Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context Main / AdaptationInspiration

Go To

1A work may be an adaptation of previous media, but that does not mean it has the same tone or style. It will usually hit the same main plot points, but change dramatically the way the plot is presented, sometimes to the point of [[GenreShift changing the genre]] or changing position on a sliding scale such as the SlidingScaleOfIdealismVersusCynicism. This may be the result of the production team experimenting with a different approach, having one or more people part of it that bring a signature style to the adaptation, [[ValuesDissonance or modern issues and values causing a shift]].
2
3Adaptations of this type are Recognizable Adaptations on the SlidingScaleOfAdaptationModification by default: anything higher would require the adaptation to remain faithful to the tone of the source material, but [[InNameOnly anything lower]] disregards even basic similarities. These adaptations may stray away from or even [[SpiritualAntithesis outright subvert]] the intent of the original work, but typically keep the basic premise intact.
4
5SuperTrope to DarkerAndEdgier and LighterAndSofter. SisterTrope to ToneShift. Not to be confused with characters who are made more inspirational in a work’s adaption.
6
7----
8!!Examples:
9[[foldercontrol]]
10
11[[folder:Anime and Manga]]
12* ''Manga/SuicideClub'' is a manga adaptation of [[Film/SuicideClub the film by the same name]]. The film's creator encouraged the mangaka to come up with his own take on the story. As a result, while the central theme of supernaturally-influenced suicides remains, the actual stories are very different.
13* Aside from the original, the various ''Franchise/YuGiOh'' mangas are more or less independent of their respective [[AnimeFirst anime franchises]]. They do share character names and appearances, and often elements of the broad concept (''Manga/YuGiOhGX'' still takes place in Duel Academia and involves Winged Kuriboh, for instance), but the actual narrative, worldbuilding, character backgrounds, personalities, relationships, and even deck themes are frequently vastly different. Secondary characters in particular tend to have nothing in common with their original selves barring looks. It tends to feel like someone being told to write a story with nothing to go on but the character designs and premise.
14[[/folder]]
15
16%% [[folder:Comic Books]]
17%% * Happens a ton with Superheroes, especially Franchise/{{Batman}}. Thankfully, many superheroes have had many different positions on the SlidingScaleOfIdealismVersusCynicism even in their own medium, which makes these easier to swallow.
18%% [[/folder]]
19
20[[folder:Fan Works]]
21* ''Fanfic/CosmicWarriors'' is based on ''Franchise/SailorMoon'', but strips Usagi of her fuku, wands and tiaras, instead giving her a battle suit and a lance to take on her enemies with. The villains have also been changed to create a darker retelling.
22* ''Website/FamilyGuyFanon'' is based on, well ''WesternAnimation/FamilyGuy''. And while it does follow a ton of the same big points as the original (i.e.: characters who died in the original still die), it adds its own changes to make it stand out. Whether from giving certain characters a recurring limelight role who were just bit characters in the original (Change for a Buck and Randall Fargus are two examples), changing certain characters personalities (Peter's father Francis) or just expanding on something more that the original didn't explore as much (Peter's fisherman job has a lot more attention in here than the original)
23* ''Fanfic/ASecondChance'' uses the original premise from ''WesternAnimation/TheLoudHouse'' about a boy and his distinct sisters' lives but follows its own tone, aesthetic and ideas. Rather than being a lighthearted SliceOfLife comedy where Lincoln survives his family and deals with school, this fanfic has Lincoln and one of his sisters called Lynn, alongside a boy called [[OriginalCharacter Ryan]], needing to improve the family and make sure "[[NoodleIncident the incident]]" doesn't come to fruition, resulting in the parents divorcing and the family spliting apart. The tone is more dark and mature but far from humorless, making it more akin to a modern Creator/{{Disney|Channel}} cartoon.
24* While ''Fanfic/TokimekiPokeLiveAndTwinbee'' is darker like ''Anime/PokemonOrigins'' and ''WebAnimation/PokemonGenerations'', it is also like your typical moe Seinen/J-Idol anime alongside elements from ''Franchise/LoveLive'', ''VisualNovel/TokimekiMemorial'' and ''{{VideoGame/Twinbee}}''.
25[[/folder]]
26
27[[folder:Films -- Animation]]
28* It is well-known that Creator/HayaoMiyazaki does ''not'' do adaptations, he simply uses the source material as a convenient jumping off point to tell his own story.
