animation/PleasantGoatAndBigBigWolfFilmSeries movies]], at least five of which have significantly more dramatic plots than the normal show:
68** ''Animation/PleasantGoatAndBigBigWolfTheSuperAdventure'' is about the goats going into the body of Mr. Slowy's snail to fight a bacteria war.
69** ''Animation/PleasantGoatAndBigBigWolfTheTigerProwess'' is about everyone working together to save the Green Green Grassland from being turned into a desert by Lord Japper, a tiger who runs an amusement park that saps a lot of energy from the surrounding area.
70** ''Animation/PleasantGoatAndBigBigWolfMoonCastleTheSpaceAdventure'' is about them saving the moon.
71** ''Animation/MissionIncredibleAdventuresOnTheDragonsTrail'' has them saving both their world and a dragon's world.
72** ''Animation/TheMythicalArkAdventuresInLoveAndHappiness'' has them saving everyone from a flood.
73[[/folder]]
74
75[[folder:Comic Strips]]
76* There are no less then ''seven'' [[ScriptFic fanfic]] ''ComicStrip/CalvinAndHobbes'' films -- two trilogies made by two authors (who are friends), with a final TrilogyCreep movie tying them together (and starting Fanfic/{{the Calvinverse}}). Each one is an ActionizedSequel to the original strip.
77** [=Swing123=]'s trilogy includes ''Fanfic/CalvinAndHobbesTheMovie'', ''Fanfic/CalvinAndHobbesIILostAtSea'', and ''Fanfic/CalvinAndHobbesIIIDoubleTrouble''.
78** garfieldodie's trilogy includes ''Fanfic/CanYouImagineThat'', ''Fanfic/AttackOfTheTeacherCreature'', and ''Fanfic/TroubleIsland''.
79** Finally, there's the CrossOver ''Fanfic/RetroChill''.
80** A lot of RecursiveFanfiction takes this format, like ''Fanfic/ThePezDispenserAndTheReignOfTerror''
81* The movie version of ''{{ComicStrip/Garfield}}'' has Garfield going into the city to save Odie from a mean TV show host. The sequel has him traveling to England and [[PrinceAndPauper switching places with a pampered cat who looks like him.]]
82** Some of WesternAnimation/GarfieldSpecials are a bit more dramatic than the comic strip. For example, "WesternAnimation/HereComesGarfield" has Garfield saving Odie from the pound, "WesternAnimation/GarfieldOnTheTown" has Garfield reuniting with his family in the alleys, and "WesternAnimation/GarfieldInTheRough" has Garfield fighting a ''panther''. And then there's ''ComicBook/GarfieldHis9Lives''.
83** Slightly less extreme in ''WesternAnimation/GarfieldGetsReal''. The setting is a crazy world on the other side of the comics page -- and Garfield gets sucked into the real world, prompting his friends to dive in as well to save him. This one wound up with two sequels:
84*** ''WesternAnimation/GarfieldsFunFest'' involves Garfield going on an adventure to reclaim his lost sense of humor.
85*** ''WesternAnimation/GarfieldsPetForce'' features Garfield teaming up with his superhero counterpart, Garzooka, while his friends temporarily transform into the remainder of the titular Pet Force (Odie becomes Odious, Arlene becomes Starlena and Nermal becomes Abnermal) to do battle with the evil Vetvix.
86* ''The Ottifants'' is a German newspaper comic that got a ShortRunner TV series in the 90's, which itself was adapted into a Big Damn Movie in the early 2000's.
87[[/folder]]
88
89[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
90* ''Film/TheThreeStooges'':
91** The 2012 feature film ''Film/TheThreeStoogesTheMovie'' puts the titular trio on a quest to save an orphanage from demolition.
92** ''The Three Stooges in Orbit'', a much earlier 1962 feature film from the Joe [=DeRita=] era, features the trio as a group of TV producers who set out to try to save their failing TV show, but instead end up bumbling their way into a plot by Martians to invade (and later destroy) Earth.
93[[/folder]]
94
95[[folder:Literature]]
96* The ''Literature/PaddingtonBear'' books are about Paddington comically misunderstanding everyday situations and muddling through regardless (although sometimes he has to give someone a Hard Stare). ''Film/Paddington2014'' is an OriginStory that also has him being pursued by a CruellaToAnimals taxidermist. ''Film/Paddington2'' is somewhere in the middle -- where it's more SliceOfLife but has a more action-packed climax.
