Nothing Better Than Parody -
But what if we have it backwards? What if, in fact, ?
To parody something well, you must understand it better than its own creator. You must find the hidden seams, the unconscious tics, the clichés that the original mistook for genius. A great parody doesn’t just mimic what a writer writes—it mimics how they think . nothing better than parody
When parody turns inward on itself, it becomes pure form. It no longer needs an original. It becomes a mirror facing another mirror. And in that infinite regression, we find something strangely beautiful: . But what if we have it backwards
Not always. But when it works, parody achieves three things the original cannot: You must find the hidden seams, the unconscious
The original has to sell its premise straight. Parody gets to whisper: “Isn’t this a little ridiculous? Don’t you feel it too?” That shared wink is a form of honesty. Mel Brooks’ Young Frankenstein is funnier, smarter, and more affectionate toward monster movies than any straight horror film of its era.