That Get Out will compete as a comedy during awards season is not a surprise. Although packed with thrills and scares, it ultimately exists as social satireโwhich, while not always funny, is a form of comedy. Also, this comedy distinction makes it more likely to win within its categories. For myriad annoying-as-the-fuck reasons, comedies, when compared with other popular movie genres, are generally treated like toddler siblings, while the โbig boyโ dramas and action movies and psychological thrillers and sweeping period pieces get the bulk of the critical consideration.
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So while Get Outโs chances might not have been as favorable if it were nominated for Best Motion PictureโDrama, its critical and commercial successโplus the biting and relevant social commentaryโwould seem to make it a heavy favorite for Best Motion PictureโMusical or Comedy.
But letโs forget about all of that for now. Instead, Iโm curiousโwas Get Out more funny or scary?
Of course, it contained parts meant to be humorousโparticularly each of Lil Rel Howeryโs scenes. And it contained enough jump scares and other cinematic devices associated with thrillers and horror to be considered scary. But which was it more of?
I have my own conclusionsโwhich Iโll share a bit laterโbut before we get to that, letโs list what would qualify for funny and for scary:
Again, each scene with Lil Rel Howeryโwhose purpose in the movie was basically to be a stand-in for the (black) audience members. He was basically, โNIGGA, DONโT OPEN THAT DOOR!โ personified.
The extreme placidity of each of the black characters at the Armitagesโ. Not meant to be funny in a โhahaโ way but in a โHoly shit, WTF is wrong with that nigga?โ way.
Everything with Lakeith Stanfieldโs middle-aged-white-dude costumeโhis lobotomized mannerisms, his clothes, his cluelessness with pound etiquetteโwhich would best be described as โaggressively Patagonia.โ
Rose Armitageโs pervasive and consummate and insidious whiteness, best exemplified by the scene toward the end of the movie where sheโs sitting on her bed, browsing the internet for black athletes, drinking milk with a straw and eating a bowl of dry-ass cereal one piece at a time. This was the whitest thing Iโve ever seen.
The sunken place, of course.
The kidnapping at the beginning of the movie, which could actually land in the funny category because of Stanfieldโs self-aware comments to himself before he was taken. He was also acting as a bit of a black-audience-member stand-in, but it was too late for him. He was already doomed.
The several jump scares throughout the movie, starting with the deer hitting Rose and Chrisโ car (which, in the theater I was in, made a woman in front of me say, โMan, fuck this shitโ).
The stretch where Chris is subdued and then prepped for his lobotomy.
The moments after Chris escapes when both โGrandmaโ and โGrandpaโ spring to life and try to kill him.
The scariest scene of allโto me, at leastโis when the cop car approaches after Chris has finished murdering all of those white people and their black help. Of course, it turned out to be his boy there to rescue him, but even I felt my fight-or-flight sense engaged when seeing that.
The answer here depends on your perspective. And also, oddly, racial politics. I laughed more while watching the movie than I was scared. Even the โscaryโ parts were followed by chuckles of recognition. Like, โHoly shit, I canโt believe this is happening.โ I also saw it in a predominantly black movie theater, and my reactions mirrored those of most of the moviegoers.
That said, I have to admit that Iโd probably feel a certain way if I watched it in a predominantly white theater and heard laughs during some of the scarier/creepier parts. Like, um, yโall donโt have permission to be laughing at any of this! THIS IS ALL YOUR FAULT!!! And I imagine that many white people who saw this movie felt similarly and refused to laugh because they just werenโt sure if the movie was allowed to be funny to them.
So my verdict is that Get Out was more funny than scary. But it was actually more creepy than anything else (unless, of course, youโre white, which means you need to watch this shit like a documentary).
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