In reverse chronological order from this morning to a few weeks ago:
Diggers
While this has some comedy in it, it's mostly played straight, and Paul Rudd does a great job in a dramatic turn. Someone from the New England area might take issue with his accent, but to my ear as a Canadian, it's spot on.
Carrie (1976)
Figured since this was on Netflix I'd finally check it out. Didn't disappoint. I'm not actually one for horror when it's played straight; I like my horror with a heaping helping of comedy or just over the top zaniness, but this delivered in that the majority of the film was just high schoolers being high schoolers, and it made you feel bad for Carrie in a very real way. Even though its one of the most iconic movie scenes and so you know what's coming, the big awful prank still gets you, and the hell she unleashes on her classmates is still pretty disturbing (By today's standards it kind of seems tame, really, but its shot in a way that makes it way more horrific than stuff 10x as graphic from today).
Idle Hands
Speaking of horror with a dose of comedy, for some reason I got to thinking about this movie recently and decided to pick it up cheap off amazon with the Evil Dead trilogy. I remember liking it as a kid who was probably too young to be watching it. It definitely doesn't hold up to those standards, because like everyone else I was an idiot when I was 13, but it has some bits which make it still enjoyable, despite its many, many faults.
The Evil Dead (1981)
After I saw Evil Dead the Musical, and having already seen Army of Darkness multiple times, I decided to just go buy Evil Dead 1 & 2. I kinda think Evil Dead 1 is totally skippable since it doesn't fit the atmosphere of the other two movies in the series, but as a horror movie its okay. I realize their intention was not to make a comedy with this one. I can see where some of the stuff in Evil Dead could be legitimately scary if it had the budget of the sequels, or for that matter the effects of today. So in that regard I'm somewhat intrigued to see the remake from last year. But like I said, I like my horror best when its served with comedy, so....
Evil Dead 2...is much superior to its predecessor. It gets the comedy right, it gets the horror right. It's everything I hoped it'd be. Army of Darkness is still my favourite out of this trilogy, but I know I will be revisiting this movie over and over again. Definitely worth finally picking up on bluray.