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Diehl40 03-01-22 06:30 PM

The MOFO Preliminary Discussion of the Top 100 Comedies
 
1 Attachment(s)

Ladies and gentlemen,

We can finally get started with the Comedy Countdown!

A list of the Top 100 Comedies of All-Time comes with unique challenges: comedy can be such a broad category, and can require the watcher’s judgment as to what is a comedy, and what is not. For instance, I never considered The Graduate to be a comedy, however it appears on several Best Comedies lists. There are also Dark Comedies which require a great degree of subjectivity. In other words, what seems like a comedy to an individual might not seem like a comedy to another. Rather than telling you what a comedy is or is not, you can make that decision for yourself. You have three months to view movies that will make your ballot. The due date is June 2nd, 2022 by 11:59 p.m.


How It Works

If you've never participated in one of these, don't be intimidated: it's easy! Any member registered for at least one month is eligible to participate. Just rank your top 25 comedies (no restrictions on years). The order matters, because it determines scoring: your #1 film receives 25 points, you #2 film receives 24, and so on, with your last film, the #25 film, receiving a single point.


The Usual Annoying Rules/Details

Any decade, any length, any language, streaming or not, but there are a few things you need to know:
  1. You have to nominate movies individually
    You can’t nominate movies in a series (such as The Lord of the Rings series together). You must nominate each film in the series individually The Lord of the Rings is not generally considered a comedy, but you get the idea. If there are any edge cases, ask about them here and we'll make a ruling, and probably keep a running list of said cases to make things easier on others.
  2. Do not reveal your list
    This is important! Please do not post or discuss where a film was in your rankings until it's revealed during the countdown. Mistakes happen, but depending on specifics this may cause your ballot to become disqualified.
  3. Your list is final
    Please note that once your list is submitted, it will be considered final. So make sure you see the films you want to beforehand. You've got time. You actually have four months. And while that sounds like a lot, you'll be amazed at how quickly that last week will arrive.

The countdown will begin shortly after voting ends (the exact date will be determined based on how much work is left, but safe bet it'll start less than a week after the closing date. Each day during the countdown we'll reveal two films from the list, though we may switch to one as we near the end, and we may skip a day here or there for major holidays. Once a film is revealed, the thread is open for discussion on its placement. Remember to keep it civil, this is all in good fun!




We Have a Ballot Link
Submit your ballot here https://www.movieforums.com/ballot.php

Ballot's Received:
Holden Pike
Hey Frederick
John W. Constatine
Tugg
Matt 72582
Moviefan1988
Torgo
donnie darko
ML
Kgaard
Mr Blond
John Dumbear
Allaby
Thursday Next
Deschain
SpelingError
Kaplan
seanc
xSookieStackhouse
Austruck
Death Proof
Diehl40
aronisred
Tokoma11
mojofilter
PHOENIX74
bradpitt<3
Raven73
crumbsroom
Steve Freeling
Daniel M
Scarlet Lion
Movie Meditation
Esmasus Sapos
Little Ash
Omnizoa
Miss Vicky
Groga
Thracian Dawg
Urkillinmesmalls
Powdered Water
The Usual Suspect
Frightened Inmate #2
Citizen Rules
Wbadger
Rauldc14
7th son
John Connor
Wigram
Cee Gee Reviews
R brayer
Fabulous
Markf
Adersenal
Rockatansky
Harry Lime
Jinaffetastin
Marlon Brando
Gulfport Doc
Slenter7
Ah Well
dedgumblah
Wyldesude19
Sedai
Cricket
loudykazoku
IrishSansred
Siddon
Yoda
Captain Spalding
Mistique
Rusty G.
Sarah F
gbgoodies
honeykid
iroquois
cobbyth
agrippinax
Thief
ynwtf
Wooley
Captain T
Apex Predator
beelzububble
Obi wan mifune
John Mcclain

SpelingError 03-01-22 06:37 PM

Re: The MOFO forums preliminary discusssion of the top 100 comedies
 
Well, time to start creating a list. And by that, I mean, procrastinate up until the final couple weeks.

ueno_station54 03-01-22 06:41 PM

Re: The MOFO Preliminary Discussion of the Top 100 Comedies
 
i don't even know what i consider to be a comedy this is going to be so hard.

Yoda 03-01-22 06:47 PM

Re: The MOFO Preliminary Discussion of the Top 100 Comedies
 
I imagine some of you want to submit your list right away, but I need some time to prep the ballot software for the new list, so you'll have to wait at least a few days, maybe a week or two. Gives you some time to reconsider. ;)

matt72582 03-01-22 06:56 PM

Re: The MOFO Preliminary Discussion of the Top 100 Comedies
 
I like the rules. If I submit a movie no one else finds funny, then it won't make the list.

Three months is more than plenty of time, but I'll only need a day or two before sending my list. Thanks for doing this, Diehl!

matt72582 03-01-22 07:04 PM

Re: The MOFO Preliminary Discussion of the Top 100 Comedies
 
This might help you...
https://www.imdb.com/search/title/?t...y_ratings,desc

donniedarko 03-01-22 07:14 PM

Re: The MOFO Preliminary Discussion of the Top 100 Comedies
 
some random recs

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikiped...45_film%29.jpghttps://upload.wikimedia.org/wikiped...%29_poster.jpghttps://flxt.tmsimg.com/assets/p13625_p_v8_ai.jpg

matt72582 03-01-22 07:28 PM

Re: The MOFO Preliminary Discussion of the Top 100 Comedies
 
Out of curiosity, what is your criteria for favorite comedies? Personally, if I've laughed aloud or inside once, it has a good chance. Once those are up, I go with the writing, or scenes that are audacious, usually black humor. The actor makes a difference, especially the angry types.

matt72582 03-01-22 08:13 PM

Re: The MOFO Preliminary Discussion of the Top 100 Comedies
 
List sent.

Yoda 03-01-22 08:17 PM

Originally Posted by matt72582 (Post 2285829)
List sent.
There's no way to submit yet. We'll be using the same ballot tool as last time, but I mentioned just above that it needs to be prepped a bit more.

Yoda 03-01-22 08:18 PM

Originally Posted by matt72582 (Post 2285824)
Out of curiosity, what is your criteria for favorite comedies? Personally, if I've laughed aloud or inside once, it has a good chance. Once those are up, I go with the writing, or scenes that are audacious, usually black humor. The actor makes a difference, especially the angry types.
Unless you're asking what Diehl's personal definition is, just to make conversation, the first post mentions that there is no criteria: anyone can vote for any film that consider a comedy.

Wyldesyde19 03-01-22 08:34 PM

Originally Posted by Yoda (Post 2285830)
There's no way to submit yet. We'll be using the same ballot tool as last time, but I mentioned just above that it needs to be prepped a bit more.
*Submits 5 lists for good measure*

Did they get through?
👀

John Dumbear 03-01-22 08:43 PM

Considering the vastness of comedic film, I’d be shocked if anyone gets ten off their ballot to appear in this countdown.

Thief 03-01-22 09:25 PM

Re: The MOFO Preliminary Discussion of the Top 100 Comedies
 
https://thumbs.gfycat.com/HelpfulCon...restricted.gif

Chypmunk 03-02-22 05:11 AM

Re: The MOFO Preliminary Discussion of the Top 100 Comedies
 
To be honest I expect this to end up with a list where I really don't care much for the majority of fillums on it (my sending in a list would be highly unlikely to change that) but as ever I wish the endeavour well and shall follow the countdown and participate in that thread as best as I can without being a wet blanket. I'm sure Diehl40 and co will do a grand job - certainly off to a (Monty Python) flying start with that OP artwork :up:

matt72582 03-02-22 08:00 AM

Originally Posted by Yoda (Post 2285831)
Unless you're asking what Diehl's personal definition is, just to make conversation, the first post mentions that there is no criteria: anyone can vote for any film that consider a comedy.

I know, I'm just asking out of curiosity.

