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Adaptation Amalgamation
aka: Adaptation Combination

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Sometimes there are not enough source material/original ideas for a complete work, like a book, or a movie. Other times there are multiple sources, each with their own merits. The result is this: a work adapted from more than one source material.

That method also sometimes used to cover the tracks in cases when plot was meant to be original but is too similar to plagiarism from some other work. The solution is to either purchase rights for something similar (yet not so expensive), or just add additional layers to the story from the other source which will confuse lawyers enough not to tell where it was plagiarized from.

A type of Crossover. Also see Crossover Alternate Universe, Composite Character, and Broad Strokes. Often crosses with Dolled-Up Installment, but not always. May be a rare example of Adaptation Distillation and Adaptation Expansion at the same time. May take place In Space.

Also compare Merging the Branches, where the later canon combines several previously mutually exclusive story branches, Patched Together from the Headlines for a story that combines unrelated Real Life happenings, and Patchwork Fic, where the amalgamation only occurs in the fanfiction. See also Frankenslation.


Examples:

    open/close all folders 

    Anime and Manga 

    Comic Books 

    Fan Works 

    Films — Animation 
  • In a case of What Could Have Been, Disney originally planned on making a film that combined the stories of Reynard the Fox and Chanticleer the Rooster, but it was rejected, so they instead made a Funny Animal version in the 1970's that eventually became Robin Hood. The final version of Robin Hood is technically a combination of the Robin Hood legends and the Reynard the Fox/Chanticleer movie Disney originally planned. Don Bluth later created Rock-A-Doodle in the 1990's.
  • Captain Underpants: The First Epic Movie combines elements from the first four books, including the Captain's origin from the first book, Professor Poopypants as a villain from the fourth, the Turbo Toilet 2000 and Invention Convention from the second, and zombie-fied children from the third book.
  • Disney's animated version of Alice in Wonderland closely follows the plot of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, but adds characters from Through the Looking Glass, specifically Tweedledum and Tweedledee, the Walrus and the Carpenter, the talking flowers, and the Tulgey Woods from "Jabberwocky".
  • The Black Cauldron combines aspects from the first two books in The Chronicles of Prydain. It follows the plot of the second book for the most part and uses its title, but uses the Horned King from the first book as the villain.
  • Disney's Hercules doesn't really feature a retelling of the legend of Herakles, instead mixing different characters and storylines from Classical Mythology to tell a new story in that setting.
  • The Mortal Kombat Legends series fuses elements of both the original eight games (such as the depiction of the Kamidogu) and the reboot trilogy (with many characters' designs being based on their designs from those games).
  • The Super Mario Bros. Movie:
    • The movie amalgamates the "Mario saves Princess Peach from Bowser" (albeit with Luigi captured instead of Peach) Excuse Plot from the first game with other games' plot points - Bowser wanting to marry Peach (Super Mario Odyssey), Mario fighting Donkey Kong (Donkey Kong), and him having worked for Foreman Spike (Wrecking Crew), among others.
    • All sorts of power-ups from the games, such as the Fire Flower, Tanooki Suit/Raccoon Suit, and Ice Flowers, among other things, are collected from the 30+ years of games that Mario has gotten.
    • The Super Star is stolen by Bowser similar to how it's a plot coupon in games like 64 and Galaxy, while it can also be used as an invincibility item like in the 2D games such as Super Mario Bros. and New Super Mario Bros.
    • Mario Kart is referenced, with the Kongs racing karts as part of their culture.

