Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context SpiritualAntithesis / LiveActionFilms

Go To

1%%
2%%This list has been alphabetized. Please put new entries in alphabetical order.
3%%Entries are organized by what film is the antithesis to the other.
4%%
5SpiritualAntithesis in {{Film}}s.
6----
7[[foldercontrol]]
8
9[[folder:A-C]]
10* On a production company level, Creator/{{A24}} and Creator/BlumhouseProductions are the two companies often credited with leading the "horror renaissance" of TheNewTens, restoring the genre to critical and commercial success after an extended [[AudienceAlienatingEra low point]] in TheNineties and the TurnOfTheMillennium, and both accomplished this with a formula that combined low budgets with exceptional creative freedom offered to filmmakers. The two companies, however, have both built distinct brands for themselves that cut against each other in notable ways. Blumhouse guns for mainstream success and box-office hits, and is unapologetic about the fact that they make [[BMovie B-movies]], such that the company's head Jason Blum has often been compared to Creator/RogerCorman. As such, the stereotype about Blumhouse horror films is that they're either crowd-pleasing scarefests that leave the viewer with something to think about after, or LowestCommonDenominator garbage that panders to teenagers. A24, meanwhile, just as consciously built up an arthouse image, their horror films having a reputation for being offbeat and weird with both GenreBusting premises and unusual directions in which they take those premises. As such, the stereotype about A24 horror films is that they're either bold artistic visions that break all the rules, or pretentious and incomprehensible.
11* ''Film/Abigail2024'' to ''Film/ReadyOrNot2019''. Both are horror films with strong BlackComedy elements directed by [[Creator/RadioSilence Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett]] and written by Guy Busick that are set in a BigFancyHouse in which a female character faces off against a group of people who are trying to kill her. Both films also make prominent use of people exploding into LudicrousGibs, [[spoiler:and end with a [[FinalGirl lone woman surviving the carnage]] after earning some VillainRespect from the BigBad.]] However, in ''Ready or Not'' said female character is the hero, a young newlywed from a [[WorkingClassHero working-class background]] who married into a family of [[UpperClassTwit Upper-Class Twits]] only for that family to try and [[HumanSacrifice sacrifice her]] as part of a DealWithTheDevil. In ''Abigail'', meanwhile, the titular female character is the villain, a [[UndeadChild child vampire]] who is kidnapped by a group of [[AntiHero sympathetic criminals]] seeking to extort her wealthy father and proceeds to [[MuggingTheMonster turn the tables]] on [[PityTheKidnapper her captors]].
12* ''Film/TheAdventuresOfBuckarooBanzaiAcrossTheEighthDimension'' has been described by some film critics as this to [[Film/ANewHope the original]] ''Franchise/StarWars''. Both of them are nostalgic [[GenreThrowback throwbacks]] to science-fiction pulp serials of the '30s and '40s, and both of them attempt to replicate the experience of watching the latest chapter in an ongoing saga--right down to making constant reference to characters, places, and past adventures that the audience never sees. But while the original ''Star Wars'' is a loving {{homage}} to old-fashioned pulp sci-fi that plays its premise completely straight, ''Buckaroo Banzai'' is an irreverent {{parody}} that plays its premise for ironic laughs. Plot-wise, the two films are also almost complete opposites: ''Star Wars'' is a story set in a fantastical alternate universe about the adventures of a hapless farmboy battling a truly dangerous [[TheEmpire interstellar empire]], while ''Buckaroo Banzai'' is a story set on present-day Earth about the adventures of an impossibly cool, [[LivingLegend larger-than-life]] adult hero battling [[LaughablyEvil a gang of dimwitted aliens]]. Appropriately enough, they also had completely opposite legacies in the long run: ''Star Wars'' was a resounding box-office hit that spawned a massive [[CashCowFranchise franchise]], while ''Buckaroo Banzai'' was an infamous box-office dud that never got a sequel (which, ironically, makes its central joke even funnier), and it's generally regarded as an oddball CultClassic today.
13* Damien Leone consciously intended Film/ArtTheClown, the villain of ''Film/AllHallowsEve'' and the ''Film/{{Terrifier}}'' [[Film/Terrifier2 films]], to be this to Pennywise the Dancing Clown from ''Literature/{{It}}'', particularly Creator/TimCurry's take on the character from [[Film/It1990 the 1990 miniseries]]. Both are [[EvilIsHammy hammy]], [[BlackComedy darkly humorous]] MonsterClown horror movie villains, but while Pennywise is colorful, talkative, and [[WouldHurtAChild mostly targets kids]], Art is a silent antagonist who relies heavily on body language and pantomime, whose visual design is devoid of color, and who [[MonsterMisogyny mostly targets women]], inspired heavily by the SlasherMovie icons of TheEighties.
14* [[Creator/AdamAndJoe Joe Cornish]] created ''Film/AttackTheBlock'' as [[https://archive.list.co.uk/the-list/2011-04-28/18/ a response]] to the British "hoodie horror" films of the 2000s like ''Film/HarryBrown'', ''Film/EdenLake'', and ''Film/Heartless2009'', in which [[LowerClassLout young, lower-class delinquents from the inner cities]] were portrayed as sadistic villains. In this film, the street toughs are instead the {{kid hero}}es battling an AlienInvasion.
15-->"This is certainly a reaction to [those] often brilliantly-made and well-crafted movies that I think take a slightly inhuman approach to an issue that, actually, involves very young kids. I think that's the easy option, to take something in the world that already is {{demoni|zation}}sed and frightens people, and just make it even more scary and horrible. ... I don't think it's an incredibly radical premise to try and have sympathy for someone who has made a mistake. I think you'll find it in Literature/{{the Bible}} quite a lot, and in various faiths; for me it's quite a simple dramatic premise, and I'd be alarmed if contemporary society decided that it could only have absolutely clean-cut, morally pure characters in its narratives. If you went through the history of art and literature doing that, you'd lose most of it!"
16* Creator/DamienChazelle's ''Film/Babylon2022'' is this to ''Film/LaLaLand'', his previous comedy-drama throwback to old-school Hollywood about people who hope to "make it" in the movies. ''La La Land'' takes the GenreThrowback route, homaging the movie musicals of the 1950s and '60s while combining them with a present-day (circa 2016) setting and an ultimately optimistic and lighthearted (if {{bittersweet|Ending}}) RomanticComedy story. ''Babylon'', meanwhile, takes the PeriodPiece route with a setting in [[UsefulNotes/ThePreCodeEra pre-Code]] Hollywood in TheRoaringTwenties, and its protagonists' dreams of fame and fortune end in disaster. Furthermore, while both films depicted Hollywood as [[HorribleHollywood not all it's cracked up to be]], ''La La Land'' downplayed it and implied that there was still something real to the magic of the movies despite all the awful people who work in them, while ''Babylon'' pulled no punches in depicting 1920s Hollywood as, if anything, even ''more'' outrageously decadent than people normally think it is, as if to say that such depravity and abuses are InherentInTheSystem and run to the very heart of the film industry.
17* A major component of the "Barbenheimer" meme is that the two films at its center, ''Film/Barbie2023'' and ''Film/{{Oppenheimer}}'', could not have been more different in terms of style and tone. Both were big-budget films made by celebrated auteurs (Creator/GretaGerwig and Creator/ChristopherNolan respectively) and featuring [[AllStarCast All-Star Casts]] that were released on the same day, July 21, 2023, but while ''Barbie'' was a lighthearted and escapist, if satirical, fantasy comedy that was drenched in aggressively girly aesthetics and a bright pink color palette, ''Oppenheimer'' was a dark historical drama about the father of the atomic bomb and him confronting the possibility that he might have enabled [[TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt the apocalypse]].
18* ''Film/BeauIsAfraid'' to ''Film/EverythingEverywhereAllAtOnce''. Both are surrealist comedies that feature some truly absurd imagery and center around dysfunctional familial relationships. But while ''Everything'' ultimately has an optimistic message and the dysfunctional family reconcile, ''Beau Is Afraid'' is hopelessly bleak from beginning to end and [[spoiler:the family never gets any better]].
19* ''Film/BillAndTedsExcellentAdventure'' to ''Film/BackToTheFuture1''. Both are '80s comedies about rock'n'roll-loving teenagers who travel through time. However, ''Back to the Future'' deliberately averted the raunchy humor of other teen movies at the time (e.g. from ''Film/FastTimesAtRidgemontHigh'' or ''Film/RevengeOfTheNerds''), while ''Bill And Ted'' embraced it. The time machines between both films are also decidedly different. In ''Back to the Future'', the time machine is a modified (then-)current-day car, while ''Bill And Ted''[='=]s time machine is a modified phone booth (a la ''Series/DoctorWho'') from the future. And most notably, Marty in ''Back to the Future'' accidentally traveled back in time, whereas Bill and Ted intentionally travel through time.
20* Nate Parker's ''Film/TheBirthOfANation2016'' to Creator/DWGriffith's ''Film/TheBirthOfANation1915''. The clash of values is similar to the below-mentioned example with ''Intolerance'', but even more explicit considering the black slave motif and the title reference, with Parker's film being a dramatization of the Nat Turner [[SlaveLiberation slave rebellion]] in which the slaves are the heroes.
21* ''Film/BlackRobe'' is this toward the NobleSavage romanticism of ''Film/DancesWithWolves''. It subverts or averts all possible cliches and stock characters that populate this kind of stories, instead paying great deal of attention to historical details and cultural context. The film goes an extra mile to portray both the unglamorous parts of natives' day-to-day life and the "good" bits, giving each the exact same amount of attention and routinely discuss or lampshade this. And rather than picking either, it endorses ''both'' inevitability of (severe) CultureClash and how various people can be surprisingly similar.
22* ''Film/BlackSwan'' manages to serve as ''both'' a SpiritualSequel and SpiritualAntithesis to ''Film/TheWrestler''. Creator/DarrenAronofsky described them as "two halves of the same film": both involve artist protagonists whose careers wreak havoc in their personal life but ''The Wrestler'' revolves around the beauty found in the "lower art" of wrestling while ''Black Swan'' revolves around the horror found in the "higher art" of ballet. They were originally going to be the one movie -- with a wrestler falling in love with a ballerina. Aronofsky realised that might be a bit much and split them into two.
23* Sheila O'Malley, in [[http://www.sheilaomalley.com/?p=2832 this article]] about ''Film/BlastFromThePast'', described it as this to ''Film/{{Pleasantville}}'', another FishOutOfTemporalWater comedy from the year before about people with the values of TheFifties interacting with TheNineties. ''Pleasantville'' was about a pair of teenagers from the '90s who get [[TrappedInTVLand sucked into a '50s sitcom universe]], whereas ''Blast from the Past'' is about a young man who, thanks to some comic mishaps during the Cuban Missile Crisis, was raised in a fallout shelter for 35 years and emerges in the late '90s as a quintessentially '50s/early '60s kid. Furthermore, while ''Pleasantville'' subverted the '50s nostalgia of its setting by having its protagonists shake up the stodgy world they find themselves in and bring to it a measure of cultural liberation, ''Blast from the Past'' plays it straight, presenting its protagonist Adam Webber's old-fashioned values as making him superior to the coarse, ill-mannered modern world he enters.
24* Ironically, ''Film/BloodAndChocolate2007'' ends up being this to [[Literature/BloodAndChocolate1997 the very book]] that serves as its [[TheFilmOfTheBook source material]], due to the numerous changes to the plot and characters. The book has Aiden's love for Vivian turn to terror and revulsion when she [[NonHumanLoverReveal reveals her true self to him]]; he regards her as a monster [[spoiler:and tries to kill her]]. Vivian realizes that they would never work out as neither belong in the other's world (he's not as able to accept the strange and supernatural as he thinks; Vivian cannot be a 'normal' teenage girl for him) and she embraces being a werewolf [[spoiler:and falls in love with [[LastGuyWins Gabriel]]]], finally content with her life. In the film, true love prevails for Aiden and Vivian; he loves and supports her even after learning she's a werewolf, and she defies the traditions and expectations of her pack to be with him. In the book Gabriel is the person who helps Vivian truly understand and accept herself, while in the film he's the person who tries to keep her from following her own path. Likewise, her relationship with Aiden in the book is based around her pretending to be something she's not, while in the movie her relationship with Aiden is the catalyst for her becoming her own person.
25* Creator/BlumhouseProductions, mentioned above as having its own antithesis in Creator/{{A24}}, was also intended as this to Creator/MiramaxFilms and its successor Creator/TheWeinsteinCompany. Jason Blum, the founder of Blumhouse, worked at Miramax from 1996 until he quit in 2000 to [[StartMyOwn start his own production company]] after he got fed up with working for Harvey Weinstein, who he [[https://www.indiewire.com/2018/07/jason-blum-harvey-weinstein-bullying-miramax-lit-cigarette-1201984413/ described]] as a BadBoss who bullied and abused his underlings and engaged in frequent ExecutiveMeddling. Blum's model for making movies was to instead offer filmmakers [[AuteurLicense near-total creative freedom, including final cut]], in exchange for very low budgets to ensure that he wouldn't take much of a loss on even an absolute bomb.[[note]]The general rule is that Blumhouse pays at scale and offers no more than $5 million for an original film. Sequels to proven hits, of course, are more likely to get bigger budgets, as are original films from people who'd made hits for Blumhouse before, but even there, the budgets usually top out at about $20 million.[[/note]]
26* ''Film/BossNigger'' to ''Film/BlazingSaddles''. Two [[TheWestern Westerns]] released one year apart that satirized the racial politics of the genre, the protagonists being Black sheriffs in white frontier towns who battle the racism of the time, but while ''Blazing Saddles'' was PlayedForLaughs as a parody of the genre and provided an optimistic story where [[TheGoodGuysAlwaysWin evil would be vanquished]], ''Boss Nigger'' is a decidedly [[SlidingScaleOfIdealismVersusCynicism more cynical]] {{Blaxploitation}} film, portraying the town's racism unhumorously and with [[OnlyInItForTheMoney opportunistic heroes]] who are [[ALighterShadeOfBlack only marginally better]] than the villains.
27* ''Film/{{Brazil}}''[='s=] idea of a dystopian authoritarian nightmare where dissidents are dragged off, never to be seen again, is similar to ''Literature/NineteenEightyFour'''s dystopian authoritarian nightmare where dissidents are dragged off, never to be seen again, but one major different is how the state is portrayed. In ''1984'' the state is infallible, never ([[WrittenByTheWinners officially]]) makes mistakes, and everyone is constantly watched at all times in one of the worst kinds of surveillance states imaginable. Even LaResistance is secretly a sting operation by [[BigBrotherIsWatching Big Brother]] to trap wannabe dissidents. In ''Brazil'', the state is anything ''but'' infallible. It is a [[ObstructiveBureaucrat bureaucratic disaster]] where mistakes are not only frequent, but sometimes outright deadly, as demonstrated at the start where a man is dragged off to be tortured and killed because of a clerical error falsely labeling him a terrorist. And while LaResistance is real, [[TheRevolutionWillNotBeCivilized they cause collateral damage and civilian casualties in their efforts]].
28* Creator/DavidCronenberg has called his 1979 horror film ''Film/TheBrood'' a counterpoint to ''Film/KramerVsKramer'', showing a much messier and more painful divorce and custody battle, ending with the child pretty emphatically scarred for life and five people dead.
29* ''Film/CalendarGirls'' to ''Film/TheFullMonty''. Both are British comedy-drama films about aging Yorkshire natives who hatch unlikely plans to make money by [[NakedPeopleAreFunny getting naked]]. But one is about a group of impoverished working-class men in urban Sheffield who decide to stage a strip act after they're laid off from their blue-collar jobs, and because one of them is really desperate to make his child support payments so that he can see his son. The other is about a group of middle-class women in the Yorkshire countryside who decide to pose nude for a calendar to raise money for a volunteer organization, starting when one of them loses her husband to leukemia. Amusingly, both of them also have stage and [[TheMusical musical]] adaptations.
30* ''Film/CarlitosWay'' to ''Film/Scarface1983''. They're both films directed by Creator/BrianDePalma about a Hispanic gangster who meets a bloody end when they try to fight their way out with Creator/AlPacino as the main lead. However, ''Scarface (1983)'' is about the rise and fall of a Cuban drug lord who gets [[SanitySlippage progressively more insane]] from his [[GettingHighOnTheirOwnSupply supply of cocaine]], while ''Carlito's Way'' focuses on a Puerto Rican mobster attempting to integrate back into society by reforming and abandoning his criminal ways. The settings and time periods too are also quite different: The former film is set in [[TheEighties '80s]] UsefulNotes/{{Miami}} while the latter takes place in [[TheSeventies '70s]] [[UsefulNotes/NewYorkCity New York]], specifically the Bronx.
31* Early in his career, Creator/JackieChan was pressured into [[BruceLeeClone imitating]] the recently departed Creator/BruceLee, but he ended up finding success by deliberately doing the opposite, making comedic films that used kung fu for slapstick as opposed to the more serious and dramatic films Lee made.
32--> '''Jackie Chan:''' "Bruce Lee kick high, I kick low. Bruce pose after a punch, [[SurprisinglyRealisticOutcome I go 'ow'."]]