97[[/folder]]
98
99[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
100* The 1986 HipHop documentary ''Film/BigFunInTheBigTown'' mentions the word [[BiggerIsBetter "big" twice in its title]]. The big fun implied here are the HipHop acts. The big town is UsefulNotes/NewYorkCity. Seeing that this documentary was made by Dutch-Belgian people it makes sense that to them the city is "big".
101* ''Series/DadsArmy'' revolves around the World War II-era British HomeGuard group that causes [[ArmedFarces hilarious and chaotic antics]] in their town (mostly by stepping on each other's toes and/or [[RagTagBunchOfMisfits not being exactly what you would call "Britain's Finest"]]). [[Film/DadsArmy1971 The 1971 film adaptation]] has higher stakes than the series had at that point, with Nazis invading Walmington in the climax, while [[Film/DadsArmy2016 the 2016 film adaptation]] has said Home Guard group causing hilarious and chaotic antics as they battle a Nazi infiltrator ring that is using Walmington-on-Sea as a staging ground, and the film climaxes with them trying to prevent the Nazis from escaping Britain with the secrets they plundered.
102* ''Series/{{Kaamelott}}'': When comparing ''Film/KaamelottPremierVolet'' to the series, there's no cheap-looking set, filming was done in forests, real castles, deserts etc, and the plot concerns an epic RightfulKingReturns quest (even though it's still very much a comedy and said rightful king is reluctant). While the budget isn't quite that of an EpicMovie, it certainly has the feel of one, helped by the cinematography and the epic soundtrack. Special mention to the castle of Kaamelott, which is seen from the outside for the first time in all its glory.
103* Completely averted in the film version of ''Film/OurMissBrooks''. [[TheMovie The movie]] has Connie Brooks pursue her {{series goal}} of getting [[LoveInterest love interest]] Philip Boynton to propose. [[spoiler:They finally get married at the end of the movie, and live HappilyEverAfter]].
104* The TropeNamer by way of FanNickname is ''Film/{{Serenity}}''. In the series, the ''Series/{{Firefly}}'' team is mostly sailing around TheVerse trying to make ends meet and keep out of the Alliance's hands; they aren't setting out to be BigDamnHeroes. Come TheMovie, it's time to get off their duffs and BringNewsBack about the Alliance's biggest screw-up yet, while being chased by a superhumanly dangerous Operative. The series may have been meant to eventually build up to such large actions, but its early cancellation meant that it had to be wrapped up all at once. WordOfGod has it that the second season was planned to conclude with what happens about 3/4 of the way through the film (i.e. the discovery of [[spoiler:the planet Miranda]])
105* ''Film/TheBradyBunchMovie'' has Series/TheBradyBunch save their home (and, by extension, their neighborhood) from a CorruptCorporateExecutive that wants to convert the area into a shopping mall.
106* ''Series/HannahMontana: TheMovie'' has the title character saving her hometown in Tennessee from a land developer [[FelonyMisdemeanor seeking to build a mall]]. It's more about Miley slowly becoming attached to said hometown and questioning whether or not it's worth it to continue being Hannah.
107* Movie versions of popular comedy skits frequently aim for an "epic quest" type of story, which is self-evidently insane. I.e. ''A Night at the Roxbury'', about two one-note characters and their epic quest to get into the best nightclub in the world.
108* Possibly parodied in ''Series/TheLeagueOfGentlemen's Apocalypse'', in which characters have to save the show itself. [[spoiler:Not only do they fail, but they accidentally kill nearly all of the creators.]]
109* Series/{{Barney|AndFriends}} has ''Film/BarneysGreatAdventure'', where Barney and his friends find a rainbow egg from outer space. When it goes missing, they have to chase after it before all its rings light up.
110* ''Series/TheRedGreenShow'' has ''Duct Tape Forever'', where Red and Harold must save Possum Lodge from demolition by entering a duct tape contest. RoadTripPlot ensues.
111** Note that the only real difference between the movie and a regular episode's plot is that Red and the gang are actually shown doing it instead of Red telling the story after the fact.