    Films — Live-Action 
  • Often found when you have an action or horror movie from Bollywood: they have a shortage of ideas in this area so they produce tons of unofficial remakes (and they've started to have a shortage there, as well: The Godfather was remade at least 7 times, for example). A particular example is a movie named Commando (no, not that one) by Bubbar Subhash starring Mithun Chakraborti, which combines Romancing the Stone with American Ninja.
  • A lot of movies are adapted (most of them uncredited and unofficially) from two novels by Dashiell Hammett, Red Harvest and The Glass Key, which are actually completely unrelated save for the same genre and writer.
    • Yojimbo by Akira Kurosawa was this to a lesser extent but spawned a LOT of unofficial adaptations on its own, most of which contain at least one significant moment from The Glass Key and the main plot patterns of Red Harvest. The primary example is A Fistful of Dollars, which was considered a plagiarism of Yojimbo in court. Ironically enough, the official remake of Yojimbo, Last Man Standing, heavily borrows elements from both Red Harvest and A Fistful of Dollars.
    • The Coen Brothers film Miller's Crossing also combines these novels by Hammett, but borrows elements from both nearly 50% to 50%.
  • Film versions of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland tend to combine the first book with its sequel, "Through the Looking-Glass and What Alice Found There."
    • The 1933 and 1985 films both devote their first halves to Wonderland and their second halves to Looking-Glass, but make them both part of the same dream. The 1999 TV version takes just three episodes from Looking-Glass (the White Knight, the Garden of Live Flowers, and Tweedledum and Tweedledee/The Walrus and the Carpenter) and puts them all together in between the Mock Turtle and Trial scenes from Wonderland. The 1972 British film is mostly jut Wonderland, but it does include Tweedledum and Tweedledee too.
    • The 2010 Alice in Wonderland (2010) film is based on a combination of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and Alice Through The Looking-Glass. The sequel is, despite debate, in face only based on ATTLG, as this story included Lewis Carroll's poem "The Jabberwocky" (on which the film is also partly based) as some of its prose. Of course, this is only very loosely based on Carroll's work, as pretty much the only things in common are a couple of character names and the premise of a world Down the Rabbit Hole.
  • Arsène Lupin (2004) takes its plot from several of the original stories, focusing largely on Lupin's history and the crucifix plot with Josephine.
  • Soviet 1987 surreal cult film Assa was adapted from an unpublished short story and song Hello, Bananan Boy but has excerpts from historical novel The Edge of the Centuries by Nathan Eidelman, which one of the characters reads, adapted as well.
  • Blade Runner itself qualifies. The film was based on Philip K. Dick's novel Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?, but the title and term "blade runner" were taken from the totally unrelated Alan E. Nourse novel The Bladerunner and screenplay adapted from it by William S. Burroughs, Blade Runner: The Movie. Ridley Scott specifically purchased the rights to the title, and both Nourse and Burroughs were credited in the end credits.
    • Burroughs' screenplay, in turn, was adapted to an already filmed, unfinished film starring Bill Paxton. The resulting movie released as Taking Tiger Mountain.
  • The third Diary of a Wimpy Kid movie is named after the fourth book, Dog Days, but is equally an adaptation of that book and the actual third book, The Last Straw.
  • All the Die Hard sequels are based, mostly, on unrelated source material, but maintain John McClane as the protagonist.
  • Russian 1995 Movie The Eggs of Doom (Rokovye yaytsa) was adapted from the short novel by famous writer Mikhail Bulgakov, but had many scenes, characters and themes actually borrowed from his most known work, The Master and Margarita.
  • Everest (2015) was based on the memoirs of several of the climbers rather than being a straight adaptation of just one, as the previous TV movie about the disaster had been.
  • Five Nights at Freddy's (2023) is based primarily on Five Nights at Freddy's, with Mike Schmidt being the protagonist and the animatronics using that game's designs, but the restaurant is named Freddy Fazbear's Pizza Place, as in Freddy Fazbear's Pizzeria Simulator, the murderer (who is only mentioned in passing in the first game's hidden newspaper stories) appears as drawn from subsequent entries (he first appears in Five Nights at Freddy's 2, wears the Spring Bonnie suit as in Five Nights at Freddy's 3, and is named William Afton, as in Five Nights at Freddy's: Sister Location), and Vanessa from Five Nights at Freddy's: Security Breach also appears in the film.