Wooley 03-02-22 10:52 AM

Originally Posted by John Dumbear (Post 2285836)
Considering the vastness of comedic film, I’d be shocked if anyone gets ten off their ballot to appear in this countdown.
Absolutely, I think I've hit 25 already and I'm not even past 1950.

Captain Terror 03-02-22 10:53 AM

Originally Posted by Wooley (Post 2285910)
Absolutely, I think I've hit 25 already and I'm not even past 1950.
I've got 25 already and I'm not even past the 3 Stooges

Sedai 03-02-22 11:05 AM

Re: The MOFO Preliminary Discussion of the Top 100 Comedies
 
1 - 25 : Heathers

Miss Vicky 03-02-22 11:12 AM

This is gonna be hard. Several of my favorite movies that aren't generally considered comedies are really funny. But also, there are a lot of favorites that are considered comedies but I don't love them for their humor. Do I vote for the ones that aren't considered comedies because they crack me up even though I know I'll probably be the only voter? And do I vote for the ones that are considered comedies even though it's the emotional impact of them that I love? How do I decide?!

Yoda 03-02-22 11:33 AM

Originally Posted by John Dumbear (Post 2285836)
Considering the vastness of comedic film, I’d be shocked if anyone gets ten off their ballot to appear in this countdown.
Could be! This is definitely one of the hardest to predict lists we've ever done, though that's what makes it fun, too.

Technically, depending on how stratified it is, there's always the option to make it a Top 50, which is something we do (and which I encourage) any time the bottom of a Top 100 would involve, say, just a vote or two.

rauldc14 03-02-22 11:44 AM

Re: The MOFO Preliminary Discussion of the Top 100 Comedies
 
I'd like a full 100 due to the unpredictability of it. Hopefully that will work out.

ynwtf 03-02-22 11:46 AM

Originally Posted by Sedai (Post 2285912)
1 - 25 : Heathers
ok, this post has me wondering. what happens if a user actually noms one film 25 times? does it score 25pts + 24pts + 23pts, etc.? is that even possible??!?

I'm kinda joking btw. Kinda.

Harry Lime 03-02-22 12:09 PM

Re: The MOFO Preliminary Discussion of the Top 100 Comedies
 
Very happy that Diehl stepped up and Citizen's going to help.

Thought I'd take a stab at an early list here and it's going to be tricky. Probably a mix of comedies from my top films list, movies that might not be on the top list but I think are hilarious, and then movies that have serious comedy angles but aren't comedies, and maybe even movies that are listed as comedies but aren't as funny...I don't know! It's going to be tricky.

Harry Lime 03-02-22 12:10 PM

Re: The MOFO Preliminary Discussion of the Top 100 Comedies
 
I think I'll create a list of 50 and remove half and move the other half around until it feels right.

MovieMeditation 03-02-22 12:32 PM

I actually like the idea of “anything goes” in terms of voting.

The only downside I guess, is that someone might vote for a film that tons of others would have voted for had they thought about it too (I realize this has been a thing before though I see it be a bigger thing this time).

Perhaps there can be a thread where people just post about tons of potential movies for the countdown. Some that might not be obvious picks. So people can scroll through that and be inspired. Kinda like we usually do I guess.

Yeah, I don’t know. Just thinking out loud. I look forward to the list as always though Comedy wasn’t my top pick for next list.

Citizen Rules 03-02-22 01:30 PM

Originally Posted by rauldc14 (Post 2285921)
I'd like a full 100 due to the unpredictability of it. Hopefully that will work out.
I sure hope it's a full 100. Even if the bottom 50 have only very few votes, it still represents what us MoFos think is funny...and in that way a full 100 list makes sense.

With that said I should say: Diehl is the Host and makes the calls...I'm his handy assistant Co-Host I make the coffee:p Oh and I did make the image in the 1st post.

Citizen Rules 03-02-22 01:35 PM

Originally Posted by MovieMeditation (Post 2285934)
I actually like the idea of “anything goes” in terms of voting.
I should give credit where credit is due, the anything goes as a comedy was originally gbgoodies idea. She had mentioned that during another countdown and I remembered her idea and championed that for this countdown. I think it's a stellar idea as it should make the list unpredictable and the countdown fun...To me that's a big plus! I don't think the any movie goes idea would work for other countdowns but for comedy, hell yeah!

The only downside I guess, is that someone might vote for a film that tons of others would have voted for had they thought about it too (I realize this has been a thing before though I see it be a bigger thing this time).

Perhaps there can be a thread where people just post about tons of potential movies for the countdown. Some that might not be obvious picks. So people can scroll through that and be inspired. Kinda like we usually do I guess.

Yeah, I don’t know. Just thinking out loud. I look forward to the list as always though Comedy wasn’t my top pick for next list.
I've got an idea for just that kind of thread. I'll make it shortly, I just got up and I'm still tired:sleep:

ScarletLion 03-02-22 01:55 PM

Thanks to those that are organising this. I'll get a list ready by the deadline but it's not my favourite genre of film, so it might be a bit of a mixed list. I have the same problem as other posters - I'm not sure whether to vote for the films that have made me laugh the most (E.g.: 'Blazing Saddles' or 'When Harry Met Sally') or the films that are considered as having comedy themes that I think are the best (E.g.: 'Clio from 5 to 7' or 'Amelie').

I guess I'll just mix it up.

Harry Lime 03-02-22 02:46 PM

Re: The MOFO Preliminary Discussion of the Top 100 Comedies
 
Top 200!

Citizen Rules 03-02-22 03:33 PM

Originally Posted by ScarletLion (Post 2285959)
Thanks to those that are organising this. I'll get a list ready by the deadline but it's not my favourite genre of film, so it might be a bit of a mixed list. I have the same problem as other posters - I'm not sure whether to vote for the films that have made me laugh the most...I guess I'll just mix it up.
All of the above! I'm personally just going for what ever strikes my comedy fancy.

Holden Pike 03-02-22 03:53 PM

2 Attachment(s)


This isn't meant to be an exhaustive list, but for my taste gives a good cross section of eras, styles, and genres. Even if you don't like or know all of these perhaps they will spark your memory for other titles? My Top 25 will somehow be whittled down from all these choices...

Dark Comedies
After Hours (1985), Something Wild (1986), Harold & Maude (1971), Heathers (1989), Four Lions (2010), In Bruges (2008), Ruthless People (1986), Lord Love a Duck (1966), The Favourite (2018), War of the Roses (1989), Where’s Poppa? (1970), Kind Hearts & Coronets (1949), Wild Tales (2014), To Die For (1995), Shallow Grave (1994), Super (2010), Thank You for Smoking (2005)

RomComs
His Girl Friday (1940), When Harry Met Sally… (1989), The Philadelphia Story (1940), Say Anything… (1989), The Apartment (1960), City Lights (1931), L.A. Story (1991), Amélie (2001), Rushmore (1998), Moonrise Kingdom (2012), They All Laughed (1981), Silver Linings Playbook (2012), About a Boy (2002), Modern Romance (1981), Lars and the Real Girl (2007), Trouble in Paradise (1932), What a Way to Go (1964), Return to Me (2000), Notting Hill (1999), Dan in Real Life (2007), Ninotchka (1939), (500) Days of Summer (2009), Broadcast News (1987), Joe versus the Volcano (1990)

Screwball & Farce
Bringing Up Baby (1938), One Two Three (1961), Raising Arizona (1987), What’s Up, Doc? (1972), Tootsie (1982), The Lady Eve (1941), A Night at the Opera (1935), The Producers (1967), The Grand Budapest Hotel (2014), It Happened One Night (1934), Arsenic & Old Lace (1943), Dirty Rotten Scoundrels (1988), My Man Godfrey (1936), A Fish Called Wanda (1988), 9 to 5 (1980), Noises Off… (1992), It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963), Seems Like Old Times (1980), The Palm Beach Story (1942), The Miracle of Morgan’s Creek (1944), Oscar (1991), What About Bob? (1991), Down & Out in Beverly Hills (1986)

