After John Carpenter’s seminal low-budget horror masterpieceHalloweenbecame one of the biggest sleeper hits of the 1970s, multiplexes were flooded with movies about masked killers targeting teenagers. Throughout the ‘80s, a succession of cliché-ridden duds –Blood Lake,Final Exam,April Fool’s Day– gave the slasher genre a framework of rigidly defined tropes and archetypes. By the time the ‘90s rolled around, the slasher had seemingly lost its ability to surprise audiences.

And then, Wes Craven directedScream, a sharp meta deconstruction of slashers that revitalized the genre by ridiculing its well-worn formula. Telling the familiar story of a masked serial killer picking off high schoolers,Screamofferedan affectionate parodyof its peers that still holds up today.

Drew Barrymore as Casey talks on the phone in Scream

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What makesScreamthe ultimate satire of horror movies is that the characters in its universe are aware of horror movies. The killers draw inspiration fromfamous slasher villainslikePsycho’s Norman Bates and the protagonists are familiar with the kind of horror movie they’re in. While iconic slasher villains like Michael Myers and Leatherface are motivated purely by their bloodlust, the killers inScreamwant to live out their favorite horror movies.

Edgar Wright’sHot Fuzzdid for action movies whatScreamhad previously done for slashers.Hot Fuzzspoofs the “buddy cop” subgenre of action cinema with the story of a big-city cop being transferred to a small town where he’s mismatched with a bumbling, incompetent detective. The bumbling, incompetent one – Danny Butterman, played by Nick Frost – is a huge fan of action movies.

Danny holding DVDs of Point Break and Bad Boys II in Hot Fuzz

Action cinema’s exciting but decidedly unrealistic portrayal of police work is what made Danny want to become a cop, and the lack ofgun-toting John McClane-style actionin his day-to-day life is a source of disappointment. Danny’s awareness of the tropes of action movies and his constant references to them point out the artifice of the genre, just like the characters inScream.

“Do you like scary movies?”Screamestablishes itself as a self-aware jab at horror movies in its iconic opening scene. The killer forces Casey to defend her life by answering horror movie trivia questions (in an homage toWhen a Stranger Calls, no less) and catches her out when she saysthe killer inFriday the 13this Jason Voorhees. Jason is the villain in all the sequels, but his mother Pamela was the killer in the first one.

Randy explaining how to survive a horror movie in Scream

Hot Fuzz’s Danny Butterman is a lot likeScream’s Randy Meeks, played by Jamie Kennedy. While all the high schoolers inScreamhave seen a bunch of horror movies, Randy is a particularly obsessive cinephile. Like Danny, he’s the resident genre aficionado. In the party scene, he outlines the rules for surviving a horror movie – namely, don’t have sex or do drugs. Randy’s enthusiasm about being in the midst of a horror movie-style serial killer is comparable to Danny’s enthusiasm whenever he’s thrust into an action sequence. After the shortest car chase in film history, an ecstatic Danny says, “That… was… brilliant.”

When Nicholas is first paired up with Danny, he starts rattling off the names of action movies. Danny names every conceivable action classic –Die Hard,Lethal Weapon,Dirty Harry– and Nicholas hasn’t seen a single one. When he says he hasn’t seenBad Boys II, Danny stops in his tracks and says, “You ain’t seenBad Boys II?” Nicholas’ idea of law enforcement is at odds with Danny’s. Whereas Nicholas wants to solve cases by the book and serve justice with as little drama and violence as possible, Danny wants to be involved in “gunfights, car chases – proper action and s***!” Nicholas hilariously counters, “Police work is not about proper action. Or s***!”

Danny recreates a scene from Point Break in Hot Fuzz

Based on one of the most memorable scenes inPoint Break, Danny asks the more seasoned Nicholas, “Have you ever fired your gun up in the air and gone, ‘Ahhh’?” Danny explains the emotional significance of Johnny Utah sparing Bodhi’s life inthe Keanu Reeves/Patrick Swayze cult classic, and later does the same thing when his villainous dad is fleeing from the model village. Moments like this highlight the phoniness of the emotional scenes in action movies.

Just asScreamreferences just about every horror movie under the sun –Psycho,Carrie,Halloween,Friday the 13th,When a Stranger Calls, the list goes on –Hot Fuzzhas references tocountless classic action movies. The birth announcement of twins named Martin and Roger is a nod to the lead duo inLethal Weapon. Nicholas’ headlights illuminating the road to justice are a nod to Max’s drive to his final vengeful rampage inMad Max. Danny dryly reads the DVD blurb of the thirdPolice Storymovie starring Jackie Chan: “Supercop. Meet the cop that can’t be stopped.”

Randy watching Halloween with the killer behind him in Scream

Eventually, Danny brings Nicholas around to his cinephilic way of thinking. When Nicholas blows the Sandford conspiracy wide open, he quotesDanny’s favorite movie,Bad Boys II: “This s*** just got real!” In the action-packed finale, Nicholas acknowledges that sometimes Bayhem is the best crimefighting strategy and teams up with Danny to shoot up the Neighborhood Watch Alliance in an extravagant display of John Woo-style “gun fu.”

Just asScreammade all subsequent slashers feel redundant,Hot Fuzzmade all subsequent buddy cop movies feel redundant. The genre has since been spoofed a bunch more times, but never to the same effect asHot Fuzz.The Other Guysbrought a delightfully absurdist slant, but it was more of a satire of the financial crash than a deconstruction of action movies acutely aware of the genre’s classics and their most prominent tropes.

Nicholas and Danny in the climactic shootout in Hot Fuzz

Much likeShaun of the Deadbefore it,Hot Fuzzisn’t so mucha parody of its genrethan an homage to it.Hot Fuzzhas nothing but love and admiration for movies likePoint BreakandBad Boys II, just likeShaunhad a respect and appreciation for the zombie-infested classics of George A. Romero.Screamis similarly affectionate to previous slashers. Craven didn’t set out to criticize or delegitimize slashers. In fact, the slasher trend of the ‘80s is what made him a household name with his 1984 hitA Nightmare on Elm Street, the first movie to bring an overtly supernatural bent to Carpenter’sHalloweenformula.

One of the great things aboutScreamis that, on top of being a meta critique of slashers, it’s also a terrific slasher in its own right. It has plenty of effective jump scares, it has a protagonist who’s easy to root for and villains who are easy to hate, andKevin Williamson’s scriptbrings a unique whodunit angle to the familiar genre framework. The same can be said ofHot Fuzz. It’s a great comedy and a hilarious takedown of buddy cop movies, but its action is shot and edited with a real kinetic energy.

That’s what setsHot Fuzzapart from other action comedies likeSpy. The humor inSpyworks really well, but its action scenes are seriously lacking, with unengaging locked-off camera angles and no real sense of danger. By contrast, the visceral shootouts and fast-paced car chases inHot Fuzzwouldn’t feel out of place in a Bayhem spectacle or a John Woo “gun fu” extravaganza. Just as Wes Craven brought real terror to his spoof of blood-soaked slashers,Edgar Wright brought real thrillsto his spoof of cops-and-crooks actioners.