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400 Horror Comedies Reviewed (2021): Realms of Terror 2021
400 Horror Comedies Reviewed (2021): Realms of Terror 2021
400 Horror Comedies Reviewed (2021): Realms of Terror 2021
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400 Horror Comedies Reviewed (2021): Realms of Terror 2021

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Steve Hutchison reviews 400 horror comedies and ranks them. Each article includes a picture of the main antagonist, a release year, a synopsis, a star rating, and a review.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateFeb 16, 2023
ISBN9781778870941
400 Horror Comedies Reviewed (2021): Realms of Terror 2021
Author

Steve Hutchison

Artist, developer and entrepreneur in film, video games and communications Steve Hutchison co-founded Shade.ca Art and Code in 1999, then Terror.ca and its French equivalent Terreur.ca in 2000. With his background as an artist and integrator, Steve worked on such games as Capcom's Street Fighter, PopCap's Bejeweled, Tetris, Bandai/Namco's Pac-Man and Mattel's Skip-Bo & Phase 10 as a localization manager, 2-D artist and usability expert. Having acquired skills in gamification, he invented a unique horror movie review system that is filterable, searchable and sortable by moods, genres, subgenres and antagonists. Horror movie fans love it, and so do horror authors and filmmakers, as it is a great source of inspiration. In March 2013, Steve launched Tales of Terror, with the same goals in mind but with a much finer technology and a complex engine, something that wasn’t possible initially. He has since published countless horror-themed books.

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    400 Horror Comedies Reviewed (2021) - Steve Hutchison

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    Tales of Terror

    400 Horror Comedies Reviewed

    INTRODUCTION

    Steve Hutchison reviews 400 horror comedies and ranks them. Each article includes a picture of the main antagonist, a release year, a synopsis, a star rating, and a review.

    #1

    Gremlins

    1984

    A high-maintenance creature gives birth to an army of small devils after being exposed to water.

    8/8

    Gremlins is a highly superior cinematographic experience in image and sound. It is meant for children and adults alike but is rather oriented at the former. It’s a horror movie that avoids violence and death using creative detours, and, simply put, instead plays on the fears of ugliness and propagation. This all happens around Christmas time and the odd resulting ambiance is a delight.

    The film is virtually flawless and an obvious fruit of effort. With some of the best animatronics, puppetry, and creature design to ever hit the screen, it’s a nicely packaged story supported by lovable characters and spiced up by a dream team of performers who are wisely directed and scripted. Everybody on board seems aware of the fact that they have one of the best gimmicks in film history.

    Gremlins is about a cute creature whose allergies trigger self-duplicating terror and destruction. In the context of Christmas, under keen lighting, when wrapped in comedy then glitter, and supported by an immersing score, this otherwise sinister film becomes a fantasy of its own before your entertained eyes. It belongs to all genres, yet none, and is unarguably one of the best pictures ever made.

    #2

    Ghostbusters

    1984

    Three unemployed supernatural investigators start a ghost-hunting business.

    8/8

    Here’s a perfect mix of comedy, horror, and fantasy that will get straight to your heart and guts. In a way, it is also a light superhero story. Because it is perfectly suitable for a child as much as the general audience, Ghostbusters is eerie, makes you jump, shiver, but features virtually no gore. There are monsters, though, and plenty of them. The effects are amazing and one of a kind.

    The score and soundtrack play a big role in delivering a fun and atmospheric supernatural aura that penetrates the screen. While some of the creature effects didn’t age so well, most of the ghost effects blend with the picture. This one isn’t all about visuals. It’s a great comedic drama. The characters and the story are compelling and the dialogue is engaging.

    The actors are perfect in their roles and their performances are close to flawless. Ghostbuster isn’t shy on effects, making use of animatronics, rubber suits, and an abundance of color keying. Get ready to be entertained all the way through; sucked in a surreal version of New York City that gets increasingly sinister as subplots converge. What an amazing ending!

