Si vous avez adoré le chaos hilarant de 'Un monde fou, fou, fou, fou' (1963), ce classique du cinéma comique, vous allez adorer cette sélection de films et séries similaires. Découvrez 10 œuvres qui captivent par leur humour déjanté, leurs courses-poursuites endiablées et leurs personnages hauts en couleur. Parfait pour les fans de comédies loufoques !

Some Like It Hot (1959)
Description: A cross-dressing farce featuring mistaken identities, mobsters, and increasingly complicated romantic entanglements.
Fait: The film was shot in black and white partly because the heavy makeup used for the cross-dressing scenes looked unnatural in color.


The Pink Panther (1963)
Description: A stylish, farcical comedy with a bumbling detective, mistaken identities, and a series of escalating, absurd situations.
Fait: The iconic Pink Panther animated opening sequence was created by Friz Freleng and won an Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film.


A Shot in the Dark (1964)
Description: A farcical mystery-comedy with a bumbling detective, chaotic crime scenes, and a series of escalating misunderstandings.
Fait: This film introduced the iconic character of Inspector Clouseau, played by Peter Sellers, though it was technically the second film in the series.


The Great Race (1965)
Description: A sprawling, star-studded comedy with a focus on a chaotic race across continents, featuring elaborate stunts and a mix of slapstick and witty humor.
Fait: The film's famous pie fight scene used over 4,000 pies and took five days to shoot. It was one of the most expensive comedies of its time.


The Party (1968)
Description: A nearly dialogue-free comedy relying on physical humor, visual gags, and escalating chaos at a high-society party.
Fait: Much of the film was improvised, with director Blake Edwards providing only a basic outline of scenes to the actors.


What's Up, Doc? (1972)
Description: A screwball comedy featuring mistaken identities, multiple identical suitcases, and increasingly chaotic chase sequences through city streets.
Fait: The film's famous chase scene down San Francisco hills destroyed 14 cars. It was intended as a homage to classic screwball comedies of the 1930s-40s.


Blazing Saddles (1974)
Description: A boundary-pushing satire that blends Western tropes with anachronistic humor, breaking the fourth wall and escalating into absurdity.
Fait: The famous campfire bean scene used real beans but the sounds were created by someone eating a bowl of macaroni and cheese.


Airplane! (1980)
Description: A rapid-fire parody film packed with visual gags, wordplay, and absurd situations that escalate to ridiculous extremes.
Fait: The film contains an average of three jokes per minute. The iconic 'drinking problem' gag was improvised on set.


The Blues Brothers (1980)
Description: A high-energy, ensemble-driven comedy with outrageous car chases, musical numbers, and a series of escalating, absurd situations.
Fait: The film's car chase scene through a shopping mall destroyed 60 cars, a record at the time. It features cameos from numerous famous musicians.


Top Secret! (1984)
Description: An anarchic parody blending spy movie tropes with musical numbers and absurd visual gags that defy logic and physics.
Fait: The underwater bar fight scene was filmed upside down to create the illusion of being underwater. It took three weeks to shoot.