Action Comedies
Beverly Hills Cop (1984), 48 Hrs. (1982), Snatch (2000), Big Trouble in Little China (1986), Romancing the Stone (1984), Grosse Pointe Blank (1997), Game Night (2018), Midnight Run (1988), Pineapple Express (2008), Sherlock Holmes (2009)

Comedy Mysteries
Clue (1985), Fletch (1985), The Big Lebowski (1998), Charade (1963), Knives Out (2019), Hot Fuzz (2007), The Nice Guys (2016), Kiss Kiss Bang Bang (2005), A Shot in the Dark (1964), The Thin Man (1934), Who Framed Roger Rabbit (1988), Silver Streak (1976), Foul Play (1978)

Spoofs
Young Frankenstein (1974), Blazing Saddles (1974), Airplane! (1980), Monty Python’s Life of Brian (1979), The Princess Bride (1987), Top Secret! (1984), Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery (1997), OSS-117: Cairo, Nest of Spies (2006), ¡Three Amigos! (1986), Support Your Local Sheriff! (1969), Abbott & Costello Meet Frankenstein (1948), Murder by Death (1976), Monty Python and the Holy Grail (1975), Dead Men Don’t Wear Plaid (1982), Die, Mommie, Die! (2003), Black Dynamite (2009), The Kentucky Fried Movie (1977), Amazon Women on the Moon (1987)

Sci-Fi/Horror Comedies
Ghostbusters (1984), Shaun of the Dead (2004), Galaxy Quest (1999), Men in Black (1997), Back to the Future (1985), What We Do in the Shadows (2014), Beetlejuice (1988), The World’s End (2013), Brazil (1985), An American Werewolf in London (1981), Zombieland (2009), Tucker & Dale vs. Evil (2010), Gremlins (1984), Tremors (1990), Fright Night (1985), Guardians of the Galaxy (2014), Time Bandits (1981), Love at First Bite (1979)

Funny Musicals & Musicians
Singin’ in the Rain (1952), This Is Spın̈al Tap (1984), The Blues Brothers (1980), The Muppets (2011), A Mighty Wind (2003), Tenacious D in the Pick of Destiny (2006), That Thing You Do! (1996), The Producers (2005), Popstar: Never Stop Stopping (2016), Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story (2007), School of Rock (2003), Little Shop of Horrors (1986)

Sports Comedies
Bull Durham (1988), Slap Shot (1977), Caddyshack (1980), Let it Ride (1989), Dodgeball: A True Underdog Story (2004), Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby (2006), White Men Can’t Jump (1992), The Bad News Bears (1976), The Longest Yard (1974), Tin Cup (1996), Diggstown (1992), Goon (2011), Major League (1989)

High Concept
Groundhog Day (1993), Splash (1984), Harvey (1950), The Purple Rose of Cairo (1985), Scott Pilgrim vs. the World (2010), All of Me (1984), A Matter of Life and Death (1946), Heaven Can Wait (1978), Defending Your Life (1991), Liar Liar (1997), Palm Springs (2020), Without a Clue (1988), Roxanne (1987), Big (1988), Elf (2003), Being John Malkovich (1999), Being There (1979), This is the End (2013), Rosencrantz & Guildenstern Are Dead (1990), Man of the Century (1999)

War/Military
Duck Soup (1933), Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb (1964), The Americanization of Emily (1964), Stripes (1981), The Great Dictator (1940), MASH (1970), Catch-22 (1970), Team America: World Police (2004), Jojo Rabbit (2019), The Russians Are Coming, the Russians Are Coming! (1966), The General (1926), Kelly’s Heroes (1970), Private Benjamin (1980), Hail the Conquering Hero (1944), Love & Death (1975), King of Hearts (1966)

(Some of) All the Rest
Paper Moon (1973), The Graduate (1967), Arthur (1981), The Hunt for the Wilderpeople (2016), Quick Change (1990), Step Brothers (2008), Lost in America (1985), The Wedding Crashers (2005), The Front (1976), A Town Called Panic (2009), Diner (1982), Tin Men (1987), My Favorite Year (1982), The Hangover (2009), The In-Laws (1979), Office Space (1999), Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan (2006), Bullets Over Broadway (1994), Barcelona (1994), The Jerk (1979), Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy (2004), Trading Places (1983), Napoleon Dynamite (2004), A Christmas Story (1983), The Freshman (1990), Waiting for Guffman (1996), Best in Show (2000), Unfaithfully Yours (1948), Fast Times at Ridgemont High (1982), Ferris Bueller’s Day Off (1986), Smokey and the Bandit (1977), Stranger Than Fiction (2006), The Gold Rush (1925)


John Dumbear 03-02-22 04:46 PM

Seen 138 of those HP. Good list!

SpelingError 03-02-22 06:35 PM

Re: The MOFO Preliminary Discussion of the Top 100 Comedies
 
This might be a bit harder than I expected. I suspect my final ballot will be full of films which loosely fit the definition (for instance, IMDb lists Chimes At Midnight as a comedy), but I'll give it a go anyways.

Allaby 03-02-22 08:38 PM

In celebration of the comedy countdown, I changed my avatar to a more comedic image. ;)

ueno_station54 03-02-22 08:59 PM

Originally Posted by SpelingError (Post 2286093)
This might be a bit harder than I expected. I suspect my final ballot will be full of films which loosely fit the definition (for instance, IMDb lists Chimes At Midnight as a comedy), but I'll give it a go anyways.
for what its worth i made a rough list of great films that immediately jumped out at me as a comedy and Chimes at Midnight was on it.

SpelingError 03-02-22 10:38 PM

Originally Posted by ueno_station54 (Post 2286129)
for what its worth i made a rough list of great films that immediately jumped out at me as a comedy and Chimes at Midnight was on it.
I think there's definitely some humor in the film since Welles roasts himself for being overweight several times, both directly and indirectly (throughout the battle scene in the middle, especially). I think most people wouldn't classify it as comedy, but I'll probably include it in my list anyways.

Citizen Rules 03-02-22 10:43 PM

Originally Posted by Allaby (Post 2286126)
In celebration of the comedy countdown, I changed my avatar to a more comedic image. ;)
Looking clowny!🙂

Wooley 03-03-22 12:47 AM

Originally Posted by Holden Pike (Post 2286024)

Perhaps off topic a bit but it's funny, despite After Hours being one of my favorite movies of all time for almost 35 years, I have never thought of it as a comedy.

John Dumbear 03-03-22 02:29 AM

Originally Posted by Wooley (Post 2286165)
Perhaps off topic a bit but it's funny, despite After Hours being one of my favorite movies of all time for almost 35 years, I have never thought of it as a comedy.
I can see your point, but it's in the eye of the beholder. Personally, I have a warped sense of humor, so naturally gravitate toward that angle. Films like the above mentioned and others like:

Freeway
Cold Pursuit
Happiness
God Bless America
World's Greatest Dad
Very Bad Things
Natural Born Killers
etc...

So, what are your thoughts on this issue. Should I rethink my list of just go for it?

Holden Pike 03-03-22 05:02 AM

Re: The MOFO Preliminary Discussion of the Top 100 Comedies
 
Originally Posted by Wooley (Post 2286165)
Perhaps off topic a bit but it's funny, despite After Hours being one of my favorite movies of all time for almost 35 years, I have never thought of it as a comedy.
Is it a frickin' documentary? Of course After Hours is a comedy.

https://youtu.be/XIRN43cVMHI

My review can be found HERE.

mrblond 03-03-22 07:43 AM

1. I'm not supportive of the "Anything fun goes" rule at all though I realize it is very difficult other definition to be established. Since half of the all time world wide production meet this rule all this can turn into some not very meaningful listing.

Please, pay attention that the real comedy is one thing and the stories that use fun instruments in their narration are something very very different.
In this connection I'd name this Countdown "Fun Styled Crime-War-Love Stories-Slice of Life--Horror-Adventures". Anything Fun but comedy.