    #3

    Gremlins 2: The New Batch

    1990

    An innocent allergic creature gives birth to a hoard of morphing monsters inside a commercial skyscraper after being exposed to water.

    8/8

    Gremlins 2 starts with a short Bugs Bunny gag as if to establish it is now a perked version of itself. It’s slightly more suitable for a younger audience but it’s dark enough to please anyone. It still feels like horror fantasy but it behaves much more like a sadistic cartoon. The previous protagonists aged a bit and their paths all happen to converge to a specific block in New York City.

    Most of the plot takes place in a prestigious high-tech high rise used for business, commerce, and science, giving Gremlins 2 a prestigious stature. None of it is taken seriously and it’s hilarious. When things go bad; worse than they’ve been so far, the makers’ ambition and skills shine through. The creatures are now fully lit, revealing more and even better animatronics than 1984’s Gremlins’.

    The concept of metamorphosis is pushed further and turned into an ongoing joke. The actors are given intricate roles and are a colorful delight. The animation techniques used have evolved. The production quality is higher, too, and the sets are very atmospheric. The perfect gateway to horror for kids, Gremlins 2 chooses to be fun, surrealist, and comedic but doesn’t forget its more sinister roots.

    #4

    Evil Dead II

    1987

    A man fights demons inhabiting a remote cottage from which he cannot escape.

    8/8

    Evil Dead 2 both follows and remakes 1981’s The Evil Dead, which was inspired by a no-budget short. The Evil Dead was straight horror and this one invests in slapstick humor. The storyline is an expansion of the previous one, but the twists and turns are fresh. The costumes and make-up are refined and more camera-friendly. The practical effects have been enhanced, too.

    Ash, the survivor guy and late bloomer from the original film is still played by Bruce Campbell. He is, more than ever, at the center of the story and into his character. Ash’s story arc is more intricate, yet hilarious. He is now both inexhaustible and pissed. This is his descent into madness. The script doesn’t take intellectual detours and delivers well-paced terror, gore, and fun.

    Evil Dead 2 is the product of its initial creator, Sam Raimi, so character design, imaginative cinematography, dialogue, and pacing meet the highest standards. Evil Dead 2 is the quintessential supernatural horror movie and reinforces the cabin in the woods cliche that it popularized and arguably founded. It has everything the fan can wish for, and then some!

    #5

    Dead Alive

    1992

    A man tries to contain a zombie outbreak originating from his home.

    8/8

    We mostly owe the masterpiece that is Dead Alive, AKA Brain Dead, to Peter Jackson. He’s grown infinitely more resourceful since 1987’s Bad Taste, which wasn’t bad at all, but this one is full throttle. It is very dynamic and never dull. It all starts with a cute love story that won’t remain cute for very long. See, Lionel’s mother is decaying and slowly turning into a zombie…

    Dead Alive contains the kind of gore so extreme it makes you piss your pants; not because you’re frightened but because you’re chortling uncontrollably. It makes you jump, it makes you want to vomit, but you’re never exactly scared. The special effects are, for lack of a better word, orgiac. This is easily one of the best zombie movies ever made, and it looks like nothing else.

    The acting is odd, the dialogue is awkward, but those aspects are charming more than they are annoying. The last act is an absolute blast. It is particularly gruesome. It is a non-stop gorefest; easily one of the most memorable moments in horror movie history. It’ll make you scratch your head as to how exactly the practical effects were made. This whole production is a beautiful enigma!

    #6

    Beetlejuice

    1988

    A recently-deceased ghost couple hires a dimensional being to scare the family that invaded their home.

    8/8

    In Beetlejuice, not all ghosts are malicious. Our two main protagonists, for instance, die in the first act. Soon enough, their house is sold and they have no choice but to haunt the place in hopes that the new family will leave. It’s not half as dark as it all sounds. We go through a wide range of emotions through this film, but it is, at the core, a fantasy comedy.