33* [[Film/WillyWonkaAndTheChocolateFactory Both]] [[Film/CharlieAndTheChocolateFactory film adaptations]] of ''Literature/CharlieAndTheChocolateFactory''. The first made some significant changes from the book and [[BoxOfficeBomb fared badly upon release]], but [[VindicatedByHistory subsequently gained a large fanbase over time]]. The 2005 film, on the other hand, was [[TruerToTheText much more nearly akin to the book]] and did much better at the box office, but has a more negative fan reaction overall.
34* ''Film/{{Cloverfield}}'' to ''Film/SnakesOnAPlane''.
35** On one hand, they can be seen as this on a meta level, as explored in [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RCLHiNw7VSo this video]] by Ryan Hollinger. Both were monster/killer animal movies from the mid-late '00s that relied on internet-based ViralMarketing campaigns to build their buzz, being among the first major Hollywood films to really capitalize on the nascent social media of the time. ''Snakes on a Plane'', however, focused on using its [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin self-explanatory, high-concept title]] to turn itself into an [[MemeticMutation internet meme]], which ultimately backfired when the meme became old hat in the year between the film's announcement and its release. ''Cloverfield'', meanwhile, used its early ads to build a mystery around itself through an AlternateRealityGame, and took only six months to do so, meaning that the film came out as hype for it was peaking instead of long after it had faded and turned to backlash. More importantly, while the marketing team for ''Snakes on a Plane'' let the broader internet culture do their job for them, meaning that the marketing for it fell victim to the vagaries of such, the marketing team for ''Cloverfield'' kept tight control over the buzz surrounding their film. The result was that, while ''Snakes on a Plane'' was a BoxOfficeBomb, ''Cloverfield'' was a smash hit that spawned a ModularFranchise of films that used similar ViralMarketing conceits.
36** The differences in the films' marketing are also reflected in their respective tones. ''Snakes on a Plane'', the film that relied on internet memes to put itself into the pop culture conversation, was a goofy HorrorComedy that proudly boasted a Film/SyFyChannelOriginalMovie premise, its action taking place entirely within the narrow confines of a commercial airliner. ''Cloverfield'', the film that employed a cerebral, multi-layered ARG to get people talking, was a {{kaiju}} DisasterMovie set in a massive city, one that played its premise very much for horror. Notably, while ''Snakes on a Plane'' is ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin and is very up-front about being such, ''Cloverfield'' relies heavily on the viewer not knowing what the hell is going on and being just as panicked as the main characters.
37* ''Film/{{Clueless}}'', like ''Film/{{Kids}}'', is a teen movie from 1995 about the problems of growing up, but both approach it from two completely different angles. ''Clueless'' is a [[LighterAndSofter PG-13-rated comedy]] about a privileged ValleyGirl from bright and sunny Beverly Hills, its plot being about ThePowerOfFriendship in bringing people together, while ''Kids'' is an [[DarkerAndEdgier NC-17-rated cautionary tale]] about juvenile {{delinquents}} in grungy New York whose relationships are mutually destructive and wind up giving them HIV, drug addictions, and lasting scars. Tom Doher, writing for ''Cineaste'' magazine, described the two films' opposite worldviews thusly:
38-->"No wonder the polar rift in directorial sensibilities ([Amy] Heckerling and [[Creator/LarryClark [Larry] Clark]] represent two diametrically opposed attitudes to filmmaking no less than towards adolescence) was seized upon as emblematic of American culture's own ambivalences towards the permanent subcultures in its midst. Are the kids alright or all screwed up, budding citizens heading into a better tomorrow or pretty vacant punks with no future?"
39* Creator/TheCoenBrothers are known for being fond of this trope. Many of their films are essentially back-to-back antitheses of one another, portraying similar ideas, themes and stories in completely opposite ways.
40** ''Film/{{Fargo}}'' and ''Film/TheBigLebowski'' are both stories set TwentyMinutesIntoThePast about unsympathetic men who try to exploit their wives' kidnappings to get rich, and about the {{Unlikely Hero}}es who set out to solve their kidnappings and save the day. But ''Fargo'' is a tense drama set in the frigidly cold rural Midwest and told in a deliberately realistic and naturalistic style (to the point that it claims to be BasedOnATrueStory [[note]] [[BasedOnAGreatBigLie It's not]][[/note]]), while ''The Big Lebowski'' is a raucous comedy set in urban Los Angeles and told in a deliberately stylized and surreal style to the point that it includes several lengthy {{dream sequence}}s. Marge Gunderson of ''Fargo'' is also a [[{{Determinator}} driven]] and hyper-competent police officer who successfully manages to bring Jerry Lundegaard to justice, but [[spoiler: fails to save his wife Jean]]. By contrast, "The Dude" is a lazy, slovenly hippie who [[ShaggyDogStory fails to solve anything]], and Jeffrey Lebowski ends the movie as a KarmaHoudini -- though with the silver lining that [[spoiler: his wife Bunny is perfectly safe, since she was never kidnapped in the first place]].
41** ''Film/NoCountryForOldMen'' and ''Film/TrueGrit'' are both latter-day [[TheWestern Western]] throwbacks [[TheFilmOfTheBook based on novels]], though they sit on completely opposite ends of the SlidingScaleOfIdealismVersusCynicism. ''No Country for Old Men'' is a relentlessly grim and cynical GenreDeconstruction of Westerns [[NewOldWest set in the modern American Southwest]] about an aging sheriff who sets out to apprehend a remorseless hitman, ending with [[spoiler: the hit-man killing the supposed protagonist and [[KarmaHoudini escaping with zero consequences]]]]. ''True Grit'', meanwhile, is a completely earnest {{Reconstruction}} of Westerns set on the actual 19th century Western frontier (to the point of being a [[TheRemake remake]] of a Creator/JohnWayne classic) about a young girl who sets out to avenge her parents' murder by bandits, and [[spoiler: actually gets the justice she seeks]].
42** ''Film/InsideLlewynDavis'' and ''Film/HailCaesar'' are both post-war period pieces about artists trying to make a living in the entertainment industry. But ''Inside Llewyn Davis'' is a downbeat drama about a struggling musician in 1960s New York, while ''Hail, Caesar!'' is a colorful comedy about a successful movie star in 1950s Hollywood. Further, the titular character of ''Inside Llewyn Davis'' is portrayed as an acerbic and antisocial man who struggles to make ends meet because [[ScrewTheMoneyIHaveRules he values his artistic integrity more than making money]], and is probably [[InsufferableGenius too smart for his own good]]. By contrast, Baird Whitlock of ''Hail, Caesar!'' is a lovable, charming dimwit who has absolutely no problems with being a sellout, but is shown to be extremely gullible and manipulatable in spite of his great success.
43* The Dutch film ''Film/TheColumnist'' is this to ''Film/FallingDown''. Both films are [[BlackComedy darkly comedic]] thrillers about an ordinary person who hits a RageBreakingPoint and goes on a violent {{vigilante|Man}} rampage against what they see as a WorldGoneMad, and are deeply satirical about modern society and its ills while ultimately revealing their respective {{Villain Protagonist}}s to be [[{{Hypocrite}} a lot less righteous than they think they are]]. ''Falling Down''[='=]s William Foster was a right-leaning, blue-collar AngryWhiteMan who worked in the highly technical profession of engineering at a defense contractor before losing his job due to the end of the UsefulNotes/ColdWar, and his targets, from an AsianStoreOwner to GangBangers to a homeless PhonyVeteran, represent the fears of conservative Middle America in the early '90s. Meanwhile, Femke Boot, the titular protagonist of ''The Columnist'', is a left-leaning, white-collar woman who works in the highly social profession of journalism, pushed over the edge not by economic misery but by [[SocialMediaIsBad online harassment]], and her targets are internet trolls and far-right {{conspiracy theorist}}s who symbolize the fears of young liberals in the late 2010s. Also, while Foster only directly kills one person even as he builds up an [[SerialEscalation increasingly outlandish]] arsenal of weapons, Femke is an outright SerialKiller who murders numerous people yet sticks to knives, garden shears, [[ElectrifiedBathtub bathtubs]], and other close-in weapons throughout.
44* In 2010, Creator/AlexandreAja directed ''Film/Piranha3D'', a horror movie about [[PiranhaProblem aquatic predators]] that [[PlayedForLaughs played its campy premise to the hilt]], and was filled with tons of BlackComedy and BloodyHilarious gore. In 2019, he directed ''Film/{{Crawl}}'', another horror movie about [[NeverSmileAtACrocodile aquatic predators]] that took itself far more seriously, the killer alligators PlayedForHorror as a genuine menace to the protagonists.
45[[/folder]]
46
47[[folder:D-F]]
48* ''Film/DarkestHour'' is this to ''Film/{{Downfall}}'': in both the audience is following a UsefulNotes/WorldWarII leader who is in an utterly desperate situation, seen largely from the point of view of their respective secretaries. Both are surrounded by advisors who urge surrender. The major difference is that Churchill's "mad" suggestion for evacuating Dunkirk succeeds, whereas Hitler's mad hopes of an eleventh hour victory over the Allied forces are crushed.
49** Also, the Churchill of ''Darkest Hour'' is the OnlySaneMan who understands the Nazi menace, compared to the delusional peace faction, who believe that Hitler will stop short of invading England if offered the right incentive, with the right amount of obsequiousnesss; while the Hitler of ''Downfall'' is a delusional madman, surrounded by sane men who know that Germany's choices have been reduced to humiliating defeat or utter annihilation.
50* ''Film/{{Daybreakers}}'' is this to ''Film/Ultraviolet2006'', as both take place in TwentyMinutesIntoTheFuture {{Dystopia}}s featuring [[OurVampiresAreDifferent Vampires]]. However, ''Film/{{Daybreakers}}'' is set in a world where vampires rule but [[DoesThisRemindYouOfAnything are running out of human blood]], while in ''Ultraviolet'', the [[NotUsingTheZWord Hematophages]] are a FantasticUnderclass suffering from [[FantasticRacism discrimination and attacks by humans]].
51* The Franchise/DCExtendedUniverse is a franchise-wide example, the Spiritual Antithesis to the Franchise/MarvelCinematicUniverse. Both franchises are modern reimaginings of superheroes in a post-9/11 America and the films are distributed by two major film companies (Disney/Warner Bros). However, the MCU is the product of a centralized production studio where every film is ready for development and they bring in a director to work out the vision of the studio, which has resulted in fairly consistent quality control, tone, and a running story spanning between all the films even if they have been criticized for diminishing the control the director has on the individual film, and for putting too much focus on the larger picture at the expense of what the movie could be as a standalone. The DCEU, on the other hand, initially set itself up as placing the ''Film/{{Justice League|2017}}'' movies at the center of the franchise and emphasizing individual directors' freedom so long as they provide the foundation for the ''Justice League'' CrisisCrossover. In fact, rather than starting with a bunch of origin stories and progressing to the crossover like the MCU did, ''Justice League'' provided introductions to a lot of heroes who will eventually get their solo film. This eventually changed over time, however, as both franchises took steps in the other's direction. After the extensively covered TroubledProduction and mixed critical reception of all their films bar ''Wonder Woman'', in 2018 Creator/WarnerBros appointed central figures like Walter Hamada and Geoff Johns to oversee their universe. In contrast, with his AuteurLicense granted by Disney, Kevin Feige was able to do away with the Creative Committee (which had arguably caused problems with previous directors walking off projects, such as Patty Jenkins and Edgar Wright) and allow the MCU's directors and filmmakers more freedom. This also extends to the films and characters of both franchises:
52** ''Film/BatmanVSupermanDawnOfJustice'' and ''Film/CaptainAmericaCivilWar''. At face value, they have similar premises: A [[HumbleHero working-class hero]] going up against a [[CrimefightingWithCash wealthy hero]] over ideological differences. However, look at their subtitles: whereas ''Dawn of Justice'' is about former enemies who help ''found'' the SharedUniverse's SuperTeam, ''CivilWar'' is about former allies who ''break-up'' the SuperTeam.
53** [[Characters/DCEUJusticeLeague The Justice League]] and [[Characters/MCUAvengers The Avengers]]. Several of the core members of the Justice League can be considered {{foil}}s or {{Shadow Archetype}}s to similar members of the Avengers, taking the same basic character archetypes and turning them on their heads:
54*** [[Characters/DCEUSuperman Superman]] and [[Characters/MCUThorOdinson Thor]] are both superpowered HumanAliens in red capes who see Earth as their adopted home, and end up clashing with rogue members of their species. But while Thor is a jovial ProudWarriorRaceGuy with a family back on his home planet, Superman is a quiet [[TheStoic stoic]] who never got a chance to know his biological family and has to deal with [[AllOfTheOtherReindeer feeling like an outcast among the people of Earth]]. Similarly, Thor does battle with Loki, his weaselly and irreverent adopted brother who becomes a TragicVillain, and is ultimately loyal only to himself. Superman battles General Zod, a hyper-disciplined soldier and unrepentant fascist who sees himself as [[IDidWhatIHadToDo serving the best interests of the Kryptonian people]].
55*** [[Characters/DCEUWonderWoman Wonder Woman]] and [[Characters/MCUSteveRogers Captain America]] are both veteran soldiers dressed in patriotic colors who are [[OlderThanTheyLook much older than they appear]], and were fighting America's wars long before they joined their respective super-teams. But while Captain America was the scrawny son of poor immigrants who volunteered to become the ultimate soldier to save his country, Wonder Woman is the daughter of the Queen of the Amazons [[spoiler:and Zeus]] who inherited her destiny as a warrior who goes to fight against the concept of war itself, and [[TheSlowPath she's forced to spend a whole century waiting for the founding of the Justice League]], while Captain America [[HumanPopsicle is awakened after sleeping for seven decades]]. Also: Steve Rogers fights in UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, a conflict that is usually remembered as history's last truly glorious battle between Good and Evil; Diana fights in UsefulNotes/WorldWarI, a conflict that is usually remembered as a tragic and pointless waste of human life which (of course) [[HereWeGoAgain just paved the way for another world war]].
56*** [[Characters/DCEUWonderWoman Wonder Woman]] and [[Characters/MCUCarolDanvers Captain Marvel]] are both [[ProudWarriorRaceGuy noble warrior]] [[ActionGirl heroines]] who have godly powers and were active long before joining their respective super-teams. But while Wonder Woman is an Amazon who was born with divine powers and her backstory is grounded in magic and classical mythology, Captain Marvel is a highly decorated human pilot [[EmpoweredBadassNormal who is empowered by alien tech]] and her backstory is based on the science fiction and the cosmic realm. Wonder Woman is considered a GirlyGirl who wears elegant dresses, works as an art museum curator, and fights with the grace of a LadyOfWar. In contrast, Captain Marvel is a {{Tomboy}} who eschews feminine outfits, pursues a more traditionally male-orientated military career, and fights with the brute force of a rough-and-tumble brawler.
57*** [[Characters/MCUTonyStark Iron Man]] and [[Characters/DCEUBatman Batman]] are both wealthy industrialists and corporate [=CEOs=] who live in secluded mansions and fight crime with technology, despite lacking superpowers. But while Iron Man was a reckless ManChild playboy who abused his power and wealth until a brush with death convinced him to become a superhero to atone for his past misdeeds, Batman was inspired to become a superhero after witnessing the deaths of his parents as a child, and [[MarriedToTheJob he has seemingly never had much of a life outside crime-fighting]].
58*** [[Characters/DCEUAquaman Aquaman]] and [[Characters/MCUTChalla Black Panther]] are both benevolent kings of technologically advanced hidden kingdom who wish to stop their kingdom from going to war with the outside world. But while Black Panther is a quiet stoic who was born in his native homeland and accepted by his people as a respected member of the royal family, Aquaman is a BoisterousBruiser of mixed-ancestry who grew up in America as an outcast before returning to his ancestral home to become king. Amusingly, Aquaman's backstory would also make him a heroic version of Erik Killmonger, the BigBad of Black Panther's movie.
59** ''[[Characters/DCEUTaskForceX Suicide Squad]]'' to ''[[Characters/MCUGuardiansOfTheGalaxy Guardians of the Galaxy]]''. Both are films where the main characters are criminals who are brought together to defeat a greater evil while the primary heroes of the respective universes (the Justice League and the Avengers) aren't involved. Although the Guardians weren't as corrupt, and willingly opposed Ronan, the Squad were convicts who were promised freedom if they helped defeat the Enchantress. For their lead females, Gamora couldn't agree to Thanos destroying worlds, but Harley was still loyal to The Joker. Also, the Guardians get their criminal records expunged, while the Squad do not get their promised freedom, though Deadshot does get to spend time with his daughter. Incidentally, ''Guardians of the Galaxy'' and ''Suicide Squad'''s [[Film/TheSuicideSquad sequel]] are both directed and written by Creator/JamesGunn.
60** ''[[Characters/MCUCarolDanvers Captain Marvel]]'' and ''[[Characters/DCEUShazam Shazam]]''. Both are humans struggling to master amazing energy abilities with the help of a new family of allies. However, while Carol Danvers is an adult soldier empowered by alien technology due to an accident involving her long-time mentor, Billy Batson is a teenager whose powers are bestowed upon him by a wizard he only just met. Carol is generally serious and devoted with moments of snark, while Billy generally doesn't take himself or his situation seriously. While Carol learns that the people who took her in were manipulating her and separating her from her real family, Billy learns that his adoptive family cares more for him than his blood relatives. The films also end with their heroes in different places. Carol leaves Earth again to fight amongst the stars, while Billy settles back in with his adoptive family. In a meta sense, regarding their codenames, Carol started as Ms. Marvel, later going by Binary and Warbird, until she settled as Captain Marvel as a LegacyCharacter upgrade. Billy's alter ego, on the other hand, ''started'' as Captain Marvel, remaining consistent through the years until the ComicBook/New52 ContinuityReboot changed it to Shazam.
