This classic 90’s comedy, Dumb and Dumber is a film about two seriously dimwitted pet stylists, buddies, roommates, and business owners named Harry and Lloyd. The two end up at the airport and encounter a woman (named Mary Swanson) with who Llyod falls completely in love.
Fifteen percent of the film is made up on the spot as well as their road trip scene in which they play tag and argue like children. The movie has since developed a major cult following. When they notice that she leaves behind her suitcase, they decide to tale a road trip to Aspen to deliver the luggage she left behind.
Young Frankenstein
The 1974 comedy horror film was directed by Mel Brooks and was a box office hit. It is frequently recognized as one of the greatest comedy films of all time. Marty Feldman played the role of Igor. He ad-libbed the line ‘what hump?” while moving around the hump on his back whenever Doctor Frankenstein asked him about it. Although not originally included in the film, the director chose to keep it in.
The scene got so many laughs, both on set and eventually in the theater, proving that this improvised moment was totally gold. The line was written by the legendary comic Gene Wilder who had written the role specifically for Feldman.
Animal House
College Dean Vernon Wormer sets off to eliminate the entire Delta Tau Chi Fraternity. However, there are other plans set out for him. One of the things which makes this 1978 American comedy film so hilarious is its improvisation. In the cafeteria scene, Belushi improvises the entire scene. He takes food, stuffs it in his mouth, pushes his cheeks together, and says “I’m a zit-get it?”
Of course, impersonating a zit by stuffing food into your mouth and punching it out of your cheeks with two fists is a good reason for big laughs, and the late SNL legend Belushi was always an expert at getting the laughs.
The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring
The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring Viggo Mortenson, playing the character Aragorn, thinks his friends Merry and Pippin are dead. He kicks a helmet in disappointment and screams in agony. His scream was purely authentic, as he actually broke his toe. The take was used in the film.
The 2001 fantasy adventure film was directed by Peter Jackson and based on the first volume of J. R. R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings. It grossed over $871 million worldwide and became the second highest-grossing film of 2001 in the world.
Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets
Harry dines at the Weasleys house while the Weasley parents argue about their children. Molly is angry that they took out the enchanted car while her husband Arthur is quite supportive. The next line was practiced 13 or 14 times, with each time being different from the former.
They eventually went with “what exactly is the function of a rubber duck?” The film adaptation of the novel was released in 2002 and became at the time the seventh highest-grossing film ever.