POV Sequel: Difference between revisions

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The '''POV Sequel''' is a sequel which, instead of putting your characters in new situation, simply retells an old one with a new protagonist. Done well, it can help you flesh out your side characters and make your [[Card-Carrying Villain]] into a [[Well-Intentioned Extremist|sympathetic guy]]. Done badly, and it reeks of laziness.
 
Compare the [[Perspective Flip]], the non-canon equivalent; [[A Day in the Limelight]], where the POV changes but tells an original story; [[Changing of the Guard]], where the main character shifts to tell an original story; [[The Gump]], when the sequel protagonist does something that retroactively affects the original's plotline; and [[The Rashomon]], where the character's opinions can colour what the audience sees. [[Another Side, Another Story]] is a video game specific subtrope where the '''POV Sequel''' is another game mode unlocked after you complete it the first time.
{{examples}}
 
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* There have been several tie-in Disney storybooks which had the movie told from another character's perspective (besides the ''Lion King'' example mentioned above), such as [[The Little Mermaid|Sebastian the crab]], [[Beauty and the Beast|Mrs. Potts]], [[Aladdin (Disney film)|the Genie]], [[Pocahontas|Meeko the raccoon]], and [[Mulan|Mushu the dragon.]] Also, there have been two tie-in storybooks based on ''[[Atlantis: The Lost Empire|Atlantis the Lost Empire]]'' which had the movie's plot told from [[Everything's Better with Princesses|____'s]] point of view. And then there's the "My Side of the Story" series books, which had the film's plots told from ''the villain's'' point of view.
* The second book of the [[Green-Sky Trilogy]] is mostly about the events of the first book from Teera's point of view, but after the second act, it takes a new direction and sets up ''Until The Celebration.''
* ''Golden Afternoon'' by Andrzej Sapkowski is a retelling of ''[[Alice in Wonderland]]'' from the point of view of the Cheshire Cat.
 
 
== Live-Action TV ==
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* The ''[[Half-Life (video game)|Half-Life 1]]'' expansion packs ''Blue Shift'' and ''Opposing Force'', which show the Black Mesa Incident from the POV of the security guards and the Marines respectively.
* ''[[Shining Force]] III Part Two'' tells some of the story of Part One, but from the Empire's point of view instead of the Republic's.
* ''[[Resident Evil 3: Nemesis]]'' is set at roughly around the same time period as ''[[Resident Evil 2]]''. The starting portion of the game is actually set a day before ''RE2'' begins and at one point, Jill falls unconscious for two days and awakens after the events of ''RE2'' have already transpired.
** The two ''[[Resident Evil Outbreak]]'' games feature numerous scenarios set during the fall of Raccoon City depicted in ''RE2'' and ''RE3''.
** The spin-off games for the Wii, ''Umbrella Chronicles'' and ''Darkside Chronicles'', featured numerous scenarios set during the events of the first few ''Resident Evil'' games (including ''[[Resident Evil Code: Veronica]]'').
** The PS2 and Wii versions of ''[[Resident Evil 4]]'' featured an extra scenario called "Separate Ways" which depicted the events of the main game from Ada's perspective and explained why certain items were located in the places they were.
* ''Heart of the Alien'', the Sega CD sequel to ''[[Another World (video game)|Another World]]'', was originally intended to be set during the events of the first game, but played through the perspective of Buddy (Lester's alien friend, although technically Lester is the alien). Interplay vetoed this idea, but still included an extensive flashback which shows everything Buddy did during the first game.
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* ''[[Crysis (series)|Crysis]]'' has a POV expansion pack that shows what Psycho was off doing while Nomad was busy swimming around inside the alien mothership.
* ''[[Rolling Thunder]] 3'' for the [[Sega Genesis]] was set during the events of ''Rolling Thunder 2'' and focused on a third WCPO agent named Jay. While Albatross and Leila were occupied with chasing [[Big Bad|Gimdo]] during the second game, Jay was assigned to track down Gimdo's [[The Dragon|second-in-command]] Dread.
* ''[[Grand Theft Auto IV]]'s'' 2 DLC, ''[[Grand Theft Auto IV: theThe Lost Andand Damned|The Lost and Damned]]'' and ''[[Grand Theft Auto: The Ballad of Gay Tony|The Ballard of Gay Tony]]'', do this well. The main game and both DLC all have a different protagonist and interconnecting storylines, telling you more about the events you already saw, and fleshing out some rarely seen characters.
* [[F.E.A.R.]] expansion Persius Mandate shows the events of the original game and its first expansion from the perspective of a no name F.E.A.R. operative.
** ''Project Origin'' is from the perspective of a Delta Force operative.
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* The ''[[Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends]]'' episode "The Little Peas" tells the same story as "The Big Cheese" through the eyes of a very small character trying to help.
** It is notably the most reviled episode in the series, to the point where the creator ''issued an apology'' for it becuase A) it introduced a character even more annoying than Cheese, B) it took the one moment of good thinking that Frankie had in The Big Cheese and gave it to Little Peas, and C) The Big Cheese was already a hated episode ''on its own''
* ''[[The Fairly Odd ParentsOddParents]]'' episode, "The Big Scoop," shows the events from "A Wish Too Far" (when Timmy wishes to be popular) from Chester and A.J's point of view.
** In this episode, Chester and AJ were updated to their [[Flashback with the Other Darrin|current voice actors]] and characterization.
* Parodied in ''[[Family Guy]]'' with a [[Real Trailer, Fake Movie]] for ''[[Brokeback Mountain]]'' from the POV of the horses.