    The script is as imaginative as they come. Tim Burton directs with a singular vision that expands as we get deeper into the story. He uses stop motion, puppetry, amazing practical effects of all kinds, revolutionary make-up effects, and a bunch of chroma key compositions. The actors are dynamic. Calling their characters colorful would be an understatement.

    Expect sporadic marginal slapstick humor at every corner. These moments can be just as scary as they are amusing. Beetlejuice has a great soundtrack and is scored by Danny Elfman, of all people. Some effects could use a touch-up, but there is virtually nothing wrong with this movie. It’s highly rewatchable, accessible for kids of a certain age, and the perfect gateway to horror movies.

    #7

    Poltergeist

    1982

    A suburban family’s home becomes infested with ghosts.

    8/8

    Few ghost movies are this marketable, complete and polyvalent; containing taboos, scares, and gore, yet available to adults and younger audiences alike. It is also convincing when relying on psychological horror. Ultimately, the fear of the unknown is what it focuses on. It makes you go through a wide range of emotions in between its terrifying key scenes, borrowing from many genres.

    The cast is relatively limited. The actors are intense and can convey both humor and terror. The dialogue feels natural, when not purposely surreal. A character is injected late in the script to bring fantasy, spirituality, and hope to a film otherwise much darker. The dynamic between scientists, believers, and the family gives you a false sense of security that it can take away at any time.

    The effects in Poltergeist sometimes reveal chroma key artifacting, but the grain and technological limitations create a unique cinematographic signature. The major scenes are big and loud, and those flaws are soon forgiven, considering how much is thrown at the viewer. The directing, the editing, and the score are immersing and add immensely to an ambiance that’s already spectacular.

    #8

    Death Becomes Her

    1992

    Two women fighting over the same man are ready to go far to stay young forever.

    8/8

    You’ve never seen Bruce Willis, Meryl Streep, and Goldie Hawn quite like this. These A-list actors are handed golden dialogue and are playing vibrant characters. This could have been a dark horror film, but it has peculiar humor and the kind of wit that makes you laugh every thirty seconds. That’s when you’re not downright fascinated by the unfolding mystery.

    Death Becomes Her is a strange story about beauty, youth, and what happens when you lose both. It is a twisted tale of jealousy and revenge. It has some of the best practical effects and make-up Hollywood had come up with up to this point in time. The film has several defining characteristics, but its slapstick humor is what it is most remembered by. Gore was never so hilarious!

    Robert Zemeckis’ cinematography is divine. All shots are calculated when it comes to lighting, camera movements, set design, blocking, and effects coordination. The writers give us a fascinating script that was probably hard to put together but feels natural once executed nevertheless. Ultimately, every aspect of this film hits its target. Death Becomes Her is close to perfection.

    #9

    Pet Sematary II

    1992

    A man and his son move into a house located near a haunted cemetery.

    8/8

    There was no sign of or urgent need for a sequel to the masterpiece 1989’s Pet Sematary was. It was a self-contained but dense horror story published as a novel then adapted for the screen by Stephen King. It was directed by Mary Lambert who also tackles this one. Post-production effects aside, the film looks great and gets frightening, though it never matches the eeriness felt in the original.

    It has the grunge vibe of the decade. Teen concerns and angst have replaced family drama. The protagonists are authentic, compelling, and played by familiar actors who carry a sometimes wobbly but always tense script on their shoulders. By tradition, the antagonists are downright creepy. The ambiance is thick and benefits from calculated dialogue, pacing, blocking, photography, and camera work.

    Though Pet Sematary 2 seems meant for a teen audience, it contains a generous amount of gore that feels earned and comes with consequences. Nothing is random, except perhaps the new direction taken. The most outrageous innovation, here, is that the revenants featured are smarter than depicted in 1989. Though continuity is broken, this allows for a different kind of scares.

    #10

    An American Werewolf in London

    1981

    The survivor of a wolf attack fears he might be cursed by lycanthropy.

