The creative minds of Twitter took to the social media site to create new versions of movie titles under the hashtag #FilmsWithOneLetterMissing, where one letter is taken out of the movie title to create an entirely new story.

No genre or film was left untouched in the hashtag, including animated, actions and Oscar-winning films.

Two of the more popular animated films that were modified were the Disney films Finding Nemo and Beauty and the Beast, Twitter users AlysonElle and karasmilz to change said titles to “Finding Emo” and “Beauty and the Beat,” respectively.



Action films were changed to extenuate humor, Twitter user FerretMeat to change the Vin Diesel and Paul Walker car chase films Fast and Furious to “Fat and Furious.”



Twitter user Sisyphus8450 went the extra mile and added a description to his movie title of “Iron Ma” from Iron Man, this new movie to be about “a mother and her love of ironing.”



Some of the thriller and scary movies renamed also had added commentary. MRCurtisE took the 1996 film Scream and changing it to “Cream,” adding the description “a masked killer smooths his victims’ skin to death.”



Returning for another post, karasmilz tries at horror, taking the zombie horror title 28 Days Later and changing it to “28 Days Late,” adding that it’s a “thriller movie for women.”



Of the Oscar-winning movies that were changed, User barbecueranking cleverly took the title of Fargo and said it becomes Argo without any effort, both films to earn Oscars in Best Writing in 1996 and 2012 respectively.



LauraK_Young joked about taking the D out of Django in the movie title Django Unchained, which earned the Best Writing, Original Screenplay and Best Supporting Actor Oscars in 2012. Laura Young then poked fun of the joke in the movie, where the main character says that the D in his name is silent, saying that the movie title “still works.”

Image courtesy of INFphoto.com