29* Disney's ''WesternAnimation/BeautyAndTheBeast''. In [[Literature/BeautyAndTheBeast the original story]], the Beast did nothing to deserve his curse, and he is unfailingly polite and kind to Beauty. She isn't doing anything particularly impressive when she falls in love with him - on the contrary, it would be surprising if she didn't. In Disney's version, the Beast is cursed for good reason: he is a spoiled, selfish child, and he has to learn not only how to love, but how to be lovable. For her part, Belle starts out with a couple of very good reasons to hate and fear the Beast, and she has to overcome that initial impression in order to love him.
30[[/folder]]
31
32[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
33* All Creator/TimBurton films have a distinct style of [[PerkyGoth dark quirkiness]], making movies like ''Film/CharlieAndTheChocolateFactory'' or ''Film/AliceInWonderland2010'' far less colorful than other adaptations, while things like ''Film/{{Batman| 1989}}'' (''[[Film/BatmanReturns Returns]]''), ''Film/SleepyHollow1999'', and ''Film/PlanetOfTheApes2001'' become weirder.
34* The ''Film/HarryPotter'' movies had different inspirations in visual tone and what the directors emphasized. ''[[Film/HarryPotterAndTheGobletOfFire Goblet of Fire]]'' had several boarding school comedy pieces, some of which weren't in the book at all. Creator/AlfonsoCuaron gave a candy shop Day of the Dead touches and food, such as candy skulls. The first two movies (directed by Creator/ChrisColumbus) feel very much like Creator/StevenSpielberg films, while the third one (directed by Creator/AlfonsoCuaron) feels more like a Creator/TimBurton film.
35* ''Film/BladeRunner'' is based upon the Philip K. Dick novel ''Literature/DoAndroidsDreamOfElectricSheep'', but takes the exact opposite stance on its theme. Reportedly, the screenwriters had not read the original book.
36* ''Film/ChaosWalking2021'' is recognizably an adaptation of ''[[Literature/ChaosWalking The Knife of Never Letting Go]]''; it has an identical premise and the main cast are mostly the same (aside from some characters being DemotedToExtra or AdaptedOut), but the way the events play out and the story's ending differ greatly from the book, while also incorporating a few plot elements from the second and third books. It's been noted that the film's ending in particular would make it extremely difficult to adapt the other books [[spoiler:given it kills off the main villain and largely resolves most of the conflict]], whereas the book ends on [[spoiler:a huge {{cliffhanger}} and [[BolivianArmyEnding the protagonists in dire straits]]]], thus setting things up for the sequel.
37* ''Film/DesertHeat'' is loosely adapted from ''{{Film/Yojimbo}}'' and even gives it a cute ShoutOut near the end.
38* ''Franchise/{{Godzilla}}'':
39** ''Film/Godzilla1998'' was, in theory, an American version of the famous Japanese franchise, with a giant reptilian monster rampaging through a city, but the similarities end there. Where the Japanese Godzilla is an ancient, slow, NighInvulnerable behemoth that is angry at humanity for atomic testing ([[HeelFaceTurn at first]]), modelled on outdated reconstructions of tyrannosaurids, capable of releasing a deadly atomic beam from his mouth, and decidedly male, the American Godzilla is an iguana mutated into a FragileSpeedster modelled (vaguely) on modern knowledge of theropods that only comes ashore to lay eggs, hermaphroditic, and with a single scene making it appear to breathe fire. Additionally, the subtext of the original Godzilla was all about the devastation of the war and nuclear weapons in particular as he was specifically awoken by American nuclear testing, which is gone from the America version. The [[WesternAnimation/GodzillaTheSeries animated series]] which followed was ''much'' closer to the original Japanese monster.
40** ''Film/Godzilla2014'' tells a markedly different story; by having the titular beast be an ancient creature, older than the earliest dinosaurs, the theme shifts from a direct allegory of nuclear destruction to primal, unstoppable forces of nature keeping the world in check, with the MUTO being the threat to humanity and Godzilla himself the inevitable response. The bombing of Hiroshima is mentioned, and gives context to Dr. Serizawa's concern over a nuclear strike (his father was killed in the blast), but the continuous American atomic testing in the Pacific, then current in 1954, is also quantified in-story -- it was a cover for the Navy's repeated efforts to kill it. The plot and ending, in turn, reflect the later growth of Godzilla into a force for good; after defeating his ancient enemies, he walks triumphantly back into the ocean, with press outlets heralding him as the savior of the city.