    8/8

    Werewolf movies are often horrifying because the enemy is the curse; not just the beast. This film does it better than most, but transformation is what it does better than all. It features the greatest effects money and grey matter can buy. The werewolf animatronics and the other practical effects used for metamorphosis are pure genius. It’s raw, real, hairy, and it looks as painful as it should.

    A few dream sequences, irrelevant and inconsequential, come out as indulgent. Otherwise, the script is clever and well-paced. There is a mind-shattering subplot dealing with ghosts. It implies that the werewolf’s dark fate involves being forever haunted by the spirits of his or her victims. This kind of writing adds depth to mythology merely alluded to in previous film history, and it’s scary.

    The vocal soundtrack is excellent; carefully selected and with lunar references as lyrics, and spices up the omnipresent tongue in cheek humor. The great acting and the intimate shooting locations work hand in hand in delivering a thick ambiance that feels familiar, comfortable, romantic, next door. Everything comes together in creating one of the spookiest werewolf movies out there.

    #11

    American Psycho

    2000

    A wealthy investment banking executive grows increasingly insane.

    8/8

    American Psycho introduces a protagonist who is both charming and despicable. Through his thoughts and actions, we understand he is a sociopath who will stop at nothing to shape the world as he sees fit. He is on the brink of psychosis and we watch him regress with delight. He has no respect for women and is obsessively competitive towards men. Here’s a one-way ticket into his madness…

    This is a satire on the late 1980s and its yuppies. It takes place in Manhattan in all its glory. Patrick Bateman, the lead, hangs out in trendy restaurants that serve meals so pretentious they seem out of a fairy tale. The movie is sexy, kinky, and features both male and female nudity. It also contains one of the most legendary threesomes in film history!

    The structure is unusual. Bateman’s antagonist, a detective, is a stress factor but isn’t much of a threat. Consequences to his murders are somehow inexistent, it seems, and his true enemy is his insanity, as it turns out. The social commentary is strong, yet you could miss it if you’re not looking deep enough. American Psycho is a mainstream jewel and an instant classic.

    #12

    From Dusk Till Dawn

    1996

    Two criminals take a family hostage to cross the Mexican border and take refuge in a bar for the night.

    8/8

    What starts as a viciously witty crime and road movie turns into something completely unexpected around the half-way point. Character exposition is cleverly delivered through a very important subplot that tricks the mind into caring for something that is ultimately trivial. Outlaws and bullies eventually turn into an asset and their evil becomes relative as they face a must stronger threat.

    Acting-wise, you get the cream of the crop. Each of the spoken lines is scripted in a calculated fashion. This is horror filmmaking of the highest quality, with many cameos, fine photography, generous effects, and plenty of good looking gore. The keyword here is cool. The characters’ testosterone level finds a purpose in the second half, as all hell breaks loose.

    See, you’re watching two brilliant films in one. You’ve got gangsters, gadgets, one-liners, prosthetics, animatronics, nudity, and implicit rape wrapped into an unlikely surprise box. A series of intricate atmospheric sets are presented to us in succession, mirroring the different subgenres From Dusk Till Dawn alludes to and the many emotions it takes us through.

    #13

    One Cut of the Dead

    2017

    Things go sour for a director, his crew, and his cast while shooting a zombie film, as the undead actually rises from the grave.

    8/8

    This film will require all your attention. Every detail matters. The first 37 minutes were shot with one camera, in one take, and that, in itself, considering the rhythm and special effects involved, is something to witness. Some filmmakers have attempted this in the past, but rarely with such accuracy. The first act is absolutely bonkers. It is incessant. It is a frantic masterpiece.

    And then, there’s everything else. The second act will remain unspoiled, and the third one is nothing but twists. This is, simply put, one of the best and most creative horror films in history. One Cut of the Dead is a movie about people making a movie, and that doesn’t even begin to describe what awaits. The actors are sublime, but the first act only reveals a glimpse of their potential.

