16 November 2025

Art Imitates Art


old-fashioned vamp and cameraman

Minding my own business, I was. Scrolling through clickbait we used to call news feeds. Subject to pitfalls and rabbit holes. And la, in the style of Movie Master John Floyd, a film collection article slid into view titled,

Different Movies with the Same Plot

Writer Brianna Zigler explains:

“Many plots in modern-day stories—even across continents, time periods, planets, and dimensions—echo each other's plot arcs. Typically, even the most original works of art nowadays owe credit to others that came before, sometimes dating back to ancient myth. … In film, scripts of one studio [can be picked] up while another takes the same idea and gives it a slight spin … Art imitates art.”

My simplistic definition: Different Titles, Same Plot. In other words, we’re not including remakes, do-overs with the same titles (although some remakes take off in wildly varying directions).

Titles began to pair in my head and within a minute, ten had come to mind. I couldn’t resist checking where she ranked them and, to my surprise, not one of mine made her list. Not one.

old-fashioned cameraman and vamp

Okay, no person can watch every movie ever. Blowup/Blowout are a bit obscure not to mention opaque, but surely most people have heard of John Travolta, Charton Heston, Sean Connery, or are we experiencing Baby Boomer irrelevance? Bond, James Bond. Who?

Zigler goes on to pair thirty four movies (after two updates). I dug into the Web to garner additional opinions, which are included in the table. Some pairings seem tenuous and specious at best: Forest Gump v Benjamin Button? I Robot v Roger Rabbit? The Matrix v The Lego MovieFugitive v Minority Report v every individualist ever taking on dystopian society?

Defending My Selections

Blowup v Blowout
Why a studio thought a redo was a good idea mystifies the most avid whodunit fan. Travolta’s Blowout closely follows the impenetrable plot of Blowup (1966). The major distinction is sight versus sound, video versus audio. Picking up the faintest clue of what’s going on requires sitting through the final couple of minutes, which many hippies weren’t willing to do.
Thunderball v Never Say Never Again
Some actors grow so full of themselves, they can’t bear another moment of the series that made them rich and famous. Then, when the world moves on without them, they panic. Leonard Nimoy felt the sting of abandoning his iconic Spock rĂ´le. Likewise Sean Connery. When he realized he was aging out of the sexy spy women adored, he rushed back to grab a script… which happened to be a Thunderball reprise.
Seven Samurai v Magnificent Seven v Battle Beyond the Stars
Hollywood adapted the Japanese classic initially as a damn good Western and later a decent space adventure. Or, one might argue Akira Kurosawa wrote a classic anti-bullying Western that spread across genres. Or, simply turn off the brain and enjoy any of them.
Last Man on Earth v I am Legend v The Omega Man
Vampires. A struggle to survive. Chomp, chomp. Slurp, slurp. Futility. What sets Omega Man apart is his heroism carries a hint of hope missing from the other movies. Further, if you sit through the end scene, you’ll witness Heston reenact a religious iconic scene.
Lawnmower Man v Frankenstein
To be clear, Lawnmower Man the movie shares no plot points with Stephen King’s short story. (Frankly, the story is not one of my King favorites, so please, Mr King, don’t sic Langoliers, Tommyknockers, or clown spiders on me.) The movie wasn’t bad, but as we walked out of the theatre, I realized I’d seen a remake of Frankenstein. What do you think?

The List

The following list includes opinions garnered from internet sites, beginning with my own notions: 68 movies, 32 plots.

