Adaptations
This page lists adaptations of Pratchett’s works. It’s divided up into lists for different media, though as there are so many of them, we have a separate list just for audiobooks.
Screen adaptations
Official adaptations
The below table is sortable. We’ve by default listed the adaptations in release order.
Title | Release Date[1] | Abbr.[2] | Based on | Format | Produced by | #[3] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Truckers | 1992-01-10 | TTV | Truckers | Stop-motion animated television series | Cosgrove Hall | B1 |
Johnny and the Dead | 1995-04-04 | TTV | Johnny and the Dead | Live-action television mini-series | London Weekend Television | J2 |
Welcome to the Discworld | 1996[4] | WTTD | Reaper Man | Animated short film | Cosgrove Hall | 11 |
Wyrd Sisters | 1997-05-11[5] | WSTV | Wyrd Sisters | Animated television mini-series | Cosgrove Hall | 7 |
Soul Music | 1997-12-27[5] | SMTV | Soul Music | Animated television mini-series | Cosgrove Hall | 16 |
Johnny and the Bomb | 2006-01-15 | JATBTV | Johnny and the Bomb | Live-action television mini-series | Childsplay Television | J3 |
Terry Pratchett's Hogfather | 2006-12-17 | HTV | Hogfather | Live-action television mini-series | The Mob | 20 |
Terry Pratchett's The Colour of Magic | 2008-03-23 | COMTV | The Colour of Magic and The Light Fantastic | Live-action television mini-series | The Mob | 1 |
Going Postal | 2010-05-30 | GPTV | Going Postal | Live-action television mini-series | The Mob | 33 |
Troll Bridge[6] | 2019-01-16 | TBF | “Troll Bridge” | Live-action short film | Snowgum Films | |
Good Omens | 2019-05-31[7] | GOTV | Good Omens | Live-action television series | Amazon Prime/BBC | |
The Watch | 2021-01-03[8] | TWTV | The Watch books[9] | Live-action television series | BBC America | |
The Amazing Maurice | 2022-12-16[10] | GPTV | Going Postal | Animated feature film | Ulysses FilmProduktion et al | 28 |
Fan films
Some of these were produced with explicit permission; others under an assumption they’d be okay since they were clearly student or amateur work.[11] The L-Space wiki has a single fan films page that lists all of these.
Title | Release Date[1] | Based on | Format | Produced by | External link |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mort | 2001 | Mort | Short stop-motion animation | Lasidlav Plecitý | YouTube: Episode 1 Episode 2 Episode 3 |
Terry Pratchett’s Lords and Ladies[12] | 2004 | Lords and Ladies | Feature-length fan film | Almost No Money Productions | YouTube (trailer only) |
Run Rincewind Run | 2007 | Original story | Short live-action film | Snowgum Films | Vimeo |
Nation (extract) | 2009 | Nation | Short stop-motion animated fan film | Billy Godfrey | N/A |
Poslední odměna[13] | 2013 | “Final Reward” | Short live-action student film | Lasidlav Plecitý | YouTube |
Terry Pratchett's The Duel | 2015 | Original story | Short animated student film | Giant Animation Studios | Vimeo |
Comics
Title | Release Date | Based on | Format | Adapted by | Publisher |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
The Colour of Magic | 1991 | The Colour of Magic | Comic book series | Scott Rockwell and Steven Ross | Innovative Corporation/Corgi (collected editions) |
The Light Fantastic | 1992 | The Light Fantastic | Comic book series | Scott Rockwell and Steven Ross | Innovative Corporation/Corgi (collected editions) |
Mort: A Discworld Big Comic | 1994 | Mort | Graphic novel[14] | Terry Pratchett and Graham Higgins | Gollancz |
Guards! Guards! | 2000 | Guards! Guards! | Graphic novel[14] | Stephen Briggs[15] and Graham Higgins | Gollancz |
Small Gods | 2016 | Small Gods | Graphic novel | Terry Pratchett and Ray Friesen | Doubleday |
Footnotes
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 For series, this is the first broadcast date, or streaming release date, of the first episode. For films, this is the first wide release date. Basically we’re trying to indicate when the adaptation was first made available to a wide audience, but we’ll make notes where the dating is a bit unclear.
- ↑ A template using this abbreviation has been set up to make linking to this adaptation easier. Type the acronym in braces, e.g. {{GOTV}} will produce Good Omens. By convention, we’re hiding the parenthetical distinctions like “(TV series)” for adaptations that use the same name as the original work; where it’s not obvious in context, use a regular wiki link and be explicit, e.g. “unlike in the television adaptation of Good Omens”.
- ↑ Use this column to sort adaptations into publication order by source work series. Discworld stories are numbered; other series use letter prefixes.
- ↑ Never broadcast, but released on the DVD for Soul Music.
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 There’s a lot of conflicting information around when the Cosgrove Hall animated adaptations were broadcast on Channel 4, for whom they were originally produced, but it seems correct that Wyrd Sisters was in May 1997. Some sources then have Soul Music not being broadcast until December 1999, which seems far too late, especially when those same sources say the DVD was released in 1997! So we’re guessing this one, and are continuig to investigate.
- ↑ While more-or-less a fan film, Troll Bridge had official permission from Pratchett and is such a huge production it feels more appropriate to list it with the other official screen adaptations.
- ↑ This is the streaming release date for all episodes on Amazon Prime. It was later broadcast weekly on BBC Two, beginning on 15 January 2020.
- ↑ This is the streaming release date for the first two episodes on BBC America in the US and Stan in Australia. It was released on BBC iPlayer on 1 July 2021, and eventually broadcast on BBC Two from 12 August 2021.
- ↑ Rather than adapting a single book, The Watch creates a new story drawing primarily on ideas from Guards! Guards!, Night Watch and Thud!.
- ↑ This was the premiere on Sky Movies; it had a limited premiere at the Manchester Animation Festival on 13 November 2022.
- ↑ From a money-making perspective; we aren’t suggesting some of these aren’t very good!
- ↑ The trailer doesn’t give the German title, but presumably it’s Lords und Ladies, the German title of the book.
- ↑ The Czech title literally translates to “The Final Reward”.
- ↑ 14.0 14.1 These volumes are described as “big comics”, with the Mort adaptation going so far as to put that into the title.
- ↑ The book is based on Briggs’ stageplay