Although humor is subjective, some comedy movies are so great that everyone seems to agree they’re hilarious. When they work and the jokes land, comedies can be among the greatest movies of all time. From Mel Brooks to Monty Python to the Zucker brothers, the best comedy filmmakers have mastered both the comedy side and the medium, making sure their movies are well-staged and well-shot in addition to having plenty of laughs.
Comedy is one of the most hit-and-miss genres, but the ones that hit really hit. There are some comedies from more than 50 years ago that still hold up today, like Dr. Strangelove and Some Like It Hot. Some comedies from the 21st century, like Bridesmaids and Shaun of the Dead, are so great that they rank alongside the all-time greats. From the pitch-perfect structure of Back to the Future to the prescient self-awareness of Monty Python and the Holy Grail, here's our take on the best comedy movies of all time.
If you're looking for more recommendations, why not check out our list of the best TV shows of all time.

30 Best Comedy Movies On Netflix
Netflix has a great selection of hysterical, studio-produced comedies for viewers to chew on. And, fortunately, there's something for everyone.
15 Step Brothers (2008)
Step Brothers
Cast
- Adam McKay
- John C. Reilly
- Release Date
- July 25, 2008
- Runtime
- 98minutes
- Director
- Adam McKay
Cruelly under-rated by critics on release, Adam McKay's delightfully silly comedy Step Brothers is one of Will Ferrell's funniest movies. Combining with John C Reilly in a partnership that would prove to be surprisingly prolific, Ferrell plays Brennan, a 40-year-old manchild forced to face the prospect of a step-brother (Reilly's Dale) infringing on his cozy only child set-up when his mother (Mary Steenburgen) remarries. What follows is a 98-minute war between the two developmentally stunted enemies whose escalation memorably includes scrotal defilement of a drum kit. Infinitely quotable and hugely funny, Step Brothers is easy watching with a slapstick kicker that gets better every time you watch it.
Rotten Tomatoes Score: 55%
Where To Watch: Peacock
14 Raising Arizona (1987)
Raising Arizona
Cast
- Holly Hunter
- Trey Wilson
- Release Date
- April 10, 1987
- Runtime
- 94 Minutes
- Director
- Joel Coen, Ethan Coen
After bursting onto the scene with their grisly neo-noir Blood Simple, the Coen brothers followed it up with a tonal 180-degree turn. Raising Arizona’s story sounds dark on paper – an ex-convict and his wife, desperate to start a family, kidnap one of a local businessman’s octuplets to raise as their own – but the Coens’ execution couldn’t be wackier. Most comedies use standard coverage to keep the audience’s focus on the performances and the dialogue, but Raising Arizona uses a fast-moving camera to enhance the humor.
Rotten Tomatoes Score: 90%
Where to Watch: Hulu
13 Withnail And I (1987)
Release Date: January 1, 1987 | Director: Bruce Robinson | Runtime: 107 Mins
Cast: Richard E. Grant, Paul McGann, Richard Griffiths
As with only the greatest comedy characters, almost everything Richard E. Grant's Withnail says could be a t-shirt slogan. So beloved is the cult classic British comedy, that its most famous lines are quoted back and forth among fans in an eternal loop, celebrating the unemployed actor and his straighter sidekick (Paul McGann's "I"). Withnail and I delightfully challenges the idea of British elegance, introducing the pair of debauched, possibly depraved down-and-outers who seek a weekend of respite in a country cottage owned by Withnail's wealthy, lascivious uncle Monty (the excellent Richard Griffiths). Roaringly funny and desperately sad, Withnail and I gave the world Richard E Grant, thanks to his stunning breakout performance, and should be on every comedy fans' to-watch list.
Rotten Tomatoes Score: 93%
Where to Watch: Max
12 Back To The Future (1985)
Back to the Future
Cast
- Michael J. Fox
- Crispin Glover
- Lea Thompson
- Release Date
- July 3, 1985
- Runtime
- 116 minutes
- Director
- Robert Zemeckis
When Marty McFly is flung 30 years into the past in his inventor friend’s time machine, he accidentally prevents his parents’ first meeting and has to make sure they get together so he won’t be erased from history. Back to the Future is as close to a perfect movie as there’s ever been, with a perfectly crafted script. Everything that gets set up in the present day in the opening act ends up having real significance when Marty goes back in time. What’s truly impressive is that Back to the Future manages to pack so many laughs into its airtight narrative.
Rotten Tomatoes Score: 93%
Where to Watch: Apple TV
11 Team America: World Police (2004)
Team America: World Police
Cast
- Trey Parker
- Kristen Miller
- Daran Norris
- Release Date
- October 15, 2004
- Runtime
- 98 minutes
- Director
- Trey Parker
From the twisted minds of South Park creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone, Team America: World Police did for traditional marionette puppets what The Book Of Mormon did for musicals, making the art form accessible for a new generation by dialing into the same anarchist spirit of the animation its creators are best known for. Outrageous and provocative in equal measure, Team America skewers the perceived self-importance of actors, positioning their skills as the most valuable asset in the global fight against terrorism to frankly ridiculous results. Featuring a sex scene that needs to be seen to be believed, and a flagrant disregard for conventional offensiveness, it's actually a far more clever parody than its ever given credit for. And it absolutely sells the idea that almost everything could be possible if the world just opened its arms to puppets more.
Rotten Tomatoes Score: 77%
Where to Watch: Max
10 Blazing Saddles (1974)
Blazing Saddles
Cast
- Cleavon Little
- Gene Wilder
- Slim Pickens
- Harvey Korman
- Release Date
- February 7, 1974
- Runtime
- 93 minutes
- Director
- Mel Brooks
Mel Brooks has made many great parody movies throughout his career, but Blazing Saddles is arguably the greatest. Blazing Saddles doesn’t just poke fun at the western genre’s clichés; it also points out the inherent racism of glorifying that period of American history. It revolves around a corrupt politician who hires a Black sheriff in an attempt to destroy a town, and the sheriff turns out to be so good at his job that he saves the town and takes down the politician and his cronies. The fourth-wall-breaking finale is a meta masterpiece.
Rotten Tomatoes Score: 90%
Where to Watch: Apple TV