61** ''Film/Shazam2019'':
62*** The film contrasts with ''Film/{{Brightburn}}''. Both involve young boys having Superman-like powers and discovering what they're capable of, but while ''[=BrightBurn=]'' 's protagonist [[BewareTheSuperman decides to show how dangerous he can be with that kind of power]], ''SHAZAM!''[='=]s hero is simply acting like any other kid would with that power and learns how to become a real superhero.
63*** The film also functions as a {{reconstruction}} of the Superman archetype, and is also a rebuttal of the previous DCEU movies starring Superman. ''Film/ManOfSteel'' and ''Film/BatmanVSupermanDawnOfJustice'' shows a Superman who is plagued by self-doubt, grew up with no role models to boost his confidence, is distrusted by the people of Earth, and [[DestructiveSavior causes collateral damage]] in his heroic actions. In contrast, while Billy Batson starts out with Clark Kent's glum attitude and accidentally destructive tendencies, he has the luxury of becoming a superhero after the Justice League have become a household name which he can use as a guideline, he gradually lightens up, and through trial and error he becomes an all-loving, inspirational hero who is beloved by his hometown.
64** Within the DCEU, Cassandra Cain in ''Film/BirdsOfPrey2020'' is this to Billy Batson in ''Film/Shazam2019''. Both are {{Kid Hero}}es with {{Alliterative Name}}s who have foster parents and get pulled into superheroics, but whereas Billy got a loving surrogate family and became a superhero in his own right [[spoiler:and the leader of a team of such]], Cass instead got a foster couple who are only heard offscreen yelling at each other in one scene, causing her to turn to a life of petty crime and later become the sidekick to ComicBook/HarleyQuinn.
65* ''Film/DeadRingers'' to ''Film/TheFly1986''. Both are Creator/DavidCronenberg films adapted from written works, coming one after the other in his filmography. Each is a PsychologicalThriller {{Tragedy}} with only a few significant characters in which a man's jealous love for a woman inadvertently sends him into SanitySlippage, culminating in a grisly finale. Both involve extensive special effects and a lead actor who was very seriously committed to their performance on physical and mental levels. But where ''The Fly'' is a science fiction film involving a transformation into both a HalfHumanHybrid and MadScientist with extreme amounts of onscreen BodyHorror, ''Dead Ringers'' is a more realistic story of a gynecologist who becomes a MadDoctor and the BodyHorror is more suggested than shown. Where ''The Fly'' involves two entities (the scientist and a housefly) merging into one with the special effects creating that creature, ''Dead Ringers'' involves two entities trying to separate themselves -- the doctor and his twin, who have shared the same life if not body, with the special effects allowing one actor (Creator/JeremyIrons) to play both. The visuals, acting, and tone are icy and chic in ''Dead Ringers'', whereas ''The Fly'' is warmer and dowdier. Interestingly, these two films are the most frequently cited candidates for the title of Cronenberg's greatest. The ''Dead Ringers'' trailer actually positioned it as this trope in its narration (and used RecycledTrailerMusic from its precursor): "From David Cronenberg, who in ''The Fly'' made the fantastic real... Now, David Cronenberg makes reality the ultimate fantasy."
66* ''Film/DemolitionMan'' to ''Film/TheTerminator'' [[Film/Terminator2JudgmentDay and its sequel]]. Both movies are about a hero and villain travelling through time to duke it out in a period that's not prepared for them, except ''Demolition Man'' is set in a future that's meant to be seen as desperately needing a heavy injection of roughneck machismo, while the ''Terminator'' films had their hero and villain come from a hellish future to a relatively peaceful present and the films condemn violence for the sake of violence.
67* ''Film/DieHard'' is this to ''Film/EscapeFromNewYork''. Two of the most influential action films of TheEighties, both are about a lone man in a [[SleevesAreForWimps tank top]] with a "cowboy" attitude fighting to escape from a ClosedCircle full of bad guys trying to kill him, all with a darkly comedic streak to their heroics (both Creator/BruceWillis and Creator/KurtRussell had been [[TomHanksSyndrome comedy actors]] before they became {{action hero}}es). The ways in which they handle this basic story outline, however, are at near-complete odds, especially when it comes to the routes they take with their GenreDeconstruction.
68** The biggest difference comes in their protagonists, ''Escape''[='=]s Snake Plissken and ''Die Hard''[='=]s John [=McClane=]. Snake's backstory is that of an archetypal HollywoodActionHero, a [[EyepatchOfPower one-eyed]] ex-Special Forces operative turned {{bank robber|y}} who was on his way to prison before being recruited for his mission. Russell may not have the HeroicBuild of someone like Creator/ArnoldSchwarzenegger, but everything else about his performance tells the viewer that he can kick ass, take names, and get the job done. He goes into the Manhattan prison island on the orders of the good guys (well, as good as the [[OppressiveStatesOfAmerica pseudo-fascist American government]] of [[TwentyMinutesIntoTheFuture 1997]] can be said to be) to rescue the President in exchange for having his sentence commuted, and the only reason he cares about his mission is because of the ExplosiveLeash they implanted in his neck. John [=McClane=], on the other hand, is an ordinary police officer who was thrust into harm's way unprepared by the bad guys when they took over Nakatomi Plaza, and despite his genuinely badass feats, he winds up more an ActionSurvivor than anything, ending the film in terrible shape and grateful that it's over. His motivations for fighting them are [[ItsPersonal personal]]: they're threatening his wife, who, marital problems aside, he still loves and cherishes. In short, while Snake is an AntiHero who happens to be the perfect man for the mission, [=McClane=] is a conventionally heroic figure (albeit a [[GoodIsNotNice salty]] [[ClusterFBomb one]]) who was caught in the wrong place at the wrong time and is out of his element. [=McClane=] even wears a white shirt (at least, [[ClothingDamage one that starts out as white]]) in contrast to Snake's black one, as if to [[ColorMotif highlight his more heroic and optimistic outlook]].
69** They also occupy opposite points on the SlidingScaleOfIdealismVersusCynicism. ''Escape from New York'', written shortly after Watergate, is a very cynical film, as was typical of Creator/JohnCarpenter's output, with Snake's handlers outside Manhattan, the United States Police Force, being a bunch of jackbooted thugs shown right from the start to not have his best interests in mind and arguably portrayed as more villainous than [[BigBad the Duke of New York]]. His feeling is mutual, [[spoiler:such that he decides to screw them over at the end for it]]. It's set in a {{dystopia}}n near-future, and Snake is very much a product of that BadFuture. (The sequel ''Film/EscapeFromLA'' goes even further, portraying the [[EvilStatesOfAmerica far-right, theocratic US government in 2013]] as outright evil and the GreaterScopeVillain, one that's [[EvilVersusEvil just as bad as Cuervo Jones' communist Shining Path army]].) ''Die Hard'', on the other hand, is far more optimistic, firmly believing that GoodIsOldFashioned in its framing of [=McClane=] as an old-school, blue-collar, all-American Joe who feels like a FishOutOfWater when juxtaposed with both the [[JapanTakesOverTheWorld Japanese-flavored]] [[CorruptCorporateExecutive corporate excess]] of Nakatomi Plaza and the [[GentlemanThief suave European villainy]] of Hans Gruber. Sgt. Al Powell, [=McClane=]'s police contact outside the building, is a genuinely good man who agonizes over the mistake he made that got a boy killed, and quickly becomes his most trustworthy ally. In many ways, ''Die Hard'' serves as a celebration of the PatrioticFervor and cultural cheerleading of '80s America that ''Escape from New York'' offered a far more satirical take on. (This is notably a big shift from the book it was based on, Roderick Thorp's ''Nothing Lasts Forever'', which went much heavier on BlackAndGrayMorality and had a comparatively bleak ending.)
70* ''Film/DontLookUp'' is a much more cynical and [[BlackComedy comedic]] antithetical sister to ''Film/Armageddon1998''. In both films, a gigantic meteor is flying towards the Earth and will wipe out all life if it hits the planet. In ''Armageddon'', the human race nobly put aside all their ideological and national differences to stop the meteor [[spoiler:and the film ends with one of the astronauts performing a HeroicSacrifice to save the world]]. In ''Don't Look Up'' , the human race falls into political division and petty squabbling while the meteor hurtles ever closer to Earth. A significant portion of the population actively deny the comet even exists, and when an Elon Musk[=/=] Steve Jobs {{Expy}} discovers that [[spoiler:the meteor is rich in rare minerals worth trillions of dollars, ''he actually scuppers a plan that might save the world'' in favour of a riskier (and ultimately unworkable) scheme to break the meteor up into pieces that can be captured for profit. The film ends with the astronomer protagonist [[FaceDeathWithDignity having one last dinner with his family before the meteor hits]], lamenting that the world's leadership had everything they needed to prevent the extinction of the human race and all life on Earth, except for the actual political will and competence to knuckle down and do it]].
71* ''Film/DoubleIndemnity'' can be seen as one to ''Film/TheMalteseFalcon1941''. Both are early ''noir'' films about a man who struggles with temptations from a FemmeFatale. Sam Spade, the man in ''Falcon'', initially appears as an off-putting, cold-hearted thug, but gradually reveals a more human and sympathetic side, and ultimately triumphs by finding the strength inside himself to resist the woman's corruption. Whereas Walter Neff, the man in ''Indemnity'', initially appears to just be a likeable everyman, yet gives in to corruption almost immediately, and dies as a result.
72* ''Film/EDtv'' came out one year after ''Film/TheTrumanShow'' (but was based on an obscure film from five years before) and has the opposite premise of that film. Truman Burbank has been unknowingly living a fake life for almost 30 years: he is constantly being filmed by hidden cameras, and being surrounded by actors pretending to be family members and friends. On the other hand, Ed Pekurny is an average guy who wants to become famous, so that he voluntarily decides to be followed by a crew at all times, in plain sight, while living a regular life among his family and people he knows.
73* ''Film/EvilDead2013'' is this to the rest of the ''Franchise/EvilDead'' series, especially the sequels. While the [[Film/TheEvilDead1981 original film]] was played relatively seriously, its low budget also made it a rather campy BMovie with a lot of NarmCharm, a direction that the series opted to deliberately go in with the sequels, which were {{Horror Comed|y}}ies that made the protagonist Ash into a [[BondOneLiner snarky]] ActionHero who slaughtered hordes of [[OurZombiesAreDifferent Deadites]] and vanquished demons. The remake did away with all of that and [[RevisitingTheRoots returned to the tone]] that the original film was going for, only now with a far bigger budget behind it, producing a graphically violent, brutal, and visceral horror film in which everything was PlayedForHorror.
74* ''Film/FatCity'' to ''Film/{{Rocky}}''. Both are sports drama films about a boxing everyman that decides to do something more with his life. While Rocky is a mentee, Billy in "Fat City" is the mentor of a young boxer. Also Billy's career path has a ''very'' different destination than Rocky's.
75* ''Film/FatHead'' is made by Tom Naughton as a response to ''Film/SuperSizeMe'', and takes an opposite approach to Morgan Spurlock's [=McDonalds=] experiment while still attempting to replicate it. Spurlock deliberately goes after the unhealtheist items on the menu, force feeds himself until he throws up, and does not keep a food log; Naughton, reasoning that he has a functioning brain, restricts his carb intake, avoids sugary sodas, and publishes his food log for transparency. Their attitudes to the larger "obesity epidemic" are also polar opposites, with Spurlock openly accusing the fast food industry of being responsible and argues that consumers should boycot them until they go bankrupt, while Naughton takes a deep dive into the statistics and research used by health experts and lobby groups such as the CSPI (used as a source by Spurlock), claiming that they have an agenda and deliberately fudged the numbers. Basically, Spurlock takes a left-progressive, social activist approach, while Naughton is a libertarian-minded, do-your-own-research and free choice advocate.
76* ''Film/{{Fitzcarraldo}}'' to ''Film/AguirreTheWrathOfGod''. Both are cynical stories by Creator/WernerHerzog starring Creator/KlausKinski about white men heading [[RiverOfInsanity into the Amazon]] to civilize it and return rich and powerful. In ''Aguirre'', they end up dying pointlessly, while in ''Fitzcarraldo'', they actually learn respect for their own limitations and others.
77* Music/IceCube [[https://www.complex.com/covers/oral-history-of-friday-20th-anniversary/ felt]] that many of the {{hood film}}s of the early '90s (including some that he had starred in) were [[TooBleakStoppedCaring pointlessly grim]], gave off a bad image of urban communities as {{Vice Cit|y}}ies, and missed the fun that a lot of people had growing up in places like South Central, so he wrote ''Film/{{Friday}}'' as a LighterAndSofter version of that material. Its plot, about two guys having to pay back a psychotic drug dealer who they owe money to, could be taken from any number of contemporary urban crime dramas... except it's a StonerFlick in which all of that is PlayedForLaughs, the inciting incident being one of the main characters smoking all the weed he was supposed to sell.
78-->"In the hood, they was doing movies like ''Film/BoyzNTheHood'', which I did, ''Film/MenaceIISociety'', ''Film/SouthCentral'', and even ''Film/{{Colors}}'', going back that far. Everybody was looking at our neighborhood like it was [[UrbanHellscape hell on Earth]], like the worst place you can grow up in America. And I’m like, why? I didn’t see it all that way. I mean, I knew it was crazy around where I grew up but we had fun in the hood. We used to trip off the neighborhood."
79* In the ''Crystal Lake Memories'' documentary, Sean Cunningham claimed that, in the original ''Film/{{Friday the 13th|1980}}'' movie, he unconsciously inverted the mother-son relationship of ''Film/{{Psycho}}''. Instead of Norman Bates' [[EvilOldFolks evil mother]] being revealed as a figment of the seemingly kind man's personality, he had Pamela Vorhees, a seemingly kind woman, be revealed as the culprit of murders assumed to have been committed by her son. At one point, she even says "Kill them, mommy" to herself, implying Jason was also part of her personality.
80[[/folder]]
81
82[[folder:G-K]]
83* ''Film/GetOut2017'', like ''Film/ThePurge'', is a "social horror" movie from the 2010s produced by Creator/BlumhouseProductions, using horror movie tropes to tackle themes of race and class in America. However, while both movies are condemning and satirizing racism and inequality, the manner in which they operate and deliver those messages could not be more different. ''The Purge'', and especially its sequels, are gritty action-horror movies set in dark, creepy nighttime streets in which the titular holiday is used as an excuse to KillThePoor, with the [[GreaterScopeVillain New Founding Fathers]] and their supporters depicted as [[PoliticallyIncorrectVillain thuggish WASP elitists]] who openly scorn the lower classes and the non-white ([[ThoseWackyNazis neo-Nazis]] and [[TheKlan Klansmen]] are shown to be enthusiastic participants). ''Get Out'', on the other hand, is a slow-burn PsychologicalHorror film set in a lush StepfordSuburbia ([[Film/TheStepfordWives that trope's namer]] having been a major influence on the film) in which the villains wear a mask of BourgeoisBohemian liberalism, with their racism being less rooted in [[CardCarryingVillain open hatred and bigotry]] than it is in [[InnocentlyInsensitive condescension and appropriation of Black lives]].
84* ''Franchise/{{Godzilla}}'':
85** ''Film/Godzilla1954'' to ''Film/KingKong1933''. Both are the first in their franchises about giant monsters and have themes about [[GreenAesop man's bad relation with nature]]. ''King Kong'' is an American-made film from before the Second World War about an expedition mounted to the mammalian Kong's jungle island home, where he is captured and brought back to civilization where he eventually dies, with [[HumansAreCthulhu man's destruction and exploitation]] [[GaiasLament of nature for entertainment]] being a major theme. ''Godzilla'', meanwhile, is a Japanese-made and set work after the war about the titular, reptilian monster coming to civilization on its own volition after being hurt by activity to wreak havoc and humanity being unable to stop it, with GaiasVengeance for nuclear testing and [[PunyHumans man's insignificance in the face of nature]] being major themes.
86** ''Film/ShinGodzilla'' to ''Film/Godzilla2014''. Both are reboots of the iconic kaiju franchise in question, but they portray the titular creature in vastly different ways. The 2014 version of Godzilla is a NonMaliciousMonster, going out of his way to not directly harm anyone who doesn't provoke him, and he ultimately saves the day by defeating other monsters who aren't as peaceful. The Shin version of Godzilla, on the other hand, is just as malevolent and wrathful as [[Film/Godzilla1954 the original King of Monsters]] and has no other kaiju to deal with, making him the sole antagonist of the film.
87** ''Film/TheReturnOfGodzilla'' to ''Film/GameraGuardianOfTheUniverse'', along with their respective Heisei-era sequels. Both rival kaiju franchises had a long DorkAge during the 60s-70s Showa-era, where toy sales and appealing to children overtook everything else about their development. Afterwards we had these two DarkerAndEdgier reboots that took both characters in wildly different directions. Godzilla was reimagined as the horrifying force of nature he was in 1954, with his few redeeming qualities removed entirely or subdued for several years. His sequels would bring back more of the fantasy elements and his most famous enemies such as Mothra or King Ghidorah, but stray away from portraying him as a hero. At best, he was the lesser of two evils. His powerset likewise kept intact, with any new abilities simply being elaborations on what he could do in earlier films. Gamera on the other hand, gained a pragmatic streak in his trilogy, but kept his habit of protecting children. His entire powerset was reworked from the ground-up, with his near-useless generic flamethrower replaced with deadly accurate fireballs, his spinning shell now a buzzsaw that could carve up kaiju, and a few new powers besides. Gamera's origins depict him as an artificial creation designed to protect the world from a terrible evil. Godzilla's creation meanwhile was a horrible accident. Gamera's trilogy only brought back one of his original villains, and diverged to create new ones in time.