  • Full Metal Jacket is based on the semi-autobiographical novel The Short-Timers published in 1979 by former Marine Gustav Hasford. However, the script was co-written by Micheal Herr, who incorporated a large amount of his Gonzo Journalism book Dispatches from the Vietnam War. The result is an odd fusion; the plot is drawn from The Short-Timers, with the first half an extremely faithful adaptation and the second half an amalgamation of events from the second and third stories, while almost all the film's iconic dialog and surreal moments are taken word-for-word from Dispatches. This led to some friction over who would be given full credits. In the end, it was given to both authors.
  • Anime example: The live-action film Ghost in the Shell (2017) uses elements of the 1995 animated film as well as the second season of Stand Alone Complex.
  • Godzilla: King of the Monsters (2019) primarily adapts the story of Toho's Ghidorah, the Three-Headed Monster (Ghidorah debuts as a nigh-unstoppable world-ending threat, and he, Rodan, Godzilla and Mothra all fight with the latter two functioning as humanity's allies by default against the far worse threat). However, the concept of antagonists played by people using sound to try and control the monsters, including Ghidorah, which is what sets up and furthers the plot of the film initially; originates in Invasion of Astro-Monster, which was Ghidorah's second ever movie appearance. Godzilla, Mothra, Ghidorah and Rodan also all combine various characteristics and events from various earlier portrayals of their characters for this movie, such as Ghidorah being an attempted murderer of children who's found buried in millennia-old ice, or Godzilla getting hit with the Oxygen Destroyer underwater and needing a nuclear strike from a submarine to rejuvenate him before he battles King Ghidorah, to name a few examples.
  • Godzilla vs. Kong is a mish-mash of the plots of Toho's King Kong vs. Godzilla (exactly what the title suggests), and Godzilla vs. Mechagodzilla (Godzilla is framed for attacking humanity, the true source of the conflict is a Humongous Mecha made in Godzilla's image as part of a plot to overthrow him).
  • Almost happened, but averted, with the Harry Potter adaptations. The original plan was to take the beginning of Sorcerer's Stone and then re-jig scenes and plot points from the second and third novels to create Harry Potter: The Movie. But then, a smarter but unprecedented idea came up: "What if our audience could grow up along with the characters?" What might have been an easy cash-in became a straight adaptation of the first book....and then the following six.
  • Hiruko the Goblin adapts two stories from the Yokai Hunter manga; "The Black Investigator" (Hiruko and his habit of stealing heads) and "Red Lips" (pretty, popular girl gets possessed by Ancient Evil).
  • Peter Jackson's The Hobbit film trilogy incorporates a number of scenes and elements from The Lord of the Rings that weren't used in Jackson's earlier LOTR films. These include the appearance of the Maiar Radagast the Brown and Saruman deriding him as a weirdo, both of which were related after the fact by Gandalf in The Fellowship of the Ring. It also borrows plot elements from the appendices of The Lord of the Rings and some of Tolkien's writings that were published after his death. Since the studio didn't own the film rights to the latter, they had to do some Writing Around Trademarks. Still, big chunks of the movies (Azog's vendetta, Kili and Tauriel's romance, Laketown's politics) are original material that Peter Jackson's team came up with.
  • After the James Bond movies started running out of novels to adapt, there were a few which combined elements from various short stories and scenes from the novels that were not used in their respective films (usually with a bunch of extra stuff added even so).
    • Dr. No follows the novel pretty closely, though it also takes scenes from Casino Royale (Bond using a strand of hair to see if someone's been in his room and his first meeting with Felix Leiter) and The Spy Who Loved Me (Bond fooling an assassin with the three-pillow trick).
    • For Your Eyes Only combines the plots of "For Your Eyes Only" and "Risico". From the former, it draws the Havelocks, Gonzales, and Melina's revenge quest, while it lifts Kristatos, Colombo, and their rivalry from the latter. The scene in which Bond and Melina are keelhauled was adapted from the climax of Live and Let Die, and the Identigraph concept is from Goldfinger.
    • Octopussy combines plot elements from "Octopussy" and "The Property of a Lady". "Octopussy" forms the backstory for the film's female lead, while the auction scene was adapted from "Property of a Lady".
    • Licence to Kill draws Felix Leiter's shark attacknote  from Live and Let Die and the character of Milton Krest from the short story "The Hildebrand Rarity". Sanchez, meanwhile, borrows heavily from the novel version of Francisco Scaramanga; Bond's plan to go undercover within Sanchez's operation and bring it down from the inside also parallels how Bond dealt with Scaramanga in the books.
