Wrap It Up

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

Some shows are Too Good to Last and get chopped down in their prime, leaving their fans chomping at the bit for more. Sometimes these shows - like Family Guy or Jericho, for example - are Uncanceled due to massive DVD sales or fan campaigns (and, in the case of Jericho, re-cancelled afterwards). Many more, of course, just disappear, having not built up enough support to be worth renewing.

But there's an uneasy middle-ground that every network fears: one where there are enough fans and supportive critics to make them look bad for cancelling the show, but not enough to make a new series profitable. In this instance, the safest thing to do is to commission a TV movie or miniseries to Wrap It Up, answering all the hanging questions and providing the fans with enough resolution that they won't send tins of baby food to the network or spam message boards with claims that the executives are idiots.

Alternatively, The Resolution Will Not Be Televised, and hanging questions from the TV series will be wrapped up in a theatrical release, OVA, comic book or other medium while sometimes still leaving room open for further flicks. These are, of course, pretty rare.

Compare Postscript Season. An intentionally short-term version of Uncanceled.

As an Ending Trope, Spoilers ahead may be unmarked. Beware.

Examples of Wrap It Up include:
  • Alien Nation received five TV Movies to tie up loose ends with after FOX canceled the show.
  • The last season of Black Hole High got hastily boiled down into a Made for TV Movie called "Conclusions" after it was cancelled.
  • Dallas and Dynasty got wrap-up movies.
  • "Phantom Planet" was a special the Danny Phantom team had to make when the show didn't get picked up for a fourth season.
  • After it was canceled, Farscape was given a miniseries, The Peacekeeper Wars, to finish it off.
  • A year after Homicide: Life on the Street was canceled, the TV Movie Homicide: Life Everlasting was made to wrap it up, and featured appearances from every Regular Character that the series ever had—even the dead ones.
  • The Pretender, which ended in multiple cliffhangers and little resolution of the major series Plots, resulted in two TV movies. (And there's still threads hanging. The creators say that they can finish wrapping it up if they're given one more TV movie, but so far they haven't been given the opportunity to prove it.)
  • Prison Break was wrapped up in the direct-to-DVD "The Final Break."
    • Though the series itself had a pretty conclusive final episode. Final Break simply provided more concrete explanations for a few developments in its epilogue.
  • A film series example - Saw VII was written to wrap up the Saw series after the sixth movie underperformed at the box office.
  • Bionicle skipped arcs about the Element Lords and Bota Magna in 2010 in order to get right to the final battle with Makuta. Fortunately, we have Web serials, BZ Power, and the wiki to expand on that.
  • Although Stargate SG-1 made it through 10 seasons before being cancelled, it still needed two TV movies to complete the story threads left over.