88* ''Film/GoodFellas'' to ''Film/TheGodfather''. They're generally cited as ''the'' definitive American films about TheMafia, they're both [[TheEpic epic sagas]] that unfold over the course of ''years'', and they were directed by two of the defining filmmakers of the UsefulNotes/NewHollywood era.[[note]]Funnily enough, ''Goodfellas'' director Creator/MartinScorsese was [[WhatCouldHaveBeen almost]] the director of ''Film/TheGodfatherPartII''. After the infamously TroubledProduction of the original ''Godfather'', Creator/FrancisFordCoppola tried to convince his friend Scorcese to replace him as director of the sequel.[[/note]] But in spite of all their parallels, their portrayals of the Mafia are complete opposites in every way. ''The Godfather'' is a lavishly produced crime drama based on a [[Literature/TheGodfather bestselling novel]], and it's well-known for its highly romanticized portrayal of the gangster life, portraying the central Corleone family as a clan of {{Noble Demon}}s who take their family, their culture, and their personal honor very seriously even with the overall message of BeingEvilSucks. By contrast, ''Goodfellas'' is a [[{{Deconstruction}} gritty and unglamorous]] portrayal of gangster life based on the actual life story of reformed mobster Henry Hill, portraying the ([[HistoricalDomainCharacter real]]) Lucchese family as a gang of sociopathic thugs and murderers who were OnlyInItForTheMoney, and deserved every bit of their inevitable comeuppance.
89* ''Film/TheGoodSon'' to ''Film/HomeAlone''. Both are about an intelligent boy played by Creator/MacaulayCulkin with great ingenuity and a penchant for causing pain. But while Kevin [=McCallister=] from the latter is a KidHero defending his home from burglars, Henry Evans from the former is a sociopathic EnfantTerrible willing to murder his own family.
90* ''Film/{{Greyhound}}'' to ''Film/DasBoot''. Both films are period pieces about the Battle of the Atlantic during UsefulNotes/WorldWarII. ''Das Boot'' is about a German U-Boat in an operation to attack Allied shipping, while ''Greyhound'' focuses on an Allied captain participating in the naval convoy system attempting to thwart the U-boats.
91* ''Film/HailCaesar'' to ''Film/{{Trumbo}}''. Both films are period pieces about 1950s Hollywood, revolving around dramatized versions of {{Historical Domain Character}}s (Eddie Mannix and Dalton Trumbo, respectively) who end up dealing with the RedScare as it hits Hollywood. But while ''Trumbo'' is a serious drama about a screenwriter [[UsefulNotes/TheHollywoodBlacklist wrongly persecuted for his Communist leanings]], ''Hail, Caesar!'' is a wacky BlackComedy where [[spoiler: the bad guys turn out to be ''actual'' Communist screenwriters]]. Amusingly, both films are also nostalgic throwbacks to post-war cinema, featuring multiple sequences taking place on movie sets while in-universe [[ShowWithinAShow Films Within a Film]] play out. ''Hail, Caesar!'' also features many NoCelebritiesWereHarmed versions of the historical figures who actually appear in ''Trumbo'', but it portrays them completely differently: ''Trumbo'' has Hedda Hopper as [[HistoricalVillainUpgrade the main villain]], while ''Hail, Caesar!'' has her FictionalCounterpart(s) [[SingleMindedTwins Thora and Thessaly Thatcher]] as a comedic nuisance; ''Trumbo'' features Creator/JohnWayne as a villainous bully, while ''Hail, Caesar!'' has the fictional cowboy actor Hobie Doyle (a loose parody of Creator/RoyRogers) as a good-hearted [[TheDitz ditz]]; ''Trumbo'' has Creator/KirkDouglas as a heroic idealist, while ''Hail, Caesar!'' has his FictionalCounterpart Baird Whitlock as a bumbling prima donna.
92* Music/RobZombie's remake of ''Film/{{Halloween|2007}}'' is this to [[Film/Halloween1978 the original film]] by Creator/JohnCarpenter. Carpenter famously described ''Halloween''[='=]s villain, the ImplacableMan Michael Myers, as "an absence of character", an anonymous escaped mental patient who was locked up after he killed his sister without any explanation when he was just [[EnfantTerrible a child]]. His doctor Samuel Loomis describes him as pure evil incarnate, less a human being than a wicked force of nature. The only thing anybody needs to know about him is that he's a psycho killer, and he was ''always'' a psycho killer.[[note]]The sequels would flesh out his character and motive, but these are controversial among both the series' fans and Carpenter himself for this reason.[[/note]] By contrast, Zombie's film spends its entire first half exploring ''how'' Michael went from [[UsedToBeASweetKid an ordinary boy]] to a psychopath, depicting him as having been beaten down by [[AllOfTheOtherReindeer his classmates' bullying]] and [[AbusiveParents his parents' abuse]] until he finally hit his RageBreakingPoint. In short, while Carpenter's film draws on the popular image of {{serial killer}}s in TheSeventies as inhuman monsters who live to prey on the innocent, Zombie's film draws on the intervening thirty years' worth of scholarship on real-life serial killers and what made them evil.
93* ''Film/HarryBrown'' to ''Film/GranTorino''. Both are thrillers about [[RetiredBadass elderly veterans]] played by acclaimed, UsefulNotes/AcademyAward-nominated actors (Creator/MichaelCaine and Creator/ClintEastwood, respectively) whose wives have passed away and whose lives have gone downhill since, and who now live alone in [[WretchedHive rough neighborhoods plagued by youth gangs]] that they fight back against. ''Gran Torino'' is a {{deconstruction}} of the [[VigilanteMan vigilante film]], one in which Walt Kowalski ultimately refuses to engage in a CycleOfRevenge that would just bring more bloodshed to a suffering community, [[spoiler:even if it means dying]]. ''Harry Brown'' is the same plot played straight (and British), as the titular protagonist buys a gun and uses his military training to clean up the mean streets of his London housing estate.
94* ''Film/TheHighwaymen'' is an anti-thesis to ''Film/BonnieAndClyde'' and other films that [[DamnItFeelsGoodToBeAGangster glamorized]] the OutlawCouple pair by depicting them as free-spirited {{Lovable Rogue}}s (a glamour that is mostly still lasting today). Clyde Barrow and Bonnie Parker are never shown up close until their death scene, only seen from afar as they're robbing civilians and graphically murdering police officers as if all we're seeing is eyewitness testimonies of their worst crimes. Additionally, the actual main characters, seasoned Texas Rangers Frank Hamer and Maney Gault, are depicted as [[PragmaticHero quite methodical and ruthless]] in their quest to hunt down the two without any attempt to whitewash their actions, and are even depicted as pretty boring everyday people. For them, it's just a job like any other, and unlike Bonnie and Clyde, they're not in it for the glory.
95* Creator/ThomasVinterberg directly presented ''Film/TheHunt2012'' as the antithesis to his previous film ''Film/TheCelebration''. They're both movies that deal with child abuse and rape, but take the concept in two wildly different directions: ''The Celebration'' is about a rape victim exposing his predatory father at a family dinner, and ''The Hunt'' is about a man wrongfully accused of molesting children. Vinterberg himself put it bluntly:
96-->'''Thomas Vinterberg:''' Things have become colder and more fearful, obviously. We've lost the innocence, and for good reasons. [...] I was here to tell that in [''The Celebration'']. Now I'm here to tell the antithesis, and I'm afraid the sad truth is somewhere in between these movies.
97* Kevin Williamson's screenplay for ''Film/IKnowWhatYouDidLastSummer'' was put into production immediately after ''Film/Scream1996'', which he also wrote, was a hit. Both films share a [[MysteryFiction whodunit]] SlasherMovie plot, a cast of attractive {{Teen Idol}}s, stylish direction, and a tone that [[GenreThrowback hearkened back]] to the {{slasher|Movie}}s of TheEighties. ''Scream'', however, was a DeconstructiveParody of the genre in which the characters frequently discussed slasher movie tropes and clichés, the killer evoked them as part of their plan, and [[SurprisinglyRealisticOutcome reality frequently ensued]] in everything from [[IfItBleedsItLeads the resulting media circus]] to the killer being an ordinary and rather vulnerable human armed with only a knife and no supernatural powers. ''I Know'', meanwhile, was a more straightforward throwback and {{reconstruction}} that played many of those tropes straight. Also, while Ghostface, the killer in ''Scream'', was a FragileSpeedster who ran after their targets but was rather vulnerable if they decided to fight back, the Fisherman in ''I Know'' was a more traditional slasher villain, an ImplacableMan with an UnflinchingWalk and an [[HooksAndCrooks unorthodox weapon]].
98* ''Film/{{Idiocracy}}'', like ''Film/DemolitionMan'', is a BlackComedy about a man from ThePresentDay who is [[HumanPopsicle cryogenically frozen]] and [[FishOutOfTemporalWater awakened in a dystopian future]], where he uses his knowledge from the past to save the day and put the world back on track. However, both have completely different protagonists and predictions of the future they wake up to. ''Demolition Man'' is about a CowboyCop brought into an [[PoliticalOvercorrectness ultra-safe world]] in which all crime, violence, obscenity, and dissent have been eliminated through deliberate social engineering, one that is so sheltered and pampered that it cannot deal with a single dangerous criminal. ''Idiocracy'', meanwhile, is about the [[RidiculouslyAverageGuy most average soldier]] in the military awakening in a world so degraded by consumerism and AntiIntellectualism that it cannot take care of even basic societal duties like waste management and agriculture, a change that is presented as a natural evolution of current trends.
99* ''Film/{{Intolerance}}'' (1915) to ''Film/TheBirthOfANation1915''. Both are films by Creator/DWGriffith. The latter is a militaristic propaganda film rooted heavily in white supremacy and romanticism of the [[UsefulNotes/AntebellumAmerica antebellum plantation South]], while the former is a tragic story of prejudice and injustice, considered by some film historians to be an apology for the racism in ''The Birth of a Nation''.
100* ItalianNeorealism was a post-UsefulNotes/WorldWarII pushback against the ''Telefoni Bianchi'' ("White Telephone") films, or "deco films", of UsefulNotes/FascistItaly. Made by the state-run Cinecittà Studios, the ''Telefoni Bianchi'' were lighthearted, apolitical comedies and {{melodrama}}s in which social problems and dissent against the state didn't exist and everybody was well-off, beautiful, and respected authority, reflecting the ideal society that the fascist government of Italy wanted to promote. The name comes from the gleaming ArtDeco-style white telephones that the characters often used, symbols of modernity and wealth. In neorealism, meanwhile, the heroes are starving and in PerpetualPoverty, those who leave to search for a better life are deluding themselves to think that things could be better, the government either doesn't care or is too incompetent to help those struggling, and the narrative usually implies that this will never change.
101* ''Film/ItsAWonderfulLife'':
102** It is this to ''Literature/TheMysteriousStranger''. Both feature an "angel" that serves as a guardian to a protagonist. However, the angel in ''The Mysterious Stranger'' is {{Satan}}, who says that nothing matters and that the universe itself is probably just a pointless figment of the narrator's imagination, while ''It's a Wonderful Life'' champions the message that every life matters and that even removing just one person from existence would have drastic consequences.
103** It can also be thought of as one to ''Literature/AChristmasCarol''. The latter is a story in which three spirits tell a greedy, miserable miser how pointless his life has been thus far, how many people are suffering due to his refusal to help them, and what he needs to do to fix it. The former is a story in which an angel tells a righteous, yet frustrated man how much good he has actually done in his life, and how worse off the world would be without him.
104* ''Film/JohnWick'':
105** It can be seen as the "anti-''[[Film/TheMatrix Matrix]]''", as outlined in [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i3P1ejh9pGs this video]] by [[WebVideo/MoviesWithMikey Mikey Neumann]]. Both are American action films starring Creator/KeanuReeves that are filled with beautifully-shot fistfights, shootouts, and car chases inspired by Hong Kong HeroicBloodshed and {{martial arts movie}}s, but whereas the action in ''The Matrix'' is portrayed as slick and elegant, the action in ''John Wick'' is portrayed as brutal and utilitarian. Furthermore, while the 34-year-old Reeves in ''The Matrix'' was a young heartthrob best known for the ''Franchise/BillAndTed'' films and ''Film/PointBreak1991'', his character being [[JumpedAtTheCall eager to throw himself into the action]] and serving as an AudienceSurrogate for the young men the film was aimed at, the 52-year-old Reeves in ''John Wick'' played a world-weary RetiredBadass who wanted to [[RefusalOfTheCall keep it that way and not get back into that life]].
106** The film's title character can also be seen as this to Beatrix Kiddo from ''Film/KillBill''. Both are highly skilled and feared former assassins whose lovers passed away and who find themselves opposed by their former employers, setting them on a RoaringRampageOfRevenge fueled by despair at what they lost, and their movies are both {{Genre Throwback}}s to old-fashioned Hong Kong action flicks.
107*** Beatrix is a woman who prefers blades and close combat, particularly a [[KatanasAreJustBetter Hattori Hanzo katana]]. She tried to leave the business and settle down with her fiancé, only to find that [[ResignationsNotAccepted resignations are not accepted]] in this line of work, causing Bill to send the other assassins she used to work with after her in a bloodbath that leaves her in a coma for four years, the baby she was pregnant with missing, and everybody around her dead. [[spoiler:Her missing daughter turns out to still be alive, raised by Bill, and the film ends with Beatrix and her daughter both alive, reunited, and starting a new life together.]]
108*** John, by contrast, is a man who prefers guns and engages in a lot of GunFu over the course of the series. He actually ''did'' manage to successfully {{retire|dBadass}}, only to not only lose his wife to cancer but to then be dragged back into the murder business because a mobster's DumbassTeenageSon decided to steal his car, beat him senseless, and kill his dog. [[spoiler:That dog remains dead for the rest of the series, though John does adopt another. Furthermore, John dies at the end of ''[[Film/JohnWickChapter4 Chapter 4]]'', "reunited" with his wife in [[TogetherInDeath two graves next to each other]].]]
109* The antisemitic UsefulNotes/{{Nazi|Germany}} propaganda film ''[[Film/JewSuss1940 Jud Süss]]'' is a case of this to a little known British film ''[[Film/JewSuss1934 Jew Süss]]'', which adapted a [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jud_Suss_(Feuchtwanger_novel) novel of the same name]] by German-Jewish author Lion Feuchtwanger. The earlier novel/film is based upon a [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_S%C3%BC%C3%9F_Oppenheimer historical person]] and a MiscarriageOfJustice that lead to his execution, which the Nazi film turns into karma for a GreedyJew. This also makes the Nazi film a combination of AdaptationalVillainy and HistoricalVillainUpgrade.
110* ''Film/{{Joker|2019}}''
111** To ''Film/TheBraveOne''. Both feature protagonists in TheBigRottenApple (or at least a [[NoCommunitiesWereHarmed fictionalized pastiche thereof]]) who are beaten savagely by society and want revenge on a system that wronged them. The films even have the main characters commit their first murders on a subway while being antagonized, in reference to the real-life vigilante Bernie Goetz. The difference is that, while [[Characters/BatmanTheJoker Arthur Fleck]] of ''Joker'' blames society for the issues he faces, Erica of ''The Brave One'' seeks to [[VigilanteMan make her city a safer place]] for the society that lives there. Ironically, the Joker is lifted up by the society he hates, while Erica remains hidden and her actions are never attributed to her. ''The Brave One'' is the optimistic version of ''Joker''.
112** Also to the early ''Franchise/DCExtendedUniverse'' films, especially ''Film/BatmanVSupermanDawnOfJustice''. Like Superman, Arthur is depicted as a troubled messianic figure who occasionally adopts the crucifix pose. Also like Batman, he was broken from decades of failure to the point of becoming a nihilist. Some viewers have also interpreted this version of the Joker's name, Arthur Fleck, as a dig at the actor who played Batman in the previous films, Creator/BenAffleck. The similarities end there, as Arthur descends into madness and evil while the aforementioned characters find HeroicResolve and eventually overcome their existential crisis to become/revert back to becoming heroes. While the World's Finest heroes in the DCEU are [[Film/ZackSnydersJusticeLeague shaped into the best versions of themselves]] by their families and friends, Arthur is corrupted by these same influences.
113* ''Film/{{Keanu}}'', like ''Film/JohnWick'', is a film about a man who who loses his beloved pet to despicable criminals in which Creator/KeanuReeves is featured quite prominently--but they're complete opposites in every other conceivable way. ''John Wick'' is a dark, action-packed crime thriller about a [[TheDreaded notoriously feared]] [[ProfessionalKiller hitman]] who gets a dog from his beloved wife shortly before her death, and sets out to [[OneManArmy dismantle a massive criminal empire by force]] to get revenge on the father of the weaselly mobster who kills his dog. By contrast, ''Keanu'' is a raucous comedy about a [[RidiculouslyAverageGuy perfectly ordinary]] African-American suburbanite who adopts a stray cat after being dumped by his girlfriend, and sets out to get his cat back through [[NonActionGuy bluffs and improvisation]] after it's kidnapped by a lowly street gang. The kicker? ''John Wick'' features Keanu Reeves in a starring role as the titular hitman, while he's the namesake of the titular cat in ''Keanu'' [[spoiler:and has a [[TheCameo cameo]] as the voice of the cat in a dream sequence]].