41* ''Film/{{Clueless}}'' is a loose adaptation of ''Literature/{{Emma}},'' except that the novel is about class status in 19th century England while the film is about popularity at a Los Angeles high school.
42* Charles Edward Pogue's original script for ''Film/TheFly1986'' took the central premise of the [[Literature/TheFly short story]] and its rather faithful [[Film/TheFly1958 1958 film adaptation]] -- a scientist's TeleporterAccident renders him a mix of man and insect -- and added the twist that the transformation wasn't an instantaneous swapping of body parts leaving a man with a fly's head and vice-versa, but rather a SlowTransformation on a molecular-genetic level into one HalfHumanHybrid. Creator/DavidCronenberg's total revision of that script started by changing the protagonists from a long-married couple to a lonely recluse and the reporter who becomes his lover as she chronicles, and even inspires, the refinement of his invention. The pivotal accident is not merely a quirk of fate, but a TragicMistake resulting from his jealousy regarding her ex. The SlowTransformation becomes a metaphor for the inevitability of disease and death, and the toll they take on both the bodies and psyches of the afflicted and those who love them -- depicted via some of the grisliest BodyHorror ever put to film.
43* ''Film/TheNorthman'' is not a "straight" adaptation of the Amleth (better known as Theatre/{{Hamlet}}) legend and more like inspired by it, taking mainly the basic "EvilUncle, YouKilledMyFather" premise. As such, Amleth is depicted as much more of a [[BarbarianHero Barbarian]] ActionHero than the GuileHero he originally was (to the point that his name is theorized to mean something like "[[TheTrickster mad trickster]]").
44[[/folder]]
45
46[[folder:Literature]]
47* Most ''Franchise/TheWarOfTheWorlds'' adaptations have been updated to a later time period and location than the original. The only thing most have in common are alien invaders with tripods and their defeat by our microorganisms:
48** The [[Literature/TheWarOfTheWorlds1898 1898 original]] takes place in 1900s England at the height of its power.
49** The infamous [[Radio/TheWarOfTheWorlds1938 1938 radio broadcast]] is set in what was then ThePresentDay.
50** The [[Film/TheWarOfTheWorlds1953 1950s film]] focuses on scientists in UsefulNotes/LosAngeles.
51** The [[Film/WarOfTheWorlds2005 2005 film]] has an almost war documentary feel to it, focusing on an East Coast family trying to survive.
52* The ''Literature/LowlandsOfScotlandSeries'' is based on the [[Literature/TheBible biblical story]] of Jacob, but it is very much a modern novel series, with all the setting details and character development and intricacies of plot that that implies.
53* ''Literature/RedDwarf'''s tie-in novels started out as a downplayed example, hewing fairly close to the plot of the series but [[AdaptationExpansion going into much more detail about the setting]] and shifting the tone away from pure comedy: Lister's loneliness and SurvivorGuilt are made more explicit and Rimmer's utterly miserable childhood and adolesence aren't played for laughs anymore, for example. But after the second volume in the series they contained more completely original plotlines, most of them significantly more surreal than anything that happened in the show.
54[[/folder]]
55
56[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
57* ''Series/BattlestarGalactica2003'' is [[Series/BattlestarGalactica1978 the original series]] turned DarkerAndEdgier.
58* ''Series/Foundation2021'' mashes together the original four short stories, four novellas and three novels, reimagines everything, tosses in new elements like a clone family of emperors, then divides it back into two seasons (so far) of streaming television. The original stories would have made unwatchable video if filmed faithfully, so calling it InNameOnly wouldn't really be fair.
59* ''Series/{{Kings}}'' takes the Biblical story of David and puts it in a modern political drama.
60* ''Series/{{Sherlock}}'' is Literature/SherlockHolmes, in the present day, with elements of SpyFiction thrown in. The show follows some of the basic characters and plots but largely rewrites them into original stories.
61* ''Series/{{Elementary}}'', despite having [[DuelingShows a similar premise]], is Literature/SherlockHolmes in the present day as a {{Cyberpunk}} PoliceProcedural.
