At one point, in what proves to be
the funniest scene in the movie, a stoned Bulworth is supposed to make a speech - and ends up singing a rap song about the corruption he's supposed to be covering up!
One of
the funniest scenes in the movie BTW.
i've a feeling this wasn't one of those comedy trailers that shows
every funny scene in the movie either.
With their partnership shattered, Nick takes a job at a mattress store (
funniest scene in the movie) and Billy begins a job search.
While the performances are mostly great and there are some very
funny scenes in the movie, most of the run time consists of Paul Rudd and Leslie Mann fighting.
The funniest scene in the movie is when they figure out the conspiracy of the white man, by the most round - a-bout way humanly possible.
There are lots of lewd (and sometimes improbable) descriptions of sex, and the men on the other end of the line turn out to be weird and played by recognizable actors (Also not helping the gender stereotype is that one of these cameos constitutes the only genuinely
funny scene in the movie: Seth Rogen trying to complete his business before he has to fly a plane and talking like a pilot checking off his instruments the entire time).
It's a funny scene — really the only
funny scene in the movie — and a welcome moment of focused rage as well as Wall Street excess and absurdity from the female lead that we should have had more of.
Not exact matches
There was a wonderful
scene in the
funny Hollywood
movie about internet dating, «Must Love Dogs,» where our heroine, Diane Lane, and hero, John Cusack wanted to get physically intimate and realized they didn't have a condom with them.
There's also a moment of poetic justice
in which he's forced to eat what he dishes out so much (I admit with a bit of shame that it's the
movie's
funniest scene).
Cheesy, campy,
funny and sad all
in the same
scene sometimes.For a
movie I stumbled into this was a frigin awesome mistake and one I am happy I made.
The
scenes involving Banes» Mrs. Rosen are some of the
funniest in the
movie.
Wiig has been the
funniest person on the planet for a while, ruling SNL when she was on it, stealing
scenes in movies like «Knocked Up,» and now,
in this script she co-wrote with Annie Mumolo, who plays her airplane seatmate
in the film, she's front - and - center
in all of her awkward glory.
In my opinion the
movie does indeed have its
funny scenes, but the
Saw this
movie at the local Dollar Tree, Decided to pick it up & Im glad I did.A very good
movie spoof on daytime soap operas.Theres so many
scenes that I thought were
funny that I cant just pick 1 as my favorite.If you're into spoof
movies or just want a
funny movie to watch take a chance on Young Doctors
In Love
As for your classification of mildly
funny moments and thereby lacking any laugh out loud
scenes is understandable since when you would picture me
in a SCAT flick, I don't think anything
in this
movie would tickle your sides.
In my opinion the
movie does indeed have its
funny scenes, but the longer the
movie runs the more boring it becomes.
The deleted
scenes are simply extended versions of some of the gags
in the
movie trimmed for time and the gag reel is, yet another, joke
in and of itself; not very
funny at all.
Yes, it's very
funny and filled with enough genuinely great performances that it's actually debatable which supporting star turns
in the best work (it's Laurie Metcalf, or maybe Beanie Feldstein, or possibly Tracy Letts), but what makes Gerwig's
movie such a gem is the honesty that infuses every part and every
scene.
A
funny scene about two nerds can turn into someone almost dying and it's believable (believable
in a superhero
movie I mean).
Except, of course,
in the brilliant, bird's - eye opening shot, which is one of the great,
funny, paranoid curtain - raisers of recent years — and I'd say the best
movie soccer
scene of all time.
In addition, there's a scene in Bridesmaids that's one of the funniest things I've seen in a movie theate
In addition, there's a
scene in Bridesmaids that's one of the funniest things I've seen in a movie theate
in Bridesmaids that's one of the
funniest things I've seen
in a movie theate
in a
movie theater.
Among the supporting players, the
movies sees fine performances from the likes of Diane Lane as Rusty's sometimes girlfriend, the then - little - known likes of Nicolas Cage (Coppola's nephew and the son of August), Chris Penn and Vincent Spano as members of Rusty's gang, Laurence Fishburne as a local go - between and Sofia Coppola, billed as Domino, who is
funny and charming
in a few brief
scenes as Lane's bratty younger sister.
Except that the final
scene is of her dancing to the eponymous track by Umberto Tozzi and,
in itself, provided me with one of my very favorite film moments from 2013 — a perfectly uplifting, joyous ending to a
movie that manages to be optimistic without being pat,
funny without being scornful and happy without being slight.
Chris Hemsworth and Charlie Day are both
funny in their respective roles, while a
scene involving a standoff between the different state police officers
in charge of patrolling the Four Corners Monument is the
funniest bit
in the entire
movie.
From the tightly scripted dialogue — by turn sharp, harrowing &
funny and without an ounce excess on its bones — to the beautifully melancholic score by Carter Burwell and the powerhouse performances from a cast who've never been better, I fell
in love with the entire
movie, with every single breath - taking, nauseating, alarming, disturbing, uplifting
scene, a fact made slightly more unusual given that I've tried — and failed on repeated occasions — to watch and enjoy Martin McDonagh's back catalogue.