112* ''Series/TheThickOfIt'' was a dialogue-driven political {{dramedy}} about petty grudges and in-fighting in the British government, and most episodes featured the spin doctor AntiHero Malcolm Tucker dealing with PR blunders and keeping his fellow party members in line. The movie spin-off, ''Film/InTheLoop'', involved Malcolm getting involved with international diplomacy in the United States on the eve of a full-on war in the Middle East.
113* ''Series/WizardsOfWaverlyPlace: TheMovie'' is about wizard-in-training and [[TeensAreMonsters rebellious teenage daughter]] Alex Russo wishing away her parents' meeting and marriage out of spite, and she and her brothers have to SetRightWhatOnceWentWrong... [[JustForFun/RecycledINSPACE IN THE CARIBBEAN]]! Keep in mind that this movie is based on a FantasticComedy with a LaughTrack.
114* ''Series/TheSweeney'' generally dealt with small scale crimes such as bank robberies. The 1977 movie dealt with a complex espionage plot with an attempt to assassinate a foreign ambassador. However they seemed to realise this was silly, so in the 1978 movie they went stuck to foiling ''particularly nasty'' bank robberies.
115* ''Series/TheBrothersGarcia'' had a TV Movie involving [[GenreShift Ancient Mayan magic, reincarnation, and antiquities smugglers]].
116* The plot of ''Series/MysteryScienceTheater3000: TheMovie'' revolved around attempts by Mike and the bots to escape the Satellite of Love. Even though the plot has been done before in episodes of the series, the movie actually shows consistent attempts at escape, all usually ending in spectacular failure.
117* The TV-movie for ''Series/AreYouAfraidOfTheDark'' definitely counts. The TV series was simply a story every episode, where a member of the Midnight Society tells a scary story with made-up characters enduring the peril. The movie was about the Midnight Society ''themselves,'' beginning with the death of the main character's grandfather, leading into the group having to gather pieces of a broken record to find clues as to the location of a mysterious "Silver Sight," which turns out to be [[spoiler:a silver marble that has to power to erase people from existence]], and adds a creepy old man and a CreepyChild who are both a little ''too'' interested in the situation. Ladies and gentlemen, ''Tale of the Silver Sight.''
118* ''Series/DrakeAndJosh Go Hollywood'': [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Exactly What you might expect happens]]. While in Hollywood, Drake and Josh get mixed up with a counterfeiter. Also, Josh wears an earring. And said criminals in this (TV) movie are some of the most wanted men in America; they even threaten at one point [[NeverSayDie to drown Drake and Josh]].
119* ''[[Series/TheSuiteLifeOfZackAndCody The Suite Life]] [[TheMovie Movie]]'' has Zack and Cody getting embroiled in an evil plot to create mind-controlled drones out of the fused bodies of twin siblings. The events of this movie, in which they develop a [[TwinTelepathy telepathic connection]] and are almost killed by heavy machinery, are never mentioned again.
120* ''Series/SaturdayNightLive'':
121** The various "Wayne's World" sketches were about a public access cable TV show put on by a couple of teenage boys. So, naturally, the ''Film/WaynesWorld'' movie is about underdogs overcoming [[CorruptCorporateExecutive corrupt network executives]] to break their show into the big time.
122** An example that is pretty big: ''Film/TheBluesBrothers'' originated on SNL as just some musical segments that had Dan Akyroyd and John Belushi as the singers of a fake band. The movie? The grand quest to stop the orphanage where the titular pair grew up from being closed by the government, so the best way to do it? By PuttingTheBandBackTogether and racing away from anything from Neo-Nazis to the biggest police manhunt in Illinois history.
123** While the [=MacGruber=] sketches usually had a lot of action (in the shape of frequent explosions), they had no continuity, with the title character dying several times in each episode, as well as sporting a new personality. The movie features a hijacked nuclear missile aimed at Washington D.C., which is standard action fare. What's really weird is the way the FlatCharacters from 30-second sketches are fleshed out.
124* ''Film/StrangeBrew'' which is the film starring [[Series/{{SCTV}} Bob and Doug McKenzie.]] It's basically [[JustForFun/RecycledInSpace Hamlet in a Canadian Brewery with Hosers.]]