  1. Blowup ⇔ Blowout
  2. Thunderball ⇔ Never Say Never Again
  3. Seven Samurai ⇔ Magnificent Seven ⇔ Battle Beyond the Stars
  4. Last Man on Earth ⇔ I am Legend ⇔ The Omega Man
  5. Lawnmower Man ⇔ Frankenstein
  6. Rear Window ⇔ Disturbia ⇔ Woman in the Window
  7. Antz ⇔ A Bugs Life
  8. Armageddon ⇔ Deep Impact
  9. Canine ⇔ Tuner and Hooch
  10. Dances With Wolves ⇔ Avatar
  11. Forrest Gump ⇔ The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
  12. Gremlins ⇔ Transformers
  13. Gumball Rally ⇔ Cannonball
  14. Iron Man ⇔ Doctor Strange
  15. It’s a Wonderful Life ⇔ Click
  16. Mall Cop ⇔ Observe and Report
  17. Megamind ⇔ Despicable Me
  18. Mirror, Mirror ⇔ Snow White and The Huntsman
  19. No Strings Attached ⇔ Friends With Benefits
  20. Phantom of the Paradise ⇔ Rocky Horror Picture Show
  21. Point Break ⇔ The Fast and the Furious
  22. Rio Bravo ⇔ Assault on Precinct 13
  23. Terminator 2: Judgment Day ⇔ Looper
  24. The Fugitive ⇔ Minority Report
  25. The Great Race ⇔ Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machines
  26. The Hidden Fortress ⇔ Star Wars
  27. The Matrix ⇔ The Lego Movie
  28. The Prestige ⇔ The Illusionist
  29. The Prince of Egypt ⇔ Thor
  30. Top Gun ⇔ Days of Thunder ⇔ Iron Eagle
  31. Volcano ⇔ Dante’s Peak
  32. Who Framed Roger Rabbit ⇔ I, Robot

Which movies would you add?

20 comments:

  1. The Glass Key (which I disliked) and Miller's Crossing (which I adore)

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    1. Good suggestion, Rob. I'm afraid you have me at a disadvantage. I've seen 2/3 of the movies on my list, but I haven't seen either of these! More catchup to do.

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  2. Thanks for settling something I long suspected (Antz and Bug's Life). I THOUGHT so when my daughter was small, but chalked it up to toddler-parent brain fry.

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    1. One has Woody Allen, one doesn't. Thanks, Anna. They came out within days of one another. These were suggested by research sources, but I'm not sure I agree with their inclusion because of plot differences.

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    2. Reminds me of the brou-ha-ha when two networks came out with Chicago-based hospital shows the same season (ER and Chicago Hope, I think) back in the 90s. I think every national magazine and newspaper wrote about it, all in high dudgeon. Sigh. Those were innocent days.

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  3. Fun post, Leigh. I seldom watch films now, but I know enough of these to appreciate the point. It's true of books, too.
    "A man disappears for years, then returns with unexplained wealth to win the woman who spurned him" applies to both Wuthering Heights and The Great Gatsby.

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    1. Good suggestion, Steve. Heathcliff! Heathcliff!

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  4. It just reinforces the truth that there are only so many plots.

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    1. Indeed, Steve, thanks. I'm not sure of the supposed number, but somewhere between 4 and 7.

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    2. Georges Polti claimed there were 36 in his book, but they were really variations on about ten. Victoria Lynn Schmidt's Story Structure Architect suggests 51, but she's amplifying Polti's work, so there are lots of repetitions again.

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  5. Oy vey, Leigh, so we now have TWO SleuthSayers who watch too many movies? And here we think it's the bad guys who have a cunning plan to destroy the fine art of reading books until it's gone forever.

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    1. Liz, I've seen 2/3 of those on the list, so I have a bit to go. Surprisingly to me, I haven't visited the movies since the beginning of Covid. I used to attend with my close friend Geri who died in the midst of the pandemic. She really loved the movies.

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  6. High Plains Drifter (Clint Eastwood) came from Yojimbo (Kurosawa)

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    1. Eve, thanks. This morning, I found myself trying to think of the title of that film. It's definitely a dark mirror of the stranger who came to town.

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    2. Yes, it is - and they both come with dwarves who are trying to save the town, but need the drifter / ronin's help.

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    3. Good point, Eve.

      I was surprised some foreign releases of High Plains Drifter revealed the stranger as the former sheriff's brother. I prefer to think Duncan survived or, alternatively, his ghost returned. However, Duncan is portrayed by Eastwood's double, which lends credence to the brother hypothesis.

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    4. Well, Leigh, I'll stick with the Drifter being Duncan's ghost.

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  7. Good column, Leigh!

    Another two that had almost the same plot were Shane and Pale Rider. I noticed it when I was halfway through Pale Rider, and sure enough, it stayed that way until the end. Afterward I mentioned it to half a dozen other so-called movie addicts, and they all said, "Huh?" Oh well.

    Also, I would add Tom Cruise's The Last Samurai to Dances with Wolves/Avatar. All three reminded me of each other.

    And El Dorado was almost a remake of Rio Bravo.

    I LOVE this stuff.



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    1. Damn, you're good, John! I agree with all of those. Perhaps the supernatural aspect of Pale Rider threw people off. Strip that away and yeah, you've got Shane.

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