Best comedies 2025
Photograph: Time Out
Photograph: Time Out

Best comedy movies of 2025 (so far)

The movies and streaming shows that have been sparking joy this year

Phil de Semlyen
Contributor: Matthew Singer
Advertising

September 2025 update: Our additions this month include an out-of-nowhere indie gem and a long-awaited spinoff to one of the most popular sitcoms of all-time. Splitsville, starring relative unknowns Michael Angelo Covino and Kyle Marvin, along with Dakota Johnson and Adria Arjona, might be the year’s best romcom. And then there’s The Paper, Peacock’s successor to The Office, set at a struggling newspaper in Toledo, Ohio. 

It took a few months, but 2025 has turned into a pretty great year for onscreen comedy – relative to recent years, anyway. How can anyone look askance at Tim Robinson starring in his first movie? Or Seth Rogen doing a high-anxiety Hollywood satire? Or low-key, leftfield gems like Splitsville and One of Them Days? Or how about the fact that we got a remake of The Naked Gun, and it turned out to be awesome? Like we said: it’s been a good year for laughs. And there’s more coming, with both the Spinal Tap sequel and Aziz Ansari’s directorial debut, Good Fortune, still on the horizon – plus anything else we probably won’t see coming. Here are the movies and shows that have busted our guts the hardest so far. 

RECOMMENDED:

🎥 The best movies of 2025 (so far)
🔥 
The best TV and streaming shows of 2025
📺 The 100 greatest ever TV shows you need to binge

Best comedies of 2025

16. Mountainhead (HBO Max)

Succession creator Jesse Armstrong apparently hasn’t had his fill of mocking the billionaire class. In his feature-length debut as writer-director, four of the world’s richest men (Steve Carell, Cory Michael Smith, Ramy Youssef and Jason Schwartzman) converge at a mountain chalet to hash out a solution to an unfolding global crisis largely of their own making. The ‘disruptor’ lingo is initially migraine-inducing, but once the group’s paranoia turns inward, the humour turns slapstick, and the movie finds satisfying schadenfreude in the idea that no amount of wealth and influence can cure the modern tech oligarchy of being irredeemable losers. 

Matthew Singer
Matthew Singer
Film writer and editor

15. Paddington in Peru

Sure, it’s no Paddington 2 and the decision to transport the Browns and their bear from London to South America lends this threequel a slightly generic quality, but there’s plenty of good-natured giggles in the family-iest family film of 2025 so far. Vying with Antonio Banderas’s pompous riverboat capital for MVP is Olivia Colman as a suspiciously gleeful nun with a touch of the Julie Andrews. Not that the little bear doesn’t deliver laughs of his own: one series of Chaplinesque mishaps culminates in a riotous rapids run.

Phil de Semlyen
Phil de Semlyen
Global film editor
Advertising

14. A Minecraft Movie

Jack Black goes full ‘School of Block’ in a game-to-movie adaptation that’s a) the giant box-office hit no one saw coming, 2) way more entertaining than it has any right to be, and 3) has subjected unsuspecting cinemagoers to the full horror of the ‘Chicken Jockey’ phenomenon (think Alien’s Space Jockey, only more harrowing). You take the rough with the smooth, though, when a comedy is this deranged. Z-ers have been lured back to the multiplex in big numbers to be introduced to the respective greatness of Jennifer Coolidge, Jason Momoa and, in cameo, Matt Berry. 

Phil de Semlyen
Phil de Semlyen
Global film editor

13. Lilo & Stitch

It’s an overly faithful live-action remake of Disney’s 2002 classic, but director Dean Fleischer Camp, who made the sweet stop-motion standout Marcel The Shell With Shoes On, infuses this story of a young Hawaiian girl (Maia Kealoha) and her blue alien friend (voiced by original artist Chris Sanders) with a gentle sense of humour and humanity. Also, don't discount the fun farting and drooling gags — kids'll love it.  

