 Someone asked me to list my top ten favorite comedy screenplays. Fine, as long as  I don’t have to do it in order and don’t have to limit myself to ten.  These are my favorites, which means these are the movies I wish I had  written.
Someone asked me to list my top ten favorite comedy screenplays. Fine, as long as  I don’t have to do it in order and don’t have to limit myself to ten.  These are my favorites, which means these are the movies I wish I had  written.
ALL ABOUT EVE  – Joseph Mankiewicz. Sharpest dialogue I’ve ever heard. The film is 60  years old and still crackles. Saw it again recently. What a pleasure to  watch, especially now during the dumbing down of America.
SOME LIKE IT HOT – Billy Wilder & IAL Diamond.   Disproves its classic last lane.  Somebody IS perfect.
HEARTBREAK KID –  Neil Simon (although the hand of director Elaine May is clearly  evident). Jewish men generally love this movie, Jewish women hate it. A  young Charles Grodin gives the comic performance of his career. And  Eddie Albert (yes, Eddie Albert) will make you laugh out loud. Ignore the remake. 
THE LADY EVE –  Preston Sturgess, story by Monckton Hoffe & Preston Sturgess.  Screwball comedy at its funniest and most sophisticated. Barbara  Stanwyck and Henry Fonda – not who you naturally think of as a comedy  team but they pull it off with ease.
HIS GIRL FRIDAY  – Screenplay by Charles Lederer, based on the play by Ben Hecht &  Charles MacArthur. Cary Grant & Rosalind Russell trade quips at a  pace that makes THE NEWSROOM seem slow. And every word out of their mouths  is a gem.
ARTHUR -- Steve Gordon's masterpiece.  For more info on Steve and scenes that were cut from his original draft, check out my archives.
TOOTSIE  – Larry Gelbart (although fifteen other writers also had a hand in it).  If there seems to be a pattern in the comedies I like its men posing as  women or “Eve” in the title.
TAKE THE MONEY AND RUN  – Woody Allen. This movie was a revelation, especially when you  consider that at the time (late 60’s) most “comedies” were lame Doris  Day type films.
YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN – Mel Brooks & Gene Wilder.  “Putting on the Ritz” scene alone puts this in my top ten.
ANNIE HALL  -- Woody Allen & Marshall Brickman. For my money the perfect  romantic comedy. (How could the same guy write HOLLYWOOD ENDING?)
MOONSTRUCK – John Patrick Shanley.  Okay, so there are two perfect romantic comedies.
CHASING AMY – Kevin Smith.  Funny, real, pitch perfect.  What happened to Kevin after this?  
AMERICAN GRAFFITI  – George Lucas and Gloria Katz & Willard Huyck. A consistently  funny movie that doesn’t even try to be a comedy. And what a soundtrack!
DR. STRANGELOVE – Stanley Kubrick and Peter George and Terry Southern. The perfect black comedy. And there are no other perfect black comedies.
THE PRODUCERS – Mel Brooks.  The movie not the movie of the musical based on the movie.  That was dreadful.
LA CAGE AUX FOLLES – Jean Poiret, Francis Veber, Edouard Molinaro, Marcello Damon.   Even the subtitles were funny.
FOUR WEDDINGS AND A FUNERAL -- Richard Curtis.  Even Andie McDowell couldn't kill this English confection.   But boy did she try.
Everyone is invited to list your favorites. Including VOLUNTEERS is not mandatory.






 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 
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