    • In addition to updating the original novel to a contemporary setting, Casino Royale takes Bond winning a car in a card game from Goldfinger, the plot of Bond coming between an unhapilly married couple from the short story "The Hildebrand Rarity" and the name Solange from the short story "007 in New York".
    • Die Another Day contains elements of Moonraker. As confirmed by Rosamund Pike, Miranda Frost was originally named Gala Brand, which was the name of the Bond girl in the original book. Gustav Graves, meanwhile, is based upon the original novel's version of Sir Hugo Drax. Also, Bond talking to M while separated by glass is a nod to the opening chapter of The Man with the Golden Gun where a brainwashed Bond attempts to assassinate M, only to be foiled by a plate of glass. Colonel Moon was a nod to Colonel Sun. In fact, he was supposed to the same character, but legal reasons prevented this. Lastly, both Die Another Day and Icebreaker feature an Ice Palace.
    • Skyfall's plot of Bond being presumed dead and M writing his obituary is taken from You Only Live Twice, while the shooting contest is taken from The Man with the Golden Gun.
    • No Time to Die incorporates elements of the book and film versions of On Her Majesty's Secret Service, and the You Only Live Twice novel (Safin's "poison garden" mirrors that of Blofeld in the novel), while featuring a high-stakes plot reminiscent of classic films like The Spy Who Loved Me and Moonraker.
  • The Lawnmower Man is a rather weird example, which was "adapted" from a short story by Stephen King using it as an In Name Only stunt for an original screenplay. King sued filmmakers to remove his name from the credits, and, especially, the film's marketing. It is weird because a) King actually liked the film and it has a lot of his common themes in it; b) the film actually featured a scene adapted straight from a short story and a dialogue between two policemen taken line-to-line from it.
  • Little Shop of Horrors is mostly based on the 1982 musical of the same name but Bill Murray's Arthur Denton character is based on one from the original 1960 movie who wasn't in the play.
  • The screenplay for Naked Lunch is based not only on William Burroughs' novel, but also on other fiction by him (in particular, first half of the movie is mostly based on The Exterminator), and autobiographical accounts of his life.
  • Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides is a combination of On Stranger Tides (although it's essentially an In Name Only adaptation) and characters and plotlines from the previous Pirates of the Caribbean movies.
  • Akira Kurosawa's Rashomon combines elements from two different Ryuonosuke Akutagawa stories. Most of the plot came from "In a Grove", while the framing device (of travelers trapped in a gate because of a rainstorm) and title came from "Rashomon".
  • The film Return to Oz takes elements from two of the Oz books by L Frank Baum: The Marvelous Land of Oz (which does not feature Dorothy as a character) and Ozma of Oz (which does), as well as the 1973 non-fiction book Wisconsin Death Trip as a historical source.
  • RoboCop: Screenwriter Edward Neumeier had written a screenplay about a robot that becomes a cop. When he met fellow writer Michael Miner it turned out that Miner was working on a screenplay about a human cop becoming a robot. They decided to combine the ideas and RoboCop was the result.
  • Scary Movie was an amalgam of two separate screenplays.
  • Sonic the Hedgehog 2 (unlike the first movie which is an embellished adaptation of the first game) combines the basic plots of Sonic the Hedgehog 2 where Sonic meets Tails for the first time and Sonic 3 & Knuckles where the duo face off against Dr. Eggman and Knuckles in pursuit of the Master Emerald.
  • After seeing The Terminator, Harlan Ellison thought that it was this for his two teleplays for The Outer Limits (1963): "Soldier" and "Demon With a Glass Hand". If so, it was very minimal, but Ellison sued the filmmakers, succeeded, and had his name added to the end credits. Which makes one wonder why he didn't sue the creators of Soldier, which was basically his short story/teleplay "Soldier" recycled in the universe of Blade Runner (which also makes it an example of the trope).
  • The Towering Inferno: In 1974, a pair of movie studios, 20th Century Fox and Warner Bros., had the rights to different books about a skyscraper on fire: "The Tower" and "The Glass Inferno". Rather than try to compete with each other the studios decided to team up, combining both books into a single movie.
  • A Trip to the Moon is based loosely on two popular novels of the time: From the Earth to the Moon by Jules Verne and The First Men in the Moon by H. G. Wells, though some sources claim otherwise on the latter. Another major source of inspiration was an 1875 operetta of the same name.
  • A Series of Unfortunate Events is based on the first three entries in the novel series, re-working the story a bit and postponing the climax of the first book until after the events of the third, so that the film forms a single self-contained narrative.

