Fan-Fiction Should Be Trashy Fun, So Why Do The Resulting Movies End Up Dour And Gross? [Be Reel Podcast]

Disintegrating boy bands, canonical works of fiction and the secret worlds of reclusive billionaires are all fertile starting points for movie scripts. Yet no episode category in the four-year run of Be Reel has seemed to lose the thread of its subject matter faster than this one.

READ MORE: I Wish I Was ‘Big’: ‘Shazam!’ Is The Latest Instant-Adulthood Comedy [Be Reel Podcast]

This week, we dive into the one-inch pool—usually relegated to LiveJournal and Wattpad—of movies based on fan-fiction: writing that starts out reimagining the characters of more popular sources and, apparently, ends by pushing them into sex.

READ MORE: More Illegal Than Fiction: ‘Can You Ever Forgive Me?’ & The Literary Hoax Movie [Be Reel Podcast]

Sometimes these sources are Jane Austen novels, sometimes alternate histories of One Direction. While fan-fiction is nothing new to online communities and book publishing, its relationship to the movies is a short and rocky one. Chronologically, our case study begins with this genre’s much-criticized urtext “Fifty Shades of Grey” (2015) and moves on to the shameless mashup “Pride & Prejudice & Zombies” (2016).

READ MORE: Operation Cha-Ching: ‘Triple Frontier,’ ‘Three Kings’ & The Military Heist Genre Mashup [Be Reel Podcast]

But the new romance film “After” (based on the YA smash hit by Anna Todd) is our true jumping-off point. To break it down, we’re joined by Kathleen Newman-Bremang of Refinery29 to assess the problematic romances of YA literature and why a movie so full of sex isn’t particularly sexy.

Ultimately, this episode of Be Reel poses the obvious, yet impossible question: If readers loved your fan-fic because it depicted explicit sex between figures from One Direction or “Twilight” and you’ve cut both of those things from your movie, what is your film? Answers below.