Next
Movie feels much more like the deleted
scenes of their first and much
funnier film, Up
In Smoke, than it does as a stand alone piece.
On the rare occasions that the pirates are left to be the scurvy dogs they are, the
movie finds its humor (the brethren court
scene is
funny as it turns into an all - out brawl and punctuated by a unfortunately forgettable cameo by Keith Richards, Depp's inspiration for the role of Sparrow), but otherwise, two seamen (Lee Arenberg and Mackenzie Cook) who have traveled the whole of this voyage provide amusing asides to the proceedings while a monkey steals every
scene it's
in.
It's one of my favorite
scenes in the
movie — so crazy, its
funny, but it's also a real low point for the character.
Her «I'm wet... with diarrhea»
scene ended up being one of the
funniest in the
movie.
Steve Carell is a very
funny man (
in the first
movie, he practically steals every
scene he's
in), but with this material, he's reduced to a shadow of his comic persona.
In the
movie's
funniest scenes, Slide attempts to tutor the bumbling conspirators, while the detail - oriented Josh builds Lego scale models of the Tower's lobby to map out his sub-Ocean's 11 infiltration scheme.
One of the
movie's
funniest scenes takes place when Austin frolics nude
in their hotel suite: Through elaborate choreography, his private parts are somehow always covered from the camera's point of view, saving the
movie's PG - 13 rating by a hair, while we find out that the British don't call their breakfast sausages «bangers» for nothing.
• Another
scene that carries more weight every time I see it is the one, late
in the
movie,
in which Mr. Mohra, the bartender shoveling his driveway, tells Officer Olson about the «
funny looking» guy who was
in his bar, boasting about having killed someone.
In Mike Mills» 20th Century Women that word — referring to that oft - experienced yet rarely spoken of bodily function — gets a hefty workout during one of the
movie's
funniest scenes.
Marvel's Howard the Duck all but disappeared after his eponymous 1986 film failed miserably and entered the pantheon of terrible comic book
movies, but the character is primed to make a triumphant return, thanks
in no small part to a
funny post-credits
scene in this year's runaway hit, Guardians of the Galaxy.
They find a wax model of Sir Lancelot (Dan Stevens) that actually thinks it's on a quest to find the Holy Grail and return it to Camelot (His attempt to find that castle leads to the sole
scene in the
movie that is genuinely
funny, featuring a pair of cameos from actors interrupted
in their performance of a Lerner and Loewe musical).
But these
scenes aren't lazy or dashed - off — some are
funny little beats that tie up lingering threads from the main storyline, others lay the groundwork for future
movies, and a few are are deeply nerdy references that exist to make Marvel aficionados cheer
in their seats while their normal friends and family stare at them and wonder what the heck is going on.
It hasn't been a particularly memorable year at the
movies, especially for those
in search of a good comedy, so it's a relief to see a film like «We're the Millers» arrive
in theaters, because although it's not as
funny as its behind - the -
scenes talent might suggest, it's one of the better comedies released thus far.
Then they have a menage a trois, snarling and snapping at each other and raking each other with their claws,
in what must be the most unintentionally
funny movie scene of the week.
«The Death Dealer» (12 mins., HD) probes the typically creepy /
funny Savini about the infamous head - splatter sequence and the scalping
scene, which I remember trying to recreate after reading one of Savini's early
movie - magic articles collected
in something I got from the library when I was a kid.
The
movie isn't the biting satire that I'd expected, but Spade is great
in the title role and the film does has some
funny scenes.
It's the
movie's most memorable
scene, so naturally a reference to it turns up
in Shaun of the Dead, a very
funny spoof of Romero's zombie
movies by British TV writers Edgar Wright and Simon Pegg.
But Clooney realized
in the editing room that even though Brolin's
scenes were «the
funniest in the
movie», they «let the air out of the balloon,
in terms of tension
in the film».
It is a hilariously
funny and involves the comic travails of tiny repair bot fleetingly glimpsed
in one
scene of the
movie.
There is one very
funny scene where the three minions hitchhike with a family, and things go deliciously sideways (the voice casting plays a large role
in why that bit is so
funny), but that is the only laugh - out - loud moment
in the
movie for the adults, or this adult, anyway.
It is ironic, because the
funniest moment
in the
movie is the American football
scene, where Stifler's team get thrashed by a team of midgets.
Although the
movie can best be described as «sad
funny,» Toni Erdmann is frequently uproarious, featuring two or three of the
funniest scenes you'll find
in any
movie this year.
I think the Paul Rudd chair
scene is the
funniest in the
movie, but it would've been just as
funny had the two characters not been on mushrooms.
This
movie would have been better with a heavier focus on just these two rather than bringing
in their SNL entourage, as evidenced by the film's
funniest scenes — when Kate helps Maura hit on the neighbor or when they dig through their old bedroom or when they go to the mall to shop for party clothes,
in a makeover montage gone wrong, before concluding that they need a little less Forever 21 and a little more Suddenly 42.