28 December 2024

My Five Favourite Comedies of All Time –
A Christmas Week List!


Many people know I got my start writing stand-up, which morphed into a syndicated humour column, which morphed into the kind of fiction I write now (generally off-the-wall capers, progressing to slightly more respectable loopy mysteries.)

John Floyd's column on sequels in movies had me thinking and rethinking my 'desert isle' list.  That is, if I could only take 5 movies with me to a desert isle, what would they be?

And of course, they would be comedies.  Christmas week is always the time I re-watch my favourite comedies.

(Aside:  I have 'desert isle' lists for almost everything - crime books, literary books, classical music, rock music, cocktails, beer, desserts - yes, of course you need desserts on a desert isle, darling. This is my desert isle, and I can design it the way I want.) 

But back to comedy movies.  I'm looking here for movies with sustained comedy, as opposed to popular rom-coms that have a scene or two that are memorable.  

Here is my list of the best of the best, from someone who has made their career in comedy.  Note that many of these are British.  I am not (I'm Canadian) but my dad was.  This possibly explains my own style of writing (which seems perfectly normal to me, but apparently others consider wacky.)

With that in mind, I hope some of these are new to you. I envy you if you haven't seen these before!  You are in for a treat.


1.  The Wrong Box

How can you go wrong with a cast like this?  Dudley Moore, John Mills, Ralph Richardson, Peter Cook, Peter Sellers...  Add in the best hearse chase scene ever imagined (with horse-drawn hearses).  I don't want to give it away, but when a box containing money gets mixed up with a box containing a statue, which gets mixed up with a box containing the dead body of the Bournemouth strangler... The Salvation Army women are just a scream.  I could quote lines, but you'd have to see it to appreciate it.  Let me just say... "This is Julia Finsbury...soon to become...Julia Finsbury!"  (final scene - an absolute hoot.)

This is my favourite movie of all time.

 

2. The Pink Panther

This was the first adult comedy I saw as a kid, and I love it even today.  It may have inspired my own reverse-robberies in The Goddaughter's Revenge.  How can you not giggle at the fancy dress ball, the apes, the crazy car chase, the marvelous thwarted seduction scene with the champagne exploding under the covers...

And Peter Sellers with Capucine. Sellers at his very best, and with her serene classiness, Capucine was made for the part. 

 

3.  A Shot in the Dark

The sequel to The Pink Panther, and many (like my friend John) would say the better movie.  I adore both.

Mike (husband) says I am unusual in that I like guy humour.  Well, if this is guy humour, he's dead on, because the scene of Peter Sellers holding the 'strategic' guitar at the nudist camp always has me giggling. 

 

4.  The Russians are Coming, The Russians are Coming

Can you tell this movie had a Canadian in the pilot seat?  I can't imagine how subversive this movie must have seemed at the time, in the midst of the cold war.  Alan Arkin is magic as the Russian submarine lieutenant charged with leading a small group of Russian sailors on a rescue mission through hick town USA. Again, I point to the dialogue.  Pure gold.

Tommy (accusing his dad):  "Yer a trader!"

Mom:  "That's traitor, Tommy, traitor."

 

5.   Here we have a dilemma.

I lean towards giving the no. 5 spot to Some Like It Hot, with strong honorable mentions to The Producers, We're No Angels, A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum, Support your local Gunfighter, and Four Weddings and a Funeral.

Okay, I may need a bigger island.

What are your favourites?  I'd like to hear.  Are any of these new to you?  Let me know if you watch them and appreciate them (or like me, love them to death.)


Melodie Campbell is the author of 18 novels, 60 short stories and over 200 humour columns. She spent a lot of time in the corner at school, as a kid.  Soon to come...

15 comments:

  1. I'm with you on The Russians Are Coming and The Producers. As for three more: Animal House? Blazing Saddles? Sleeper or Love and Death? A Fish Named Wanda?

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    1. Mel Brooks is always high on my list, Rob! I love the Yiddish in Blazing Saddles (won't say more to avoid spoiling.) Thanks for adding more to the list!

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  2. With one or two exceptions in your no. 5 category I’ve seen all your picks and find myself chuckling just thinking about them. I’d add as my no. 1 favorite The Loved One, with Rod Steiger, Robert Morse, Jonathan Winters, and a host of others.
    Edward Lodi

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    1. My goodness, Edward - I haven't seen The Loved One! I must see if I can get it. Well, thanks so much - now, I'm excited!

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  3. Congratulations on your new book deal! Don't forget Buster Keaton for your desert island stay,

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    1. Absolute classics, those Buster Keaton films! Thanks for the reminder, Janice. Melodie

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  4. I love them all, every single one. My #1 favorite is Some Like It Hot - I never get tired of it. But I'm with you on them all. I also add A Fish Called Wanda, Blazing Saddles ("Morons" and I'm snorting whatever I'm drinking out my nose), and Best in Show.

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  5. Eve, HOW could I forget Best in Show? Immediately adding it to my list. Catherine O'Hara in my all time fave role for her. For the longest time, I used Best in Show to determine if I would like someone or not (if they didn't find it a hoot, they probably wouldn't find me amusing.) Thanks for the reminder! Melodie

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  6. My Cousin Vinny is on the top of my list. I can go with Blazing Saddles. Priscilla Queen of the Desert is an all-time fave, if rather poignant for a comedy. Just looked for the two Pink Panther movies and The Wrong Box on Netflix, and they don't have 'em. And what about not-guy funny movies? Born Yesterday. Clueless. Private Benjamin. Sister Act.

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  7. Great additions, Liz! I think you'd have to find the dvd of The Wrong Box to get it over here, although it sure is well-known in England. Do you get Amazon Prime? I think the Panthers were on there recently. Melodie

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  8. Elizabeth Dearborn28 December, 2024 15:29

    Never saw any of the movies you mention, except for "Some Like It Hot", "The Producers", & "A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum," all of which we own on DVD. So I'd nominate "The Road to Wellville", "Married to the Mob", "Idiocracy", & "The Inspector General" starring Danny Kaye who made some other great comedies too.

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  9. Oh, I do remember The Inspector General! Thanks for that reminder, Elizabeth. I definitely need to look up The Road to Wellville. Yet another reason to be happy I posted this column! I was hoping to get new comedies to look at. Thank you! Melodie

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  10. Melodie, I have a fondness for Buster Keaton, and I rather like Harole Lloyd and Charlie Chaplin, and especially anything with Groucho Marx. Along slightly more modern lines, it's hard to top It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World.

    Interestingly, when I brought home a batch of library movies, Marx Brothers and Mad Word were favorites. They didn't care for Stan Laurel and Ollie Hardy, and found the Three Stooges slapstick to be savage and annoying.

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  11. Leigh, THANK you for reminding me about Mad World! Lots of fun - I will put that on my list for this week. So many of these movies I tend to love were made in the 60s, when I was a wee thing. I didn't see them first go-around, and so my knowledge is not complete. Melodie

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  12. The Pink Panther movies are great.
    I would add Danny Kaye's The Court Jester, and Without a Clue. Both are tremendous fun. Also funny: Murder by Death.

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