Based on a True Story: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Content added Content deleted
No edit summary
(replaced the request for examples with a request that examples be added to the subpages instead of to this page)
Line 19: Line 19:
* [[Literary Agent Hypothesis]]: When fans theorise that a work is based on actual events, which are published as fiction.
* [[Literary Agent Hypothesis]]: When fans theorise that a work is based on actual events, which are published as fiction.


{{noexamples|please add examples to the subtropes instead.}}
{{examples}}
{{Trope Needs Examples}}


{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}

Revision as of 19:38, 24 April 2023

And it's all true.
—Theatrical release posters for Dog Day Afternoon.

A Stock Phrase in fictional works of all kinds. Popular, partly because you can get away with more outrageous elements if you say "The Tasteless But True Story", and partly because some works happen to be based on true stories.

Strength of Basis

As an illustrative example, we will use the story of Donald Sheer finding an original copy of the Declaration of Independence behind a painting bought at a flea market and auctioning it for US$2.42 million.

Related Tropes

No examples, please; please add examples to the subtropes instead.