Need a laugh? You’ve come to the right place.

Netflix’s vast library can be hard to sift through, even if you know what mood you’re in. There are romantic comedies, satires, action comedies, dramedies, musical comedies, and plenty more available on the platform. We’ve put together a list of some of our very favorites that you can watch at home right now.

If you’re looking for comedies beyond just Netflix, check out our list of some of our favorite comedy movies currently streaming across platforms. And for more of the best on this particular streaming service, check out our frequently updated list of the best movies on Netflix, or the best horror and action movies it has to offer.

Photo: Scott Yamano/Netflix

Adam Sandler’s latest basketball project is one of our favorite movies of 2022 — it’s a terrific showcase of his skills as a dramatic actor, his love for the game of basketball, and the merits of casting real athletes as performers in sports movies.

Sandler is Stanley Sugerman, a down-on-his luck scout who is finally on the verge of getting a big promotion to assistant coach, allowing him to spend more time with his family. But when the one person who knows how good Stanley is at his job dies, Sugerman must prove himself all over again and find a diamond in the rough — Bo Cruz (real-life NBA player Juancho Hernangómez), who the scout discovers playing pickup basketball.

From my write-up of Hustle as one of the best movies of the year:

Hustle’s performances truly shine. Sandler’s centered, grounded portrayal of a man who loves what he does but would rather have the job he was promised is another terrific, layered role for one of our great modern actors. The cast is also filled with NBA players who deliver memorable performances, led by Hernangómez as the temperamental and talented Cruz and Minnesota Timberwolves superstar Anthony Edwards as his trash-talking rival Kermit Wilts, a terrific addition to a long line of sports movie heels.

Edwards is worth highlighting here, since this is a list of comedies. His performance as Wilts is one of the funniest of the year, repeatedly taunting Cruz with hilarious jabs and making full use of the NBA star’s magnetic charisma. —Pete Volk

The Unauthorized Bash Brothers Experience

Image: Netflix

A somewhat forgotten Lonely Island project from 2019, this straight-to-Netflix Lemonade parody was a delightful surprise when it first arrived, and holds up as a silly and entertaining musical romp. Following Oakland A’s teammates Jose Canseco and Mark McGwire as they mash a metric ton of home runs in the 1980s, the movie features an ensemble cast that includes Maya Rudolph, Jenny Slate, and Sterling K. Brown in addition to Akiva Schaffer and Andy Samberg as the Bash Brothers themselves. —PV

The Ballad of Buster Scruggs

Image: Netflix

This 2018 Coen bros. anthology is consistently funny, frequently moving, and prominently features Tim Blake Nelson. What’s not to love? —PV

The Ballad of Buster Scruggs plays like the ultimate acceptance of this repetitive process, providing some of the most side-splitting laughs of the year at the cost of human lives (albeit fictional ones), even as we’re made to question this long-standing narrative paradigm. Moments of entertainment between the dread — nuggets of gold, much as Tom Waits’ prospector finds, while putting humanity’s worst foot forward — make The Ballad of Buster Scruggs one of their funniest yet hauntingly pessimistic films in years, asking whether questions about how or why we exist can have answers at all.

Image: Netflix

Noah Baumbach is well known for his particular form of dramedy, with Frances Ha as a standout example. Frances Ha is no longer streaming on Netflix, but the heartfelt and underseen Meyerowitz Stories is.

A family drama about a group of siblings who return from their very different lives to visit their older father, Meyerowitz features terrific, layered performances by the three dysfunctional siblings (Adam Sandler, Ben Stiller, and Elizabeth Marvel), as well as a powerhouse rendition of an aging patriarch by Dustin Hoffman. Adam Driver, Sigourney Weaver, Judd Hirsch, Emma Thompson, and Candice Bergen all also feature in the sprawling ensemble cast. It is also, crucially, quite funny! Intra-generational and inter-family conflicts are often quite humorous, and the specificity of the characters and the ways members of the same family can be vastly different makes for a great modern comedy of errors. —PV

Image: Warner Home Video

Ryan Gosling and Russell Crowe star in The Nice Guys, Shane Black’s second-best neo-noir buddy cop comedy, as Holland March and Jackson Healy, an unlikely pair of down-and-out private eyes in 1970s Los Angeles who could generously be described as two of the most likable terrible people you will ever meet. When the investigation of a missing girl and the death of a porn star bring the two together, Holland and Jackson are forced to team up to get to the bottom of an insidious conspiracy. (A note: The Nice Guys is leaving Netflix March 31, so watch it while you can). —Toussaint Egan

From Matt Essary’s write-up of 10 great detective movies to watch at home:

This wonderfully twisty mystery from writer/director Shane Black finds Ryan Gosling as a shady private investigator in late 1970s Los Angeles who gets inadvertently sucked into a case involving arson, the death of an adult film actress, and a possible government conspiracy involving a politician played by Kim Basinger. Gosling’s only help in this situation, where he is clearly outmatched and in over his head, is a local bruiser-for-hire played by Russell Crowe (in what is his most fun on-screen performance in years). Together, the pair hilariously bumble and argue their way through unraveling how and why everything ties together while barely avoiding angry hitmen and the local authorities. If you only know Shane Black from his work on Iron Man 3, then you owe it to yourself to check out The Nice Guys and see why he is such a cult favorite among people who adore noir films.