125* One episode of ''Series/SoRandom'' makes fun of the concept by having the first sketch be a [[RealTrailerFakeMovie trailer to a fake movie]] about a WesternAnimation/StrawberryShortcake copycat saving her land from an alien invasion.
126-->Coming soon from We're Running Out of Toys to Turn into Action Movies!
127* The ''Series/LizzieMcGuire Movie'': Lizzie and her class ([[PutOnABus minus Miranda]]) goes to Rome, and Lizzie has to impersonate a missing famous Italian pop star who happens to look exactly like her.
128* Most of the Heisei ''Franchise/KamenRider'' films have been [=BDMs=], pitting the stakes to ''post-apocalyptic levels'' in some (namely ''[[Series/KamenRider555 555]]'' and ''[[Series/KamenRiderKabuto Kabuto]]'').
129* ''Franchise/StarTrek'', in all of its various TV incarnations, typically tells character-driven stories about politics and day-to-day exploration in space, typically ending with AnAesop about cultural understanding and the importance of avoiding violence. Even the relatively DarkerAndEdgier series in the franchise, which are more likely to involve proper "bad guys", never quite take it all the way to "action thriller [-IN SPACE!-]" The movies, on the other hand, invariably involve the ''Enterprise'' crew going on epic quests through space and time and facing off against unsavory characters in cool space battles with lots of StuffBlowingUp. It's worth noting that ''Star Trek'' episodes with a clear villain are fairly rare, but 11 of the 13 ''Franchise/StarTrek'' films are centered (more or less) around a BigBad,[[note]]''Film/StarTrekTheMotionPicture'' and ''Film/StarTrekIVTheVoyageHome'' being the two exceptions[[/note]] usually one with a personal vendetta against the captain.
130* ''Series/BigTimeRush''[='s=] Big Time Movie involves the band fighting off [=MI6=] to rescue a secret agent from a supervillain.
131* ''Film/AlanPartridgeAlphaPapa'': Radio Norwich is being held hostage by a disgruntled DJ and the hapless presenter becomes a siege negotiator.
132* ''Series/DaAliGShow'' is a {{Mockumentary}} series about the titular chav-talking wannabe rapper running his own talk show, and conducting unscripted interviews with people in amusing locations. Creator/SachaBaronCohen's first big-screen SpinOff, ''Film/AliGIndahouse'', was a fully scripted political satire about Ali running for Parliament and fending off a plot to depose the Prime Minister of Britain.
133* Baron's two other movie spinoffs, ''Film/{{Borat}}'' and ''Film/Bruno2009'', both avert this trope, as they're actually pretty close to the show in scope and style. Interestingly, they turned out to be ''much'' more critically and financially successful than ''Indahouse'' (particularly the runaway hit ''Borat''), demonstrating that this trope isn't always required for a successful adaptation.
134* ''Film/{{Bean}}'' has Series/MrBean travelling to America and saving his new friend's career... admittedly from Bean himself. Spoofed in the trailer for ''Film/MrBeansHoliday'' -- which, the deep-voiced narrator informs us, is about "one man's journey... [[MundaneMadeAwesome to the beach]]."
135* ''Series/SabrinaTheTeenageWitch'' had two {{Made For TV Movie}}s -- ''Film/SabrinaGoesToRome'' and ''Film/SabrinaDownUnder''. Both had a more dramatic and serious tone than the FantasticComedy they were based on. The former has Sabrina trying to uncover the mystery behind why one of her ancestors was trapped in a magical locket, while two mortals try to capture her using her powers on camera to sell a story. The latter features a GreenAesop about saving a mermaid colony in Australia.
136* ''Series/CasteloRaTimBum'' had a movie that set aside the series's EdutainmentShow qualities in favor of a somewhat [[DarkerAndEdgier darker]] plot.
137* ''Series/AreYouBeingServed'' is normally a WorkCom where the story rarely ever leaves the Grace Brothers Department Store and almost all the plots are about petty conflicts or accidental misunderstandings among the employees... so when they have [[Film/AreYouBeingServed a movie]], it's about the staff going to a Spanish hotel as it's attacked by a group of guerrillas trying to start a revolution.
