8 Referential Classic Comedy Movies That Don’t Make Much Sense Today

Movies have been referencing each other since the beginning of cinema, which can be fun for viewers who catch the jokes, but it often makes those films harder to understand years later. It’s a lot of fun to watch a delightfully self-aware movie at the time of its release, as it spoofs, lampoons, and satirizes the films of that era. While the very best examples of this type of filmmaking have given us all-time beloved comedies like Blazing Saddles or Airplane!, there were plenty more classic comedies that don’t hold up as well or just plain don’t make sense today.

Parody franchises like Scary Movie or genre spoofs like Robin Hood: Men in тιԍнтs not only made fun of a particular genre but actually required audiences to have seen several other movies to fully get the joke. This means modern viewers are often left scratching their heads and wondering what was so funny or what was actually being referenced. Just because a movie makes less sense today does not necessarily mean it’s bad; it’s just that older viewers or those who caught the film the first time around will have a much fuller and more enjoyable experience.

8

The Kentucky Fried Movie (1977)

Directed by John Landis


The Kentucky Fried Movie (1977) One of the scnes with a white woman in oriental dress with asian co-stars in the background

While comedy writing trio Zucker, Abrahams, and Zucker, known as ZAZ, would later write perhaps the greatest parody movie of all time, Airplane!, they previously wrote the anthology sketch film The Kentucky Fried Movie. Through a series of rapid-fire sketches, the trio’s distinctive and absurd writing style was on display from the start; however, those unfamiliar with 1970s pop culture, news media, and public broadcasting will likely be left wondering what all the jokes were referencing.

The Kentucky Fried Movie is entirely dated today, and its legacy is more closely tied to what the people involved in it did afterward. With ZAZ going on to make several comedy classics, including the Naked Gun series, director John Landis secured a job directing National Lampoon’s Animal House the very next year. While The Kentucky Fried Movie was funny for viewers at the time, looking back, it’s a dated glimpse into the bright futures of several new voices in comedy.

7

Top Secret! (1984)

Directed by Jim Abrahams, David Zucker, and Jerry Zucker (ZAZ)


Val Kilmer's Nick Rivers sings onstage in Top Secret 1984

Following the success of the directing trio ZAZ’s all-time great disaster movie spoof Airplane!, they returned for yet another self-referential comedy. However, unlike Airplane!, Top Secret! did not possess the same timeless quality as its predecessor, and references to everything from Elvis Presley movies to Cold War-era spy films feel quite dated today. While there’s a lot of self-aware satire to enjoy, only those who are already familiar with older media will get everything that’s been lampooned in this forgotten comedy.

As the late actor Val Kilmer’s feature film debut, Top Secret! was packed with hilarious one-liners and a near-constant stream of gags. With Kilmer as the American rock star Nick Rivers, it’s clear his character was modeled after the movie career of Elvis Presley and the absurd scenarios he found himself in across his 31-film career. As an underseen comedy packed with real talent, although not everything in Top Secret will make sense to modern viewers, it still deserves far more attention.

6

ᴅᴇᴀᴅ Men Don’t Wear Plaid (1982)

Directed by Carl Reiner


Steve Martin as Rigby Reardon talking on the telephone in ᴅᴇᴀᴅ Men Don't Wear Plaid.

While ᴅᴇᴀᴅ Men Don’t Wear Plaid was a hilariously clever comedy, it won’t make a lot of sense to those unfamiliar with film noirs of the 1940s. Through clever editing techniques, this underrated Carl Reiner movie incorporated Steve Martin’s private investigator, Rigby Reardon, into scenes from 19 other films where he acted opposite classic film stars of the Golden Age of Hollywood, like Humphrey Bogart and Bette Davis. By mixing dialogue from old movies and new footage with Martin, this experimental comedy created an entirely new hard-boiled mystery.

With plenty of silly humor that leaned into the tropes and cliches of classic noirs, ᴅᴇᴀᴅ Men Don’t Wear Plaid paired the outrageous comedy style of Martin with the distinctive aesthetic of detective fiction. As Martin and Reiner’s follow-up to The Jerk, ᴅᴇᴀᴅ Men Don’t Wear Plaid had a far more niche appeal but was no less enjoyable than a comedy classic. As a farcical love letter to film noir, this was a movie that will only make sense to those who already have a great love for releases like The Big Sleep or Double Indemnity.

5

H๏τ SH๏τs! (1991)

Directed by Jim Abrahams


Charlie Sheen with Valeria Golino in H๏τ SH๏τs!

While the renewed popularity of the Top Gun franchise following the success of its legacy sequel, Top Gun: Maverick, means that modern viewers won’t be totally confused when watching the spoof film H๏τ SH๏τs, there are still plenty of references that will go right over most audiences’ heads. With Charlie Sheen as the Tom Cruise stand-in Lieutenant Sean “Topper” Harley, this self-referential parody was packed with gags and didn’t overstay its welcome at a brisk 84 minutes.

