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Top 10 Hilarious Jim Carrey Moments

The most hilarious Jim Carrey moments crown this man as the king of 90s movies.

By WatchMojoPublished 5 years ago 4 min read
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Watching him’s exhausting, but we love every minute. Welcome to WatchMojo.com, and today we’re counting down our picks for Jim Carrey’s top 10 most hilarious moments.

Batman Forever’s casting director had it pretty easy when it came to this flick: Jim Carrey was the only man to play Edward E. Nigma, better known as The Riddler. The role requires an actor to be energetic, over-the-top and all over the place, and Carrey was more than happy to oblige. When he meets up with his new ally Two-Face, that’s when the games truly begin.

Carrey assumes a two-faced role himself in Me, Myself & Irene. Charlie Baileygates is a doormat who’s abused by everyone who crosses his path. That causes him to go nut-burgers and develop split personalities, one of whom is a total psycho-badass. The on-a-dime transformation between his two selves is something to behold, but when Carrey comes to blows with himself, that’s when the real magic happens.

Playing him with humanity, humor and a knowing smile, Carrey completely vanishes into the role of eccentric and misunderstood comic genius Andy Kaufman. To play Kaufman doesn’t require only an impersonation of him: Carrey also masters his alter-egos, and stable of impressions—including his famed Elvis. After watching Man on the Moon, you may not understand Kaufman any better, but you do know more about Jim Carrey’s incredible range.

In Bruce Almighty, Carrey plays Bruce Nolan, one of those reporters that always gets the puff pieces—or puff pastry pieces. Like Carrey himself, Bruce struggles to be taken seriously, so when he’s passed over for the anchor job in favor of his rival, well, he doesn’t take it so well. Unfortunately, he’s on live TV at the time. That poor old lady doesn’t know what hit her.

Before prospering on the big screen, Carrey was the token white guy on the Wayans family sketch series In Living Color. True to form, he stole the show with his physical comedy, rubberized facial expressions and valuable life lessons. Once he’d become a huge movie star, Carrey returned to his sketch comedy roots with a memorable Saturday Night Live hosting gig that gave birth to one head-bobbingly unforgettable sketch.

He sings, he dances, he makes excellent balloon animals—he’s The Mask. If you’re a Jim Carrey fan, this movie is right up your alley because it’s everything you love about him, kicked up about a thousand notches. He bounces from suicidal to sing-songy in a matter of minutes, and while his dance number with Cameron Diaz is smokin’, it’s his faux-death scene that’s really ready for the Academy.

Coming at a time when Carrey was honing his frenzied comic energy Liar Liar, gives us the best of both Carrey worlds: manic and restrained. After his son wastes his birthday wish requesting his father be barred from fibbing, Carrey is stuck in truth-telling mode—which, as a lawyer, isn’t great. So, he tries to weasel out of it, mind-over-matter style. It don’t work.

Here’s how you do a dark, psychological thriller, the Jim Carrey-circa-mid-90s way. The eponymous Cable Guy is lonely and well-meaning, but a little unhinged—just unhinged enough to require the comic stylings of a guy like Carrey. When he’s not trying to make friends, singing karaoke or flashing prisoners, the Cable Guy is letting off steam the only other way he knows how: by sword fighting.

It takes a genius to play an idiot. With his bowl-cut, chipped tooth and buddy at his side, Lloyd Christmas sets off to follow his dream woman cross-country. Sandwiched between the hot-tub parties, motorcycle rides and getting-ready-montages is one killer road trip—and by “killer,” we mean they pick up a hitchhiker who’s trying to murder them. But they’ll be fine: they can always annoy him to death.

If you thought Jim Carrey was everywhere in the mid-90s, you’re right: he had no less than three huge movies out in 1994 alone. But only one is a decisive touchdown: Ace Ventura: Pet Detective introduced Carrey’s hyperactivity and elastic face to a wider movie audience, and gave us all the Jim Carrey-isms we know and love. It also proved that Rubberface knows comedy both frontwards and backwards.

Do you agree with our list? What do you think is Jim Carrey’s funniest moment? For more top 10s about your favorite comedians, be sure to subscribe to WatchMojo.com.

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