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However, thankfully, there’s the sub-genre of horror-comedy, which uses well-timed humor to take the edge off the scares in films that fall into this category. Balancing laughs and frights is notoriously difficult for a filmmaker to nail, but these five movies are a few of the very best at walking the line between humor and horror.
5) The Cabin in the Woods

The Cabin in the Woods has an embarrassment of riches – it was written by Joss Whedon, who gave us Buffy the Vampire Slayer and The Avengers, co-written and directed by Drew Goddard of Cloverfield fame, boasts an incredible cast, and contains one of the best twists in a horror comedy of the past fifteen years. The film starts as most standard horror films do.
A group of five friends, all typical archetypes we see in horror like the brainless jock, the conspiracy theory stoner, and the good girl, spend a weekend at an isolated cabin when they’re confronted with horrors that stem from the cabin’s basement. However, the story unfolds in any way but typical, making Cabin in the Woods a smart and enduring satire of the horror genre while also being a highly entertaining film.
4) Beetlejuice

Beetlejuice creepily and hilariously explores the idea of the afterlife and the notion of “you can’t take it with you” in an imaginative, zany manner only Tim Burton is capable of. Alec Baldwin and Geena Davis play a young, dead couple who enlist the help of the wily “bioexorcist” Betelgeuse, played by a pitch-perfect Michael Keaton, to drive out the insufferable family of yuppies that have moved into their beloved home. Yet Betelgeuse’s is more than the pair bargained for, and thanks to the help of the family’s Goth daughter Lydia (Winona Ryder), they’re able to banish him.
Being a Tim Burton film, Beetlejuice is chock full of the strange, unusual, and scary, but Burton counteracts any deep frights with his quirky and irresistible humor.
3) Ghostbusters

Few films strike such a deft balance between horror and comedy like the original Ghostbusters. Even with three comedy legends in the lead roles, Bill Murray, Dan Aykroyd, and the late, great Harold Ramis, the movie manages to still deliver on scares without going too far in the horror direction.
Ramis, Aykroyd, and Murray’s pursuits as to capture ghosts and prevent an ancient evil from bringing about the end of the world has jusr as many funny memorable moments as it does spine-tingling ones – from the trio taking down Slimer in a ballroom blitz at a swanky hotel to Murray’s main squeeze Dana Barrett’s (Sigourney Weaver) possession by a terror dog. Every element of the film comes together seamlessly, making Ghostbusters a classic for a reason and a movie the whole family can watch year after year.










