
Let’s be real—spoof and parody films have a certain kind of magic. They make us laugh so hard that we almost forget that the joke is on us, lovingly lampoon Hollywood, and manage to become classics in their own right. There was a time when spoof films dominated movie night, giving us endless quotable lines and ridiculous characters that are still a part of pop culture to this day. Their time eventually passed, and the spoof film genre all but died out—until recently, when a new crop of filmmakers attempted to recapture that magic. So sit back, don your best Leslie Nielsen impression, and join us as we count down the 10 spoof and parody films that changed comedy history once and for all, beginning with number 10 because, well, a little bit of suspense makes it even funnier.

10. Pitch Perfect (2012)
Alright, alright, so it’s no spoof classic like Airplane!, but Pitch Perfect definitely gets points for shaking up the musical comedy genre with a fresh spin. The offbeat, all-girl a cappella singing group, the Barden Bellas, dish out wit, attitude, and catchy tunes in spades. Filled to the brim with clever humor, lovable misfits, and iconic musical numbers, the movie struck just the right chords—musically, of course.

9. Animal House (1978)
Before every college comedy copied the formula, there was Animal House. John Belushi’s toga-clad, chaos-loving Bluto turned frat life into full-blown anarchy, and audiences loved it. With its rebellious humor and slapstick spirit, it redefined what a comedy could get away with. If you’ve ever screamed “Toga! Toga!” after two drinks too many, this movie is the reason why.

8. Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery (1997)
Yeah, baby! Mike Myers hit paydirt satirizing James Bond and the swinging ’60s simultaneously. Austin Powers is ridiculous, cheeky, and quotably endless, ranging from evil lairs and laser sharks to mojo moments of awkwardness. It’s more than just a spoof of spy movies; it’s a complete party to their goofiness. Groovy, all right.

7. Raising Arizona (1987)
It takes the Coen Brothers to turn a crime caper into a cartoon fever dream. Raising Arizona chronicles a couple who conclude that the solution to their childlessness is… baby stealing. Nicolas Cage and Holly Hunter keep it straight in the midst of utter nonsense, producing one of the greatest off-kilter comedies ever crafted. It’s quick, it’s humorous, and utterly out of its mind in the best sense of the words.

6. Groundhog Day (1993)
Cranky weatherman Bill Murray trapped in a time loop doesn’t sound like parody material, but its self-deprecating humor and looping ridiculousness are among the most brilliant comic setups in movies. It’s quick, witty, and deceptively deep. The laughs land, but the commentary on change and redemption comes crashing down just as forcefully. Not many comedies balance those elements so neatly.

5. The Princess Bride (1987)
“As you wish.” And with that line, The Princess Bride established itself as the greatest fairy-tale spoof ever made. It playfully satirizes fantasy conventions while providing real heart, swashbuckling adventure, and some of the most memorable dialogue in the history of cinema. From sword battles to wise-cracking narrators, it’s a film that winks at the viewer while drawing them further into the narrative.

4. Airplane! (1980)
Of course, you can’t be serious. Spoof movies are impossible to discuss without Airplane! The holy grail of parodies, this mile-a-minute masterpiece turns disaster movies upside down. Each scene is loaded with wordplay, slapstick, and deadpan genius from Leslie Nielsen. It didn’t just define a genre; it became the reason for spoof comedy’s existence.

3. The Big Lebowski (1998)
The Dude abides, and so does this cult classic. The Coen Brothers’ The Big Lebowski spoofs noir, mystery, and detective conventions through the eyes of a bowling-obsessed slacker who just wants his rug back. It’s strange, quotable, and endlessly replayable. Its surreal humor and absurd reasoning spawned an entire subculture of comedy enthusiasts who, to this day, convene in robes and shades to worship The Dude’s do-nothing ethos.

2. Shaun of the Dead (2004)
Edgar Wright resuscitated the zombie film genre with Shaun of the Dead by combining horror and comedy so successfully that it set a standard for genre hybrids. Simon Pegg and Nick Frost make survival during an apocalypse an epic pub crawl complete with buddy drama, slapstick bloodletting, and impeccable British dialogue. It’s not parody; it’s one of the 21st century’s smartest comedies.

1. The Naked Gun (1988)
And at the top of the list, The Naked Gun, the parodist supreme. Leslie Nielsen’s Frank Drebin is the greatest bumbling detective of all time, clunking his way through a universe of dumb puns, sight gags, and dumb police procedures. Each joke hits with precision, and the impact of the movie can still be felt today in contemporary comedies. It’s evidence that when timing, writing, and dumbness converge, parody can be an art form.

After decades of spoof comedies dominating theaters, the style finally fizzled out, deeply buried in lazy sequels and pop-culture saturation. Hollywood didn’t dare touch it for almost a decade. But with a Naked Gun reboot imminent (yes, featuring Liam Neeson as Frank Drebin Jr.), parody may just stage a glorious return. Because let’s be honest: when executed properly, spoof comedies don’t just get us laughing, they remind us how entertaining movies can be when they don’t take themselves seriously whatsoever.