    Literature 
  • The Kalevala is an Adaptation Distillation of lots of otherwise unrelated tales and myths from Finnish Oral Tradition.
  • Discworld:
  • Go to Sleep (A Jeff the Killer Rewrite): Two characters from other creepypastas appear here, with elements of their own stories worked into this one. Ben from Ben Drowned is Jeff's friend who died from drowning. There is also Jane Arkensaw, from a Jeff spin-off known as Jane the Killer, who appears as a minor character, being Jeff's neighbor who sees him run from his house and calls the police the night he murders his family.
  • In-universe in Grand Central Arena, there's a significant recurring plot point involving a work that's a mash-up of E. E. "Doc" Smith's Lensman and Skylark Series.
  • The Bible and its books are actually an amalgamation of multiple texts. However, there are many debates as to what originated from one text, what originated from multiple texts, how many texts they originated from and so on. For instance, The Pentateuch or The Torah is believed by many scholars to be an amalgamation of four different documents titled as J, E, P, and D by scholars.
  • Judge Dee: The recurring characters come from the author's translation of the first part of Dee Goong An, which was intriguing because of the way it fit Western standards of detective stories better than traditional Chinese ones (the murderer is not known to the audience, the mystery isn't solved by direct supernatural intervention, etc.). The plots of each story were taken from various Chinese criminology texts, with the sources explained in each book's afterword.
  • Geary Gravel's Batman: The Animated Series tie-in novels, with the exception of the one adapting The Movie, combined multiple plots from the series, since half-hour episodes meant even a two-parter would be slim pickings on its own. Shadows of the Past combines several episodes revolving around the origins of Batman and his assistants, Dual to the Death combines two Two-Face two-parters, and The Dragon and the Bat brings together all the episodes featuring the ninja Kyodai Ken.
  • The Troy Saga is a re-imagining of the entire The Trojan Cycle along with other sources it pulls from and so is a mish-mash of elements from The Iliad, The Odyssey, The Aeneid, and The Book Of Exodus