62* ''Series/The100'' TV series keeps the basic premise and a few of the characters from the book, but takes them in its own direction, focusing less on the ''Literature/LordOfTheFlies''-esque situation and more on conflict between different civilizations on the Ground.
63* ''Series/GetShorty'' is based on the [[Literature/GetShorty book of the same name]], but unlike the film adaptation, it takes only loose inspiration from the source material and tells an original story with entirely new characters.
64* ''Series/WonderWoman1975'' is far more faithful to the vision of Creator/WilliamMoultonMarston than ''Film/WonderWoman1974'' starring Creator/CathyLeeCrosby, but there are many differences from the original source material. The emphasis on bondage and submission is entirely absent, as would be expected from a prime-time network show. There's a considerable amount of girl power, most notably from Wonder Woman, Wonder Girl, and the amazons of Paradise Island, but the comics take it much farther. In the comics, Wonder Woman recruits Etta Candy and her college sorority, the Holliday Girls, for assistance, even serving as infantry troops to beat up squads of Nazis. In the comics, very special ladies are given the opportunity to travel to Paradise Island for training to unlock their super-strength and fighting abilities. Nothing like this ever happens or is even hinted as being possible in the show. Simply featuring a woman fighting, winning, and being far stronger and more capable than anyone else around her was more than enough in TheSeventies.
65[[/folder]]
66
67[[folder:Pinball]]
68* While most pinball games [[LicensedPinballTables based on existing works]] tend to be relatively loose adaptations (since the medium rarely allows for stories above {{Excuse Plot}}s), ''Pinball/CreatureFromTheBlackLagoon'' is particularly notable because the bulk of the game is themed around '50s [[DriveInTheater drive-in theaters]], with [[Film/CreatureFromTheBlackLagoon the original movie]] only getting "adapted" in its multiball mode.
69[[/folder]]
70
71[[folder:Theater]]
72* Creator/WilliamShakespeare is one of the most frequent targets of this.
73** Creator/AkiraKurosawa made ''Film/{{Ran}}'', a ''Theatre/KingLear'' (originally set in Britain) [[JustForFun/InSpace in Japan]].
74** Kurosawa also did ''Film/ThroneOfBlood'', which is ''Theatre/{{Macbeth}}'' (originally set in Scotland) [[JustForFun/InSpace in Japan]].
75** ''[[Theatre/TheLionKing1997 The Lion King]]'', like [[WesternAnimation/TheLionKing1994 its source material]], is a mashup of ''Theatre/{{Hamlet}}'', ''Theatre/{{Macbeth}}'', and a bit of ''Theatre/HenryIV'', but starring lions and other animals in an African savannah.
76** Film/WilliamShakespearesRomeoAndJuliet is ''Theatre/RomeoAndJuliet'' (originally set in Verona, Italy) [[JustForFun/InSpace in California]].
77** ''Film/ForbiddenPlanet'' is ''Theatre/TheTempest'' JustForFun/InSpace.
78[[/folder]]
79
80
81[[folder:Video Games]]
82* In ''VideoGame/TheFeebleFiles'', while the game is obviously, though loosely, based on Orwell's ''Literature/NineteenEightyFour'', ''Feeble Files'' does seem to divert from the anticommunist (albeit not antitotalitarian) message of the novel quite a bit. The Freedom Fighters address one another as "comrade", the EvilEmpire is referred to as "the Company" (the founding of which is elaborated on in a Bible-like book), the Metro Prime spaceport is a flashing center of commerce and paid entertainment, citizens are required to confess their crimes against the [=OmniBrain=] via confessional-like boxes, etc. One of the key differences between the novel and the game is that the Freedom Fighters' only problem with the [=OmniBrain=] is the political tyranny and brainwashing of citizens whereas no mention is ever made of any sort of poverty within society that actually does not seem to be the least bit prevalent anyway.
83[[/folder]]
84
85
86[[folder:Western Animation]]
87* ''WesternAnimation/{{Dinotrux}}'' takes the general idea of Dinosaurs and Construction Vehicles merged together from the Chris Gall book series, but goes in an entirely different direction with it, featuring more mechanical robotic character designs versus the organic ones seen in the illustrations of the books.
88[[/folder]]

Top