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The term first appeared in print in the book '' The Ingoldsby Legends '' by Richard Harris Barham , published in 1845 . The author uses the term describing a Frenchman : '' Tongue-in-cheek Humour in fiction often takes the form of gentle parodies, in stories that use the conventions of an established serious genre while gently poking fun at some aspects of that genre. A tongue-in-cheek work still relies on these conventions and is not the same as a Farce . Good examples of films that are made in a tongue-in-cheek way are '' An American Werewolf In London '', '' Scream '', or '' True Lies ''. Note that these films are still faithful to their genre (horror and spy, respectively) and are not out-and-out parodies such as '' Airplane! ''. REFERENCES
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