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Aug 2, 2024, 8:14:12 AM8/2/24
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High-minded satire or expertly timed farts: many of the best comedies blend highbrow and lowbrow (think Monty Python), but, at the end of the day, the best comedy is the one that makes you laugh the most.

Has the Ghostbusters franchise seen better days? Probably, but there's still some life left in the spirited series, and this latest installment blends the characters from the '80s era of the series (Bill Murray, Dan Aykroyd, Ernie Hudson, and Annie Potts) with the new generation introduced in Afterlife (Paul Rudd, Carrie Coon, Finn Wolfhard, Mckenna Grace). After that previous film's excursion into rural Oklahoma, a return to a more familiar New York City environs is welcome.

The movie that made Eddie Murphy an international superstar stands up today as one of the best examples of the 1980s action comedy subgenre. Murphy plays Detroit cop Axel Foley, out of his depth (at first) when he finds himself pursuing a case in sunny California and teaming up with Judge Reinhold. And what a soundtrack! Netflix also has the decent first sequel, as well as this year's surprisingly good legacy followup, Axel F.

This charming, bitchy blockbuster stars Constance Wu as Rachel Chu, an NYU professor from a poor family, who learns (a bit late in the game) that her boyfriend Nick (Henry Golding) is the heir to a massive Singaporean real estate empire. She's suddenly thrown into a world of obscene wealth and treated like a gold digger, forced to face off against Nick's impenetrable mother (Michelle Yeoh).

Frank (Seth Rogen) the sausage, Brenda (Kristen Wiig) the hot dog bun, Teresa Taco (Salma Hayek), and Sammy Bagel Jr. (Edward Norton) can't wait to be chosen from the grocery store shelves by a loving family. Until they learn the horrible truth. It's nearly 90 minutes of raunchy jokes and goofy food puns, but it's also weirdly sweet? If you like this, it got a followup TV series this year, but you'll have to subscribe to Prime Video to watch it.

A tightly constructed and rather weird time travel comedy about a kid who goes back in time and gets hit on by his own mom becomes an epic bit of sci-fi silliness in the hands of director Robert Zemeckis and writer Bob Gale. Michael J. Fox and Christopher Lloyd are a cinematic pairing for the ages. It's a movie that's as funny as it is rewatchable.

After crafting a superb mystery-comedy in Knives Out, writer-director Ryan Johnson returned with this sequel that almost tops the original, and certainly outdoes it in size and scope. Daniel Craig is back as slow-talking, quick-thinking detective Benoit Blanc, this time taken to the island of a billionaire and faced with, as expected, multiple murders to solve. Like the original, the movie balances zippy pacing and entertainingly over-the-top characters with some wildly on-point social satire. The supporting cast collects the entire A-list, and two cameos mark the final screen performances of Steven Sondheim and Angela Lansbury.

The action-comedy franchise lives on with the latest entry in the Bad Boys series, Ride or Die. In the meantime, Netflix has the 1995 original (and the first sequel). Martin Lawrence and Will Smith have chemistry for the ages (which is why we're getting new movies almost 30 years later), even if the Michael Bay of it all places explosions over everything else. The recent movies are actually a bit better than the originals, so if you like this one, you might as well keep going.

Glen Powell (who co-wrote this dark comedy alongside director Richard Linklater) stars as Gary Johnson, a withdrawn New Orleans professor who's roped into a side gig at which he's surprisingly good: impersonating hired assassins to help out the police. People looking to hire a killer come to Gary believing that he's a hit man, only to find that they've been entrapped. Things get complicated when he's approached by Madison (Adria Arjona), a woman with an abusive jerk of a husband she wants bumped off. Suddenly not so clear as to whose side he's on.

The Archie gang has proven itself to be remarkably adaptable: from a wholesome family-friendly comic, to zombie horror, to whatever the hell you'd classify Riverdale as. So this bubbly, '60s-set Indian version doesn't even feel like that much of a stretch. The movie's Riverdale is a harmonious Anglo-Indian enclave, home to Archie Andrews (Agastya Nanda), rich Veronica (Suhana Khan), and bookish Betty (Khushi Kapoor), all recreating a version of that time-tested love triangle. It's cute, funny, and sincere, with plenty of very charming musical numbers.

When it comes to the underrated comedy movies on Netflix, there are several to choose from that are both underappreciated and often labeled as guilty pleasures. It could be argued that most comedy movies are guilty pleasure movies that simply vary between comic tastes. The more ridiculous, far-fetched, or over-the-top a comedy is, the guiltier the pleasure of watching it. As a pure form of escapism, the comedy genre tends to sit near the top of the heap, offering audiences a chance to forget about life for a while with a big smile on their face.