Image: Netflix

This modern Bollywood classic comes from Farah Khan, a decorated choreographer in addition to her work as a director. Starring Hindi superstar Shah Rukh Khan, it’s an absolute delight of a musical comedy, with plenty of romance and thrills along the way. —PV

From Sydney Wegner’s list of the best Hindi-language movies on Netflix:

Om Shanti Om is an epic of romance and reincarnation following a young man whose life is changed after he encounters his favorite actress. [It has] plenty of comedy, romance, action, and joy.

Photo: Elizabeth Viggiano/Netflix

David Dobkin’s Eurovision Song Contest: The Story of Fire Saga is just as ridiculous and entertaining as its title. Will Ferrell and Rachel McAdams star as Lars and Sigrit, two musicians who are given the opportunity to represent their country at the Eurovision Song Contest. As we said in our review, “Director David Dobkin doesn’t land every single beat, but he taps into that well of carefree exultation so potently that the movie’s stumbles hardly register.” It’s a joyous, goofy, irreverent film that’s not without its foibles, but nonetheless wins you over with through its sheer absurdity and silliness. —TE

Image: Warner Bros. Pictures

Greta Gerwig’s fantasy comedy based on the Mattel line of fashion dolls was the highest-grossing film of 2023, a bright and sprightly pink film that explored what it means to be a woman and the many insidious forms toxic masculinity can take. “Barbenheimer” — the simultaneous theatrical debut of Gerwig’s film alongside Christopher Nolan’s epic biographical drama of J. Robert Oppenheimer — was a bona fide cultural phenomenon the likes of which neither jaded marketing consultants nor armchair pundits could’ve expected, let alone conceived of.

None of that distracts from the plain truth, which is that Barbie is an absolute delight to watch. Margot Robbie’s bubbly effervescence is the purest embodiment of the character one could ask for, and Ryan Gosling’s portrayal of Barbie’s would-be beau Ken (“Just Ken”) is one of the actor’s finest comedic turns. But if you’re reading this right now, you probably already know this from having watched it. Barbie is one of the best movies on any streaming service it happens to be on, full stop, so it’s no surprise that it should find its way onto this list. —TE

Photo: François Duhamel/Netflix

Eddie Murphy is brilliant as Rudy Ray Moore, a comedian, actor, and larger-than-life personality best known for playing the character Dolemite. A movie very much about who gets to make movies (and which get made — Murphy’s Moore remarks in disgust that a movie has “no titties, no funny, and no kung fu”), Dolemite works best as a display of Murphy’s outrageous talent (and of Da’Vine Joy Randolph’s, as well), and it’s shame his performance went mostly unnoticed in awards circles. —PV

Image: Bleeker Street via Everett Collection

Before Daniel Craig was employing his faux Southern drawl to solve murders as Benoit Blanc, he was using an even sillier accent as the explosives expert Joe Bang in Logan Lucky. One of the funniest movies of the last several years, Logan Lucky follows two brothers who decide to pull off a heist at Charlotte Motor Speedway with the help of Joe and a few more members of their crew. The extremely funny performances by Craig, Channing Tatum, and Adam Driver are immediate highlights of the movie, but the standout belongs to a very drawn-out Game of Thrones joke that just gets funnier every single year. —Austen Goslin

Photo: Kimberley French/Paramount Pictures

Big-budget studio comedies are rare these days, but it’s even more rare that they’re actually funny; thankfully, The Lost City is both of those things. The movie follows Loretta Sage (Sandra Bullock), an adventure novelist who gets kidnapped and sent to the jungle alongside Dash McMahon (Channing Tatum), the handsome cover model on all her books. The pair are sent there by a strange billionaire (Daniel Radcliffe) who is convinced that Loretta has the key to finding a magical city full of treasure. Bullock and Tatum are fantastic in this and winningly funny, which helps make this a perfect family watch for the Thanksgiving season. —AG

Image: Netflix

One of Adam Sandler’s least Sandler-y comedies, this is a fun mystery movie send-up pairing him with Jennifer Aniston and directed by television veteran Kyle Newacheck (Workaholics, What We Do in the Shadows). Sandler is a cop, while Aniston is his mystery novel-obsessed wife. While on an anniversary trip, the two get caught up in a real murder mystery, and must work together to figure out what actually happened. It’s a funny, breezy 97 minutes that also cleverly inverts some expectations about the genre and the roles “husbands” and “wives” typically play in them. —PV

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