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I Know What You Did Last Summer

Posted on November 20, 2025

Dying of Laughter: Exploring Horror Parody and the Scary Movie Films

Guest Post

By

Nehir Orhon

A haunted house, an innocent girl possessed by the devil, or a group of teenagers that make foolish decisions to try and survive a masked killer… These cliché horror tropes can be found in famous horror films, such as The Exorcist (1973) and The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974). Such storylines, figures and settings are elements that are commonly associated with the genre’s identity.

However, as Chris Yogerst argues, “repetition of genre tropes breeds familiarity, robbing once-shocking images and plot twists of the impact they originally had” (Yogerst 207). When these key tropes and patterns get overused in horror films, they become repetitive and lead to criticism, self-reflection, and parody. In the book Film Parody, Dan Harries defines parody as “the process of recontextualizing a target or source text through the transformation of its textual (and contextual) elements, thus creating a new text” (Harries 6). In this instance, through twisting the lexicon, style or syntax, parody spoofs the familiar patterns, stereotypical and normative representation of marginalised groups, and cultural taboos displayed in horror films.

Scary Movie (Keenen Ivory Wayans, 2000), the first film of the contemporary horror parody franchise, takes Scream (1996) and I Know What You Did Last Summer (1997) as reference. Whilst spoofing these movies, Scary Movie not only makes fun of the familiar horror tropes but also exposes how the “film technology and genre fictions” (Bailey 1229) are shaped by the hegemony of the white male gaze and “white ideological frames” (Yancy and Ryser 732). This essay explores the relation between horror, humour and social critique, and how parody functions within the Scary Movie films through analysing the used “methods of parodic coding” (Harries 39).

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person in a slicker raises a hook in the air. Their face is obscured.
Posted on August 18, 2025

“What Are You Waiting For?”: Talking I Know What You Did Last Summer

Podcast

In this episode, we’re talking all things I Know What You Did Last Summer.  Loosely based on the novel by Lois Duncan, this story of adolescent guilt and moral consequence has demonstrated remarkable cultural longevity but why? We’re breaking down this legacy sequel with spoilers, so stay tuned.

Decorative image that links to podcast.

Works Cited

Khalid, Haliyana, and Alan Dix. “I Know What You Did Last Summer: What Can We Learn from Photolog.” ECSCW Conference, 2007.

Loock, Kathleen. “Reboot, Requel, Legacyquel: Jurassic World and the Nostalgia Franchise,” 173-88, Daniel Herbert and Constantine Verevis (eds), Film Reboots, Edinburgh University Press, 2020.

Och, Dana. “Beyond Surveillance: Questions of the Real in the Neopostmodern Horror Film.” Style and Form in the Hollywood Slasher Film. Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2015, pp. 195-212.

Patterson, Valerie O. “Writing Books that Hold Up, from Pay Phones to Cell Phones: An Interview with YA Suspense Novelist Lois Duncan,” North Carolina Literature into Film, vol. 21, 2012, pp. 123-32.

Schneider, Steven Jay. “Kevin Williamson and the Rise of the Neo-stalker.” Post Script, vol. 19, no. 2, 1999, pp. 73-87.

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