    Live-Action TV 

    Music 

    Mythology and Religion 
  • While technically any Arthurian story which involves both the Grail Quest and Lancelot is this by very definition, special note should go to The Once and Future King, as it was T. H. White's attempt at creating an Arthurian super-myth, which incorporated as many of the myriad Arthurian myths and legends into one cohesive story as possible. Although how well this succeeded is debatable (there are a number of myths missing, but the overall quality is unquestionably excellent nonetheless), it is still the most "complete" of all Arthur myths, and borrows from at least a dozen stories.

    Tabletop Games 

    Theater 

    Toys 
  • When Hasbro imported Takara's toy lines Diaclone and Microchange, they were combined in a new franchise with an invented plot: Transformers.

    Video Games 
  • Several Chinese bootleg video games use some old games and just stash new sprites into them to release them as 8-bit cash-ins on recent movies. As a result you'll have Harry Potter and SpongeBob SquarePants games made of engine from one game combined with sprites from another and bizarre translation to fix at least some of the holes.
  • Somari, also a Chinese Famicom bootleg, puts Mario, using his Super Mario Bros. 3 character design, in the game world of Sonic the Hedgehog.
  • The video game of Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End actually combines the stories of Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest and At World's End into one game. This is actually quite odd, given that Dead Man's Chest is the film before At World's End, and so the game would have been more expected to be named after the earlier film (since that obviously comes earlier in the game, too) — or even for that film to have had its own game adaptation previously that excluded it from being part of the later one (it had but on different consoles). The title signifies how the plot of the third film overtook the second. The Dead Man's Chest story features quite a few game-exclusive scenes as well, some of which show Tia Dalma and even Captain Teague calling for the Pirate Brethren to assemble with every plot point leading At World's End.
  • The plot of Call of Cthulhu: Dark Corners of the Earth is mostly a loose adaptation of The Shadow Over Innsmouth, but it also includes elements from another (unrelated) H. P. Lovecraft novella, The Shadow out of Time, especially in the prologue and the ending.
  • Batman: Arkham Series: While the games have an original plotline, they incorporate elements of several story arcs and characterizations from the original comics, the Burton-Schumacher and Nolan films, and the DC Animated Universe.
  • The video game adaptation of Quantum of Solace actually consists of that movie as well as the events of Casino Royale (2006). The levels based on the latter occur in the game as flashbacks.
  • Electronic Arts' Licensed Game of Peter Jackson's The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers is an amalgam of said film and The Fellowship of the Ring. Vivendi Universal's stand-alone The Fellowship of the Ring game, by contrast, is directly based on the original novel, since they held the rights to video game adaptations of Tolkien's literary works, while EA held the rights to adaptations of the films.
  • In the Alternate Continuity mobile game Harry Potter: Hogwarts Mystery, the canonical characters look like they do in movies but their personalities are more in line with the books.
  • The PlayStation version of Doom combines the campaigns of The Ultimate Doom and Doom II, along with adding a few exclusive levels, although it lacks a couple enemies from the PC version such as the Arch-Viles and Icon of Sin. On higher difficulties, Doom II enemies will show up in The Ultimate Doom's levels.
  • The "Mac Family" ports (SNES, Macintosh, Jaguar, 3DO) of Wolfenstein 3-D incorporate three bosses from the PC Mission Pack Prequel, Spear of Destiny.
  • In Sega's 1985 arcade adaptation of Pitfall II: The Lost Caverns, Stages 1 and 2 are based on the first and second Atari 2600 games, respectively, while Stages 3 and 4 take place in new environments inspired by Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom.
  • Friday the 13th: The Game incorporates any version of Jason you please (except Jason X, for legal reasons), the creepy mother's-head-in-a-shack from the second film and it even offers the same way to kill Jason, Tommy Jarvis as he appears in the sixth film, and characters based on archetypes from all over the series.
  • The PS2/Wii version of the Coraline video game takes various elements from both the novel and the film and puts them together into its own game story. More notably, the tennis court that's in the book but not in the film. Coraline herself in particular is a Composite Character of both her book and movie versions.
  • In Japan, Yo-kai Watch 3 was a case of One Game for the Price of Three, but the English version merged all of the content into a single version of the game.
  • A fan hack of Mega Man Star Force (here) merges all of the content from Leo, Pegasus, and Dragon into one version, while also adding quality of life features from the two sequels.
  • The first Discworld game has the basic plot of Guards! Guards!, and the second is more loosely based on Reaper Man. Both of them star Rincewind, who was in neither book, and borrow heavily from other novels in the series, especially Moving Pictures.
  • Wild ARMs: Million Memories tries to amalgamate plots from no less than six games. The widest plot is taken loosely from 1 with elements from 3, 5 and XF woven in. However, Chapters 21 to 30 bring in more elements from 2 and 4, to the point where the stuff from 1 almost vanishes until Chapter 31 and onward.
  • Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Smash Up takes inspiration from various aspects of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles franchise without leaning into any one interpretation. Most of the cast use their designs from the 2007 movie but have their voice actors from the 4Kids cartoon, the arcade mode cutscenes are done in the Mirage comics artstyle, and Karai is a villain who wants to overthrow Shredder instead of an ally to the turtles.
  • Due to hardware limitations, the Game Boy Advance version of Contra III: The Alien Wars swaps the Mode-7 Top-Down sections with levels from Contra: Hard Corps.
  • The plot of the Moomin game Snufkin: Melody of Moominvalley is mostly based on Moominsummer Madness (Snufkin destroying signs in the parks, Moomintroll in prison, Moominpappa putting on a play), but a few elements, like Teety-Woo and certain sidequests, are taken from Tales from Moominvalley.

