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Tag: Genre Study

  • Jurassic Park Was Right

    Jurassic Park Was Right

    Science fiction has a specific job: to take something real, push it past its logical limits, and show you what breaks. Jurassic Park (1993) does that job better than almost any film I can think of. Thirty years later, it feels less like a dinosaur movie and more like a memo someone should have read…

  • What Horror Is Actually Afraid Of

    What Horror Is Actually Afraid Of

    Most horror films give you a monster and ask you to be scared of it. Shadow of the Vampire gives you a monster and asks you to be scared of the person who hired it. The 2000 film, starring Willem Dafoe and John Malkovich, is built around a premise that sounds like a late-night comedy…

  • Why Liar Liar Changed My Mind About Jim Carrey

    Why Liar Liar Changed My Mind About Jim Carrey

    Jim Carrey has been back in the news after an appearance at a French awards show triggered online speculation that it wasn’t even him. A clone. A stand-in. A double. Absurd. And strangely on-brand. Carrey has always felt larger than his own frame. His face stretches past plausibility. His body folds into itself. He commits…

  • Why Action Lives or Dies by Its Rules

    Why Action Lives or Dies by Its Rules

    In previous Field Notes, I’ve explored how thrillers sustain tension through control and how romance earns belief through emotional alignment. Across genres, I keep returning to the same question: What makes an audience believe? Action answers it differently. It runs on rules. John Wick (2014) is a clear example. On paper, it borders on absurd:…