114* ''Film/KimmyVsTheReverend'' is the antithesis to ''Film/BlackMirrorBandersnatch'' Both are interactive films produced by Creator/{{Netflix}} with their [[{{Gamebooks}} Choose Your Own Adventure-esque Branch Manager technology]] as entries in two of their live-action TV properties, ''Series/UnbreakableKimmySchmidt'' and ''Series/BlackMirror''. However, the tonal differences in the two shows reflect in these films: ''Kimmy'' is a wacky, colorful comedy, while ''Bandersnatch'' is a grim existential horror. ''Kimmy'' creator Creator/TinaFey deliberately went in a different direction from ''Bandersnatch'' with the Branch Manager choices with deliberate pushes towards 'good' or 'proper' endings instead of a MindScrew approach. Even lampshaded -- in one bad ending, Mikey comments that the film just took a dark turn, "like that show ''Spooky Mirror''."
115[[/folder]]
116
117[[folder:L-M]]
118* ''Film/LaLaLand'' to ''Film/TheNotebook'', Creator/RyanGosling's ''other'' retro-flavored [[TheEpic epic]] romance from [[TurnOfTheMillennium the previous decade]]. Both feature Gosling's character in a relationship with a FieryRedhead that [[DidNotGetTheGirl slowly falls apart over time]], but they take the premise to completely opposite conclusions. ''The Notebook'' is a classic StarCrossedLovers story about two teenagers in [[TheForties 1940s]] UsefulNotes/NorthCarolina who defy their families to court each other, only to be forced apart by circumstances beyond their control. The ending also features the female lead tragically succumbing to Alzheimer's and forgetting that their relationship ever happened. By contrast, ''La La Land'' is a love story set in modern UsefulNotes/LosAngeles between two adults who freely fall in love, but slowly have to face the fact that they aren't as perfectly compatible as they thought, ultimately choosing to let each other go in order to pursue their respective dreams. The ending also highlights the fact that they'll always remember each other, and that they changed each other's lives for the better even if their relationship ultimately didn't work out. One could make a pretty good case for calling the film "''The Notebook'' for grown-ups".
119* ''Film/{{Labyrinth}}'' for ''Film/TheWizardOfOz''. Both films are modern [[TheMusical musical]] {{fairy tale}}s about innocent, virginal teenage girls being whisked away to magical lands [[OrWasItADream that may or may not be imaginary]], and both feature the protagonist going on [[TheQuest a quest]] with a trio of non-human companions in order to get home while being dogged by a malevolent magic-using BigBad. However, one is a classic Hollywood musical about an [[IncorruptiblePurePureness incorruptibly pure]] farm girl who initially wants a better life, but learns to love her home and family along the way; the other is a RockAndRoll musical about a flawed, selfish, antiheroic suburban girl who undergoes her quest to save an innocent child from a gruesome fate [[TheAtoner that she herself condemned him to]]--and it ends with the strong implication that [[spoiler: her magical companions followed her home]]. Interestingly, Music/DavidBowie's Jareth the Goblin King is practically a mirror image of Creator/MargaretHamilton's Wicked Witch of the West: one is a hot-tempered, emotionally volatile, grotesquely ugly sorceress who revels in her CardCarryingVillain status, while the other is a cool-headed, handsome, charismatic sorcerer who [[BlueAndOrangeMorality seems to consider himself a genuinely decent person]].
120* ''Film/LastNightInSoho'' and ''Film/MidnightInParis'', as both protagonists believe they are BornInTheWrongCentury according to the city they are visiting (London & Paris respectively). Both find a way to magically transport back to the golden age of each city, but while ''Film/MidnightInParis'' is a romantic comedy that explores nostalgia [[spoiler: in general by unlocking further time travelling to a more distant past]], ''Film/LastNightInSoho'' is a a PsychologicalHorror {{Deconstruction}} of the NostalgiaFilter we tend to have for older eras.
121* ''Literature/LetTheRightOneIn'' and TheFilmOfTheBook of ''Literature/{{Twilight}}.'' The latter is fairly well known for its LighterAndSofter take on [[OurVampiresAreDifferent vampire mythos]] and there's never any doubt that Edward wouldn't truly physically hurt Bella. The former is a full-on {{Deconstruction}} of the FriendlyNeighborhoodVampire while Eli is a ''merciless'' predator, regardless of how nice she is to Oskar.
122* ''Film/LetThereBeLight2017'', like ''Film/JesusBro'', is about an atheist converting to Christianity after a near-death experience involving alcohol, but are the complete opposites of each other in terms of tone. ''Jesus, Bro!'', directed by the agnostic Creator/BradJones, is a parody of Christian "faith-based" films like ''Film/GodsNotDead'', while ''Let There Be Light'', directed by the Christian Creator/KevinSorbo, is exactly that kind of movie. David Gobble's character in ''Jesus, Bro!'', Rick Whitehead, is an atheist [=YouTuber=] who initially gets sick at the mere sight of a man praying. He eventually converts after passing out from a night of drinking and meeting [[WebVideo/TheNostalgiaCritic Santa Christ]], but only because he thinks it will make his ex-girlfriend come back to him. He proves to be just as bad a person as a Christian as when he was an atheist, driving home the film's theme that [[HeelFaithTurn having a religion]] [[AvertedTrope doesn't automatically make you a better person]]. Sorbo's character from ''Let There Be Light'', Dr. Sol Harkens, is a former Christian who lost his faith after his son David died from cancer, and tried to make others into atheists like him. He eventually rediscovers his faith after suffering a drunk driving accident and seeing visions of David, and becomes a much better person after his conversion, reflecting the film's message that the Christian faith is the way to a righteous life. ''WebVideo/TheCinemaSnob'', a video series hosted by Brad Jones, naturally lampshaded this during an episode about ''Let There Be Light'', referring to the film as, "''Jesus, Bro!'', but for real."
123* ''Film/{{Logan}}'' to ''Film/{{Deadpool|2016}}''. Both are graphically violent R-rated spin-offs from the existing ''[[Film/XMenFilmSeries X-Men]]'' cinematic universe. However, ''Deadpool'' is a BloodyHilarious, cheerfully amoral BlackComedy with a fourth-wall-breaking FirstPersonSmartass, while ''Logan'' is an elegiac NewOldWest Western that is mostly about two beloved characters from the earlier films getting old and dying.
124* Director Panos Cosmatos stated in the interview that his second film ''Film/{{Mandy|2018}}'' is the yang to the yin of his first film ''Film/BeyondTheBlackRainbow'', as both of them were [[CreatorBreakdown inspired by his]] [[RealitySubtext real-life grief]] over the death of his parents. They both combine surreal and nightmarish imagery with [[LeaveTheCameraRunning very long takes]] and monochromatic light saturation, though as an action/revenge story, ''Mandy'' has a tighter plot and more emphasis on action and gore.
125* ''Film/{{Mank}}'', like ''Film/TheSocialNetwork'', is a Creator/DavidFincher film that utilizes non-linear storytelling, is driven by dialogue, focuses on a historical and monumental period for an industry, utilizes a lot of ArtisticLicenseHistory whilst also telling true stories, has a dysfunctional main character who ends up burning personal bridges, and has a connection to ''Film/CitizenKane'' (''Mank'' being about its writing, ''Network'' telling a very similar story of a SelfMadeMan who alienates everyone around him). Other than that, the films are opposites. ''The Social Network'' is set in the 2000s played in TwentyMinutesIntoThePast mode, whilst ''Mank'' is a PeriodPiece set in the 1930s. ''Mank'' features an [[{{Retraux}} old-fashioned '30s look and style]], whilst ''The Social Network'' looks like any other film made in the 2010s. ''The Social Network''[='=]s Mark Zuckerberg is a {{jerkass}} who [[spoiler:is left alone by his former friend, ally, and girlfriend even as he]] becomes the youngest billionaire in the world, whilst ''Mank''[='=]s Herman Mankiewicz is a JerkWithAHeartOfGold who [[spoiler:is left alone by his antagonistic colleagues (studio heads Louis B. Mayer and businessman William Randolph Hearst) and]] ends up writing a script that wins an Oscar and contributes to a film deemed to be "the greatest of all time". Herman also has a loving relationship with his wife, whilst Mark is dumped by his girlfriend at the beginning of the film. Finally, ''Mank'' depicts the [[UsefulNotes/TheGoldenAgeOfHollywood "Old Hollywood" industry]] in a cynical light, whilst ''The Social Network'' depicts the beginning of Website/{{Facebook}} and social media at large also in a cynical, yet more personal and less systemic light. ''Mank''[='=]s tone is also more sentimental and optimistic despite everything, with Herman's crowning accomplishment ultimately recognized in the end, whilst ''The Social Network''[='=]s is much darker and more pessimistic, showing Mark at the end as being LonelyAtTheTop.
126* ''Film/TheManySaintsOfNewark'' to ''Film/ElCamino''. Both films take place in the settings of one of the most critically acclaimed TV crime dramas, ''Series/TheSopranos'' and ''Series/BreakingBad'' respectively. However ''The Many Saints of Newark'' is a {{Prequel}} that takes place in TheSixties where Tony Soprano was still an adolescent, while ''El Camino'' was an ImmediateSequel taking place right after the ending of ''Breaking Bad''. Both movies also put the spotlight people close to the VillainProtagonist, but ''Many Saints of Newark'' focuses on Tony's mentor, Richard "Dickie" Moltisanti, while ''El Camino'' focuses on Walter White's student, Jesse Pinkman.
127* The Franchise/MarvelCinematicUniverse has its own internal spiritual antitheses to their films and characters:
128** ''Film/{{Guardians of the Galaxy|2014}}'' to ''Film/{{The Avengers|2012}}''. On a superficial level, they're almost exactly the same story: a mismatched group of heroes must overcome personal differences to come together for an epic team-up in order to stop a mad alien conqueror who wants to use a mysterious MacGuffin to TakeOverTheWorld. But while the Avengers are a team of individually respected heroes who have already proven themselves through previous solo adventures, the Guardians are a team of full-on {{Unlikely Hero}}es who are initially OnlyInItForTheMoney (or for personal revenge), and are regarded as trash by most authority figures before they ultimately save the day. Another important detail to note is that Guardians are a much more tight-knit group than the Avengers and the more volatile bond they share.
129** ''Film/DoctorStrange2016'' to ''Film/{{Thor}}''. Both are [[FunctionalMagic magic]]-themed characters who, [[BreakTheHaughty after a blow to their pride]], travel to other dimensions and find a true calling as superheroes defending Earth from mythical/mystical threats. However, the difference is the path they take. Thor, a Norse PhysicalGod, starts off as being steeped in Myth/NorseMythology and [[HonorBeforeReason lives to uphold]] his {{Proud Warrior Race|Guy}} culture, which leads him to be banished to Earth. As a result, he learns to appreciate the mundanity of human culture. Doctor Strange, however, is an ordinary mortal man who starts off as [[ArbitrarySkepticism discounting the existence of magic]] before traveling to the Ancient One's monastery and other dimensions to learn that magic does indeed exist in the MCU. In addition, the magic of Thor is portrayed as SufficientlyAdvancedTechnology that follow ClarkesThirdLaw, while the magic of Doctor Strange [[DoingInTheScientist cannot be explained]] by Earth science.
130** ''Film/ThorRagnarok'' to ''Film/CaptainAmericaCivilWar''. At the barest level, the two films do have a vaguely similar premise: [[Characters/MCUSteveRogers Captain America]] and [[Characters/MCUThorOdinson Thor]] are faced with a situation that [[ICantDoThisByMyself they cannot handle on their own]], [[{{Crossover}} so they form alliances with heroes outside their solo franchises]] in a manner similar to ''Film/{{The Avengers|2012}}'' [[Film/AvengersAgeOfUltron films]]. However, that is the only similarity the two films have. ''Captain America: Civil War'' is a [[DarkerAndEdgier gritty]], Earth-based political thriller that [[DestructiveHero emphasizes the collateral damage of superhero battles]] and [[DysfunctionJunction how traumatized the heroes themselves are]], and depicts [[Characters/MCUSteveRogers Captain America]] and [[Characters/MCUTonyStark Iron Man]] fighting [[spoiler:due to the machinations of [[Characters/MCUHelmutZemo Helmut Zemo]], a non-powered, non-costumed villain]] [[BreakingTheFellowship effectively ending the Avengers as we know them]]. ''Thor: Ragnarok'', by contrast, is a giddy SpaceOpera and BuddyPicture that embraces the cosmic aesthetic of Creator/JackKirby, and involves [[Characters/MCUThorOdinson Thor]] ''assembling'' a team [[PuttingTheBandBackTogether of fellow former Avengers and warriors of Asgard]] such as [[Characters/MCUBruceBanner The Hulk]], [[Characters/MCUAsgard Valkyrie]], and his former enemy [[Characters/MCULokiLaufeyson Loki]] against [[Characters/MCUHelaOdinsdottir Hela]], a superpowered, scenery-chewing [[KnightOfCerebus Goddess of Death]]. Also, while ''Civil War'' was largely set up by the events of second ''Avengers'' movie ''Film/AvengersAgeOfUltron'', ''Ragnarok'' plays an important role in setting up the ''third'' ''Avengers'' movie, ''Film/AvengersInfinityWar''.
131** ''Film/{{Black Panther|2018}}'' to ''Film/ThorRagnarok''. They both tell a story where the protagonist must lead his people after his father's death and fight against an attack [[spoiler:led by a family member he didn't know about]] and the revelations about wrongs done by his father that come with it. But where ''Ragnarok'' is strong on the humor even when compared to previous movies, ''Black Panther'' tones it down when compared to other MCU productions. ''Ragnarok'' is ultimately about the destructive consequences of conquest and colonialism (supposedly to benefit the conquered lands), while ''Black Panther'' is about the destructive consequences of isolationism and xenophobia (explicitly to protect Wakanda and maintain their increasingly narrow advantage over the world). The heroes and villains of both films are evil relatives of the heroes who have deep cultural ties to their homelands, but different motivations. Hela in ''Ragnarok'' represents the tradition of Asgard as a nation built on conquest, while Thor represents a progressive desire to move away from it, [[spoiler:and at the end of the movie he and his fellow Asgardians lose their home and become nomadic, breaking away from their old ways completely]]. Erik Killmonger in ''Black Panther'' wants to drag Wakanda kicking and screaming into a position he believes it should take on an international scene, while T'Challa represents the respect for the country's traditions, [[spoiler:but in the end, he realizes [[VillainHasAPoint Killmonger had a point]] even if his methods were wrong, and sets Wakanda to a less extreme path to break away from its old isolationism]]. Both kingdoms have a DarkSecret, but Asgard's is very large-scale and hidden out of personal shame, and Wakanda's is very, very personal and hidden for political stability. Hela and Killmonger have fatal flaws that ultimately led to their downfall: the former is incapable of change as she kills shedloads of Asgardians and would kill anyone for what she sees as the good of Asgard and the universe, the latter is a somewhat inconsistent hypocrite[[note]]He criticizes the museum for exhibiting African art presumably stolen from others, then takes a random African tribal mask just because he likes the aesthetic[[/note]] whose noble-sounding rhetoric is just an excuse for him to lash out at the world over his childhood trauma for revenge.
132** ''Film/AntManAndTheWasp'' to ''Film/SpiderManHomecoming''. The former is the anti-registration perspective in the wake of the events of ''Film/CaptainAmericaCivilWar'' compared to Spidey's pro-registration point of view. Much like the earlier film, ''Ant-Man and the Wasp'' features TheEveryman AnimalThemedSuperbeing hero (both creepy-crawlie variants, to be exact) as its protagonist struggles to figure out where he belongs in a post-Sokovia Accords world. Unlike Peter Parker, though, Scott Lang is forced to evade the law and use out-of-date or untested tech when the former was being supplied state-of-the-art gear by Sokovia Accords poster boy Tony Stark. Additionally, whereas ''Spider-Man: Homecoming'' focused on a KidHero who was just starting out while dealing with school problems, ''Ant-Man and the Wasp'' is told from the adult perspective while dealing with adult issues such as parenthood. Both films end with the hero suiting up in their original gear for the final battle, but Peter is stuck battling the BigBad Vulture with no backup in the sky while Scott has the assistance of Hope and Luis in a race to protect the shrunken Pym Technologies from the BigBadEnsemble of Ghost and Sonny Burch. Even the villains are strikingly similar with a key difference. Both Adrian Toomes and Ava Starr are extremely sympathetic villains who turn to crime in desperate times and have a begrudging respect for the heroes when they are shown mercy in the final battle, but the Vulture is a normal human who uses a suit to give him superpowers, while Ghost is an enhanced human who uses a suit to ''limit'' her debilitating abilities. Amusingly enough, both movies feature an actor named [[Creator/MichaelKeaton Michael]] [[Creator/MichaelDouglas Douglas]] playing the father of the hero's love interest. Likewise, each movie has one of the leads of ''Film/BatmanReturns'', but with reversed morals from their roles in ''that'' movie: In ''Homecoming'', Keaton (Characters/{{Batman|TheCharacter}}) played the villain Adrian Toomes, but in ''Ant-Man and the Wasp'', Creator/MichellePfeiffer (Characters/{{Catwoman|SelinaKyle}}) played one of the heroes, the elder Wasp.
