
The Watch
2021 • Action & Adventure, Sci-Fi & Fantasy • TV-14
A group of misfit cops rise up from decades of helplessness to save their corrupt city from catastrophe. Inspired by the characters created by Sir Terry Pratchett’s famous “Discworld” novels.
Why you should read the novels
Terry Pratchett's Discworld City Watch novels offer a unique blend of wit, satire, and rich worldbuilding that television simply cannot capture in full. The original books explore deep social issues, character growth, and absurdity with the kind of nuance and charm that has made them enduring classics. Each page is filled with clever humor, immersive storytelling, and layers of meaning that reward careful readers.
By reading the City Watch novels, you experience the true evolution of beloved characters like Sam Vimes, Carrot Ironfoundersson, and Angua as they navigate mystery, politics, and morality in the unforgettable city of Ankh-Morpork. The source material’s depth, emotional resonance, and inventive language give readers an incomparable journey into Discworld’s heart.
Above all, Pratchett’s writing style brims with warmth, intelligence, and a gentle satirical wisdom that simply must be read to be fully appreciated. The novels inspire laughter, thought, and sometimes even tears, making them an essential and transformative experience for any fan of fantasy, humor, or storytelling.
Adaptation differences
The TV series The Watch takes immense creative liberties, drastically altering the tone, setting, and characters of Terry Pratchett’s beloved source material. The show features a punk-rock, dystopian cityscape filled with modern aesthetics and anachronistic technology, diverging starkly from the baroque, medieval-meets-industrial charm of Discworld’s Ankh-Morpork. While the books are deeply rooted in satire and British humor, the adaptation opts for a grittier and more chaotic style, losing much of Pratchett’s subtle wit.
Characters in The Watch are nearly unrecognizable compared to their literary counterparts. Sam Vimes transforms from a complex, world-weary leader in the novels to a disheveled caricature, while characters like Lady Sybil Ramkin and Carrot Ironfoundersson are heavily reimagined in both personality and background. Several key characters from the books, such as Nobby Nobbs and Detritus, are either omitted entirely or given drastically different roles.
Additionally, the show amalgamates and distorts stories from multiple novels, creating an original narrative that often disregards the integrity of Pratchett’s intricate plots. Important themes about justice, identity, and social change are simplified or ignored, resulting in a less meaningful exploration of the issues that define the City Watch books. The subtle humor and complex social commentary central to the novels are underplayed or replaced with more generic action and spectacle.
Ultimately, the adaptation is less a faithful translation and more a radical reimagining, often alienating longtime fans of the Discworld series. Instead of expanding upon the books’ strengths, it introduces tonal and narrative inconsistencies that diminish the rich history and layered storytelling that made the original City Watch novels so beloved.
The Watch inspired from
Night Watch
by Terry Pratchett
Snuff
by Terry Pratchett
Thud!
by Terry Pratchett
The Fifth Elephant
by Terry Pratchett
Feet of Clay
by Terry Pratchett
Guards! Guards!
by Terry Pratchett
Jingo
by Terry Pratchett
Men at Arms
by Terry Pratchett