Blazing Saddles: 8 Ways It's A Spot-On Parody Of Westerns
Mel Brooks is a master of satire, but how did his ode to westerns, Blazing Saddles, perfectly parody the classic genre and its tropes?
9 Dr. Strangelove (1964)
Dr. Strangelove Or: How I Learned To Stop Worrying And Love The Bomb
Cast
- George C. Scott
- Slim Pickens
- Peter Sellers
- Keenan Wynn
- Release Date
- January 29, 1964
- Runtime
- 95 minutes
- Director
- Stanley Kubrick
Stanley Kubrick made his political satire Dr. Strangelove to reflect Cold War-era fears of nuclear war in the 1960s. But, since humanity is unfortunately still on the brink of nuclear annihilation, the movie is still just as timely and relevant today. Peter Sellers gives a trio of hysterical performances at the center of a star-studded cast. Dr. Strangelove has a wonderfully zany sense of humor, but its depiction of warfare and mutually assured destruction is startlingly accurate. Kubrick ends with the perfect punchline, using Vera Lynn’s “We’ll Meet Again” to show that World War II-era optimism is moot in the age of nuclear weapons.
Rotten Tomatoes Score: 98%
Where to Watch: Apple TV
8 Shaun Of The Dead (2004)
Shaun of the Dead
Cast
- Kate Ashfield
- Nick Frost
- Lucy Davis
- Release Date
- September 24, 2004
- Runtime
- 99 minutes
- Director
- Edgar Wright
Edgar Wright kicked off his Three Flavours Cornetto Trilogy with one of the greatest horror comedies ever made. Shaun of the Dead combines a George A. Romero zombie movie with a Richard Curtis romantic comedy as an immature slacker tries to grow up and win back his ex-girlfriend in the midst of the zombie apocalypse. As with all the best parodies, Shaun of the Dead has real affection for its chosen genre. Wright doesn’t look down his nose at zombie movies; he genuinely loves them.
Rotten Tomatoes Score: 92%
Where to Watch: Apple TV
7 Bridesmaids (2011)
Judd Apatow’s comedies have dominated the box office by combining crowd-pleasing raunchy humor with heartstring-tugging sincerity, and the pinnacle of that style is Bridesmaids. Bridesmaids follows a down-on-her-luck single woman in the lead-up to her best friend’s wedding. There are plenty of big laughs throughout the movie – including the notorious dress fitting scene – but Kristen Wiig and Annie Mumolo’s Oscar-nominated script keeps its focus on the emotional cores of the story: friendship, arrested development, and burgeoning romance.
Rotten Tomatoes Score: 89%
Where to Watch: Netflix

Bridesmaids' 10 Funniest Scenes
Bridesmaids was such a great film it earned Oscar nods for Kristen Wiig and Melissa McCarthy. Here are the funniest scenes in the female-led comedy.
6 Monty Python And The Holy Grail (1975)
Monty Python and the Holy Grail
Cast
- Michael Palin
- John Cleese
- Terry Jones
- Graham Chapman
- Release Date
- May 25, 1975
- Runtime
- 91 minutes
- Director
- Terry Jones, Terry Gilliam
After changing the comedy landscape with their iconic sketch show, the Pythons brought their blend of sharp satire and unbridled silliness to the big screen with Monty Python and the Holy Grail, a lampoon of the Arthurian legend. There’s a big laugh every few seconds, ranging from shameless slapstick to highbrow historical references. From the coconut-clattering horseback riding to the beautifully anticlimactic ending, this movie’s self-awareness was way ahead of its time. Monty Python and the Holy Grail shatters the fourth wall at every opportunity.
Rotten Tomatoes Score: 96%
Where to Watch: Netflix