Advertising

12. Heads of State (Prime Video)

It really should be terrible. Heads of State is a ridiculous action movie about a preening Hollywood star turned US president (John Cena) and a world-weary British Prime Minister (Idris Elba) who have to bring down a terrorist group after their plane is hijacked over eastern Europe, leaving them missing, assumed dead. High potential to be garbage, but Nobody director Ilya Naishuller gets the tone just right, leaning into the ridiculousness of it and making sure almost every moment is purely good fun. There’s zero pretentiousness in it, just determination to entertain. And on that front, it gets our vote.

📍 Where was Heads of State shot? The locations behind Idris Elba’s new action-comedy

11. The Paper (Peacock)

Is a spinoff of The Office necessary? Not really. But this new series, set at a struggling local newspaper, has enough heart and droll humour to make the endeavor worthwhile. Although it shares direct connective tissue with the old Dunder Mifflin crew, the premise is closer to Parks & Rec, in which suburban drones content to do the bare minimum are begrudgingly inspired by an overenthusiastic idealist (Domhnall Gleeson) to fight an uphill battle – in this case, against clickbait, unethical bloggers, declining readership and lack of funds. Sorry, can’t relate!

Matthew Singer
Matthew Singer
Film writer and editor
Advertising

10. One of Them Days

An R-rated caper with an urban setting and two extremely likeable leads? What is this, 1995? Indeed, One of Them Days is something of a throwback, but it’s less a nostalgic retread than an example of the kind of crowd-pleasing hangout comedy that never should’ve become so rare in the first place. The ever-reliable Keke Palmer and R&B star SZA, in her acting debut, exude Wayne-and-Garth-level chemistry as lifelong friends scrambling to come up with rent money and falling into deeper, and far more dangerous, debt over the course of a few eventful hours. Seriously, put them in everything – and bring Katt Williams along, too.

Matthew Singer
Matthew Singer
Film writer and editor

9. The Rehearsal season 2 (Max)

Nathan Fielder: genius or jerk? Across both of the unscripted series he’s created and starred in, the comedian has shown no compunction about using guileless civilians as guinea pigs in various sociocomic experiments. In the second season of his high-concept HBO docuseries, though, he insists it’s in service of a greater good: preventing aviation disasters. At least, that’s the jumping-off point for more of his alien-like observations of human interaction, elaborate dupes and extravagant wastes of Warner Brothers' money. Maybe his methods are morally questionable, but if it produces strokes of absurdity like the beyond-bonkers ‘Sully’ Sullenberger episode, well, it’s probably worth it.

Matthew Singer
Matthew Singer
Film writer and editor
Advertising

8. Splitsville

A slapstick farce that’s a little Judd Apatow, a little Woody Allen, the second feature from co-writers and stars Michael Angelo Covino and Kyle Marvin is one of 2025’s great surprises, an exploration of open marriages involving two schlubs and their improbably gorgeous wives, played by Dakota Johnson and Aria Arjona. Boasting a joke-per-minute ratio to challenge The Naked Gun, the gags fly from everywhere, but the centrepiece is an extended fight scene that escalates from slaps to powerbombs, leaving shattered fish tanks and burned-off eyebrows in its wake.

7. The Ballad of Wallis Island

British stand-up and screenwriter Tim Key leaves Alan Partridge’s Sidekick Simon behind with a comedy that has him playing a lonely lottery winner with a very specific musical dream. He invites his favourite folk musician, Herb McGwyer (co-writer Tom Basden), to his island without telling him that his old musical and romantic partner, Nell Mortimer (Carey Mulligan), is also coming. Whatever could go wrong, does go wrong in a gentle but heartfelt comedy that plays like Local Hero and Once singing a duet. A comedy about romance, rather than a romantic comedy, it’s a true charmer.