    Web Animation 

    Western Animation 
  • Episodes of Thomas & Friends not only take cues from The Railway Series books, but multiple promotional medias such as its annuals and magazines. Multiple writers of all these forms have even had direct involvement in the show.
  • The Christmas Special Sonic Christmas Blast is mainly based on Adventures of Sonic the Hedgehog, but also includes elements from Sonic the Hedgehog (SatAM) such as the Robotropolis setting, SWAT-Bots, and Princess Sally.
  • The Batman: The Animated Series episode "The Laughing Fish" is mostly adapted from the comics storyline "The Laughing Fish"/"Sign of the Joker!" (Detective Comics #475-476), however, the final act is largely drawn from the unrelated comic story "The Joker's Five-Way Revenge" (Batman #251). This was mainly due to the fact that the ending of the original was devoted to tying up plot threads that were never introduced in TAS or were introduced in a manner that decoupled them from the storyline as presented in the episode as aired. note 
  • Some episodes of Moominvalley combine elements from different The Moomins stories:
    • "The Golden Tale" is based on the Moomins comic strip story of the same name, but is set around the Moomins putting on a play at Emma's theatre, a part of the novel Moominsummer Madness that was cut from the episode of that title. And the play is based on Moominpappa's memoirs, resulting in a few set-pieces from The Exploits of Moominpappa.
    • "The Secret of the Hattifatteners" starts off with the short story of that title, and then moves on to the Hattifattener sequence in Finn Family Moomintroll.
  • Masters of the Universe: Revelation was marketed as a sequel to the 1983 He-Man and the Masters of the Universe but had some elements of the 2002 reboot such as Prince Adam looking different from He-Man to help keep his secret identity and Robot being built by Man-At-Arms rather than coming from space.
  • The first half of the second season of The Avengers: Earth's Mightiest Heroes is pretty closely based on Secret Invasion (2008), but the specific plot point of a Skrull taking the appearance of Captain America because everyone listens to Captain America, only for the real Cap to force him to revert to Skrull form in the middle of a press conference, seems to be inspired by the Sensational Hydra's plan in Mark Waid's Captain America.
  • Young Justice, a show heavy on comic book elements, reinterprets different comic storylines to fit its overarching plot.
    • Season 2: Invasion combines the titular storyline of Invasion! (DC Comics) (an alien race targets Earth and identifies the metagene) with the 2000s run of Blue Beetle (said alien race are the Reach who seek to control Blue Beetle's scarab as part of their invasion).
    • Season 3: Outsiders acquires various plotlines derived from Batman and the Outsiders (Batman forms his own team when he deems the Justice League unable to stop the current threat and includes Katana and Metamorpho, but the other founding members, being Black Lightning, Geo-Force, and Halo, are part of a team based on Nightwing's later iteration), with the actual name of the Outsiders being taken by a team inspired by the Teen Titans, complete with The Judas Contract (Terra infiltrates the teenage heroes under Deathstroke's orders). A seasonal plotline involving the Anti-Life Equation is taken from Final Crisis, but like the original Young Justice, a hero who is used to channel the equation is involved (with Halo replacing Empress).
    • Season 4: Phantoms combines a few Superman-centric plotlines for its base plot, such as Superman: The Movie and Superman II (General Zod, complete with his signature trope, leads an army of Kryptonians to conquer Earth after being banished to the Phantom Zone, with Canon Immigrants Ursa and Non among his forces), and a hint of Infinite Crisis and Final Crisis (Lor-Zod loosely fills Superboy-Prime's role of attempting to kill Conner Kent in the former, while the Legion of Super-Heroes trying to prevent his death mirrors how they resurrected him in the latter), though the results of the Legion's efforts parallels The Death of Superman (a Kryptonian hero is presumed dead, how his death affects other characters is explored, but he later returns alive).
  • The Harriet the Spy cartoon on Apple+ mostly adapts from the original book, but takes elements from the 1996 live-action movie, such as Janie being African American.
  • Captain Laserhawk: A Blood Dragon Remix: While the main inspiration is clearly Far Cry 3: Blood Dragon, the series pulls in elements from a wide range of Ubisoft titles including Watch_Dogs, Assassin's Creed, Beyond Good & Evil, and even Rayman.

Alternative Title(s): Adaptation Combination

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