The 25 Best Comedy Movies on Netflix, According to Critics
On 2/28/21 at 7:00 AM EST
Let s face it, in times like this, we could all do with a good laugh.
As we continue to be mostly stuck in our homes due to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, many of us are turning to good old Netflix to keep us entertained.
And why not get a few laughs in while a deadly pandemic rages on outside?
The list below reflects comedy films that are ranked by either Metacritic or Rotten Tomatoes and are currently on Netflix U.S.
The 25 Best Comedy Movies on Netflix, According to Critics
Naughty Mickey And Angry Goofy – Connie And Fish Saturday Rewind Show (2-27-21)
It s time again for another Connie and Fish Saturday Rewind Show where we showcase all of the Connie and Fish Rewinds from the week. This week the featured clips need a warning pig before you hear them (they are not for little ears). The clips are a call from everyone s favorite mouse, Naughty Mickey as well as a follow up call from a very angry Goofy who weighs in on what Mickey said. Also on the show, we hear the very first time that Stewart the Stuart made an appearance on the show, we got to hear Connie tell everyone that eating a well-done steak is a perfectly good way to go, and Fish finally learns a new recipe. All of that and much more on the Saturday Rewind Show!
IMDB information:
Genres: Musical, Comedy
Description: Sailor Ted meets at the Lonely Hearts Club of his friend Gunny s wife, Jenny, a girl, Nora Paige, and falls in love. Nora wants to become a dancer on Broadway. Ted rescues the Pekinese of Lucy James, a Broadway star during a public relations campaign on his submarine. Lucy falls in love with Ted, and Ted is ordered by his Captain to meet her in a night club, in spite of the fact that he has a date with Nora. Nora, who lives with Jenny and her and Gunny s daughter, doesn t want to hear anything from Ted, after she spotted a picture of Ted and Lucy in the morning paper. Lucy convinces her manager Dinehart to stop the press campaign and tells him that she would leave the production, if another photo or article of her and Ted is published. Nora has become her understudy, and she begins to think her behaviour to Ted over. Suddenly she is fired after Dinehart told her to dance a number Lucy James called undanceable. But when Ted is t