Indiana Jones films are Fun-Styled-Adventure and meets the criteria, right?
"Amelie" is not a comedy at all. It is a contemporary fairy tale using some fun instruments in its narration.
You know, the comedies as real genre are going to be a tiny part of this countdown.

2. Another point that troubles me a lot is the simple fact that the leading classic comedy film schools are almost unknown into the English language world (due to the market control). Does it mean that titans of comedy should be skipped in this game? :shrug:

3. And these three months time of waiting are just killing me...:skeptical:
Two months would be a good consensual resolution.

Cheers!
---

Harry Lime 03-03-22 12:25 PM

Originally Posted by Holden Pike (Post 2286024)
After Hours (1985)
Great list. Thanks. Right at the start I see one that I have been meaning to rewatch for years now and will add it to the list of rewatches for this countdown.

Also way at the end of the list, Step Brothers makes me laugh quite a bit.

I'll dig through everything in between.

matt72582 03-03-22 01:41 PM

Re: The MOFO Preliminary Discussion of the Top 100 Comedies
 
Buffalo '66
Mikey And Nicky
Harry And Tonto
A Woman Under The Influence
Minnie And Moskowitz
One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest
La Strada
Never On Sunday
Harold And Maude
Shadows In Paradise
Next Stop, Greenwich Village
Made For Each Other
Nashville
Annie Hall

Diehl40 03-03-22 03:11 PM

Re: The MOFO Preliminary Discussion of the Top 100 Comedies
 
Here are a few sites that may help you find films to watch as you compile your lists.




https://stacker.com/stories/1810/100...ording-critics
https://www.bbc.com/culture/article/...es-of-all-time
https://www.afi.com/afis-100-years-100-laughs/
https://editorial.rottentomatoes.com...comedy-movies/
https://www.metacritic.com/browse/mo...?view=detailed

Diehl40 03-03-22 04:14 PM

Re: The MOFO Preliminary Discussion of the Top 100 Comedies
 
Does anybody know where I can purchase or stream for free a copy of Arsenic and Old Lace (Carey Grant)

crumbsroom 03-03-22 04:34 PM

Re: The MOFO Preliminary Discussion of the Top 100 Comedies
 
Damn, I thought this would be easy, considering I generally thought only about six comedies have ever been good in the history of cinema. But it appears there is so far over thirty. What to do?


EDIT: Good Lord, I don't even think there's going to be room for Holy Grail. What to do? What to do?

ueno_station54 03-03-22 04:36 PM

Re: The MOFO Preliminary Discussion of the Top 100 Comedies
 
leaving a bunch of favs of my list because even tho they're listed as comedies i don't see them that way. feels bad man.

Citizen Rules 03-03-22 04:46 PM

Originally Posted by Diehl40 (Post 2286288)
Does anybody know where I can purchase or stream for free a copy of Arsenic and Old Lace (Carey Grant)
It's streaming at Apple TV, Amazon, YouTube, Google Play, Vudu, Microsoft. It's a pretty popular classic. Of course there's always that free Russian site, depending on how you feel about that.

Holden Pike 03-03-22 04:56 PM

Re: The MOFO Preliminary Discussion of the Top 100 Comedies
 
Originally Posted by ueno_station54 (Post 2286292)
leaving a bunch of favs of my list because even tho they're listed as comedies i don't see them that way. feels bad man.
You're making yourself feel bad, Man.

Wooley 03-03-22 04:57 PM

Originally Posted by Holden Pike (Post 2286184)
Is it a frickin' documentary? Of course After Hours is a comedy.

https://youtu.be/XIRN43cVMHI

My review can be found HERE.
Yeahhhhh...

Holden Pike 03-03-22 05:15 PM

2 Attachment(s)
A 2020 piece from Esquire...
35 Years Ago, After Hours Saved Martin Scorsese's Career
In the early 1980s the legendary director knew he was box office poison. That's when he made this small-budget twisted comedy that brought him back.



Right now, you could make a pretty iron-clad case that Martin Scorsese is our greatest living director. There’s a handful of solid runners-up, to be sure. But I can’t think of another filmmaker (American or otherwise) who’s compiled as many masterpieces and near-masterpieces as he has during his six decades behind the camera. Even now, at age 77, there’s no shortage of major studios and steaming services who would kill to be in business with him. I mean, who else could have gotten Netflix to fork over $160 million to make a three-and-a-half hour gangster epic like The Irishman with no strings attached and no questions asked?

And yet there was a time back in the early 1980s when Scorsese was written off as box-office poison. Even after having made Mean Streets, Taxi Driver, and Raging Bull, no one wanted to touch him with a ten-foot pole. It was a dark time for the director. And even after he eventually bounced back with The Color of Money and GoodFellas, that feeling of rejection was never far from his psyche. In fact, I remember meeting the director at his brownstone on the Upper East Side of Manhattan back in the early 2000s when he told me a story about that period. It was a story I found hard to believe. But it was one hundred percent true. It went like this:

“I remember it was the last day of 1983,” he said. “The King of Comedy had come out earlier that year. And on New Year’s Eve, I was getting dressed to go to Jay Cocks’ house. I had the TV on in the background and for some reason it was tuned to "Entertainment Tonight". And I heard them say as sort of a tease before they went to commercial, ‘Coming up: The Movie Flop of the Year!’ So I sort of stuck around to see what it was. What was the Movie Flop of the Year? And when they came back, they said it was The King of Comedy! I was the flop of the year! And on top of that, I had been planning to make The Last Temptation of Christ, which had just been canceled on me. So it was a double whammy. I had nothing lined up next. And I knew I was going to have to start all over.”

Scorsese was just 41 at the time this all happened. And that “double whammy” as he called it made him start to believe that maybe he was all washed up. Or, if not washed up, then certainly in some nightmarish maximum-security wing of Director’s Jail. With no new offers from the big studios forthcoming, Scorsese quickly realized that it was time to get back to his low-budget indie roots and get a movie going fast. Something small and personal that no one could lose a lot of money on. Something that would make being a director fun again. The movie that would emerge from that dark, winter-of-the-soul period would turn out to be 1985’s After Hours — a deliriously tense and twisted comedy that remains one of his most under-appreciated films to this day.

Released on this day in 1985, After Hours is the story of an uptight New York City office drone named Paul Hackett (Griffin Dunne, never better) who returns to his depressingly non-descript apartment after work one night, finds nothing worth watching on TV, and heads out to a diner with a copy of Henry Miller’s Tropic of Cancer for company. There, he meets a mysterious and alluring woman named Marcy (Rosanna Arquette) sitting nearby and strikes up a conversation with her. She tells him about her friend, an artist who sculpts Plaster of Paris bagel-and-cream cheese paper weights. They exchange numbers. He leaves. And then, figuring why the hell not, he calls her for a date. It’s late, but she invites him downtown to the SoHo loft where she’s staying. On the cab ride there, his only money (a $20 bill) flies out of the window. Oh well, he thinks, he still might get lucky anyway. But Paul doesn’t get lucky. In fact, he gets very unlucky.

Over the next 98 hyper-caffeinated minutes, Scorsese takes us on a harrowing series of existential trials in the wee-hour nocturnal desolation below Canal Street. After his date with Marcy turns weird, he splits. And with no money to get back uptown, he loiters around a bizarre, avant-garde Manhattan ghost town populated by a put-upon bartender (John Heard) who gets some bad news about his girlfriend, a clingy waitress with a beehive hairdo and a fondness for The Monkees (Teri Garr), an S&M dominatrix with “not a lot of scars” (Linda Fiorentino) and her leather-daddy boyfriend Horst (Will Patton), a manic Mister Softee ice cream truck driver (Catherine O’Hara), and a couple of dazed and confused burglars (Cheech and Chong). At every turn, just when it looks like Paul will be able to get home thanks to the kindness of strangers, some new cruel twist of fate’s knife lands him worse off than he was just a minute earlier. At one point, looking like a Yuppie version of Job, he looks to the heavens and screams, “What do you want from me?! What have I done?!” You don’t know whether to laugh or cry for the poor schmuck.