    The thing is the whole crew’s working miracles. The cameramen are giving all they have, which is an understatement considering what you’re signing up for. They’re extremely agile, precise, and only surpassed by the actors’ calculated yet vivid performances. One question resurfaces every five minutes: what the fuck are we watching? Answers will come. Better enjoy the ride till everything adds up!

    #14

    Re-Animator

    1985

    Two medical students stir up trouble after experimenting with a scientific formula that brings back the dead.

    7/8

    Most cinematographic adaptations of H.P. Lovecraft’s stories are completely different in tone from one another, though they mostly feature complex antagonists and the scientists investigating them, as an unspoken rule. This couldn’t apply more to Re-Animator, even considering the dark, contemporary slapstick humor. Few aspects of this film are reproachable.

    It wants to gross you out then make you laugh at yourself by the time you realize how ludicrous the script is, despite its pseudo-serious tone. It manages this irony using good but implausible prosthetic effects, more gore than you could ask for, constant banter, and keen deliveries from nearly impossible characters that are brilliantly played and directed.

    Sometimes titillating, often repulsing but always amusing, Re-Animator is an escalation of combined unfortunate events. The revenant talk. Some are smart, therefore not literal zombies, and most are their own creatures. Their design is seemingly the fruit of a genius mind. The film avoids the usual clichés, too, becoming itself an inspiration for horror pictures to come.

    #15

    The Lost Boys

    1987

    A family moves to a city that is home to a clan of vampires.

    7/8

    Unraveling to a highly atmospheric score and a soundtrack of its time, this well-crafted supernatural horror thriller has a lot going for it. Highly cultural in its comments, brilliantly scripted, and featuring acting skillfully performed, The Lost Boys is a shout out to rebel teenagers dreaming of popularity, power, and freedom. It is also an homage to comic books and classic horror.

    Few vampire movies are this upbeat and enthusiastic about their dark premise. Everyone, from the director to the performers, is having fun and seemingly wants us to join the party. Crafting mythology of its own, this movie adds to the rules of typical bloodsuckers established by old literature, cinema, games, and general fandom. It is a metaphorical coming of age for some of the characters.

    It is implied that the antagonists are were-bats but there is no clear shot confirming it. Clever camera traveling is sporadically used as a device to create this illusion, at times leaving us wanting more. The cheese, and there’s plenty of it, sets a certain tone but is sometimes detrimental to the movie. Regardless, this comes out as one of the best contemporary vampire features.

    #16

    Little Shop of Horrors

    1986

    A nerdy florist develops a relationship with a talking plant that grows when it is fed human blood.

    7/8

    Reuniting some of the funniest comedians of its time; Rick Moranis, Steve Martin, and Bill Murray, namely, Little Shop of Horrors is the darkest of black comedies. If it wasn’t so hilarious and symphonic, it would simply be a gross movie about an arrogant alien plant that feeds on human blood. It ends up being much more: a love story, a theatrical homage, and a source of masterful puppetry.

    Some songs work better than others. It gets you wondering what this would’ve been had it not been a musical. It is a period piece depicting the 50’s and 60’s with surrealism injected. The great set design contributes to a unique vibe, along with old graphic design and a dense atmosphere right out of an oil painting. The visual style is at times reminiscent of the original Roger Corman film.

    It’s not innocent enough for a young audience despite its comical appeal. It’s not gory either but the carnivorous plant is so ingeniously designed and rigged that it can scare. Although some plot devices and resolutions rely on the main protagonist being submissively obedient, we accept what we see because of the slapstick comedy layer. The story is cleverly told and the last scenes are a blast!

    #17

    Bride of Chucky

    1998

    A woman steals a possessed doll used as evidence in a murder investigation and reanimates it using voodoo magic.

    7/8

    Chucky was never so funny! He was purely terrifying in the first film because his presence was only suggested during the first half, making his reveal more shocking at the moment he was fully exposed. He only gradually became the clown he is through sequels. The animatronics are now slightly better, but this is a comedy with only a few scares that benefit from them.

