The genre of this movie takes the taste of three different types of movies and blends them cohesively together to make a somewhat dramatic action-comedy. John Belton describes this type of comedy in one of his works. It talks about women in the workplace rising up to show everyone they are just as qualified as men. Belton says, ?In Working Girl (1988), the traditional office hierarchy (the status quo) is upset when a lower-class secretary, Tess (Melanie Griffith), puts together a big deal without the knowledge of her upper middle-class boss (Sigourney Weaver). Working outside the prescribed system, Tess pools her efforts with an upper middle-class male executive from another company (Harrison Ford). Together they create an ideal business team, which functions more efficiently and effectively than any pairing within the existing system. This new order, which democratically combines members of different classes, ultimately triumphs over the old, more hierarchic,
Cited: Belton, John. American Cinema/ American Culture. New York: McGraw-Hill, Inc., 1994. Ebert, Roger. ?Miss Congeniality.? Current Review. 22 Dec. 2000. Chicago Sun-Times. 1 Mar. 2004 http://www.suntimes.com/ebert/ebert_reviews/2000/12/122210.html. Multicultural Film. Crook E. and Martinez M. Boston: Pearson Custom Publishing, 2004.