Unlike most of the movies that he’d made up until that point, After Hours didn’t begin with Scorsese. Joseph Minion, a 26-year-old aspiring filmmaker had written the script for a film class while studying at Columbia. He’d called it Lies and then A Night in SoHo. The script would end up in the hands of An American Werewolf in London’s Dunne, who wanted to star in it. And after attracting the interest of Tim Burton, who had just finished his short film Frankenweenie, Dunne thought he was about to make the film. But after Paramount pulled the plug on Scorsese’s passion project, The Last Temptation of Christ, he knew that this was exactly the kind of giddy, guerilla-style cheapie he needed to do to keep his career momentum going and distract him from his heartache. The story was also set just blocks away from where he’d grown up in Little Italy. He knew this artsy, open-all-night demimonde of freaks and hipsters by osmosis. Burton graciously stepped aside. Although he’d end up doing okay for himself, quickly landing his feature-directing debut, Pee-Wee’s Big Adventure.

Scorsese kept Dunne on as his onscreen Everyman, Paul, and he rounded out the cast with great comic actors who weren’t required to be movie stars since After Hours’ relatively small $4.5 million budget would seem like a rounding error to the movie’s financier, The Geffen Company, and distributor, Warner Bros. He had total artistic freedom…which is exactly what he was after. “After Hours was like an independent film,” Scorsese told me. “It was shorter and cheaper. I just wanted to see if I still had the energy to shoot quickly. There’s a certain passion that you have to have to make Mean Streets or Taxi Driver and Raging Bull. I had to find that again.”



Thirty-five years later, After Hours remains all energy and passion. And if you weren’t around to experience New York City before SoHo was turned into a glorified mall of chic high-end chain stores, overpriced art galleries, and $10,000-a-month studio apartments, it’s also a love letter to a gloriously gritty bygone era. With After Hours, Scorsese was working at the height of his powers — a man driven by a newfound sense of urgency, playfulness, and freedom. It’s the only movie I can think of that manages to include on its soundtrack both Bach and Bad Brains (and Peggy Lee, to boot!). And Scorsese, the merry prankster finally unburdened of the weight of world, seems to be having a blast in every frame. Especially when he makes a split-second Hitchcockian cameo in an after-hours punk venue called Club Berlin on “Mohawk Night.”

Watching After Hours today is like watching a master filmmaker rediscover what made him want to be a filmmaker in the first place. It has that over-stylized anything-goes spirit. It’s a hysterically frenzied and fizzy Kafkaesque cocktail of horrible bad luck, insane misunderstandings, screwball chaos, sweaty paranoia, and Plaster of Paris bagel-and-cream cheese paper weights. It’s also absolute perfection (even if Paul’s odyssey would be over in five minutes if the film was set just a decade later in the brave new world of ATMs, Metrocards, and cell phones).

But never mind all of that, just do yourself a favor and watch it. Because aside from being one of the strangest and most unsung entries on the resume of our era’s greatest living director, if you squint just a little while you’re watching it, you’ll also see an artist finding his own personal salvation via celluloid. And that’s exhilaratingly rare. After all, while it’s clear that absolutely nothing has changed for Paul Hackett by the final scene of the After Hours, for Martin Scorsese, everything had. He remembered his calling.

https://www.esquire.com/entertainmen...essay-history/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1CProHhddH0
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HkyAjUlZPb8

Diehl40 03-03-22 09:56 PM

Re: The MOFO Preliminary Discussion of the Top 100 Comedies
 
How about some predictions while we wait for the ballot..


1. Which director will have the most films listed in the final 100?


2. Which actor/comedian will star in the most films represented in the final 100?.

Wyldesyde19 03-03-22 10:01 PM

Originally Posted by Diehl40 (Post 2286347)
How about some predictions while we wait for the ballot..


1. Which director will have the most films listed in the final 100?


2. Which actor/comedian will star in the most films represented in the final 100?.
1. Going to say Woody Allen.

2. Hmmm. Possibly Chaplin, or Robin Williams even.

Citizen Rules 03-03-22 10:09 PM

1 Attachment(s)
1. Which director will have the most films listed in the final 100?
Woody Allen is a good bet, but I'll go with this director

2. Which actor/comedian will star in the most films represented in the final 100?. Gotta be this guy

Hey Fredrick 03-03-22 10:30 PM

1. Which director will have the most films listed in the final 100?

Also think it's Woody Allen but he won't be getting any help from me. I'll be throwing some weight behind these kingpins of bad taste instead:

https://external-content.duckduckgo....jpg&f=1&nofb=1

2. Which actor/comedian will star in the most films represented in the final 100?

Probably DDL. He seems to win everything. If not him maybe:
https://external-content.duckduckgo....gif&f=1&nofb=1

SpelingError 03-03-22 11:40 PM

Originally Posted by Diehl40 (Post 2286347)
How about some predictions while we wait for the ballot..


1. Which director will have the most films listed in the final 100?


2. Which actor/comedian will star in the most films represented in the final 100?.
Woody Allen

Maybe Chaplin. Or Jim Carrey.

Wooley 03-04-22 12:27 AM

The time is three a.m. Do you know where your sanity is?


https://i.imgur.com/iwjZdCr.gif?1

Roger Ebert, January 14, 2009

"After Hours" approaches the notion of pure filmmaking; it's a nearly flawless example of -- itself. It lacks, as nearly as I can determine, a lesson or message, and is content to show the hero facing a series of interlocking challenges to his safety and sanity. It is "The Perils of Pauline" told boldly and well.
Critics have called it "Kafkaesque" almost as a reflex, but that is a descriptive term, not an explanatory one. Is the film a cautionary tale about life in the city? To what purpose? New York may offer a variety of strange people awake after midnight, but they seldom find themselves intertwined in a bizarre series of coincidences, all focused on the same individual. You're not paranoid if people really are plotting against you, but strangers do not plot against you to make you paranoid. The film has been described as dream logic, but it might as well be called screwball logic; apart from the nightmarish and bizarre nature of his experiences, what happens to Paul Hackett is like what happens to Buster Keaton: just one damned thing after another.
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The project was not personally developed by director Martin Scorsese, who was involved at the time in struggles over "The Last Temptation of Christ." Paramount's abrupt cancellation of that film four weeks before the start of production (the sets had been built, the costumes prepared) sent Scorsese into deep frustration. "My idea then was to pull back, and not to become hysterical and try to kill people," he told his friend Mary Pat Kelly. "So the trick then was to try to do something."
After rejecting piles of scripts, he received one from producers Amy Robinson and Griffin Dunne, who thought it could be made for $4 million. It had been written by Joseph Minion, then a graduate student at Columbia, and Scorsese was later to recall that Minion's teacher, the Yugoslavian director Dusan Makavejev, gave it an "A." He decided to make it: "I thought it would be interesting to see if I could go back and do something in a very fast way. All style. An exercise completely in style. And to show they hadn't killed my spirit."

It was the first film of his what would become his long collaboration with German cinematographer Michael Ballhaus, who had worked with Fassbinder and therefore knew all about low budgets, fast shooting schedules and passionate directors. It was shot entirely at night, sometimes with on-the-spot improvisation of camera movements, as in the famous shot where Paul Hackett (Dunne), the hero, rings the bell of Kiki Bridges (Linda Fiorentino) and she throws down her keys, and Scorsese uses a POV shot of the keys dropping toward Paul.

In pre-digital days, that really had to happen. They tried fastening the camera to a board and dropping it toward Paul with ropes to stop it at the last moment (Dunne was risking his life), but after that approach produced out-of-focus footage, Ballhaus came up with a terrifyingly fast crane move. Other shots, Scorsese said, were in the spirit of Hitchcock, fetishizing closeups of objects like light switches, keys, locks and especially faces. Because we believe a close-up underlines something of importance to a character, Scorsese exploited that knowledge with unmotivated closeups; Paul thought something critical had happened, but much of the time it had not. In an unconscious way, an audience raised on classic film grammar would share his expectation and disappointment. Pure filmmaking.