    The franchise is following its natural course. It could have taken any other tangent, but the doll is so iconic that it adopted the same route other popular horror monsters have: humor. Bride of Chucky is a strong slasher with a competent cast comprised of popular names. The performances are flawless, like most aspects of the film. The only real drawback for the fan is the lack of eeriness.

    We get gore and creative kills, though. We get a new doll called Tiffany, too. Her significant entrance is marked by memorable moments that elevate her character to a status similar to Charles Lee Ray’s, the serial killer who initially transferred his soul in the Chucky doll. This is the first time children are not a stake, but the political correctness denatures an otherwise faithful sequel.

    #18

    Ghostbusters

    2016

    Four women found a ghost hunting company.

    7/8

    The events in this remake take place 27 years after Ghostbusters 2, in what we presume is an alternate New York City. Instead of four males, we get four female Ghostbusters. The humor, much like the characters, is sometimes so dumb it is embarrassing. Mind you, this is the film’s biggest flaw. Everything, here, is bigger and more colorful than what we are used to and it feels great!

    All actors deserve a round of applause for keeping up with a script that is both dialogue and action-heavy. We constantly alternate between humor, slapstick comedy, light horror, and action. In the middle of all this are a bunch of cameos present to please the faithful fans. Like its predecessors, the film is accessible to all audiences, given they can take a couple of jump scares and fart jokes.

    The first half will make you laugh and the second one will have your heart pumping. The last act is satisfying, high on emotions, and big on special effects. It makes all the character exposition worthwhile. This remake is both an ode to the classic Ghostbusters films and a long-overdue upgrade with digital effects instead of practical ones. The new generation of moviegoers will love it!

    #19

    This Is the End

    2013

    Six celebrities are stuck in a house after a series of devastating events destroyed the city.

    7/8

    This is the End is a horror-comedy, with emphasis on comedy. Seth Rogen, Jonah Hill, James Franco, Jay Baruchel; the all-star millennial jet-set responsible for the most successful comedies of the last decade are gathered. Danny McBride, Craig Robinson, Michael Cera, and Emma Watson show up. This is as trendy as horror gets. It’s your front seat to hilarity!

    This is Seth Rogan and Even Goldberg’s version of the apocalypse. Humor comes first, as always; we’re both mocking and honoring horror films. It’s one inside joke after another. The cast’s chemistry speaks volumes about how passionate everyone is. There is an unprecedented cohesion between the characters that you can’t fake. It makes this film magical and extremely organic.

    If you don’t laugh your way through this thing, you’re either missing the references or you’re dead inside. This is the End is one of the funniest horror-comedies ever made. The best joke of all? The end of the world, here, doesn’t matter all that much. It’s just an excuse to push a bunch of buffoons to their limits. Needless to say, the dialogue is phenomenal and only surpassed by the acting.

    #20

    The Final Girls

    2015

    Four friends get pulled into a 1980s slasher and must avoid getting killed.

    7/8

    This slapstick comedy isn’t afraid to get dramatic to get its point across, but 95% of it is delirious. It is fascinating and hysterical. It’s a spoof of Friday the 13th, first and foremost, but it’s also about a cyclic time loop, it’s meta, and it’s an unusual time travel movie. It’s also claustrocore in its way. Every second of this gem is fascinating and unprecedented.

    The characters are a likable bunch, even the ones in the film within the film. They get our imaginations running wild. Adam Devine and Angela Trimbur are hilarious as the two dumbest 1980s slasher flick stereotypes a writer could come up with. The way the two realities merge is far-fetched, but it’s better to roll with it, considering where the script takes us if we suspend our disbelief.

    Billy Murphy’s design is as close as possible to Jason Voorhees’, and it’s impressive how much the creators got away with. In this film, the killer comes second. The Final Girls is

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