Phil de Semlyen
Phil de Semlyen
Global film editor
Advertising
  • Movies
  • Comedy

Tim Robinson disciples won’t need much convincing when it comes to the comedian’s first movie-star vehicle, an exploration of adult-male relationships that plays like one of his I Think You Should Leave sketches stretched to 90 minutes. For everyone else, the notion of spending that much time with a character like Craig Waterman, a suburban dad with a tenuous grasp on human interaction, is a tough sell. But if you’re already on Robinson and writer-director Andrew DeYoung’s comic wavelength, the absurdism and awkwardness are just what you’re looking for. And even if you’re not, there’s still Paul Rudd doing Paul Rudd things – namely, being cool, charismatic and a bit of a weirdo himself.

Matthew Singer
Matthew Singer
Film writer and editor

5. The Righteous Gemstones season 4 (HBO Max)

The final season of Danny McBride’s outrageously profane skewering of for-profit fundamentalism hasn’t felt particularly final, but it has served as a potent reminder of what television is losing. What other show is giving you a Civil War-set mini-movie guest-starring Bradley Cooper, a tragic pole-dancing accident and Walton Goggins hanging brain on a waterski, all in the first three episodes? Plot-wise, it’s more scheming and squabbling from the maniacally self-absorbed Gemstone siblings, this time aimed at John Goodman’s family patriarch and his new lover, played by a fully country-fried Megan Mullally. But honestly, how else would you expect them to go out? 

Matthew Singer
Matthew Singer
Film writer and editor
Advertising
  • Movies
  • Comedy
  • Recommended

That old truism about comedy being tragedy plus time counts double in the fourth Bridget Jones movie. Renée Zellweger’s put-upon Londoner, now a mum twice over, is still reeling from the death of her beloved Mark Darcy but Shazzer and the gang are determined to get her back out there. ‘Out there’ being a place where humiliating sexting disaster, heartwarming triumphs and some classic Bridge pratfalls await. Hugh Grant delivers another hilariously wolfish turn as Daniel Cleaver and Emma Thompson steals scenes as Bridget’s slightly annoyed doctor. A treat.

Phil de Semlyen
Phil de Semlyen
Global film editor
  • Movies
  • Comedy
  • Recommended

Not so much ‘funny haha’ as ‘funny… sob’, Jesse Eisenberg’s Oscar-winning road trip movie nonetheless delivers some big laughs as it follows Eisenberg and Kieran Culkin’s estranged cousins David and Benji across Poland on a Holocaust tour. Not on paper a laugh riot, but that jittery odd-couple chemistry and some pinsharp writing translates into big laughs when they’re most needed on this bittersweet exploration of past (and present) trauma.

Phil de Semlyen
Phil de Semlyen
Global film editor
Advertising

2. The Studio (Apple TV+)

Seth Rogen is harried Hollywood studio head Matt Remick who finds that his dream job is a hand grenade with the pin removed in this godlike Apple TV comedy series. With a never-more-out-there Bryan Cranston delivering a deviant brand of David Zaslav corporate oversight as the big boss who wants a Kool-Aid corporate partnership turned into a Barbie-alike blockbuster (‘If Warner Bros. can make a billion dollars off the plastic tits of a pussyless doll, we can make two billion dollars!’), Rogen’s Remick and his team (Ike Barinholtz, Chase Sui Wonders, Kathryn Hahn) desperately try to hold it all together. Sharply observed, relentlessly funny, perfectly cast and often systolic-raisingly stressful to behold, it’s like if the Safdies remade Entourage and it was good. Really, really good. 

Phil de Semlyen
Phil de Semlyen
Global film editor
  • Movies

After years of cementing his gritty action hero status, Liam Neeson breathes new life into The Naked Gun franchise in this hilarious legacy sequel. Chock-a-block with sight gags, non-sequiters and word play with a contemporary flavour, Neeson brings a brooding flair to his Lt. Frank Drebin Jr as he investigates a murder alongside a stellar cast including Pamela Anderson and Paul Walter Hauser. Given the chequered history of reboots and remakes, Akiva Schaffer's The Naked Gun is an unexpected delight: a LOL-apalooza, if you will, guaranteed to leave you in stitches.

Hanna Flint
Hanna Flint
Critic, journalist and podcast host
Recommended
    More on Time In
      You may also like
      You may also like
      Advertising