Another device was to offhandedly suggest alarming possibilities about characters, as when Kiki describes burns, and Paul finds a graphic medical textbook about burn victims in the bedroom of Marcy (Rosanna Arquette), the girl he has gone to meet at Kiki's apartment. Are the burns accidental or deliberate? The possibility is there, because Kiki is into sadomasochism. Trying to find a shared conversational topic, Paul tells Marcy the story of the time he was a little boy in the hospital and was left for a time in the burn unit, but blindfolded and warned not to remove the blindfold. He did, and what he saw horrified him. Strange, that entering the lives of two women obsessed with burns, he would have his own burn story, but coincidence and synchronicity are the engines of the plot.

"After Hours" could be called a "hypertext" film, in which disparate elements of the plot are associated in an occult way. In "After Hours," such elements as a suicide, a method of sculpture, a plaster of Paris bagel, a $20 bill and a string of burglaries all reveal connections that only exist because Paul's adventures link them. This generates the film's sinister undertone, as in a scene where he tries to explain all the things that have befallen him, and fails, perhaps because they sound too absurd even to him. One thing many viewers of the film have reported is the high (some say almost unpleasant) level of suspense in "After Hours," which is technically a comedy but plays like a satanic version of the classic Hitchcock plot formula, the Innocent Man Wrongly Accused.

With different filmmakers and other actors, the film might have played more safely, like "Adventures in Babysitting." But there is an intensity and drive in Scorsese's direction that gives it desperation; it really seems to matter that this devastated hero struggle on and survive. Scorsese has suggested that Paul's implacable run of bad luck reflected his own frustration during the "Last Temptation of Christ" experience.

Executives kept reassuring him that all was going well with that film, backers said they had the money, Paramount green-lighted it, agents promised it was a "go," everything was in place, and then time after time an unexpected development would threaten everything. In "After Hours," each new person Paul meets promises that they will take care of him, make him happy, lend him money, give him a place to stay, let him use the phone, trust him with their keys, drive him home - and every offer of mercy turns into an unanticipated danger. The film could be read as an emotional autobiography of that period in Scorsese's life. The director said he began filming without an ending. IMDb claims, "One idea that made it to the storyboard stage had Paul crawling into June's womb to hide from the angry mob, with June (Verna Bloom, the lonely woman in the bar) giving 'birth' to him on the West Side Highway." An ending Scorsese actually filmed had Paul still trapped inside the sculpture as the truck driven by the burglars (Cheech and Chong) roared away. Scorsese said he showed that version to his father, who was angry: "You can't let him die!"
That was the same message he had been hearing for weeks from Michael Powell, the great British director who had come on board as a consultant and was soon to marry Scorsese's editor, Thelma Schoonmaker. Powell kept repeating that Paul not only had to live at the end, but to end up back at his office. And so he does, although after Paul returns to the office, close examination of the very final credit shots show that he has disappeared from his desk.

"After Hours" is not routinely included in lists of Scorsese's masterpieces. Its appearance on DVD was long delayed. On IMDb's ranking of his films by user vote (a notoriously unreliable but sometimes interesting reflection of popular opinion), it ranks 16th. But I recall how I felt after the first time I saw it: wrung out. Yes, no matter that it was a satire, a black comedy, an exercise in style, it worked above all as a story that flew in the face of common sense, but it hooked me. I've seen it several times since, I know how it ends, and despite my suspicion of "happy endings," I agree that Paul could not have been left to die. I no longer feel the suspense, of course, because I know what will happen. But I feel the same admiration. "An exercise completely in style," Scorsese said. But he could not quite hold it to that. He had to make a great film because, perhaps, at that time in his life, with the collapse of "The Last Temptation," he was ready to, he needed to, and he could.

Wooley 03-04-22 12:29 AM

Originally Posted by Diehl40 (Post 2286347)
How about some predictions while we wait for the ballot..


1. Which director will have the most films listed in the final 100?


2. Which actor/comedian will star in the most films represented in the final 100?.
1. Mel Brooks

2. Bill Murray

John Dumbear 03-04-22 01:14 AM

1. Which director will have the most films listed in the final 100?

Billy Wilder


2. Which actor/comedian will star in the most films represented in the final 100?

Eddie Murphy

Holden Pike 03-04-22 08:39 AM

Originally Posted by Diehl40 (Post 2286347)
How about some predictions while we wait for the ballot..

1. Which director will have the most films listed in the final 100?

2. Which actor/comedian will star in the most films represented in the final 100?.
Wishful Thinking Me:
1. Preston Sturges
2. Cary Grant

Realist Me:
1. Dennis Dugan
2. Adam Sandler

Chypmunk 03-04-22 09:41 AM

Re: The MOFO Preliminary Discussion of the Top 100 Comedies
 
Imma gonna go with Rob Reiner and Steve Martin

MovieFan1988 03-04-22 11:27 AM

Re: The MOFO Preliminary Discussion of the Top 100 Comedies
 
I'll be making up a list soon, I can't wait until this countdown starts. it's gonna be fun :)

MovieFan1988 03-04-22 11:33 AM

Originally Posted by Diehl40 (Post 2286347)
How about some predictions while we wait for the ballot..


1. Which director will have the most films listed in the final 100?


2. Which actor/comedian will star in the most films represented in the final 100?.
1. Not really sure tbh

2. Adam Sandler or Jim Carrey

Diehl40 03-04-22 12:28 PM

Originally Posted by Diehl40 (Post 2286288)
Does anybody know where I can purchase or stream for free a copy of Arsenic and Old Lace (Carey Grant)

I ended up buying a digital copy from Amazon

Diehl40 03-04-22 12:52 PM

Re: The MOFO Preliminary Discussion of the Top 100 Comedies
 
Most films by Director: Wishful Thinking Woody Allen or Ernst Lubitsch, Preston Sturgis

Actual: I'd say Woody but he is loosing, or rather lost, his star appeal along the way, I'm not really keeping up with the current comedy directors.



Wishful Thinking: Actors: Charlie Chaplin, Cary Grant, and Woody
Actual: Robin Williams or Owen Wilson

John Dumbear 03-04-22 01:06 PM

Even though I don't really care for him, Owen Wilson is a good guess. Adam Sandler though...shudders

Diehl40 03-04-22 03:06 PM

Re: The MOFO Preliminary Discussion of the Top 100 Comedies
 
Another question

Which decade will have the most entries on the final list.

John Dumbear 03-04-22 03:16 PM

Originally Posted by Diehl40 (Post 2286498)
Another question

Which decade will have the most entries on the final list.
1a. '80s
1b. '70s
3. '60s
4. '50s
5. '90s

MovieFan1988 03-04-22 03:34 PM

Originally Posted by Diehl40 (Post 2286498)
Another question

Which decade will have the most entries on the final list.
The 80s or The 2000's

SpelingError 03-04-22 05:52 PM

Originally Posted by Diehl40 (Post 2286498)
Another question

Which decade will have the most entries on the final list.
80's, maybe.

Wyldesyde19 03-04-22 05:57 PM

Originally Posted by Diehl40 (Post 2286498)
Another question

Which decade will have the most entries on the final list.
1980’s I’d think

Allaby 03-04-22 06:16 PM

Originally Posted by Diehl40 (Post 2286347)
How about some predictions while we wait for the ballot..


1. Which director will have the most films listed in the final 100?


2. Which actor/comedian will star in the most films represented in the final 100?.
1. Mel Brooks

2. Jim Carrey

Allaby 03-04-22 06:16 PM

Originally Posted by Diehl40 (Post 2286498)
Another question

Which decade will have the most entries on the final list.
1980s

Citizen Rules 03-04-22 08:19 PM

Re: The MOFO Preliminary Discussion of the Top 100 Comedies
 
Originally Posted by Diehl40
Another question

Which decade will have the most entries on the final list.
1980s...at least at lot of ballot will be made up of 80s.

pahaK 03-04-22 08:23 PM

Originally Posted by Diehl40 (Post 2286498)
Another question

Which decade will have the most entries on the final list.
I'm in the 80s (or 70s) camp as well.

