Original photo comics •
Twisted ToyFare Theatre, the inspiration behind
Robot Chicken •
The Brick Bible, stories from the Bible illustrated using photos of
Lego figurines and sets, as well as speech balloons and caption boxes •
Killing •
A Softer World by
Joey Comeau and Emily Horne. •
Doomlord by
Alan Grant and
John Wagner. •
Alien Loves Predator by Bernie Hou. •
Transparent Life by Charlie Beck •
Night Zero by Anthony van Winkle and Eli Black-Mizuta. •
The Chefs of Death mini-series written by Alex Finch and starring Ian Lane, Chloe Taylor and Christopher Denton. • The series
3hoog,
Ype and
De Uitgeverij by Dutch comics artist Ype Driessen. • The one-shot album
De Hete Urbanus (
The Hot Urbanus) in the
Urbanus series by
Willy Linthout and
Urbanus. •
Urbanus,
Kamagurka and
Herr Seele made some one-shot photo comics in the 1980s for the magazine
Humo. •
Louis Salvérius and
Raoul Cauvin once made a one-shot photo comic strip parodying their own series
Les Tuniques Bleues with themselves dressed up as their characters. •
Mannetje en Mannetje (
Little Man and Little Man) by
Hanco Kolk and
Peter de Wit. • ''Christopher's Punctured Romance'' by
Terry Gilliam, starring
John Cleese. •
Jean Teulé is a French cartoonist who takes photographs or makes photocopies, which he then changes with colors and pencil. •
@$$hole by Trevor Mueller •
Kwakzalver en Knettergek by Nix. •
God en Klein Pierken by Nix and Bart Schoofs. •
Crimefighters by Fjodor Buis and
Thé Tjong-Khing. •
Happenstance by Stephen Saperstein Frug, which used color photographs, sometimes intentionally blurred, to tell the story of a character with
prosopagnosia (the inability to recognize faces). •
Artful Design: Technology in Search of the Sublime, a book by
Ge Wang. •
Punk magazine by
John Holmstrom et al. frequently used the photo comics format for interviews and other features, notably in the case of two full-length photo comics "The Legend of Nick Detroit" (#6, October 1976), and "Mutant Monster Beach Party" (#15, July/August 1978). •
The Last Gay Man on Earth, an autobio graphic novel by Ype Driessen.
Film adaptations (Many marketed as "Fotonovels") •
Alien (1979 film) (large format) •
Americathon (1979) •
The Best of Rocky and the Complete Rocky II (1979) •
Blair Witch Project, The (2000) •
Buck Rogers in the 25th Century (1979) • ''
Can't Stop the Music'' (1980) •
The Champ (1979) • ''
Charlie's Angels'' (2000) • ''
Cheech and Chong's Next Movie'' (1980) •
Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977) •
Grease (1978) •
Hair (1979) •
Heaven Can Wait (1978) •
Ice Castles (1978) •
Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1978) •
The Jerk (1979) •
Little Shop of Horrors (1986), adapted by Robert and Louise Egan •
The Lord of the Rings (1978) •
Love at First Bite (1979) •
Nashville (1975) •
Nightwing (1979) •
Outland (1981) (large format) •
Revenge of the Pink Panther (1979) •
The Rocky Horror Picture Show (1975) •
Saturday Night Fever (1977) •
Star Trek: The Motion Picture: The Photostory, edited by Richard J. Anobile (1980) •
Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan: Photostory, by Richard J. Anobile (1982)
Television adaptations (Many marketed as "Fotonovels") •
Battlestar Galactica (pilot film) •
Doctor Who •
The Incredible Hulk •
Mork & Mindy •
Star Blazers. English version of
Space Battleship Yamato published by West Cape Corporation in 1983 •
Star Trek – Twelve episodes were adapted. •
The City on the Edge of Forever, published November 1977 •
Where No Man Has Gone Before, published November 1977 •
The Trouble with Tribbles, published December 1977 •
A Taste of Armageddon, published January 1978 •
Metamorphosis, published February 1978 •
All Our Yesterdays, published March 1978 •
The Galileo Seven, published May 1978 •
A Piece of the Action, published June 1978 •
The Devil in the Dark, published July 1978 •
Day of the Dove, published August 1978 •
The Deadly Years, published September 1978 •
Amok Time, published October 1978 ==See also==