133** ''Film/ShangChiAndTheLegendOfTheTenRings'' to ''Film/{{Black Panther|2018}}''. Both are the MCU's first films to feature people of color (Black for ''Black Panther'', Asian/Chinese for ''Legend of the Ten Rings'') as the lead, and feature [[MonochromeCasting supporting casts comprised of their respective races]]. In addition, both movies have TheHero and the BigBad [[RelatedInTheAdaptation be related to each other to serve their respective plots]] ([[spoiler: [[Characters/MCUErikKillmonger Killmonger]] being ClashingCousins with T'Challa]] in ''Black Panther'', [[Characters/MCUXuWenwu Wenwu]] being the ArchnemesisDad of Shang-Chi in ''Legend of the Ten Rings''). Moreover, both movies have one of the main characters live in the United States before coming to their family's country (Wakanda in ''Black Panther'', China in ''Legend of the Ten Rings''). However, here are some major differences:
134*** In ''Black Panther'', [[spoiler: it's Killmonger - the BigBad -]] who was raised in the United States and comes to Wakanda to [[TheUsurper claim the throne]] from T'Challa, while in ''Legend of the Ten Rings'', Shang-Chi is an immigrant from China who seeks to ''avoid'' taking his place in his father's organization, the Ten Rings.
135*** Moreover, there is an inversion of the dynamics in power and status between the hero and the villain: In ''Black Panther'', the titular hero, T'Challa [=/=] Black Panther, utilizes the Vibranium-based equipment and mystical empowerments that his position as King of Wakanda affords him, while his opponent Killmonger, [[VillainousUnderdog grew up with none of that]] [[spoiler: [[TheUsurper until usurping the Wakandan throne]] and [[EmpoweredBadassNormal the mystical empowerments]] that come with it]]. By contrast, ''Legend of the Ten Rings'' has Shang-Chi, a BadassNormal hero who worked in the United States in lower-class jobs, going up against the BigBad, Xu Wenwu [=/=]the Mandarin, who asserts his position as the leader of the Ten Rings with the titular ten [[RingOfPower powered rings]].
136*** Interestingly, both movies end with [[spoiler:one of the main characters recognizing the flaws in their family's traditional ways, and seeking to change it]]: In ''Black Panther'', [[spoiler: T'Challa recognizes the merits of Killmonger's critiques of Wakanda's isolationist policies, and responds by having Wakanda play a more active role in global affairs by using its Vibranium-based technology for more benevolent purposes than Killmonger's more radical, self-serving goals]], while TheStinger in ''Legend of the Ten Rings'' establishes that [[spoiler: Xu Xialing, scorned with the StayInTheKitchen attitudes of the Ten Rings under the leadership of her father Wenwu, takes command of the organization after his death, and reforms it to include more women in combat positions]].
137*** Another big difference is how the films were received by their intended demographics, the African diaspora almost universally praised ''Black Panther'' whereas Chinese audiences didn't like ''Shang-Chi'' for being a Western movie that plays fast and loose with their culture, Creator/SimuLiu and Creator/{{Awkwafina}} being ugly due to having squinty eyes and the Mandarin (a YellowPeril character) as the main villain, in contrast with Chinese and Asian-American viewers who were more fond of it.
138** ''Film/{{Eternals}}'' serves as one to ''{{Film/Captain Marvel|2019}}'' in terms of their roles given to Creator/GemmaChan. In both of these cosmic-level Creator/MarvelStudios films, Chan plays [[YouLookFamiliar two different characters]] involved in separate [[ForeverWar centuries-old]] [[FantasticRacism conflicts between alien races]] (The Kree vs. the Skrulls for ''Captain Marvel'', ComicBook/TheEternals vs. the Deviants for ''Eternals''). However, in ''Captain Marvel'', Chan plays the [[spoiler: one-shot]] villainous Kree Minn-Erva who helps hunt down [[spoiler: the GoodAllAlong]] Skrulls in a genocidal campaign waged by the Kree Empire. By contrast, ''Eternals'' has Chan play the heroic Eternal Sersi, who help protects Earth from the [[AlwaysChaoticEvil villainous Deviants]].
139** Creator/ZackSnyder said in [[https://web.archive.org/web/20121116024519/http://herocomplex.latimes.com/2012/11/12/zack-snyder-on-watchmen-legacy-as-the-anti-avengers-movie/ an interview]] that he regarded ''Film/TheAvengers2012'' as this to his adaptation of ''Film/{{Watchmen}}'', though he was talking about it recursively, calling ''Watchmen'' the "anti-''Avengers''".
140* ''Film/{{Matilda}}'' to ''[[Film/TheProfessional Léon: The Professional]]''.
141** Both are mid-'90s movies about young, pre-teen brunette girls named Mathilda (or a variation thereof) who come from [[DysfunctionalFamily abusive, dysfunctional families]] chiefly comprised of an apathetic blonde mother, a FatBastard father involved in criminal activity, and an equally fat, violent sibling, but they eventually escape their troubled households by befriending a kindly adult with a DarkAndTroubledPast which blossoms into a close, family-like relationship as they work together to take down a LargeHam villainous authority figure that has a creepy fetish for an otherwise normal hobby and is shown to be outright harmful to kids. Both stories even have a branch of American law enforcement present throughout the story. However, both works belong to completely different genres and tones: whereas ''The Professional'' is an R-rated action thriller which was inspired by the success of Creator/LucBesson's previous film ''Film/{{Nikita}}'', especially its EnsembleDarkHorse Victor the Cleaner, ''Matilda'' is a family-friendly fantasy comedy directed by Creator/DannyDeVito and based on a 1988 [[Literature/{{Matilda}} novel]] by Creator/RoaldDahl.
142** Another big contrast between the two movies is the career trajectory of their star actresses: ''The Professional'' was the first silver screen role for Creator/NataliePortman, who was practically an unknown actress at the time, while Creator/MaraWilson was fairly recognizable to audiences thanks to her previous experience as cute girls in ''Film/MrsDoubtfire'' and the remake of ''Film/MiracleOn34thStreet''. Portman would go on to have a successful career as an adult and nab several notable roles over the last two decades, such as Padme Amidala in ''Franchise/StarWars'' and Nina Salyers in ''Film/BlackSwan'', while Wilson eventually fizzled out from acting after the failure of ''WesternAnimation/ThomasAndTheMagicRailroad'' and later became a full-time author aside from a few voiceover roles.
143** Some of the characters in both films also fill out similar roles and archetypes but have stark contrasts with each other in terms of personalities, story arcs, skills, and attributes:
144*** Mathilda Lando and Matilda Wormwood are WiseBeyondTheirYears kids forced to live with neglectful parents and an older sibling who acts like an outright bully, not to mention being outright absent from traditional schools. But Mathilda Lando is a 12-year-old girl [[TroublingUnchildlikeBehavior who openly smokes, swears, uses guns, plays Russian Roulette, and has a sexual interest in her hitman mentor]], though she eventually grows up to become a mature, stable young woman when she arrives in New Jersey to resume her education at Spencer School after escaping a shootout with everyone in the apartment. Matilda Wormwood, meanwhile, is a "six-and-a-half" year old BadassBookworm child who has [[MindOverMatter telekinetic powers]] that allow her to have a better life, especially when she's HappilyAdopted by a benevolent Crunchem Hall school teacher. Additionally, Lando has a teenage stepsister and a younger loving sibling in contrast to Wormwood's kid brother, while their respective fathers had engaged in different criminal activities (drug dealing and car dealership scams).
145*** Léon Montana and Jennifer Honey have rough pasts involving a loved one who died under tragic and unfortunate circumstances, but they would later become the teachers to a young girl from an abusive family. However, Léon has a stoic, downbeat personality as a HitmanWithAHeart after his girlfriend was murdered and NeverLearnedToRead, [[spoiler:and he is killed by the film's antagonist before he could live a new life with Mathilda]]. Jennifer, meanwhile, is a well-educated, cheery schoolteacher despite losing her mother to natural causes, and she has a happy ending when [[spoiler:she adopts Matilda after her rotten parents are arrested]].
146*** Norman Stansfield and Agatha Trunchbull are both AxCrazy, hammy villains portrayed by British actors (Pam Ferris/Creator/GaryOldman). The former is an American DEA agent who has an entire crew of DirtyCops and NaughtyNarcs to back him up [[FriendOrFoe (mostly)]] until he's killed by Leon in his dying moments, while the latter is a skilled EvilBrit Olympic athlete and teacher who is capable of hurting anyone without assistance or help until she is eventually ran out of Crunchem Hall by Matilda and her classmates.
147*** The Landos and the Wormwoods meet their ends at the hands of law enforcement, but their respective fates are quite different. The former family (especially the younger brother) are set up as [[SacrificialLamb Sacrificial Lambs]] to be outright slaughtered by corrupt DEA agents after the father cut the dope that was stashed at their apartment, which motivates Mathilda to go on a RoaringRampageOfRevenge. The latter family are arrested by the FBI in Guam once Henry's car dealership is exposed by Matilda for selling defective cars.
148* ''Film/TheMiseducationOfCameronPost'', like ''Film/ButImACheerleader'', is a film set in TheNineties about a pretty and popular blonde GirlNextDoor who gets sent to [[CureYourGays conversion therapy]]. Desiree Akhavan, the writer and director of ''Cameron Post'', is a fan of ''Cheerleader'' and [[https://www.mic.com/articles/190547/desiree-akhavan-the-miseducation-of-cameron-post-interview acknowledged the similarities,]] but maintained that she wasn't influenced by ''Cheerleader'' when she made her own film, to the point of going out of her way to ''not'' rewatch it first.
149** ''Cheerleader'' is a BlackComedy set in what was then the present day (it was released in 1999) in which the experience is PlayedForLaughs. The people who run the camp are portrayed as bumbling, closed-minded idiots whose program doesn't do anything, and the aesthetics of the camp are saturated in bright colors to create an artificial CrapsaccharineWorld feel. The experience also ironically causes Megan, who was deep in denial about being a lesbian beforehand (though [[TransparentCloset it was obvious to everyone else]]), to [[ClosetKey come to terms with her sexuality]], and the film ultimately [[spoiler:gives her a happy ending in which she has a girlfriend and her family accepts her for who she is]].
150** ''Cameron Post'', meanwhile, is a PeriodPiece that [[PlayedForDrama handles the subject dramatically]], with the conversion therapy camp depicted in a naturalistic fashion as a BoardingSchoolOfHorrors that succeeds only in giving the characters a basket case of mental health issues and self-loathing. Cameron, unlike Megan, always knew that she was a lesbian, and the film ends with [[spoiler:her and two other campers [[TheRunaway running away]] to an [[AmbiguousEnding ambiguous fate]] that may not end well for them]].
151** On a meta level, ''Cheerleader'' also had to be {{Bowdlerise}}d (most notably removing any and all reference to cunnilingus) to avoid an NC-17 rating, while ''Cameron Post'' was released unrated specifically to avoid this.
152* ''Film/Moonlight2016'' is this to Creator/RichardLinklater's ''Film/{{Boyhood}}''. Both films are about a coming-of-age story of a boy from his childhood to adulthood, but the two's setting and the production were polar opposites. ''Boyhood'' took 12 years to shoot while ''Moonlight'' took less than a month. The former used the same actor to play a straight middle-class Caucasian, while the latter used three actors to play a gay lower-class Black man at three stages in his life. The former took place in suburban Austin, Texas while the latter took place in a housing project area of Miami, Florida.
153[[/folder]]
154
155[[folder:N-R]]
156* Creator/QuentinTarantino's ''Film/OnceUponATimeInHollywood'' is both this and a SpiritualSuccessor to his previous film ''Film/InglouriousBasterds''. They're both historical films starring Creator/BradPitt that are ''billed'' as standard {{period piece}}s, but turn out to be [[spoiler:{{alternate history}} films about infamous historical "monsters" getting the comeuppance that they didn't get in RealLife]]. But ''Inglourious Basterds'' features Pitt as a hardened military officer who commands a crack commando unit, while ''Hollywood'' features him as a burned-out aging Hollywood stuntman past his prime. As an epic war film about the Nazi occupation of France, ''Inglourious Basterds'' is ultimately about the evil of authoritarianism, while ''Hollywood'' (a {{true crime}} film about [[spoiler:the Manson Family murders]]) touches on the dark side of ''anti''-authoritarianism. And while ''Inglourious Basterds'' ends with [[spoiler:UsefulNotes/AdolfHitler getting shot to death in spectacular fashion]], ''Hollywood'' ends with [[spoiler:three members of the Manson Family getting spectacularly butchered, but also with UsefulNotes/CharlesManson himself alive and free]].
157* ''Film/TheOrder'' is the spiritual antithesis to ''Film/AKnightsTale'', reuniting the writer/director and three stars of the latter for a film that couldn't be more different in tone and content. Whereas ''A Knight's Tale'' was a lighthearted, escapist, gleefully {{anachronis|mStew}}tic medieval action film where a [[TheTourney jousting tournament]] plays out like a sports movie, ''The Order'' is a dark, humorless ReligiousHorror movie with a DownerEnding.
158* ''Film/PacificRim'':
159** Manages to be both a {{Homage}} ''and'' antithesis to classic {{Kaiju}} films. Here, the kaiju are [[AlwaysChaoticEvil flat out evil]], not {{Tragic Monster}}s, the [[GreenAesop usual pollution]] [[SpaceWhaleAesop aesop]] is quickly glossed over, and [[HumansAreWarriors humanity is capable of saving itself without being crippled]] and without the help of good kaiju.
160** Contrasts ''{{Film/Cloverfield}}'', with the monsters being visible from the beginning, [[EvilIsCool being cool villains]] instead of a horrific force of nature, and taking a tone of CoolVersusAwesome with the destruction being enjoyable instead of the 9/11-esque presentation of Clover's attack.
161** Michael Mirasol of Creator/RogerEbert's [[http://www.rogerebert.com/far-flung-correspondents/a-defense-of-pacific-rim-along-with-other-reflections Far Flung Correspondents]] characterizes the film as the antithesis of Creator/MichaelBay's ''Film/TransformersFilmSeries'', with the absence of vulgar humor and greater respect for the mechas, portraying them as elegant rather than merely awesome.
162* ''Film/PansLabyrinth'' is the antithesis to ''Literature/AliceInWonderland'', having the same plot structure of a girl going DownTheRabbitHole to a fantasy world, escaping from the real world. Where Alice generally faces whimsical and harmless characters, with no great danger, Ofelia faces the terror of the Spanish Civil War and the danger posed by her new stepfather, the cruel Captain Vidal.[[note]]Captain Vidal, in fact, kills people left and right throughout the film, and only tolerates Ofelia because her mother is pregnant with his son.[[/note]] The tone is notably darker, mixing elements of Brother's Grimm dark fairy tales and the tone of a war movie where AnyoneCanDie. It calls attention to being an antithesis by having Ofelia wear a green color swapped version of the Blue dress Alice is typically depicted in. Whereas Alice's dress is usually pristine and clean no matter what happens, at one point Ofelia angers her mother and stepfather by coming in a soiled dress after one of her supernatural tests.
163* ''Film/Parasite2019'', like the previous year's UsefulNotes/PalmeDOr winner ''Film/{{Shoplifters}}'', almost feels like a situation where two filmmakers got the same writing prompt, but with slightly different instructions. The prompt would be something like "put together a full-length film set in your East Asian country's largest city about a poor family living in squalid conditions, who turn to petty crime as a way to deal with their situation, with the question of whether CapitalismIsBad as a running theme. The family must contain a shrewd father figure, a MamaBear mother figure, a young man with HiddenDepths, and a young woman who is skilled at roleplaying. There must be a HalfwayPlotSwitch centered around a [[TheReveal Reveal]] that turns the story on its ear. Also, there must be a scene toward the end with the young man in the hospital recovering from the wounds of a serious injury, [[spoiler:and also a scene where a deceased older woman is buried in the yard of a house by the father figure]]." But ''Shoplifters'' director Creator/HirokazuKoreEda would've gotten the prompt with the added sentence "Do it [[InTheStyleOf as a colorful human drama in a manner reminiscent]] of Creator/CharlesDickens," while ''Parasite'''s Creator/BongJoonHo got the prompt with "Do it as a BlackComedy-laden {{thriller}}, with {{horror}} elements, in a manner reminiscent of Creator/AlfredHitchcock."
164* ''Film/{{Pearl}}'' was produced and filmed back-to-back with ''Film/{{X|2022}}'', the film to which it serves as a {{prequel}}, and they work as funhouse mirror reflections of each other. In ''X'', Pearl is an [[EvilOldFolks Evil Old Lady]] who subjects the crew of a pornographic movie filming on her farm to all sorts of HillbillyHorrors, implicitly because she resents and envies their youth, [[SexIsEvilAndIAmHorny lust]], and desire to be famous. In ''Pearl'', she's still a young FarmersDaughter who lashes out against the family that keeps her on the farm when she wants to pursue a career as a chorus girl. The contrast also applies in the cinematic style: ''X'' is a GenreThrowback to the {{exploitation film}}s of TheSeventies, with most scenes taking place at night, while ''Pearl'' is a gory take on the golden age of Hollywood, with lots of KensingtonGore.
