What funny movies will we also like, if we like these?
Question : What funny movies will we also like, if we like these?
Harold and Kumar
Eurotrip
White chicks
Office Space
shaun of the dead
Orange county
happy gilmore
meet the fockers
zoolander
dodgeball
blades of glory
along came polly
something about mary
little man
grandma’s boy
We can buy some movies next week. Which ones should we buy, based on our tastes?
Thanks!
Ricky Bobby would’ve been funny if I didn’t live in Hickville surrounded by people who really act that way…
orange county office space
Best answer:
Answer by steven b
meet the parents
Hot fuzz
Talladega nights: The ballad of Ricky Bobby
In Bruges
Here are some that are not on your list – I love them all and have them.
LICENSE TO WED: A reverend (Robin Williams) puts an engaged couple (Mandy Moore and John Krasinski) through a grueling marriage preparation course to see if they are meant to be married in his church.
STEP BROTHERS: Two spoiled adult men (Ferrell and Reilly) are pulled into a new sibling rivalry after their respective single parents get hitched.
50 FIRST DATES: Henry Roth is a man afraid of commitment up until he meets the beautiful Lucy. They hit it off and Henry think he’s finally found the girl of his dreams, until he discovers she has short-term memory loss and forgets him the very next day.
THE HOT CHICK: An attractive and popular teenager who is mean spirited toward others, finds herself in the body of an older man, and must find a way to get back to her original body.
MR DEEDS: A sweet-natured, small-town guy inherits a controlling stake in a media conglomerate and begins to do business his way.
THE WATERBOY: A football team water boy discovers he has a unique tackling ability and becomes a member of the team.
HAPPY GILMORE: A rejected hockey player puts his skills to the golf course to save his grandmother’s house.
SCHOOL FOR SCOUNDRELS: A young guy short on luck, enrolls in a class to build confidence to help win over the girl of his dreams,
which becomes complicated when his teacher has the same agenda.
RV: Bob Munro and his dysfunctional family rent an RV for a road trip to the Colorado Rockies, where they ultimately have to contend with a bizarre community of campers.
THE PINK PANTHER: Loosely based on the 1964 Peter Sellers original film, where the detective must solve the murder of a famous soccer coach and find out who stole the infamous Pink Panther diamond.
I NOW PRONOUNCE YOU CHUCK AND LARRY: Two straight, single Brooklyn firefighters (Sandler, James) pretend to be a gay couple in order to receive domestic partner benefits.
WEDDING CRASHERS: John Beckwith and Jeremy Grey, a pair of committed womanizers who sneak into weddings to take advantage of the romantic tinge in the air, find themselves at odds with one another when John meets and falls for Claire Cleary. Stars Owen Wilson and Vince Vaughn.
WHAT ABOUT BOB?: A successful psychiatrist loses his mind after one of his most dependent patients, a highly manipulative obsessive-compulsive, tracks him down during his family vacation.
SON IN LAW (1993): Having gotten a taste of college life, a drastically changed farm girl returns home for Thanksgiving break with her best friend, a flamboyant party animal who is clearly a fish out of water in a small farm town.
ANCHORMAN: Ron Burgundy is San Diego’s top rated newsman in the male dominated broadcasting of the 1970′s, but that’s all about to change when a new female employee with ambition to burn arrives in his office.
AMERICAN PIE (Trilogy)
ME, MYSELF AND IRENE: A nice guy cop with multiple personality disorder, must protect a woman on the run from a corrupt ex-boyfriend and his associates.
– Really, anything with Chevy Chase and Bill Murray (Vegas Vacation, etc.)
PORKY’S (1 and 2 – Porky’s Revenge)
Set in 1954, a group of Florida high schoolers seek out to lose their virginity which leads them to seek revenge on a sleazy nightclub owner and his redneck sheriff brother for harassing them.
AUSTIN POWERS (Trilogy)
CLERKS (1 and 2): A day in the lives of two convenience clerks named Dante and Randal as they annoy customers, discuss movies, and play hockey on the store roof.
NATIONAL LAMPOON’S ANIMAL HOUSE: This crude parody of college life in the ’60s spawned many imitations, but none could match the fresh-faced talent or bad taste of this huge box office success.
THE BLUES BROTHERS: After building up the duo’s popularity through popular recordings and several performances on Saturday Night Live, John Belushi and Dan Aykroyd–as “legendary” Chicago blues brothers Jake and Elwood Blues–took their act to the big screen in this action-packed hit from 1980. As Jake and Elwood struggle to reunite their old band and save the Chicago orphanage where they were raised, they wreak enough good-natured havoc to attract the entire Cook County police force.
CADDYSHACK: A no-brainer that has become a low-brow classic, this 1980 comedy makes anarchy the rule of the day, unleashing the antics of Bill Murray, Rodney Dangerfield, Ted Knight, and Chevy Chase. Caddyshack is about the scheme of a vulgar land developer (Dangerfield) who wants to build condominiums on the site of a ritzy country club.
ACCEPTED: When a high school burnout discovers he’s been rejected from every college he’s applied to, he creates a fake university in order to fool his overzealous parents.
MEATBALLS: Bill Murray plays a hip camp counselor at a summer facility for geeky kids and assorted losers.
CONEHEADS: Following a similar plot to the skit, Coneheads is the story about the Beldar Conehead family who crash on earth during a scouting mission for planet conquest. While here, they dodge the INS, have a child and discover that life on Earth is quite good.
LIAR LIAR: A fast track lawyer can’t lie for 24 hours due to his son’s birthday wish after the lawyer turns his son down for the last time.
THE MASK: Bank clerk Stanley Ipkiss is transformed into a manic super-hero when he wears a mysterious mask.