I would argue again that some works can belong to multiple genres at the same time: an SF caper film, or a sci-fi detective story or whatever. Somewhere in Time is undeniably a fantasy, a time-travel story, and a swoony, romantic love story, for instance. (It's also been made into a musical.) See also The Ghost and Mrs. Muir. Alien is science fiction (spaceships, aliens) and horror. There's no rule that says any given work is only allowed one label or genre.
Meanwhile, I suspect we're talking past each other by using the word "style" differently. I think of "style" as a matter of technique, not content or theme. So an SF novel written by Tanith Lee was likely to be written in the same style as one of her fantasy novels or horror stories. Her prose style was quite distinctive, regardless of the subject matter or genre. See also Bradbury, Moore, Sturgeon, Matheson, Zelazny, King . . .
And I'm sure there are cinematic equivalents as well, as with, say, Hitchcock. "The Birds" is possibly the only one of his films that actually contains a fantastic element, but, as an exercise in suspense, it's very much in the same "style" as his other films, which ranged from espionage, crime thrillers, horror, etc. Different subject matter, arguably different genres, but the same recognizable "style" . . . which, to my mind, is matter of execution, not subject matter.
Another example: "Batman" (1966), "Batman" (1989), and "Batman Begins" are all about the same subject matter but are wildly different in style. No one is ever going to confuse a Tim Burton movie with a Christopher Nolan movie, let alone the campy 60s TV version.
Meanwhile, I suspect we're talking past each other by using the word "style" differently. I think of "style" as a matter of technique, not content or theme. So an SF novel written by Tanith Lee was likely to be written in the same style as one of her fantasy novels or horror stories. Her prose style was quite distinctive, regardless of the subject matter or genre. See also Bradbury, Moore, Sturgeon, Matheson, Zelazny, King . . .
And I'm sure there are cinematic equivalents as well, as with, say, Hitchcock. "The Birds" is possibly the only one of his films that actually contains a fantastic element, but, as an exercise in suspense, it's very much in the same "style" as his other films, which ranged from espionage, crime thrillers, horror, etc. Different subject matter, arguably different genres, but the same recognizable "style" . . . which, to my mind, is matter of execution, not subject matter.
Another example: "Batman" (1966), "Batman" (1989), and "Batman Begins" are all about the same subject matter but are wildly different in style. No one is ever going to confuse a Tim Burton movie with a Christopher Nolan movie, let alone the campy 60s TV version.
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