100 best comedy movies

The 100 best comedy movies, picked by experts from across film, TV and comedy

By Tom Huddleston, David Jenkins, Adam Lee Davies, Derek Adams, Edward Lawrenson, Wally Hammond, Ben Walters, Gabriel Tate and Phil Harrison. Explore the individual top tens of every contributor.

20
Dan Aykroyd and Eddie Murphy in 'Trading Places' Dan Aykroyd and Eddie Murphy in 'Trading Places'

Trading Places (1983)

Dir John Landis (Eddie Murphy, Dan Aykroyd, Jamie Lee Curtis)

‘It ain't cool being no jive turkey so close to Thanksgiving.’

A definition of comedy greatness: a movie you can watch in the depths of winter, on a low-rent Canadian cable channel, dubbed into French (and you don’t speak French), and it’s still ridiculously funny. The Eddie Murphy we loved in the ’80s may be long gone, but we still have the memories, and movies like this. ‘Trading Places’ may not be as slick as ‘Beverly Hills Cop’, as confrontational as ‘48 Hrs’ or as raw as, um, ‘Raw’, but it’s still the best Murphy vehicle on the road: whipsmart, close to the bone, unashamedly capitalist but unexpectedly decent at the core. A bit like the man himself. TH

19
'South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut' 'South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut'

South Park: Bigger, Longer

Dir Trey Parker (Trey Parker, Matt Stone, Isaac Hayes)

‘Hey Stan, tell them about the part where Terrence calls Phillip a testicle-shitting rectal wart.’

What’s the greatest musical of all time? ‘Singin’ in the Rain’? Too cute. ‘West Side Story’? Too butch. ‘Meet Me in St Louis’? If Judy Garland had called Margaret O’Brien a 'donkey-raping shit eater', it might have stood a chance. Surely, the finest example of the musical form in cinema has to be this wistful rites-of-passage tale of life in a quiet Colorado mountain town, where all the folks need to worry about is parking provision, bad language, gay dogs, an impending land war with Canada, Satan’s fuck-buddy Saddam, whether it really was Cartman’s mother in that German scheisse video and, of course, those goddamned Baldwins. Aw, shucks. TH

18
Leslie Nielsen in 'The Naked Gun' Leslie Nielsen in 'The Naked Gun'

The Naked Gun (1988)

Dir David Zucker (Leslie Nielsen, Priscilla Presley, OJ Simpson)

‘I promise you: whatever scum did this, not one man on this force will rest one minute until he's behind bars. Now let's grab a bite to eat.’

In the wake of ‘Scary Movie’ and ‘Meet the Spartans’, it’s hard to remember that the scattergun, slapstick, movie-pastiche genre started out with the noblest of intentions: to level the comedy playing field by making even the smartest moviegoers laugh like total idiots. In translating their criminally overlooked TV show ‘Police Squad!’ to the big screen, the Zuckers delivered the purest expression of the form outside of their own masterpiece ‘Airplane!’. ‘The Naked Gun’ is a film so devastatingly daft it leaves the stoniest of cynics gasping for breath and shrieking, ‘It’s Enrico Pallazzo!’ TH

17
'Duck Soup' 'Duck Soup'

Duck Soup (1933)

Dir Leo McCarey (Groucho Marx, Harpo Marx, Chico Marx)

‘I could dance with you till the cows come home...But I would rather dance with the cows till you come home.’

Journalists ritually cite George Orwell’s ‘1984’ when bemoaning the rotten state of contemporary politics. Let's put that down to the fact that they’ve probably never seen ‘Duck Soup’. Groucho Marx plays Rufus T Firefly, the dangerously daffy autocrat of the sovereign state of Freedonia, whose anarchic style of governance is as much a rib-crackingly hilarious indictment of power-hungry tyrants as it is a harrowing harbinger of things to come. We may chuckle when he attempts to squeeze ‘financial assistance’ from a status-hungry dowager. We may guffaw when he inducts a pair of friendly nitwits (Chico and Harpo Marx) into high government posts. We may snigger when the boys break into song at a war crimes trial. But is this not also a bracing vision of a grim future (and, of course, a very funny one)? DJ

16
Bill Nighy in 'Shaun of the Dead' Bill Nighy in 'Shaun of the Dead'

Shaun of the Dead (2004)

Dir Edgar Wright (Simon Pegg, Nick Frost, Kate Ashfield)

‘How's that for a slice of fried gold?’

Our voters declare this the funniest of the films made by the reigning kings of British comedy, the triumvirate of Nick Frost, Simon Pegg and Edgar Wright. Previous beloved Brit comedy duos – from Eric and Ernie to Cannon and Ball and the great Hale and Pace – failed to make, or faltered on, their elevation from the small to the silver screen. It was more than the making of perky Pegg and frolicsome Frost – the surprise hit of ‘Shaun of the Dead’ catapulted them to just below demi-god status (as enjoyed by, of course, the Pythons) and to the second highest spot in the poll for British performers. ‘Shaun...' is not a film about survival: this genuinely suspenseful rom-zom-com is about respect, and the getting of it. That what’s Pegg/Frost/Wright give to the living dead of Crouch End, Highgate and North Finchley in spades, with due compassion, not a little heroism and without losing their sense of humour and essential Britishness. WH


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  • OMG i can't believe Jerry Lewis or James Cagney movies are not even in the list!!! are you kiddin' me?!!! WTF!! and what about the order of this list? - That's really dissapointing.

    miyu Sun Dec 16 2012
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  • Do you have a personal vendetta with Tom Hanks?

    Andre Sun Nov 18 2012
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  • This list is blowing my mind. While I love that movies like Anchorman and The Big Lebowski are so high up on this list, Coming to America and Team America need to switch places, no question...In fact, dump Team America altogether along with half of the Woody Allen movies. Also, Happy Gilmore and Dumb and Dumber made the list, but not Clue, Ferris Bueller's Day Off, Spaceballs, The Philadelphia Story, Super Troopers, It Happened One Night, The Birdcage, or Moonstruck? A list of the best comedies actually made me sad.

    Paige Thu Oct 4 2012
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  • while most movies are there (with 100 how could they not be).. the order is horrible... Also Step Brothers over Anchorman.. and neither should be in a top 10 all time.

    really? Mon Sep 24 2012
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  • Office Space????

    Allan Sat Aug 25 2012
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  • Most of these are 20+ years old! Don't get me wrong, you need some classics in there but I for one would (like to) think that our generation has advanced intellectually enough to appreciate a slightly less obvious/dumb kind of humour... Monty Python sure but come on! We are British, we are far more dry than the humour in most of these films... disappointing man

    kristen Sun Aug 19 2012
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  • Great list and a lot of fun to read. Missing from the list is those magnificent men in their flying machines.

    Pete Sat Aug 18 2012
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  • Where's Pappa? ... pitch black and hilarious. Ruth Gordon at her very best!

    just saying... Sat Aug 18 2012
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  • I would have high expectations of a list of the greatest comedies that was compiled by Time Out - but this list is infantile in its taste, and I can only assume that the the compiler is in his teens. Frankly, pathetic, for a company which claims to know films.

    makemegoodbutnotyet@gmail.com Fri Aug 10 2012
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  • OH MY GOD!! Where is THE 40 YEAR OLD VIRGINNNN????? :O You have to be kiddin me!!

    Abe Mahmood Fri Jul 27 2012
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