Fanedit.org
Website | |
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Name: | Fanedit.org |
Owner/Maintainer: | Reave |
Dates: | |
Type: | |
Fandom: | multifandom |
URL: | https://www.fanedit.org |
Click here for related articles on Fanlore. | |
Fanedit.org is a multifandom website for fanedits of a wide range of movies and TV shows.
About
Fanedit.org is the largest online database of fanedits. We are a community of nerds, geeks, cinephiles, and all-around awesome human beings (the human part might be occasionally questionable). Because fanediting operates in the gray-area of copyright laws, we have developed a set of rules and guidelines for this site. We love film, and want to ensure that we support the industry and show respect to the talented people who bring stories to life on the big screen. Please take the time to read the rules and guidelines, and if you have any questions, you can get in touch with one of our helpful staff members.
Types
The website classifies fanedits as follows:
FanFix
With a FanFix, the editor is typically attempting clean-up or otherwise modify the original so as to make it a more enjoyable viewing experience. Quite often this entails adding and/or removing portions of the movie, reordering scenes and in general, addressing aspects of story and/or character that detract from the movie. In general terms, a FanFix tends to be an effort to polish the movie, often removing contrivances added by studios or filmmakers which interfere with the story. The goal here is not to invent a new movie or narrative, but to clean-up the existing one and hopefully make the movie more enjoyable. Examples of FanFixes are havok1977’s Codename: Wolverine, gekko’s Mission Impossible 2: Disavowed and The Phantom Editor’s Star Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Edit.
FanMix
Where a FanFix attempts to clean-up a story, a FanMix fanedit instead modifies the story so drastically as to make it a new and unique movie experience. In these “new takes” entire sub-plots and characters can be removed, character motivations changed and new endings created. Famous instances of such new takes include Remixed by Jorge’s The Dark Knight, Jack Marshall’s Star Trek Phase II, and CBB’s Titanic – The Jack Edit.
Extended Edition
Extended Editions (EE) attempt to create the fullest version of a movie as possible using deleted scenes from commercial DVD’s. Similar to the concept of a Director’s cut, EEs look to present all possible material available as an integrated movie-going experience. If a studio releases an official version that incorporates the same material in similar fashion, it is our site policy to remove the fanedit from the site as it can be legally purchased from a retailer. Extended Editions can be include deleted scenes only available in TV versions, such is the case with EEs like Ridgeshark’s Army of Darkness: Primitive Screwhead Edition or Tranzor’s The Warriors: TV Composite.
Documentary/Review
This particular form of fanedit creates a movie that does exactly as the name implies, documents a particular topic (quite typically a movie) or provides a review of a movie. Both incorporate movie footage and voice-over work that speaks to the events happening on-screen. The intent of these particular edits is not to create a fictional story, but rather inform, illuminate, or otherwise make comment on or about a particular movie, or set of movies.
Shorts
This category takes a movie (or TV show) and turns it into a significantly shorter piece of work, either as a stand-alone short movie, or broken/restructured into a series of edits in either the fashion of episodic television, or old-fashioned movie serials. These edits may modify visual style, or restructure the flow of events, but it is a broad category which allows for a wide-range of freedom and reinterpretation.
Special Projects
Some fan-based projects do not seek to create new, untold or heavily modified versions of a film or show. Special Projects are fanedits in which faneditors infuse personal creative choices to modify the viewing experience, yet are not significantly different from the original. The main purpose of a Special Project is to make minor changes to a movie that don’t affect the story or plot too much but change the atmosphere of the movie or create a unique viewing experience.
Preservation
These aren’t fanedits per se, but a collection of works not available commercially. These may include behind-the-scenes specials, interviews, outtakes, music videos, guest spots, and more for a particular film. Preservation projects are a means of collecting and preserving as much promotional material as possible for a film that may otherwise be lost.