15 Best Comedy Movies On Netflix Right Now

Because you don't need everything to be gritty and grim...

By Jamie Armstrong /

As with Borges’ The Library of Babel, the infinitely vast variety and choice enabled by online streaming services arguably renders them useless. Entire evenings can be wasted deciding what new series or film to watch, with the time elapsed whilst deciding far greater than any Martin Scorsese movie- with no choice ever being made.

Advertisement

The seemingly infinite choice proffered by Netflix et al. is sadly wasted on many who rather than risk watching a new film that may disappoint, would rather stay in the comfort zone by watching Friends for the fifteenth time this year. As a result, Narcos, The Irishman and Stranger Things are able to maintain their perfect, unblemished state of “unwatchedness”. Like a blank Word document yet to be ruined by your attention.

But for those who wish to sojourn into unknown territory and try something new, Netflix is teeming with content that is just waiting to be consumed. And whilst public pressure dictates that you watch the latest gripping drama, Netflix and a complete lack of things to do allows you to intersperse any societally-pressured Breaking Bad viewing with some light-hearted comedy.

So, when the world is saying watch Tiger King, but your heart is saying that you need something a bit lighter, elude the algorithms and follow your funny bone by trying some of Netflix’s best comedy movies.

15. Groundhog Day

Does it really need explaining why this movie is so pertinent as of April 2020?

Advertisement

But if the inverted Schadenfreude wasn’t enough, Groundhog Day is a classic comedy directed by, and starring, Ghostbuster’s alumni Harold Ramis and Bill Murray. The film follows Murray as a TV weatherman who whilst reporting an annual Groundhog Day event is caught in a time loop and must face the arduous reality of repeating the same day repeatedly. Can you imagine it?

Also, starring the 1990s’ very own Andie MacDowell, Groundhog Day is full of wit and charm and despite arguably failing to fully utilise the underlying themes of the movie, Ramis and Murray’s comedy has stood the test of time. Over and over again.

Advertisement