138* Disney Channel has given several of their shows the Big Damn LicensedGame treatment over the years, usually on Nintendo DS. The two most well-known of these, ''Series/TheSuiteLifeOfZackAndCody'': Circle of Spies and ''Series/CoryInTheHouse'' involve spies attempting to sabotage the Tipton and a MadScientist out to brainwash the entire US, respectively.
139[[/folder]]
140
141[[folder:Music]]
142* ''Film/{{Help}}'': Granted, anything with the Beatles in at the peak of their power is fairly awesome anyway, but then you throw in the British Army's tanks surrounding the band playing near Stonehenge accompanied by StuffBlowingUp, the stadium of people singing 'Ode to Joy' to calm a tiger. That last one may just be a shot of StockFootage, but it's still epic.
143[[/folder]]
144
145[[folder:Puppet Shows]]
146* ''Franchise/TheMuppets'':
147** The [[Film/TheMuppets2011 2011 movie]] is about saving the studio from demolition by a greedy oil tycoon.
148** The follow-up to ''The Muppets'' was ''Film/MuppetsMostWanted'', about Kermit (while on a European tour with the rest of the Muppets) being temporarily replaced with an insane criminal who looks almost exactly like him (save for a shorter collar and a mole), and getting thrown in a gulag because of it.
149** Some of the earlier ones were this to an extent as well (even ignoring the [[UniversalAdaptorCast book adaptations]]). ''Film/TheMuppetMovie'': Save Kermit from Doc Hopper! ''Film/TheGreatMuppetCaper'': Save the Baseball Diamond from Nicky Holliday! ''Film/MuppetsFromSpace'': Save Gonzo from TheMenInBlack! ''Film/TheMuppetsTakeManhattan'' is the only one that's just about a bunch of frogs and pigs and bears and things putting on a show, and even it amps up the epicness a bit.
150* ''Series/SesameStreet''
151** ''[[Film/SesameStreetPresentsFollowThatBird Follow That Bird]]'' involves the other characters tracking down and rescuing Big Bird from some seedy amusement park operators. Note that this is a film for a PBS educational TV series aimed at toddlers--it does not make for sweet dreams among its target demographic.
152** There's also ''Film/TheAdventuresOfElmoInGrouchland'', where the title character goes down Oscar's trash can to retrieve his stolen blanket.
153** And ''Film/DontEatThePictures'' had them get locked in the Metropolitan Museum in New York, with the primary plot seeing Big Bird and Snuffy helping the spirit of an Ancient Egyptian prince escape a demon and pass into the afterlife.
154** In ''Big Bird in China'', Big Bird and Barkley [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin go to China]] [[VisualPun on a very slow boat]] -- and encounter two shape-shifting Chinese gods once they get there.
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156
157[[folder:Web Animation]]
158* ''WebAnimation/AlfredsPlayhouse'': In the original series, Alfred [[FreakOut Freaked Out]] for the duration until he encountered his Evil inner counterpart who taught him the true dark nature of his childish Playhouse. In the movie, we are promised to see his deranged exploits and continuous mental breakdown as he plugs himself into the internet in an attempt at world domination.
159* ''WebAnimation/{{Eddsworld}}'' got this treatment, with a [[MilestoneCelebration 10th anniversary film]] animated by Mark Lovallo (supersmash3ds).
160* ''WebAnimation/DickFigures'' ended up [[WebAnimation/DickFiguresTheMovie getting the treatment]].
161* ''[[WebAnimation/Supermarioglitchy4sSuperMario64Bloopers SMG4]]'' has the [[MilestoneCelebration 10 year anniversary film]], which at first has the characters (including [=SMG3=]) celebrating said anniversary, then the dead memes [=SMG3=] brought over from the Internet Graveyard start to become corrupted and wreak havoc, then [=SMG4=], [=SMG3=] and Mario get kidnapped and they meet [[BigBad SMG0]], who has kidnapped all the other Mario recolors and turned them into his own zombified lackeys, and it wants to destroy the [=SMG4=] universe by [[MindRape Mind Raping]] Mario, it's up to the Glitchy Gang and [[spoiler:[=SMG1=] and [=SMG2=]]] to stop him and save Mario and the universe.