This is going to be so difficult ballot for me to make (assuming I even manage to do that). I don't watch many comedies, and I have massive difficulties even making a preliminary list.

Diehl40 03-05-22 07:25 PM

Originally Posted by Diehl40 (Post 2286498)
Another question

Which decade will have the most entries on the final list.

I want to guess the 40's and the 70's


I think it will be the 80's and the 2010's

rauldc14 03-05-22 07:36 PM

Re: The MOFO Preliminary Discussion of the Top 100 Comedies
 
No way on the 2010s

CosmicRunaway 03-05-22 07:49 PM

Originally Posted by Diehl40 (Post 2285805)
The Lord of the Rings is not generally considered a comedy
This makes me want to come up with an absurd reason as to why they should be included. :lol:

ynwtf 03-05-22 09:32 PM

Well, well, well...
With so many nods to the 80's decade, I must start calculating my nom's to counter such arrogance!!!


https://thumbs.gfycat.com/GiantGraci...us-max-1mb.gif

Chypmunk 03-06-22 05:32 AM

Re: The MOFO Preliminary Discussion of the Top 100 Comedies
 
Is it ok to change my guess for most appearances on the list from Steve Martin to Kermit the Frog?

rauldc14 03-06-22 11:32 AM

Originally Posted by Chypmunk (Post 2286840)
Is it ok to change my guess for most appearances on the list from Steve Martin to Kermit the Frog?
Yes

Citizen Rules 03-06-22 01:00 PM

Re: The MOFO Preliminary Discussion of the Top 100 Comedies
 
Steve Martin....thanks for reminding me of The Jerk and The Man With Two Brains. He was in a bunch of other funny comedies too like Plains, Tanks and Gyromobiles:D

John Dumbear 03-06-22 01:11 PM

Originally Posted by Citizen Rules (Post 2286874)
Steve Martin....thanks for reminding me of The Jerk and The Man With Two Brains. He was in a bunch of other funny comedies too like Plains, Tanks and Gyromobiles:D
"Roxanne" and "Father of the Bride" are both entertaining as well.

Allaby 03-06-22 01:14 PM

Originally Posted by Chypmunk (Post 2286840)
Is it ok to change my guess for most appearances on the list from Steve Martin to Kermit the Frog?
I’ve always considered Kermit’s films as erotic thrillers and not comedies, but maybe that’s just me.

Thursday Next 03-06-22 01:15 PM

A little mention for some British comedies...

Ealing Comedies
Such as Passport to Pimlico, The Ladykillers, The Man in the White Suit, Whisky Galore. My top pick would be Kind Hearts and Coronets - Alec Guinness plays multiple parts in this story of a man who tries to bump off a whole collection of distant relatives.

Richard Curtis Rom-coms
Four Weddings and a Funeral is probably the top pick here, although Notting Hill a close runner up. Love Actually and Bridget Jones's Diary are also available. The less said about The Boat that Rocked the better...

The Brit-com
Almost a genre in itself, in which a group of usually mismatched, usually working-class people band together to do a usually quirky activity and/or take on the bosses, in a mostly heart-warming (or unbearably cheesy, your mileage may vary) way, with some usually gentle comedy and probably a death just to balance things out. Brassed Off is probably the original, The Full Monty, in which a group of unemployed Sheffield steelworkers take to stripping probably the best example. There have been hordes over the year, from Calendar Girls to Kinky Boots to Lucky Break.

Post Modern Trips
Before The Trip there were 24 Hour Party People, a comedic tour through the Manchester music scene and Factory Records and A Cock and Bull Story, also starring Steve Coogan and directed by Michael Winterbottom, with plenty of fourth wall breaking. A Cock and Bull Story owes something I think to 1963’s Oscar-winning Tom Jones, also worth a watch. After the Trip there was Greed, a thinly veiled skewering of a certain fashion mogul.

King of Comedy
Before Paddington and its sequel took the world by storm, director Paul King (also the director of TV’s The Mighty Boosh) directed the joyfully odd Bunny and the Bull which fans of Paddington’s visual quirks might also enjoy.

Dark and Pointed
Chris Morris, Sam Bain, Jesse Armstrong and Armando Ianucci have between them created some dark, funny and at times boundary pushing TV including Peep Show, The Thick of It, Brass Eye and Succession. But they are variously responsible for a few films too: Four Lions is a comedy about hapless terrorists, In the Loop a satire about political manoeuvring. The Death of Stalin is so dark it almost goes through comedy and comes out the other side.

The Best of the Rest
Monty Python needs no introduction. Life of Brian is probably a more complete and consistent film, but I'm not sure I've ever laughed more than I laughed when I saw Holy Grail for the first time. I’m going to Carry On without an entire sub-genre of badly dated 60s and 70s sex comedies. I will mention Withnail & I in which drunk unemployed actors go on holiday by mistake, a cult classic. Lock Stock and 2 Smoking Barrels is pretty funny. Shaun of the Dead and Hot Fuzz are pretty well loved on here. The World’s End is the Godfather Part III of the bunch. Some people consider Trainspotting a comedy, but it's more of a mixed genre to me.

Citizen Rules 03-06-22 01:18 PM

Originally Posted by John Dumbear (Post 2286878)
"Roxanne" and "Father of the Bride" are both entertaining as well.
It's been a long while since I seen those, but yeah I remember liking them. Time to watch me some Steve Martin comedies.

John Dumbear 03-06-22 01:38 PM

Originally Posted by Thursday Next (Post 2286880)
A little mention for some British comedies...

Would also like to add:


"Four Lions"
"Waking Ned Devine"
"In Bruge"
"Bedazzled" ('67)
"Alfie"
"Shaun the Sheep Movie"

Chypmunk 03-07-22 08:30 AM

Re: The MOFO Preliminary Discussion of the Top 100 Comedies
 
I'll be brave and say the 1920s for the decade with the most entries.

Still waiting for the most important question though: How high up the countdown will The Titfield Thunderbolt appear?

rauldc14 03-07-22 08:35 AM

Re: The MOFO Preliminary Discussion of the Top 100 Comedies
 
Top 8 minimum.

Holden Pike 03-07-22 09:44 AM

Originally Posted by Diehl40 (Post 2286498)
Another question
Which decade will have the most entries on the final list.
Comedies that made the previous decade lists…

Pre-‘30s (a Top 50)
The General (#2)
The Gold Rush (#4)
Sherlock Jr. (#8)
The Kid (#10)
Safety Last (#11)
Steamboat Bill, Jr. (#33)
The Circus (#37)
The Goat (#46)

1930s
It Happened One Night (#3)
City Lights (#5)
Modern Times (#7)/i
Bringing Up Baby (#8)
Duck Soup (#12)
Trouble in Paradise (#20)
The Thin Man (#25)
A Night at the Opera (#27)
My Man Godfrey (#31)
Make Way for Tomorrow (#32)
Ninotchka (#36)
You Can’t Take it with You (#39)
Mr. Deeds Goes to Town (#47)
Horse Feathers (#51)
The Awful Truth (#60)
Destry Rides Again (#72)
Sons of the Desert (#80)
Way Out West (#81)
Monkey Business (#91)

1940s
The Great Dictator (#11)
His Girl Friday (#14)
Arsenic & Old Lace (#18)
The Shop Around the Corner (#19)
Kind Hearts & Coronets (#26)
The Ghost & Mrs. Muir (#33)
The Philadelphia Story (#37)
Miracle on 34th Street (#53)
Abbott & Costello Meet Frankenstein (#65)
Sullivan’s Travels (#68)
To Be or Not To Be (#83)
Blithe Spirit (#90)