Although the Top Gun references still make sense, fewer people will immediately recognize references to erotic romance films like 9½ Weeks or the comedy-drama The Fabulous Baker Boys. While classic references to films like Gone with the Wind or Rocky have remained relevant in the 21st century, just as many aspects of H๏τ SH๏τs have become woefully dated. Although viewers might not get every joke, Two and a Half Men fans will be excited to see an appearance from Sheen’s future co-star Jon Cryer as Lieutenant Jim “Wash Out” Pfaffenbach.

4

Austin Powers: International Man Of Mystery (1997)

Directed by Jay Roach


Collage of Austin Powers and Dr Evil against a psychedelic backdrop

While Austin Powers now stands out as a pop culture icon, modern viewers may not realize that this Mike Myers character is actually an amalgamation of various character tropes and clichés. Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery was a parody of British spy movies from the 1960s, in particular the womanizing persona of Sean Connery’s James Bond. This, paired with the counterculture of Swinging London and hippie psychedelia, made for a groovy movie that does not make much sense without understanding these cultural references.

From its “shagadelic” dialogue to outdated references to 1990s culture, like The Jerry Springer Show, Austin Powers‘ meta-humor is likely to go over the heads of many younger viewers in the 21st century. However, while outdated Sєxual atтιтudes could have easily characterized the womanizing endeavors of Austin Powers, thankfully, this 1960s spy actually demonstrated quite modern viewpoints when it came to issues of consent in his pursuit of the opposite Sєx.

3

Scary Movie (2000)

Directed by Keenen Ivory Wayans


Scary Movie 1 Cindy Ghostface Shorty
Custom image by Ana Nieves.

While parody movies have been around for a long time, Scary Movie reinvigorated the genre for the 21st century, as the Wayans brothers cast a self-referential eye on contemporary horrors. By using the plots of Scream and I Know What You Did Last Summer as its foundation, this franchise-starting comedy poked fun at everything from Buffy the Vampire Slayer to The Sixth Sense, pairing its pop culture references with plenty of gross-out humor. While Scary Movie may still elicit a few laughs from viewers today, they will not have nearly as much context for the references it makes.

Scary Movie was a major box office hit and went on to have plenty of sequels throughout the 2000s, which continued to parody the most popular horror movies of its time, including The Haunting, The Ring, Signs, and even non-horror movies like 8 Mile. At the time these movies were released, it was immediately obvious what they were satirizing; yet, many of their target movies have failed to maintain much pop culture relevance, meaning that a lot of the jokes in these movies make less sense to younger viewers today.

2

Robin Hood: Men In тιԍнтs (1993)

Directed by Mel Brooks


Cary Elwes and Dave Chappelle in Robin Hood: Men in тιԍнтs

Director Mel Brooks was the king of self-referential parody films, helping to popularize the genre in the 1970s with works like the Western satire Blazing Saddles and horror spoofs such as Young Frankenstein. A later self-referential spoof from Brooks that doesn’t make as much sense today was Robin Hood: Men in тιԍнтs, which parodied the Robin Hood legend, but its target was the 1991 movie Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves. With numerous scenes that directly mimic and parody Kevin Costner’s action adventure, viewers today may have less context for many of the jokes.

Robin Hood: Men in тιԍнтs poked fun at the overly serious tone of the Prince of Thieves and added a much-needed sense of levity to the story. Whether it was through fourth-wall breaks or infusing the narrative with hip-hop musical numbers, comedy stars like Cary Elwes, Richard Lewis, and Dave Chappelle kept the laughs coming, even if not all of them hold up today. While Men in тιԍнтs had its moments, it has not endured as well as Brooks’ best work.

1

Last Action Hero (1993)

Directed by John McTiernan


Arnold Schwarzenegger as Jack Slater with a gun in Last Action Hero.

Last Action Hero was a peculiar example of a self-referential movie being created by the very people behind the material it was referencing. With Die Hard director John McTiernan and action movie superstar Arnold Schwarzenegger, this satirical action film made light of the legacies of both of them as it deconstructed the genre by parodying the tropes and cliches of Hollywood blockbusters. With Schwarzenegger playing a fictional action hero who enters the real world as well as a fictionalized version of himself, Last Action Hero was interesting for the way it blended fact and fiction.

Through cameo appearances from the likes of Jean-Claude Van Damme and incredibly meta sequences that mimicked the one-liners and cheesy dialogue Schwarzenegger was known for, Last Action Hero was a movie that made a lot more sense if you were familiar with all the biggest action hits of the 1980s and early 1990s. While Last Action Hero has become a cult favorite, its high production values mean it almost looks too slick to be a satire, as it feels a little strange to watch a parody film that was even more expensive than the movies it spoofed.

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