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What We Do in the Shadows Is the Gold Standard of a Movie Moving to TV

What We Do In The Shadows has thrived in a televised format and has made the leap from film so smooth that it has become the measuring stick. What We Do in the Shadows is considered the gold standard for adapting a movie to the medium of serialized storytelling, as it has been praised for its consistency and focus on keeping the heart and soul of the franchise the same. The show has been described as one of the funniest shows on TV and has built a strong audience and is predicted to continue for many years. The transition from film to TV has historically been difficult, with many attempting to replicate the film's formula without losing what made it great. However, the show has taken a unique approach to the material and paid off using a range of new vampires as the leads. The film, "We Do in The Shadows," was praised for being inventive, wacky, and genuinely hilarious. Despite this, the series has been adapted into a second spinoff series titled "Wellton Paranormal". There are plans to create a werewolf movie with plans to expand the universe beyond its runtime.

What We Do in the Shadows Is the Gold Standard of a Movie Moving to TV

发表 : 2年前 经过 George ChrysostomouEntertainment

What We Do in the Shadows is one of the best vampire films to watch this Halloween. But it's also a fantastic TV show that has gone from strength to strength and looks to be continuing for many years. It seems unlikely that both formats of this story have achieved and enjoyed such success. But in an industry that has forever struggled with adapting a movie to the medium of serialized storytelling, What We Do in the Shadows has proven to be the exception to the rule. A lot of care has gone into keeping the heart and soul of the franchise the same.

There are a few specific techniques that have been used to make this transition a smooth one. But what should be focused on is how What We Do in the Shadows has become the gold standard moving forward. Although there will still be debates as to which iteration is better, the series or the film, what is clear is that the quality is consistent. What was perhaps most risky was that the series didn't attempt to copy the movie and its characters but instead went on its own path. It's that penchant to think outside the box that has earned it so much praise separate from its original material.

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What We Do in the Shadows Still Holds Up

What We Do in the Shadows, the movie, wasn't revolutionary by any means. But it was inventive, wacky, and genuinely hilarious. With Taika Waititi and Jemaine Clement coming up with the wild concept, the film took a mockumentary approach and traced the lives of a group of vampires living in New Zealand. It was low-budget, full of black comedy and packed with plenty of gory moments. But it wasn't just designed to be a silly take on the horror genre. It also boasted a genuinely emotional arc about this group of vampires accepting someone new into their found family. While it's unclear how long the TV spinoff will run for, the film also crafted a world and lore that was rich enough to be expanded past its runtime.

Indeed, What We Do in the Shadows has been adapted into a second spinoff series titled Wellington Paranormal, which tracks the adventures of the Wellington Police paranormal investigations unit. The mockumentary series has added further mythological monsters and aliens to the shared universe, and with plans to create a werewolf movie as well, it's clear that there's so much more potential in this universe. Perhaps that's part of the reason the show has done so well because it had so many avenues to explore based on what What We Do in the Shadows created. But the heart and humor of the original film hold up so well that it would have been easy to make comparisons between the two projects. In fact, it would have been even easier to suggest the TV spinoff just didn't live up to the original.

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The Move From Film to TV Has Been Notoriously Difficult

Traditionally, making the jump from film to TV has been very difficult. There aren't many franchises that made the successful move, and it's still a well-documented struggle today. Looking at big franchises, the likes of Star Wars might have made the transition relatively easily, but the Marvel Cinematic Universe is still struggling to convey the same tone and inventiveness on the small screen. When looking at direct adaptations, many have been lost to the history books. From Ace Ventura: Pet Detective to Beetlejuice, Clueless, and Dirty Dancing, most audiences would have forgotten that many of these even existed.

What We Do in the Shadows has been heralded as one of the funniest shows on TV and has built a connection with its loyal audience. But many of these past outings tried too hard to be like the originals without bringing anything unique to the table and thus were unable to form that same connection. They were shells of what came before and weren't able to make the impact that the movies did. It's a challenge that the industry will continue facing in the coming years, as there's no clear strategy for taking a property directly from the big screen without losing what made it great, to begin with.

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What We Do in the Shadows Found the Right Balance to Thrive

What We Do in the Shadows has taken a genuinely unique approach to the material, and that's really paid off. It introduced a range of new vampires as the leads but did actually feature cameos from the characters in the original movie. Although it wasn't a direct adaptation and thus featured a different backdrop and supporting cast, it did very much take the same premise and narrative structure of a misfit group of blood-suckers coexisting together under one roof. In many ways, a parallel could be drawn to how the US Office took the format of the British iteration and crafted a new world that David Brent actually visited. By using this technique, fans of the film are content that the original hasn't essentially been replaced and is still being represented, but the story of What We Do In The Shadows is still consistent, thus allowing a new audience to experience it.

What We Do in the Shadows has completely surpassed its initial limits and become a franchise unto itself. That's really how it has set the bar for other adaptations. Because it has been unafraid to create its own lore and not simply live within the boundaries of the movie it's based on. The introduction of the Vampiric Council, new romance narratives, ongoing supporting characters who are not Vampires; the list goes on when it comes to narrative elements that have been added into the show that weren't present in the film. Ultimately, the DNA of the first What We Do in the Shadows is obvious, but the show has ironically found a way to live outside of the shadows of its starting point. Those adaptations that have failed over the years never quite got that part right. They always sought to live up to something as opposed to going in new creative directions.


话题: Movies

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