Underrated comedy movies on Netflix range from slapstick to spoof comedies, some with heartfelt themes, others full of hijinx and mayhem instead. There are legit masterpieces that most people can agree on when it comes to comedies, including some giant comedic masterpieces on Netflix, including Monty Python and the Holy Grail and Groundhog Day. However, there are also a lot of comedies that are better than their reputation. They all come with hilarious, memorable characters and performers. Whatever the viewer's taste, there is a guilty pleasure comedy for them on Netflix right now.

When Peter Jackson first started his movie-making career, he made an R-rated movie with puppets called Meet the Feebles. It has since become a cult classic and in 2018, another director wanted to do something similar. This was another familiar name, as Brian Henson took his dad Jim Henson's puppet studio and used it to make the R-rated comedy The Happytime Murders. Here, Melissa McCarthy starred as a human detective who teamed with a puppet PI to find out who has been killing retired sitcom stars. The movie was a critical bomb, picking up six Razzie nominations. However, it remains a guilty pleasure and is one of the more underrated comedy movies on Netflix.

In 2006, some comedy stars tried to keep their brand of comedy going with the sports comedy The Benchwarmers. The cast included several Saturday Night Live stars including Rob Schneider and David Spade and the star of Napoleon Dynamite, Jon Heder. However, even with all these funny comedians in one movie, critics hated it and blasted it as juvenile humor. However, when it comes to comedy movies, it is always subjective and fans often don't care what critics think, making it a box office success. Now, it is one of the more underrated comedy movies on Netflix for anyone looking for some goofy laughs.

From the team that brought audiences the TV series Trailer Park Boys comes Swearnet: The Movie. Robb Wells, John Paul Tremblay, and Mike Smith play themselves and decide to create an uncensored internet network after being annoyed by all the censorship that followed them after their Trailer Park Boys careers. Fans of the series that made them famous are in for a treat with this one, and newcomers to the Trailer Park Boys world who love tasteless humor will also get a kick out of Swearnet. The trio is well-known for their anything-goes depiction of their characters and plotlines, and they don't disappoint here.

For most of his career, Robert De Niro was one of the most famous and beloved crime thriller actors on the planet. However, there came a point in his later years when De Niro decided he was going to move into more comedy roles. His most popular turns came in the Meet the Parents franchise, but he went one step further into absurdist comedy with the 2016 movie Dirty Grandpa. The movie received universally bad reviews, sitting at just 10% on Rotten Tomatoes. However, it was a box office success and remains one of the more underrated comedy movies on Netflix.

Adam Sandler has been almost exclusive to Netflix in recent years, and most of his movies have been met with harsh reviews from critics. However, Netflix keeps bringing him back for more, and with Hubie Halloween, the movie delivered what most Sandler haters despise the most about his movies. Sandler plays a dimwitted citizen of Salem, Massachusetts who sets out to make sure everything on Halloween goes by the rules. However, he soon realizes supernatural forces are falling on the town and he alone can save them. The movie has quickly become a Halloween staple and had better reviews than a lot of Sandler's recent projects.

It is hard to remake a beloved comedy classic that had an iconic star in the lead. The original Pink Panther was directed by Blake Edwards and starred the incomparable Peter Sellers as Detective Jacques Clouseau, a bumbling detective who somehow managed to solve crimes in spite of his own ineptitude. The best way to fix the problem of replacing Sellers is to bring in a comic legend to do it, and the remake did so with Steve Martin. Critics shredded the movie with bad reviews, but it was a box office success and even received a sequel, making it one of the most underrated comedy movies on Netflix.

Before American Idol and The Voice, the longest-running music competition show in history was the Eurovision Song Contest, which has run in Europe for almost 70 years. It is something that was never as popular for American audiences but was a huge success for Europeans. That might be why the 2020 movie Eurovision Song Contest: The Story of Fire Saga wasn't as popular in America as Netflix might have hoped. While it received mixed reviews, the movie remains one of the more surprisingly underrated comedy movies on Netflix and even has an Oscar nomination to its credit for Best Original Song.

One of the more underrated comedy movies on Netflix is the seldom talked about 2006 comedy Accepted. The movie starred Justin Long and Blake Lively and told the story of outcast high school students who created a fake college after the ones they applied to rejected their application. The cast has some recognizable faces early in their careers, including Jonah Hill, and some big-name talent in supporting roles, including comedian Lewis Black and Anthony Heald, the man known as Hannibal Lecter's jailer in Silence of the Lambs.

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