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Movie that you just watch that needs no brain & that keeps you laughing.

2006-08-06 18:51:25 · 14 answers · asked by Levi 2 in Entertainment & Music Movies

14 answers

White Chicks

2006-08-06 18:59:29 · answer #1 · answered by mrxxbrian 2 · 0 1

Lightning Jack
50 First Dates
Nothing To Lose

2006-08-06 19:17:40 · answer #2 · answered by Gemini 4 · 0 0

Half Baked - Any movie about three guys who come up with a plan to get a friend of jail by selling medical marijuana cannot require too much brain-power. Besides, it's got Dave Chappelle, so it has to be funny...

2006-08-06 18:55:06 · answer #3 · answered by dk 3 · 0 0

All 3 Austin Powers films

2006-08-06 21:33:16 · answer #4 · answered by slayer203 2 · 0 0

Anything by Kevin Smith is pretty much stress free!

But, if you watch his movies please make sure you watch them in order:

1. Clerks
2. Mallrats
3. Chasing Amy
4. Dogma
5. Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back
6. Clerks II

Kevin did also write and direct "Jersey Girl", but your question asked for comedies that are "stress free".

2006-08-06 19:06:35 · answer #5 · answered by GottaGo 3 · 0 0

Any Steve Martin movie. His spoof send-ups are particularly hilarious. Watch Naked Gun, Wrongfully Accused, Mafia!, Mr Magoo, or the Pink Panther for no-brainers. Cheaper by the Dozen and its sequel made me hate kids, though...

2006-08-06 19:00:57 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The American Pie Trilogy

The First One
------------------
The first 'American Pie' is still the best from the trilogy. May be because it is the original teenage sex comedy, but for sure because most of the jokes are still funny during a second viewing. Yes, every joke has to do with sex but it is handled in a certain honest way. The movie feels almost sweet in the end.

Basically the movie is about four friends who want to lose their virginity before their high school prom. The four are Jim (Jason Biggs), Oz (Chris Klein), Finch (Eddie Kaye Thomas) and Kevin (Thomas Ian Nicholas). Kevin has a girlfriend named Vicky (Tara Reid), Oz joins a chorus to impress Heather (Mena Suvari), Finch makes sure certain stories are told about him, and Jim, who has one embarrassing moment after another, has the hots for Nadia (Shannon Elizabeth). Other funny characters are Jim's date to the prom Michelle (Alyson Hannigan), Jim's dad (Eugene Levy), Steve Stifler (Seann William Scott) and Stifler's mom (Jennifer Coolidge).

Especially Stifler and Jim's dad will make you laugh a lot. The embarrassing moments with Jim make you laugh as well although sometimes they are really painful to watch. His scenes in particular could offend some people, but if you think you can stand a little sex you will probably laugh. It is very clearly that the movie wants the best for the main characters and although they face some humiliating things at first, there is a good chance things will turn out the way they want it after all.

American Pie2
-------------------
Don't think this movie would work, if you haven't seen the first.
It relies too much on characters and story from the first encounter set one year earlier.
This said it is a great sequel that simply picks up where the last film left off, it retains all the characters from the first film and places them in equally embarrassing and hilarious situations.
Slick, Funny and Entertaining
If you've missed it, then check it out, but see American PIE FIRST
If you like it then see 'Road Trip' and 'Old School' as well

The Wedding
------------------
There's one thing you have to say for `American Wedding': like the two `American Pie' films that came before it, it is unapologetically unashamed of its shamelessness. Here's a film that doesn't try to hide its gleeful perverseness under a bushel of coy double entendres; instead the film revels in its frank and openhearted treatment of sexuality and lust. `American Wedding' is clearly a comedy about sex and it doesn't pretend to be anything but. Whether this is a good thing or a bad will, I suppose, depend on your own affinity and tolerance for jokes and images that routinely push the boundaries of common decency and good taste. In fact, the film wears its tastelessness almost as a badge of honor. And just in case you're unfamiliar with this series and its brand of humor, subtlety and wit are not considered virtues in an `American Pie' world.

In `American Wedding,' Jim and Michelle - he a self-described pervert and she a self-described nympho - have finally agreed to tie the knot. The film centers around Jim's attempts to convince Michelle's square, uptight, sexually repressed parents that he is indeed husband material for their less-than-innocent daughter. The problem is that his efforts are consistently being undermined by the inane, out-of-control antics of Steve Stifler, the foulest-mouthed, dirtiest-minded professional adolescent this side of Bluto Blutarsky. Seann William Scott, in fact, steals the show as Stifler, providing an over-the-top manic energy that is both endearing and infectious.

Indeed, without Stifler, there would be precious little to recommend this particular `American' outing. The jokes and setups, for the most part, are crude and graphic without being very imaginative, and writer Adam Herz and director Jesse Dylan, even when they hit on an inspired piece of silliness (as when Stiffler winds up dancing mano a mano with a guy in a gay bar), end up diluting the humor by letting the scenes drag on well past the point where they're truly funny anymore. This is not to say that there aren't a few good laughs in `American Wedding,' just that they don't come often enough to really lift the film much above the ordinary. Luckily, the funny moments increase a bit in the final stretches of the movie. In the film's defense, I would also add that, like its two predecessors and unlike many sexually charged teen comedies, `American Wedding' conveys a certain affection for its characters. In addition to Stifler, Jason Biggs as Jim and Eugene Levy as Jim's befuddled but strangely tolerant and supportive father come across as decent, well-meaning and likable individuals.

The film itself may be uneven, but as a character actor who makes an indelible impression on the material at hand, Scott is the genuine article. He transforms what is essentially cinematic rotgut into sweet-tasting vintage wine. All hail the Stifman!

2006-08-06 18:58:12 · answer #7 · answered by JoYbOy 4 · 0 0

You should check out:
Grandma's Boy
or
Harold and Kumar Go to White Castle
Both are really funny mindless entertainment

2006-08-06 19:15:08 · answer #8 · answered by Sara 4 · 0 0

the mask 2

2006-08-06 18:54:53 · answer #9 · answered by mitch 2 · 0 0

'Young Frankenstein'
'Animal House'

2006-08-06 19:14:47 · answer #10 · answered by nora22000 7 · 0 0

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