165* ''Film/PeepingTom'' serves as a SpiritualAntithesis to several Hitchcock films, especially since both Creator/MichaelPowell and Creator/AlfredHitchcock were contemporary English directors with the former likely taking inspiration from the latter.
166** Many people have compared ''Peeping Tom'' to ''Film/{{Psycho}}'' since the two films, both released in 1960, helped inspire the [[SlasherFilm slasher genre]]. In both films, the killer is a [[ThePeepingTom Peeping Tom]] whose FreudianExcuse involves an {{Abusive Parent|s}}, and both Mark and Norman make money by renting out their properties to other people. However, Mark lives in a suburb in the same house as his tenants and, as a result, only kills people outside of his home, whereas Norman lives by himself in a more rural area in a house away from his empty motel, which gives Norman opportunities to kill off the occasional guest on his property. Finally, Mark's love for Helen allows Helen to survive, while Norman's attraction to Marion leads to her death. Likewise, Mark commits suicide before the police can arrest him, whereas Norman is successfully apprehended. On a minor note, ''Peeping Tom'' is in full color while ''Psycho'' is DeliberatelyMonochrome. Both films also experienced controversy upon release. Backlash against ''Peeping Tom'' was strong enough to make it a CreatorKiller for Powell, and it would take at least a decade before the film was VindicatedByHistory. On the other hand, ''Psycho'' was able to weather the controversy to become Hitchcock's most successful film, so successful in fact that the film would become a ToughActToFollow for Hitchcock.
167** ''Peeping Tom'' is also comparable to ''Film/RearWindow'', albeit with some differences. Both films feature a [[ThePeepingTom Peeping Tom]] whose profession involves the usage of cameras: Mark in ''Peeping Tom'' is both a film cameraman and a photographer, and likewise, Jeff in ''Rear Window'' is also a photographer. Like the aforementioned ''Psycho'', both movies comment that [[YouBastard watching a movie is a form of voyeurism]], a message that is made more explicit when Mark and Jeff utilize their cameras to secretly observe the other characters. However, Mark is easily more villainous than Jeff, as Mark is a SerialKiller whereas Jeff is a NosyNeighbor whose voyeurism exposes one of his neighbors as the murderer. In addition, while Mark occasionally travels to other locations for his form of voyeurism, Jeff does all his spying from his room due to a broken leg.
168* The titular villains of the ''Franchise/{{Predator}}'' series, as in the ''Franchise/{{Alien}}'' series, are alien creatures who like to violently kill humans and are presented as some of the most fearsome hunters in the world, but that's where the similarities end. The Xenomorphs from the ''Alien'' films are pure animals, [[AlwaysChaoticEvil mindless killing machines]] whose sole purpose in life is to eat and reproduce with no capacity for reason. Outside of [[Film/{{Aliens}} the second film]] where they fought {{space marine}}s, its victims are usually people who were [[InnocentBystander caught in the wrong place at the wrong time]], be they {{Space Trucker}}s in [[Film/{{Alien}} the first film]], convicts in [[Film/Alien3 the third]], or scientists in the films after that. The Yautja from the ''Predator'' films, on the other hand, are a ProudHunterRace who believe in [[CodeOfHonour fighting their prey honorably]] rather than simply slaughtering them, sparing the lives of unarmed combatants who pose no threat to them, and giving themselves a challenge to make things more interesting and fair, specifically targeting elite killers from alien societies who they see as {{Worthy Opponent}}s (the [[TheSquad squad of elite mercenaries]] in the [[Film/{{Predator}} first film]], the {{gangbangers}} and [[CowboyCop police officers]] in [[Film/Predator2 the second]], the [[RagtagBunchOfMisfits motley crew of soldiers and hardened criminals]] in ''Film/{{Predators}}'', the [[BadassNative Comanche warriors]] in ''Film/{{Prey|2022}}'') and even dropping some of their weapons in order to even the odds. Ironically, these stark differences wound up making for great {{crossover}} fodder. In the ''Franchise/AlienVsPredator'' franchise, the Yautja treat the xenomorphs as the ultimate big-game prey, going so far as to breed them for hunting purposes.
169* Despite being an official {{prequel}} to the ''Franchise/{{Alien}}'' franchise, ''Film/{{Prometheus}}'' is actually a SpiritualAntithesis of ''Film/{{Aliens}}'' in many ways. While ''Aliens'' is told from the perspective of a platoon of working-class soldiers, and it largely uses the Xenomorphs as a metaphor for the insecurities of childbirth and parenthood (subtly highlighted by Ripley's relationship with Newt), ''Prometheus'' is told from the perspective of a group of well-paid academics, and it largely uses the Engineers as a metaphor for overbearing parents (subtly highlighted by [[spoiler: Meredith Vickers' relationship with her father, Peter Weyland]]).
170* ''Film/PumpUpTheVolume'' is the SpiritualAntithesis to ''Film/{{Heathers}}''. In many ways, the later film is the sort of earnest, teen issue-centered angsty melodrama the earlier film both deconstructed and parodied.
171* ''Film/ReadyOrNot2019'', like ''Film/YoureNext'', is a film about a young woman fighting to survive in the home of the wealthy BigScrewedUpFamily of her lover and turning out to be [[ActionGirl far tougher than she appears at first glance]], with villains motivated by financial gain [[spoiler:who include members of the family in question]], all amidst a tone that adds a streak of BlackComedy to otherwise grim and violent proceedings. Both of them even star Australians who'd cut their teeth on ''Series/HomeAndAway'', Creator/SamaraWeaving and Sharni Vinson respectively, as the heroines.
172** ''You're Next'' leans much closer to the "horror" side of the equation, with the villains portrayed as a pure menace and most of the humor coming from the family's interactions and personal drama, while the family themselves are just as threatened by the killers as the protagonist Erin is. [[spoiler:The fact that three members of the family are secretly leading the plot in order to collect on a massive inheritance is presented as a twist.]] Erin being an ActionGirl as opposed to an ActionSurvivor, meanwhile, is used to build her up as a genuine badass, an AwesomeAussie raised by a CrazySurvivalist who claims half the film's body count by herself and functions like how everybody watching a horror film imagines they'd act if thrown into such a scenario.
173** ''Ready or Not'', meanwhile, is a full-blown HorrorComedy in which the family themselves are the villains, having made a DealWithTheDevil for their fortune and setting out to [[HumanSacrifice sacrifice]] the protagonist Grace in order to keep up their end of the deal. Also, while Grace too is a badass, she's closer to an ActionSurvivor, going up against easier prey in the form of a family of [[UpperClassTwit Upper-Class Twits]] who are quickly revealed to be a bunch of idiots who have no clue what they're doing. Most of the film's deaths, [[spoiler:even before the ending where [[{{Satan}} Mr. Le Bail]] kills them all for their failure]], are a direct result of their mistakes getting themselves killed. (Also, Grace is simply ''[[FakeAmerican played by]]'' an Australian.)
174* ''Film/TheReport'' to ''Film/ZeroDarkThirty''. Both fact-based GovernmentProcedural films related to the War on Terror, but while the latter was controversial for how it portrayed torture as part of the process and a NecessaryEvil to stop terrorism, the former deconstructs and refutes the idea that torture is in any way effective or necessary.
175* ''Film/RioBravo'' was this to ''Film/HighNoon''. Director Creator/HowardHawks and star Creator/JohnWayne loathed ''High Noon''[='=]s message and politics (its writer, the [[UsefulNotes/TheHollywoodBlacklist blacklisted]] Carl Foreman, having written it as a critique of [[RedScare McCarthyism]]), with Wayne calling it "the most un-American thing I've ever seen in my whole life" and Hawks referring to its protagonist as a man who "run[s] around town like a chicken with his head cut off asking everyone to help, and finally his Quaker wife had to save him." As such, they sought to make a Western with a story similar to ''High Noon'' (a town is about to be attacked by a gang of outlaws and the sheriff must gather allies to stop them), but instead of having the sheriff protagonist be somebody who barely defeats the bad guys and grows disillusioned with his job due to the townsfolk's cowardice, he is instead a morally upright man who believes in doing what's right, is surrounded by people who do the same, and is ultimately successful through his own effort and righteousness.
176* The 1940 film ''Die Rothschilds'' produced in UsefulNotes/NaziGermany is [[GreedyJew antisemitic]], whereas 1934's ''Film/TheHouseOfRothschild'' denounced antisemitism.
177[[/folder]]
178
179[[folder:S-T]]
180* ''Film/Scream2022'' is this to ''Film/Scream4'', the previous installment in the ''Film/{{Scream}}'' series.
181** Both movies are literal sequels to and metaphorical [[TheRemake remakes]] of ''Film/Scream1996''. However, ''Scream 4'' was made in a time when horror remakes like ''Film/FridayThe13th2009'' and ''Film/ANightmareOnElmStreet2010'' were often full {{Continuity Reboot}}s that radically altered the source material for a new audience, whereas the 2022 film came out in a time when {{Soft Reboot}}s, or "re-quels", like ''Film/Halloween2018'' that were heavily rooted in {{nostalgia|Filter}} were the new trend. This is reflected in how the two films differ greatly in their ruleset, {{Plot Twist}}s, and commentary on the horror genre, most notably with the identities and motives of their respective killers. ''Scream 4''[='=]s [[spoiler:Jill, a [[AttentionWhore glory hound]] who staged a murder spree and ultimately tried to kill her cousin Sidney so that she could take her place as the new hero of Woodsboro/the franchise]], served as a symbol of remakes that cynically attempt to copy the original film without understanding how it worked just for the sake of attention. The 2022 film's [[spoiler:Richie and Amber, meanwhile, are two {{Loony Fan}}s of the ''Stab'' films (''Scream''[='=]s [[ShowWithinAShow in-universe version of itself]]) who, believing that ''Stab'' has [[AudienceAlienatingEra gone off the rails]] and that the series works best when it's BasedOnATrueStory, stage a murder spree just like in the original film in order to create new "source material" to bring ''Stab'' [[RevisitingTheRoots back to its roots]]]]. In this, they are representations of nostalgic sequels and remakes that are overly reverential towards the originals at the expense of doing anything new.
182** Both of these films' Ghostfaces also satirize contemporary internet culture. In ''Scream 4'', [[spoiler:Jill is motivated by the pursuit of fame (with the killings being recorded and uploaded onto the web), and explicitly says that she doesn't need to be talented or a good person to become famous]]. With this, the killer is a satire of the irony-drenched internet/social media culture of the late '00s and early '10s, treating everything, even murder, with snide, dispassionate irreverence as an exercise in building clout. In the 2022 film, Ghostface is [[spoiler:the duo of Richie and Amber, a pair of {{Loony Fan}}s of the in-universe ''[[ShowWithinAShow Stab]]'' movies whose obsession leads them to kill and harm multiple people, including the real-world figures who inspired the characters in the films they love. Amber even tells Dewey "it's an honor" as she kills him.]] This film's killer is a snapshot of toxic fandom run amok, someone who is ''extremely'' passionate about what they love to the point that they are willing to engage in horrible behaviour in the name of expressing that love and claiming ownership of it.
183* ''Film/TheShawshankRedemption'' to ''Film/CoolHandLuke''. Both stories centre around a BlitheSpirit who gets sent to a brutal prison, gradually earns the respect of their fellow convicts at the expense of becoming hated by the guards, and eventually starts trying to escape. However, Luke's attempts to escape are framed as a matter of HonorBeforeReason, as he was only meant to serve a short sentence for a minor crime, and [[spoiler:his escape attempts just keep making things worse until his eventual death]]. The other convicts around him are also mostly portrayed as a decent bunch of guys, despite having broken the law. In ''Shawshank'', on the other hand, the protagonist is serving a double life sentence for a murder he didn't commit, he's repeatedly raped by a brutal prison gang, and [[spoiler: after 19 years of hard work, he eventually flees to live a happy life in Mexico]].
184* Creator/StevenSpielberg has often done this to his own films.
185** Spielberg produced ''Film/{{Poltergeist|1982}}'' (directed by Creator/TobeHooper, though it's widely believed that Spielberg was a lot more involved than his producer credit suggested) at the same time that he was making ''Film/ETTheExtraTerrestrial''. He described ''ET'' as the Suburban Dream... and ''Poltergeist'' as the Suburban Nightmare.
186** ''Film/ETTheExtraTerrestrial'' can be considered a spiritual antithesis to Spielberg's earlier film ''Film/CloseEncountersOfTheThirdKind''. They're both science fiction films about suburban everymen encountering aliens and tangling with government agents, but ''Close Encounters'' is a thriller about a suburban man embracing his inner child as he tries to understand the boundless mysteries of space, while ''E.T.'' is a light-hearted ComingOfAgeStory about a suburban boy bonding with an all-too-human alien who spends most of the movie trying to understand the mysteries of ''Earth''.
187** Spielberg later said ''Film/WarOfTheWorlds2005'' served as an antithesis both ''E.T.'' and ''Close Encounters'', having an everyman discovering evil aliens instead of benevolent ones.
188* ''Film/StarTrekIntoDarkness'' is the spiritual antithesis to the ''Series/StarTrekDeepSpaceNine'' episode "In The Pale Moonlight". Like the below-mentioned ''Film/WarOfTheWorlds2005'' and ''Film/IndependenceDay'', the two stories reflect their respective post- and pre-9/11 origins. "Pale Moonlight" was made in 1998, three years before the 9/11 attacks and the War on Terror began. In "Pale Moonlight", Captain Sisko forges evidence of hostility by the Dominion to persuade the neutral Romulans to join the Federation's side in the ongoing Dominion War and win it together, with some particularly DirtyBusiness shocking Sisko at first before he ends the episode saying "[[IDidWhatIHadToDo A guilty conscience is a small price to pay for the safety of the Alpha Quadrant]].". ''Into Darkness'' was made in 2013, 10 years after the War on Terror led to the Iraq War, which was widely speculated to have been fueled by faulty or forged evidence, accompanied by massive backlash to the War on Terror as a whole. In ''Into Darkness'', Admiral Marcus, working with [[NoSuchAgency Section 31]] (who were introduced on [=DS9=]) forges evidence of hostility by the Klingon Empire in an attempt to ''instigate'' a war between the two powers, which Captain Kirk and his crew thwart, and the story ends with Kirk giving a speech about the importance of Starfleet's values of peacekeeping, saying "There will always be those who mean to do us harm. [[HeWhoFightsMonsters To stop them, we risk awakening the same evil within ourselves]].", a refutation of both the War on Terror and the DarkerAndEdgier direction that the ''Franchise/StarTrek'' franchise and sci-fi genre had taken in recent years.
189* ''Franchise/StarWars'':
190** ''Film/RogueOne'' is this to the larger ''Star Wars'' universe. Many of the ''Star Wars'' movies (''especially'' the Original Trilogy) portray the universe with truly BlackAndWhiteMorality; the rebellion and the Jedi are unequivocally good, and the Empire and the Sith are equally evil. While the prequels attempted to flip this on its head (the Jedi, for example, were Lawful Neutral monks fighting ''for'' a large, corrupt republic, and the Separatists -- those fighting for freedom against an oppressive government - were portrayed as evil), ''Rogue One'' took this a step further. The Rebellion, which had previously been portrayed as united and pure, was now divided by infighting and filled with a sense of hopelessness. The characters, too, were deconstructions of the OT's cast: many of the rebels had committed murder and worse for the cause of rebellion -- as demonstrated in the first minute that Han Solo {{Expy}} Cassian is on the screen -- and, unlike Luke, Jyn wanted nothing to do with the rebellion and simply kept her head down and did her best to ignore the oppressive actions of the Empire.
191** ''Film/TheLastJedi'', meanwhile, can be seen as this to ''Film/TheForceAwakens'', especially on a metatextual level. ''The Force Awakens'' was the franchise's return to the big screen after over a decade of dormancy following the end of the prequel trilogy, and as such, it leaned heavily on nostalgia for the older films. The plot largely followed the contours of ''Film/ANewHope'', and many characters are heavily, consciously based on their counterparts in the original trilogy (Rey = Luke Skywalker, Poe Dameron = Han Solo, Kylo Ren = Darth Vader). ''The Last Jedi'', while following the general outline of ''Film/TheEmpireStrikesBack'', tries to reject such nostalgia and plays as an InternalDeconstruction of many classic ''Star Wars'' tropes, with its main themes concerning how the aforementioned characters -- and by extension, the franchise as a whole -- have to get past trying to copy the legacy of their inspirations and become their own people. It is perhaps best reflected in the most common criticisms of each film: while ''The Force Awakens'' was criticized [[ItsTheSameNowItSucks for being too similar to the originals]], to the point of inspiring the [[NostalgiaFilter "member berries"]] arc on ''WesternAnimation/SouthPark'', ''The Last Jedi'' was criticized [[TheyChangedItNowItSucks for being too]] ''[[TheyChangedItNowItSucks different]]'' [[TheyChangedItNowItSucks from them]].
192** A case can be made that ''Film/{{Solo}}'' is this to ''Rogue One''. Both films substitute BlackAndGrayMorality in place of the franchise's usual black and white morality, featuring more morally ambiguous main characters doing morally ambiguous things. However, ''Rogue One'' is a war movie and its leads are members of the [[YourTerroristsAreOurFreedomFighters Rebellion]] who are often forced to do shady things in their war against the Empire. ''Solo'', on the other hand, is a heist movie. Its leads are ruthless criminals who are only looking out for themselves and have no interest in the budding conflict between the Empire and the nascent Rebellion. [[spoiler:With the exception of Enfys Nest and her Cloud Riders.]]
