home / skills / a5c-ai / babysitter / genre-analysis-film

This skill analyzes film and TV genres to guide creative work, applying conventions to meet or subvert audience expectations.

npx playbooks add skill a5c-ai/babysitter --skill genre-analysis-film

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---
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

Overview

This skill analyzes and applies film and TV genre conventions, tropes, and audience expectations to help creators shape stories that satisfy or smartly subvert viewers. It breaks down core elements, common conventions, tone markers, and blending rules so projects hit their emotional promise while remaining fresh. Use it to define a genre strategy, craft pitch documents, or review drafts for genre clarity and audience fit.

How this skill works

The skill inspects a project’s premise, beats, character arcs, and tone to identify the primary genre and relevant subgenres. It maps expected elements and audience contracts, evaluates how the project fulfills or subverts conventions, and produces actionable recommendations: which tropes to lean into, which to flip, and how to manage tonal balance in hybrids. Outputs include a concise genre analysis, a checklist, and comparable titles to guide positioning.

When to use it

  • Early development to set a clear genre identity and emotional promise
  • When blending genres to manage tonal shifts and audience expectations
  • During script rewrites to ensure core conventions are met or intentionally subverted
  • Preparing pitches or marketing copy that must signal genre to buyers or audiences
  • Adapting a format (feature, series, short) to align genre structure with runtime

Best practices

  • Identify one primary genre before layering subgenres
  • Map explicit audience expectations and ensure the emotional promise is maintained
  • Use genre conventions deliberately—know the rule before subverting it
  • Manage tonal transitions in hybrids with clear anchors and recurring beats
  • List comparable titles to communicate positioning quickly to collaborators

Example use cases

  • Turn a high-concept premise into a genre-safe pitch with suggested opening hooks and stakes
  • Audit a pilot script to ensure inciting incidents and tonal anchors match the chosen genre
  • Design a horror-sci-fi hybrid: recommend which genre rules remain primary and which to subvert
  • Create a festival strategy for a short film by highlighting which single genre element to emphasize
  • Refine a romcom by tightening beat structure: meet-cute, dark moment, and reunion timing

FAQ

Can a project successfully be equal parts two genres?

Yes, but one genre should usually remain primary; equal blends require careful tonal management and repeated anchors so the audience knows what emotional payoff to expect.

How do I subvert a trope without alienating fans?

Subvert with purpose: understand why the trope satisfies the audience, then replace it with a stronger emotional promise or an unexpected payoff that honors that promise.