--- name: genre-analysis-film id: SK-FTV-012 version: 1.0.0 description: Analyze and apply film/TV genre conventions, tropes, and audience expectations specialization: film-tv-production --- # Genre Analysis (Film) Skill ## Purpose Understand and apply genre conventions to meet audience expectations while finding fresh approaches. Genres are contracts with viewers—knowing the rules lets you fulfill or subvert them effectively. ## Major Genres ### Action **Core Elements:** - Physical conflict as resolution - Clear hero vs. villain - Stakes are life/death - Spectacle and set pieces **Conventions:** - Opening action hook - Training/preparation sequence - Escalating confrontations - Climactic battle - Hero's moment of doubt **Subgenres:** Martial arts, war, spy, disaster, superhero ### Comedy **Core Elements:** - Humor as primary emotion - Characters in absurd situations - Social commentary through laughter - Happy or ironic ending **Conventions:** - Setup and payoff - Rule of threes - Fish out of water - Escalating complications - Comedic timing **Subgenres:** Romantic comedy, dark comedy, satire, parody, slapstick ### Drama **Core Elements:** - Character-driven conflict - Emotional truth - Realistic stakes - Internal transformation **Conventions:** - Slow burn development - Subtext-heavy dialogue - Moral complexity - Ambiguous endings acceptable **Subgenres:** Family drama, legal, medical, political, historical ### Horror **Core Elements:** - Fear as primary emotion - Threat to survival - Darkness (literal/metaphorical) - Violation of safety **Conventions:** - Opening kill/scare - Investigation/discovery - Rules of the threat - False scares - Climactic confrontation - Final girl/survivor - Ambiguous ending (is it really over?) **Subgenres:** Slasher, supernatural, psychological, body horror, found footage ### Thriller **Core Elements:** - Suspense and tension - Protagonist in danger - Cat and mouse dynamics - High stakes **Conventions:** - Mystery/puzzle element - Ticking clock - Plot twists - Unreliable elements - Confrontation with antagonist **Subgenres:** Psychological, crime, spy, legal, tech ### Science Fiction **Core Elements:** - Speculative premise - "What if?" exploration - Technology or science central - Commentary on humanity **Conventions:** - World-building - Exposition challenges - Visual spectacle - Philosophical questions - Rules of the world **Subgenres:** Space opera, cyberpunk, dystopia, time travel, hard sci-fi ### Fantasy **Core Elements:** - Magical/supernatural elements - Mythic storytelling - Good vs. evil - Hero's journey **Conventions:** - World-building heavy - Chosen one narrative - Quest structure - Magical system rules - Mentor figure **Subgenres:** Epic, urban, dark, fairy tale, historical ### Romance **Core Elements:** - Central love story - Emotional journey - Obstacles to love - Satisfying resolution **Conventions:** - Meet-cute - Initial antagonism or misunderstanding - Growing attraction - Dark moment/separation - Declaration and reunion **Subgenres:** Romantic comedy, romantic drama, period romance ## Genre Expectations ### Audience Contract | Genre | Viewer Expects | |-------|----------------| | Action | Excitement, spectacle, clear victory | | Comedy | Laughter, happy ending, release | | Drama | Emotional catharsis, truth | | Horror | Fear, dread, survival | | Thriller | Tension, surprise, resolution | | Sci-Fi | Ideas, wonder, speculation | | Romance | Love, emotion, satisfaction | ### Tone Markers **Action:** High energy, clear morality, physical **Comedy:** Light, irreverent, self-aware **Drama:** Serious, nuanced, grounded **Horror:** Dread, unease, violation **Thriller:** Tense, paranoid, uncertain **Sci-Fi:** Intellectual, expansive, questioning **Romance:** Warm, emotional, hopeful ## Genre Blending ### Successful Hybrids | Hybrid | Example | Balance | |--------|---------|---------| | Action-Comedy | Guardians of the Galaxy | 60/40 action/comedy | | Horror-Comedy | Shaun of the Dead | Alternating tones | | Sci-Fi/Horror | Alien | Sci-fi setting, horror structure | | Drama-Thriller | Prisoners | Drama depth, thriller tension | | Romance-Comedy | When Harry Met Sally | Equal measure | ### Blending Rules 1. One genre should be primary 2. Tonal shifts need management 3. Core audience expectations must be met 4. Genre tropes should complement ## Subverting Expectations ### Effective Subversion - Know the rules before breaking them - Subvert with purpose - Maintain core emotional promise - Replace expectation with something better ### Examples - **Scream:** Horror that's self-aware of horror rules - **The Cabin in the Woods:** Meta-commentary on horror - **500 Days of Summer:** Anti-romantic comedy - **No Country for Old Men:** Western without resolution ## Genre Analysis Template ```markdown ## Genre Analysis: [PROJECT] ### Primary Genre [Genre name] ### Subgenre(s) [If applicable] ### Core Audience [Who watches this genre] ### Expected Elements - [Element 1] - [Element 2] - [Element 3] ### How This Project Fulfills Expectations - [How we meet expectation 1] - [How we meet expectation 2] ### How This Project Subverts/Freshens - [Fresh take 1] - [Fresh take 2] ### Tone Approach [How we handle tone] ### Comparable Titles - [Comp 1] - because [reason] - [Comp 2] - because [reason] - [Comp 3] - because [reason] ``` ## Genre Checklist - [ ] Primary genre identified - [ ] Core conventions understood - [ ] Audience expectations mapped - [ ] Key tropes identified - [ ] Fresh angle articulated - [ ] Tone approach defined - [ ] Comparable titles listed - [ ] Subversion is purposeful - [ ] Emotional promise maintained ## Genre by Format ### Feature Film - Clearer genre identity - Complete arc in one viewing - Higher production values expected ### TV Series - Genre blending more common - Character development over time - Episodic vs. serialized affects genre use ### Limited Series - Novelistic approach - Genre can evolve - More complexity allowed ### Short Film - Concentrate on one genre element - Subversion more acceptable - Experimental audience