The Naked Gun 2 1/2: The Smell Of Fear Now

A dive bar where the wall photos are all of famous tragedies (the Hindenburg, the Titanic).

The 1991 sequel is a masterclass in the "more is more" philosophy of comedy. Following the massive success of the first film, director David Zucker and star Leslie Nielsen returned to prove that lightning—and bumbling police work—could indeed strike twice. The Plot (Sort Of)

A recurring gag involves a look-alike of the then-First Lady being subjected to Frank’s unintentional physical comedy. Why It Holds Up The Naked Gun 2 1/2: The Smell of Fear

By 1991, Leslie Nielsen had fully transitioned from a serious dramatic actor to the face of the "spoof" genre. His performance as Frank Drebin relies on a singular, brilliant hook: no matter how absurd the situation—whether he’s crashing a car into a pier or mistaking a priceless vase for a urinal—he plays it with the gravity of an Oscar-winning drama. It is this "deadpan in the eye of the storm" energy that makes the film's relentless gags land. Visual Gag Overload

The film is famous for its "blink and you’ll miss it" background humor. Highlights include: A dive bar where the wall photos are

A wildly messy recreation of the pottery scene from Ghost , involving far too much clay and various limbs.

It remains a pinnacle of the ZAZ (Zucker, Abrahams, and Zucker) style—a film that doesn't just want you to laugh, but wants to overwhelm you with reasons to do so. The Plot (Sort Of) A recurring gag involves

Unlike modern spoofs that often rely on pop culture references that age poorly, The Naked Gun 2½ leans into slapstick, wordplay, and structural parody. While the environmental subplot provides a loose framework, the movie is essentially a delivery system for 86 minutes of pure, unadulterated silliness.