1950s
Singin’ in the Rain (#10)
Some Like it Hot (#11)
All About Eve (#12)
Harvey (#31)
Mon Oncle (#67)
The Seven Year Itch (#74)
Duck Amuck (#89)
Roman Holiday (#92)

1960s
Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb (#4)
The Graduate (#6)
The Apartment (#8)
Playtime (#31)
A Hard Day’s Night (#53)
Charade (#57)
Barefoot in the Park (#91)

1970s
Monty Python and the Holy Grail (#13)
Young Frankenstein (#15)
Harold & Maude (#27)
Annie Hall (#30)
Blazing Saddles (#33)
Monty Python’s Life of Brian (#41)
The Rocky Horror Picture Show (#46)
Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory (#47)
Manhattan (#52)
The Jerk (#54)
The Sting (#57)
Animal House (#66)
The Muppet Movie (#69)
Paper Moon (#74)
MASH (#78)
Being There (#98)

1980s
Back to the Future (#3)
The Breakfast Club (#13)
Ghostbusters (#20)
Brazil (#21)
Ferris Bueller’s Day Off (#23)
The Princess Bride (#27)
An American Werewolf in London (#28)
Who Framed Roger Rabbit (#31)
This Is Spın̈al Tap (#33)
After Hours (#35)
Raising Arizona (#40)
Airplane! (#43)
Gremlins (#46)
The Blues Brothers (#50)
The Purple Rose of Cairo (#53)
Tootsie (#62)
Planes, Trains, and Automobiles (#71)
National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation (#80)
Diner (#81)
Heathers (#85)
Beetlejuice (#87)
A Christmas Story (#90)
Modern Romance (#98)
Hannah & Her Sisters (#100)

1990s
The Big Lebowski (#6)
Groundhog Day (#25)
Clerks (#45)
Dazed & Confused (#48)
Ed Wood (#49)
Dumb and Dumber (#59)
As Good as it Gets (#62)
Rushmore (#87)

2000s
Amélie (#16)
Shaun of the Dead (#20)
Lost in Translation (#32)
The Royal Tenenbaums (#35)
Sideways (#39)
In Bruges (#56)
A Serious Man (#66)
Fantastic Mr. Fox (#70)
Snatch (#71)
Kiss Kiss Bang Bang (#76)
Juno (#89)
The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou (#100)

Millennium (not included in 2000s list)
Wonder Boys (#39)
Ghost World (#45)
Lars and the Real Girl (#84)
The Artist (#88)
Black Dynamite (#97)

Westerns (not included in a decade list)
City Slickers (#62)
The Frisco Kid (#70)
¡Three Amigos! (#82)
Support Your Local Sheriff! (#89)

Sci-Fi (not included in a decade list)
Men in Black (#61)
Galaxy Quest (#88)


The '80s had the most, with twenty-four. There are over a hundred and twenty movies listed there. But if I were a betting man (which I am not) I would wager less than half of those listed above will make it. We shall see.

mrblond 03-07-22 10:00 AM

Originally Posted by Thursday Next (Post 2286880)

Richard Curtis Rom-coms
Four Weddings and a Funeral is probably the top pick here, although Notting Hill a close runner up. Love Actually and Bridget Jones's Diary are also available. The less said about The Boat that Rocked the better...
This group is within the top tier on my consideration list especially the first three titles you mention here. Hope to find place for more than one of these.
:yup:

Wooley 03-07-22 10:28 AM

For what it's worth, L.A. Story is my favorite Steve Martin movie and will be high on my overall list.

Holden Pike 03-07-22 12:03 PM

Re: The MOFO Preliminary Discussion of the Top 100 Comedies
 
Same here.

Diehl40 03-07-22 03:38 PM

Re: The MOFO Preliminary Discussion of the Top 100 Comedies
 
We Have a ballot.
You can now cast a ballot. The link is in the OP. Please report issues to Yoda or myself.

edarsenal 03-07-22 03:56 PM

Originally Posted by Thursday Next (Post 2286880)
A little mention for some British comedies...

Ealing Comedies
Such as Passport to Pimlico, The Ladykillers, The Man in the White Suit, Whisky Galore. My top pick would be Kind Hearts and Coronets - Alec Guinness plays multiple parts in this story of a man who tries to bump off a whole collection of distant relatives.

Richard Curtis Rom-coms
Four Weddings and a Funeral is probably the top pick here, although Notting Hill a close runner up. Love Actually and Bridget Jones's Diary are also available. The less said about The Boat that Rocked the better...

The Brit-com
Almost a genre in itself, in which a group of usually mismatched, usually working-class people band together to do a usually quirky activity and/or take on the bosses, in a mostly heart-warming (or unbearably cheesy, your mileage may vary) way, with some usually gentle comedy and probably a death just to balance things out. Brassed Off is probably the original, The Full Monty, in which a group of unemployed Sheffield steelworkers take to stripping probably the best example. There have been hordes over the year, from Calendar Girls to Kinky Boots to Lucky Break.

Post Modern Trips
Before The Trip there were 24 Hour Party People, a comedic tour through the Manchester music scene and Factory Records and A Cock and Bull Story, also starring Steve Coogan and directed by Michael Winterbottom, with plenty of fourth wall breaking. A Cock and Bull Story owes something I think to 1963’s Oscar-winning Tom Jones, also worth a watch. After the Trip there was Greed, a thinly veiled skewering of a certain fashion mogul.

King of Comedy
Before Paddington and its sequel took the world by storm, director Paul King (also the director of TV’s The Mighty Boosh) directed the joyfully odd Bunny and the Bull which fans of Paddington’s visual quirks might also enjoy.

Dark and Pointed
Chris Morris, Sam Bain, Jesse Armstrong and Armando Ianucci have between them created some dark, funny and at times boundary pushing TV including Peep Show, The Thick of It, Brass Eye and Succession. But they are variously responsible for a few films too: Four Lions is a comedy about hapless terrorists, In the Loop a satire about political manoeuvring. The Death of Stalin is so dark it almost goes through comedy and comes out the other side.

The Best of the Rest
Monty Python needs no introduction. Life of Brian is probably a more complete and consistent film, but I'm not sure I've ever laughed more than I laughed when I saw Holy Grail for the first time. I’m going to Carry On without an entire sub-genre of badly dated 60s and 70s sex comedies. I will mention Withnail & I in which drunk unemployed actors go on holiday by mistake, a cult classic. Lock Stock and 2 Smoking Barrels is pretty funny. Shaun of the Dead and Hot Fuzz are pretty well loved on here. The World’s End is the Godfather Part III of the bunch. Some people consider Trainspotting a comedy, but it's more of a mixed genre to me.
Excellent listing. I have Guinness films on my watchlist and already love Kind Hearts and need to see white suit abd whiskey galore is on my radar.

I'd add the original 2007 Death at a Funeral to the list. NOT the American remake.

Holden Pike 03-07-22 05:04 PM

Originally Posted by Diehl40 (Post 2287163)
We Have a ballot.
Submitted.

Yoda 03-08-22 11:58 AM

Re: The MOFO Preliminary Discussion of the Top 100 Comedies
 
Oh noooooo I made a really rough preliminary list and it's almost 40 titles and it's not even done heeellllpppp

Chypmunk 03-08-22 12:07 PM

Originally Posted by Yoda (Post 2287327)
Oh noooooo I made a really rough preliminary list and it's almost 40 titles and it's not even done heeellllpppp
Simply remove the first fifteen or so and replace them with The Titfield Thunderbolt - jobsagood'un ..... oh wait, that'll probably mean it appears on your list twice then though which I don't think is allowed. Sorry, I tried to help :(

Diehl40 03-08-22 08:04 PM

Re: The MOFO Preliminary Discussion of the Top 100 Comedies
 
We have two ballots so far with 46 titles. I think Yoda is right, there are going to be a lot of unique film entries. It will be interesting when we have 20 or so ballots to see if we can get some consensus.


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