Although many would define “spoof” as being synonymous with “parody,” it appears in actuality to be far more specific according to general usage. Whereas a parody can be made in any medium – literature, music, film, visual art, oration – to mock or simply recycle the ideas of the original work, author or artist, the word “spoof” is usually only used in reference to film parodies. Furthermore, spoofs are always meant to have a comic effect while a parody may or may not be intended to be funny.
For example, when a musician parodies another musician’s work, it can go in one of two directions. The most well-known, modern, musical parodies are those of Weird Al Yankovic, who takes the melody of popular songs and replaces the original lyrics with humorous ones. However, artists who rework another artist’s songs or sample bits of other songs are creating a type of parody as well. In Kanye West’s “Gold Digger,” Jamie Foxx sings a portion of Ray Charles’s “I Got a Woman” but with new lyrics to fit the needs of West’s song, which is about a woman taking a man’s money rather than giving it to him as is the case with Charles’s original. It’s not funny by any means; rather, this type of parody is done in the name of evolution and as an homage to the original.
Spoofs can also be distinguished from satires in that a satire is meant to criticize or bring to light some social, political or economical reality in the hopes of bringing about change. Huckleberry Finn, Dr. Strangelove and The Colbert Report are all examples of satire. They are filled with irony and can certainly be humorous, but their goal is to provoke thought and change through witty commentary on issues of their day (slavery in Huckleberry Finn and the Cold War in Dr. Strangelove). A spoof just makes fun of a pre-existing film or film genre. It is not meant to be incisive, only ridiculous.
Spoof films will generally include several of the following characteristics:
While these are the conventions that define spoof films, the films themselves vary greatly, mocking every conceivable genre from zombie horror (Shaun of the Dead) to folk music documentary (A Mighty Wind). And while this type of film is, in itself, an art form, the films themselves are, in every way, a laughing matter.