193* [[Film/StarshipTroopers The film adaptation]] of ''Literature/StarshipTroopers'' is this to ''its own source material''. Creator/PaulVerhoeven was already working on a script that deconstructed the WarIsGlorious trope, and after he read Heinlein's novel he kicked everything into high gear. The resulting rewrite is one giant, deliberate TakeThat to the novel and what Verhoeven saw as a militaristic, borderline-fascist message, turning the novel on its head into a satire of militarism and propaganda.
194* ''Film/{{Striptease}}'' to ''Film/{{Showgirls}}''. Both erotic films from the 1990s about hard-working strippers [[WomanScorned taking on powerful men and winning]], though they're both [[BestKnownForTheFanservice much more famous for their dance sequences]]. But ''Showgirls'' (released in 1995) is an erotic drama about Nomi Malone, a blonde-haired young woman with a DarkAndTroubledPast who eagerly sets out to seek a career as a showgirl, only to find that the world of professional dancing is a dangerously cutthroat world where [[ChronicBackstabbingDisorder most dancers are out to get each other]]. ''Striptease'' (released in 1996) is an erotic comedy about Erin Grant, a dark-haired divorcee and single mother who's forced to become a stripper to make ends meet after she loses her "respectable" secretary job, but finds that most strippers are [[TrueCompanions fiercely loyal to each other]]. Nomi gets repeatedly shamed for her erotic dancing, and is often told that it amounts to prostitution, while Erin is frequently assured that it's just a job, and strippers deserve just as much respect as everyone else. Their contrasting settings also help: one is set in [[VivaLasVegas Las Vegas]] in the West, and the other is set in [[OnlyInFlorida Miami]] in the East.
195* The [[Film/Suspiria2018 2018 remake]] of ''Film/Suspiria1977'' is a case study in how two directors can approach the exact same story -- a young American woman attending a European dance academy finds that it is [[SchoolForScheming run by a coven of evil witches]] -- and produce two radically different takes on it. The 1977 original, directed by Creator/DarioArgento, is famous for its bright visual palate and use of color to convey emotion and theme, while for the 2018 version, Creator/LucaGuadagnino used mostly [[RealIsBrown washed-out colors]] for a bleak visual design and instead employed dance as the film's major stylistic flair. Furthermore, while both films are set in UsefulNotes/WestGermany in 1977, Argento's version is a dark fairy tale set in what was then the present day that's not interested in the world outside of the dance academy and the people within it, while Guadagnino's version is a grounded PeriodPiece deeply rooted in the setting and the political strife of the time period, using its story as a metaphor for Germany's grappling with its postwar national guilt. Finally, while in the 1977 film Susie is a traditional FinalGirl, in the 2018 version [[spoiler:she was the villain Mother Suspirium all along. [[AntiVillain And she may have been justified.]]]]
196* ''Film/{{Tar}}'' is one to ''Film/{{Whiplash}}''. While both are films about abusive musicians and their students, ''Whiplash'' is from the student's perspective, has the teacher of Terrence Fletcher be male, and ends with him [[KarmaHoudini facing no punishment for his methods in the long run]], while ''Tár'' is from the perspective of the female teacher, the titular Lydia Tár, and is all about her [[LaserGuidedKarma facing the consequences of her own]].
197* ''Film/TheyLive'' to ''Film/Ghostbusters1984'', specifically in terms of their political leanings. Both are sci-fi action films with a comedic/satirical undercurrent, but while ''Ghostbusters'' is a very pro-capitalist and pro-business film, with the heroes being men who use their technology to go into private enterprise and have to contend with an ObstructiveBureaucrat trying to shut them down (with disastrous results), ''They Live'' is a vicious satire of consumer capitalism, presented as an instrument for an alien ruling class to TakeOverTheWorld.
198* ''Film/TheThinRedLine'' has been seen as this to ''Film/SavingPrivateRyan'' ever since they came out, largely because they were DuelingWorks. Both films are big-budget UsefulNotes/WorldWarII epics that explore the WarIsHell theme in great depth, but they take completely different approaches to their subject matter, and ultimately come to very different conclusions about the nature of war. ''Saving Private Ryan'' tells a linear, character-driven story about sacrifice that ultimately comes to the conclusion that soldiers can redeem themselves for the atrocities of war through noble acts. By contrast, ''The Thin Red Line'' is a much more philosophical, open-ended story that seriously examines the idea that war is an inherently unnatural act, and seems to suggest that humans often fight wars without truly understanding why. The different settings also help (one is in the European Western Front, the other in the Pacific War).
199* ''Film/{{The Thing|1982}}'' has often been read as this to ''Film/ETTheExtraTerrestrial''. Both films came out around the same time, but deal with humanity's first contact with aliens in ''very'' different ways: E.T. lands in the American heartland and befriends the protagonist, with the main goal being to help him return home, while the Thing turns up in the Antarctic wastes, destroys everything it encounters and must be kept from escaping at all costs.
200%%* ''Film/TheThirdMan'' for ''Film/{{Casablanca}}''. Seriously, watch them back to back. It's amazing. And depressing.
201* ''Film/TheWomanInBlack''’s Arthur and ''Film/{{Mama}}''’s Annabel are both plagued by attacks from the titular shadowy spirits. Both protagonists learn the tragic circumstances of these spirits. Both spirits were mentally ill women whose children were taken from them, both took their own lives, and both returned as spirits driven by the tragic deaths of their children. Both films open with the deaths of the spirit’s main targets, followed by the protagonists trying to prevent further death, reaching a climax where the protagonists reunite the spirit with the remains of her child, and both feature a bittersweet ending where a child dies and is reunited with his/her mother. However, the motivations of the spirits lead to an important difference in the tone of the ending.
202** ''Film/TheWomanInBlack'' opens with Jennet killing three local girls, as she is motivated by a desire to take revenge on the people of Crythin Gifford, blaming them for her son's death. Jennet goes on to target more local children, and Arthur fails to save them, earning the ire of the townspeople. When reunited with her son, she swears that in spite of this, she will never let go. She spitefully leads Arthur’s son Joseph to his death, leading Arthur to die at the same time when he tries and fails to save him. While Arthur’s wife Stella, who died after Joseph was born, is able to reunite with her family in death, Jennet’s vengeful spirit will continue to plague the people of Crythin Gifford.
203** ''Film/{{Mama}}'', opens with Edith killing the father of Victoria and Lily, as she is trying to protect them from being killed by him, so that she can take them in as substitutes for her own child whom she was separated from. Edith goes on to target the girls' uncle Lucas and his girlfriend Annie, but Annie takes care of the girls, growing closer to Victoria. When given the remains of her baby, she almost seems ready to move on, only continuing her attack because Lily still wantw to be with Edith instead of her new family. While Annabel is unable to save Lily, Edith finally passes on, and Victoria survives, going on to live with Annabel and Lucas as her new family.
204* ''Film/TropicThunder'' is this and a SpiritualSuccessor to ''Film/ThreeAmigos'' and ''Film/GalaxyQuest''. They're all about [[AndYouThoughtItWasAGame actors who are mistaken for the heroes they play]], but while ''Three Amigos'' and ''Galaxy Quest'' are [[AffectionateParody Affectionate Parodies]] of classic westerns and sci-fi (specifically ''Franchise/StarTrek''), respectively, ''Tropic Thunder'' is a very caustic DeconstructiveParody of war movies, specifically ''Film/ApocalypseNow'', and [[HorribleHollywood Hollywood itself]].
205* ''Film/TroubleWithTheCurve'' is a SpiritualAntithesis to ''Film/{{Moneyball}}''. ''Moneyball'' is a film that champions statistics over experienced evaluation from scouts, and subtly ridicules the human insights that scouts can bring as being vulnerable to human bias. By contrast, ''Trouble With the Curve'' tells the story of an old-fashioned baseball scout and tries to vindicate all of the experience scouting has compared to stats. Every suggestion made by the scout in ''Trouble With the Curve'' turns out to be correct.
206* TheFilmOfTheBook of ''Literature/{{Twilight|2005}}'' was directed by Creator/CatherineHardwicke, at the time best known for her debut film ''Film/{{Thirteen|2003}}''. Both films are about a teenage girl raised by a single parent who becomes friends with an edgy classmate, and both star Creator/NikkiReed, as the friend in question in ''Thirteen'' (which she also co-wrote) and as a member of the friend's family in ''Twilight''.
207** In ''Thirteen'', Tracy Freeland is raised by a single mother in UsefulNotes/LosAngeles. Her new friend Evie Zamora is a cool FilleFatale who quickly becomes TheCorrupter, leading Tracy down a path of sex, drugs, and petty crime until her mother Melanie finally [[GrewASpine grows a spine]] and gets her free from her {{toxic friend|Influence}}.
208** In ''Twilight'', Bella Swan is raised by a single father in [[UsefulNotes/TheOtherRainforest rural Forks, Washington]]. Her new boyfriend Edward Cullen, despite being [[RomanticVampireBoy a vampire]], turns out to actually be a pretty stand-up guy beneath his brooding exterior, the story being a straightforward, idealized romance between the two in which [[spoiler:Bella marrying Edward and becoming a vampire herself]] in ''Literature/BreakingDawn'' is presented as a good thing.
209[[/folder]]
210
211[[folder:U-Z]]
212* ''Film/UrbanCowboy'' is both this and a SpiritualSuccessor to ''Film/SaturdayNightFever''. Two dance films released three years apart starring Creator/JohnTravolta as a young working-class man who spends the nights expressing himself through his hometown's music scene, and which helped to popularize the respective genres of music featured on their soundtracks, but with aesthetics that are polar opposites. ''Saturday Night Fever'' was the film that defined {{disco}} in the popular imagination, with Travolta playing a disco dancer in UsefulNotes/NewYorkCity nightclubs. The plot was also a dark UnbuiltTrope example of the genre, in which the club is portrayed as Tony Manero's escape from an increasingly toxic life that he ultimately cannot outrun. ''Urban Cowboy'', meanwhile, is set in UsefulNotes/{{Houston}} and is about CountryMusic, which sits on the opposite end of the spectrum from disco in terms of the values associated with it (i.e. [[EverytownAmerica down-home traditionalism]] instead of big-city glamour) and enjoyed a boom in its popularity as the [[DiscoSucks anti-disco backlash]] set in during the early '80s. Its plot is also more optimistic, with Bud Davis ultimately making his marriage with Sissy work while the villain Wes gets sent to prison.
213* ''Film/{{Venom|2018}}'' is this to ''Film/TheMask''. Both films are about unlucky guys who end up getting something (an ancient mask in Stanley Ipkiss' case, an alien symbiote in Eddie Brock's) that helps them get payback, but while ''The Mask'' is a RomanticComedy film that revolves around Stanley and his alter ego The Mask causing harmless mayhem and having fun, ''Venom'' is a BlackComedy film that revolves around Eddie and the Venom symbiote causing trouble and even killing some people as well. In both films, they try to be with the women they love, but while Stanley gets the girl, Eddie does not, even if the Venom symbiote does intend to bring them both together. Additionally, the antagonist in ''The Mask'' has to steal the titular artifact, which means Stanley can only fight him when he doesn't possess it, eschewing a visually striking clash in favor of character development. ''Venom'', on the other hand, has its antagonist gain his own symbiote, which leads to a spectacular battle between two empowered beings.
214* Within the ''Film/{{VHS}}'' series of {{found footage|Films}} [[GenreAnthology horror anthology]] films, ''Film/VHS2'' and ''[[Film/VHS94 V/H/S/94]]'' each have a segment set in Indonesia and directed by Timo Tjahjanto. In ''[=V/H/S/2=]'', "Safe Haven" was a ReligiousHorror story about a film crew investigating an [[ReligionOfEvil evil cult]] in which the menace is supernatural, while in ''[=V/H/S/94=]'', "The Subject" is a [[SciFiHorror Sci-Fi]] BodyHorror story inspired by Creator/DavidCronenberg about a MadScientist who subjects people to UnwillingRoboticisation.
215* Creator/StevenSpielberg's [[Film/WarOfTheWorlds2005 2005 adaptation]] of ''Literature/TheWarOfTheWorlds'':
216** It is this to Spielberg's own ''Film/ETTheExtraTerrestrial''. Both films focus on alien contact from the perspective of a working-class American family, one of them a 10-year old child. But while ''E.T.'' has an optimistic tone and features a friendly alien, ''War of the Worlds'' focuses on an invasion by aliens who want to exterminate humanity, and has a very bleak and cynical tone. While ''E.T.'' is told from the perspective of a child trying to protect his alien friend from the adults around him, ''War of the Worlds'' is told from an adult perspective, focusing on a father who is determined to protect his children ''from'' the aliens.
217** It's also this to ''Film/IndependenceDay'', as described in [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KioF1sTQFtE this video]] by Creator/LindsayEllis. Both are stories about an AlienInvasion destroying American society, with ''War of the Worlds'' recycling a lot of ''Independence Day''[='=]s visual shorthand, and Creator/RolandEmmerich, the director of ''Independence Day'', explicitly [[https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/movies/movie-features/independence-day-movie-cast-oral-history-1234976626/ cited]] Creator/HGWells' [[Literature/TheWarOfTheWorlds original novel]] as an influence. However, the two films go for very different tones that reflect their respective pre-9/11 and [[Post911TerrorismMovie post-9/11]] origins. In ''Independence Day'', the heroes make quips about kicking alien ass, the focus of the carnage is on MonumentalDamage that is framed to look cool and exciting, the invasion brings the world together as one to fight the aliens off, and the film overall has a very strong AmericaSavesTheDay feel. ''War of the Worlds'', on the other hand, drew on the 9/11 attacks four years prior for inspiration; the characters' reactions to the invasion range from panic to a desire for revenge, focus is placed on loss of human life that is played for horror (the only real landmark that gets blown up is a local one, the Bayonne Bridge), the invasion causes society to break down, and the aliens are defeated by terrestrial microbes after the military struggles to stop them.
218* Music/{{Madonna}}'s film ''Film/WE2011'' is one to ''Film/TheKingsSpeech.'' The latter is a loving tribute to George VI and his wife, and vilifies Edward VIII and Wallis Simpson; the former does exactly the opposite.
219* ''Film/TheWickerMan1973'' was made in sharp contrast to the Film/HammerHorror films that had ruled British horror cinema for fifteen years by then, with director Robin Hardy and writer Anthony Shaffer setting out to make a horror film that treated seriously the pagan religious traditions that, by that point, had become cliches in Hammer's films. Creator/ChristopherLee's villain was also radically different from the Dracula that he was best known as -- instead of an immortal, aristocratic vampire who lives in a castle, Lord Summerisle is a human, pagan religious leader who lives in tune with nature.
220-->'''[[https://www.bfi.org.uk/news-opinion/sight-sound-magazine/features/long-arm-lore-robin-hardy-wicker-man Hardy:]]''' "We had been aficionados of the Hammer films. They used all the old clichés of the witchcraft thing, holding up crosses, garlic -- things the Catholic Church invented as propaganda against the still-surviving old religion that they had replaced. We thought it would be quite good to create a society where the actual Celtic religion informed everybody. We went for all the religious and quasi-religious things which informed the mythology of various nations going back, back, back."
221* The 2005 documentary ''Without My Daughter'' was a direct answer to ''Film/NotWithoutMyDaughter''. In it, the real Sayyed "Moody" Mahmoody, who ''Not Without My Daughter'' portrayed as an abusive husband who trapped his wife Betty in Iran, argues that Betty exploited anti-Iranian sentiment to make money and screw him out of the custody of their daughter.
222* Creator/OliverStone's ''Film/WorldTradeCenter'' is this to his film ''Film/{{JFK}}''. At that point, the 9/11 attacks were already starting to displace [[WhoShotJFK the assassination]] of UsefulNotes/JohnFKennedy as the most notorious conspiracy theory subject matter in American society and popular culture, and given that the main dramatic thrust of ''JFK'' was to endorse the conspiracy theory around the assassination, critics expected the worst when they learned that Stone would be making a film about 9/11, namely that he would promote various crackpot ideas about who was ''really'' behind the attacks. Instead of a cynical ConspiracyThriller, however, ''World Trade Center'' turned out to be a straightforward BasedOnATrueStory DisasterMovie about a group of Port Authority police officers fighting for survival amidst the attacks, the focus placed on their heroism.
223* ''[[Film/BlackBook Zwartboek]]'' to ''[[Film/SoldierOfOrange Soldaat van Oranje]]''. ''Soldaat'' was a Dutch epic war film by Creator/PaulVerhoeven about the [[LaResistance Dutch resistance]] bravely playing cat and mouse with the unscrupulous Nazi occupiers to achieve freedom. ''Zwartboek'' was Verhoeven's return to the subject matter of ''Soldaat'' after years in Hollywood with an uncannily similar premise and plot, except that the idealism levels are exactly ''nil''. [[ExaggeratedTrope The Nazis are even more brutal]], [[HeWhoFightsMonsters the Resistance are deeply corrupt and bigoted themselves]], everyone turns on each other, and even the ''end of the war'' doesn't hamper the conflict. It's a very bitter foil to the freedom-fighting heroism of ''Soldaat''.
224[[/folder]]
225
226%%
227%%This list has been alphabetized. Please put new entries in alphabetical order.
228%%Entries are organized by what film is the antithesis to the other.
229%%

Top