All-Time Top Five
Laugh it up at a list that's a cut above the rest!
With so much pop culture in the world, it’s hard to know what’s best. Fortunately, Media Magpies has you covered, as one of our writers will occasionally share what they have determined to be The All-Time Top Five.
Well well well, it’s not so easy to find a pop culture list that doesn’t suck shit, huh? Variety recently released its choices for the top 100 “comedy movies” and was roundly disparaged — the list is English-language-centric, it has stand-up sets along with narrative films, it includes any number of bad choices (Everything Everywhere All At Once?), it is loaded with movies that may be funny or have funny parts but do not actually make the viewer laugh. There is nothing funny about such a poor set of rankings!. That’s why it’s imperative to read and propagate this correct list of The All-Time Top Five Comedies (although you can also suggest your own in the comments).
Un Chien Andalou — Comedy lives in the collision of order and chaos, and chaos does not hit harder or weirder than Luis Buñuel and Salvador DalÃ’s 1929 short. Demanding men invade rooms, ants crawl out of holes in hands, a sexual assault is interrupted, in the funniest if not keenest cut of the movie, by the need to drag two dead donkeys on pianos. But the often-violent punchlines (a woman getting clocked by a car is pretty great) and shocking images are interspersed among scenes of near-normality, or normality asserting itself without regard to the insanity around it, and this unease and confusion creates the tension that snaps in baffled and apprehensive laughter. As Athena sprang from the forehead of Zeus, Adult Swim oozed from this sliced-up eyeball.
Only God Forgives — the logical conclusion of deadpan comedy. Ryan Gosling’s stonefaced protagonist moves through a world of heightened violence, what separates him from forerunners like Chaplin and Keaton is that he is a total moron without their wit or knack for escape. Instead he stoically blunders his way toward Vithaya Pansringarm, who matches impassive countenance with focused brutality. Nicholas Winding Refn knows comedy lives in the wide and (durationally) long shots, following Gosling on his misguided journey all the way back to his mother’s womb, never blinking as his foolish hero makes one mistake after another and gets his ass handed to him. It’s no joke to Gosling, but that’s exactly what makes it funny.
The Birds — sly pervert Albert Hitchcock brings multiple comedic stylings together, starting with the rom-com. While Daphne du Maurier’s short story is a savage story of one family’s survival, Hitchcock and Evan Hunter open it up with a lengthy beginning of Tippi Hedren and Rod Taylor flirting with each other in a love-hate meet-cute with amusingly cruel undertones. This extends to further meetings where the ostensibly fun times are given a jaggedly funny and sinister edge (sure, that’s Taylor’s “sister,” uh huh). But the twisted relationship shenanigans are blasted aside for the real humor — the titular avians’ takeover of the movie after ominously lurking throughout, their assault provoking blithering recriminations and idiot windbaggery that leads to chaos and carnage. The film becomes the blackest form of zany madcap, and the great joke is how fast society breaks down because of a bunch of damn seagulls — it’s a bird, bird, bird, bird world.
Drug War — a man must play two opposing roles for two opposing groups, and the more successful his fakery the more disastrous his potential failure. This is farce, and director Johnnie To even stages near-misses via opening and closing (elevator) doors as mid-level drug dealer Louis Koo tries to save his skin by helping cop Sun Honglei nab the rest of his meth-dealing gang. Koo works both sides, meeting with confederates and feeding information to cops, leading to one incredible sequence where he coaches Sun to impersonate another drug supplier in order to meet with a distributor, and then to impersonate the distributor when it comes time to meet with the supplier. Koo’s plate-spinning leads to an army of cops getting murked by a pair of mute brothers and a goof-up with a recording device, among other comedic setpieces, but it can only last so long and Koo eventually smashes the two groups that would control him together. To’s precise understanding of objects in motion makes him a perfect director of escalating intensity and the final firefight is Heat-level destruction with nearly every character getting a bullet’s final punchline. Except for Koo, who dies screaming by lethal injection as the credits roll. It’s a grim ending, but as Michael O’Donaghue said, making people laugh is the lowest form of comedy.
The Sound Of Music — on the other hand, sometimes the people make their own fun. The good people and robots of Mystery Science Theater 3000 have made a career out of finding the humor in movies full of unwatchable garbage, and no garbage is less watchable — yet with so many minutes to watch — than The Sound Of Music. But the film’s bloat is its undoing, as it offers endless opportunities for mockery. Singing your own lyrics to the tedious songs, making running gags about Nazi complicity, disparaging the acting and very appearance of the many foul children — for the engaged viewer, the potential for humor is endless and indeed the only way to bear the film. For whatever a movie’s intentions, comedy is in the eye of the beholder, and the audience has the last laugh.
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Department of
Conversation
From the moment I saw the first film on your list, Un Chien Andalou, I knew where were you were going with this premise. A great rethinking of the film canon!
For The Birds, I do think that the stiff acting of Rod Taylor (who plays good guys, but in real life was a dick, not to be confused with Robert Ryan, who’s the exact opposite) does fit in the comic category. And as the town gets wrecked, all it’d take to make the scene feel madcap, would be a more comic soundtrack (in the film, the eerie silence, punctuated by the birds’ sounds, makes it feel more gripping).
As a kid, I got a lifetime ban from participating in family viewings of The Sound of Music, for having the reaction you had. I had, by then, seen the photos of the liberation of the concentration camps, and I had, uh, some problems with the film’s portrayal of the Nazis.
Mel Brooks is on the rather short list of those who should be allowed to deviate from realism in depicting the Nazis (and, Quentin, sorry, but you ain’t on the list).
Thanks! And I think Sound of Music will be the most controversial choice here but what else do you do with Maria other than brutally mock her?
And great point about Taylor and his polar opposite Robert Ryan — his squareness is definitely off and suspect, which makes for dark comedy. I keep coming back to his “sister” because it’s such an uncanny vibe, it never goes directly into “we can’t say it but we’re saying it” territory so there is deniability, but man is it weird. And funny!
Thirding the appearance of The Birds as an especially apt choice. I’m with John in how much the emotional effect comes from the score: if you threw in some Benny Hill music over some of those attacks, people would be on the floor. I feel like Vertigo would also reward a comedic lens.
That line about Adult Swim is a thing of beauty and a joy forever.
Vertigo as a comedy? Sounds like that’d be right up someone like Tim Heidecker’s alley.
I came across this perfect scene, under a half a minute, via Adult Swim: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kA89RWCnE1c
Thank you! And yeah, the soundtrack does so much — there has to be a “Surfin Bird” reworking that is hilarious.
I am a little disappointed one of my top comedy picks in response to the Variety list isn’t on here.
I’m speaking, of course, of No Country for Old Men.
The Big Lebowski is, in my estimation, the Coen Brothers’ funniest film and one of the funniest films of all time. However, Variety only ranked it #72. Meanwhile, Fargo, a very good movie that is occasionally funny, ranked #8. From this I must conclude that the Coen Brothers are comedy directors, and the more critically acclaimed one of their films is, the funnier it is.
Therefore, No Country for Old Men, their most acclaimed film and only Best Picture winner, must be their funniest film. And if Fargo is #8, that means No Country must surely be in the top 5.
I cannot argue with this math! There is another version of this list that relies on this kind of logic more than comedy theory, and No Country is heading it.
Excellent logic, and also consistent with The Ladykillers being their least funny film – glad they learned from it and quickly shifted back into the more overtly comic sensibility of No Country.