162* The mexican ''Huevocartoon''
163[[/folder]]
164
165[[folder:Web Videos]]
166* ''Website/ChannelAwesome'' is a group of internet reviewers. The anniversary specials are evolving into this.
167** ''The WebVideo/TGWTGYearOneBrawl'': Essentially, gamers and critics get in a room together and fight, including the long-awaited rematch between the Nostalgia Critic and the WebVideo/AngryVideoGameNerd.
168** ''WebVideo/{{Kickassia}}'': The critics team up to invade a micronation.
169** ''WebVideo/SuburbanKnights'': They all go on a quest to retrieve a priceless treasure.
170** ''WebVideo/ToBoldlyFlee'': They convert The Nostalgia Critic's house into a spaceship, which they use to traverse the solar system (and save the universe).
171** Conversely, the ''WebVideo/AtopTheFourthWall'' movie (which used a plot element from ''To Boldly Flee'' as part of its premise) just felt like part of the show's plot without any of the reviewing but when you have a main character who went up against ''multiple'' elder gods who threatened ''all of reality'', it's not exactly easy to raise the stakes. It did have an decently large amount of guest stars contrast the series itself usually does, though.
172* ''The WebVideo/AngryVideoGameNerd: The Movie'': The Nerd sets out to make a video on the infamous New Mexico dumping site for the even more infamous ''VideoGame/ETTheExtraterrestrial'' video game. Then things start going horribly awry for the Nerd.
173* ''WebVideo/JonTron's [[Franchise/StarWars Starcade]]'' provides a rare example of a Big Damn Miniseries.
174* Parodied by ''WebVideo/ProZD'' in [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xEfFy-uZ8_g "anime timeskips and spinoffs"]]. ''Chairem Anime'' is (or at least, [[CerebusSyndrome starts out as]]) a lighthearted HaremGenre show about a woman named Tomoko interacting with sentient furniture. ''Chairem Anime: The Movie'', however, ends up being about Tomoko meeting a sword-wielding warrior and traveling to an ice kingdom to slay a dragon.
175* ''WebVideo/ScottTheWoz's'' 100th episode ''It's Awesome, Baby!'' is this. The plot revolves around Scott trying to restore his timeline from being ruled by a dictator obsessed with "Dick Vitale's 'Awesome Baby!' College Hoops". The video is in collaboration with a lot of popular [=YouTubers=] as well as some fan-submitted content.
176** ''The Dark Age of Nintendo'' trilogy may also count if you consider the CompilationRerelease combining all three episodes into an hour-and-45-minute-long saga. Said trilogy involves Scott going to therapy after playing what he considers to be [[VideoGame/AnimalCrossingAmiiboFestival three of]] [[VideoGame/MarioTennis the worst]] [[VideoGame/ChibiRobo Nintendo games]] ever made.
177** ''Borderline Forever'' is a full hour long movie, where Scott finally realizes that he's been haunted by the blue border that surrounds every single one of his videos, and he attempts to break free from it. Along the way, he and his friends ponder the tropes they have been acting out for years, attempt to raise awareness about the blue border, and then travel into space in a desperate bid to escape it.
178* WebVideo/SchaffrillasProductions' [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2q8GLJyUYN4 "Why Tamatoa Is My Favorite Character Ever"]] is Schaff's 1 million sub special and his answer to ''It's Awesome, Baby!'', featuring cameos from other [=YouTubers=] (many of which appear as part of a lengthy ChainOfDeals sequence) and fans, a plot to restore the 12 pieces of [[WesternAnimation/{{Moana}} the heart of Te Fiti]], a {{secret societ|ies}}y called the [[FunWithAcronyms Guardians Of The Heart Pieces And Top Tier YouTubers]], [[spoiler:[[WesternAnimation/SharkTale Oscar]] summoning a moon with Sykes' face to destroy all land creatures (shades of ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaMajorasMask''), and a parody of [[Music/BonnieTyler "Holding Out For a Hero"]] as it appears in ''WesternAnimation/Shrek2'']].
179* WebVideo/MichaelTrapson's ''Trapson EO'' is both this and AffectionateParody, being a TrapMusic send-up of both ''Film/CaptainEO'' and ''Film/TheLastDragon''.
180[[/folder]]
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