**Scary Movie** (2000) doesn’t work without **Anna Faris**—period. She’s the beating heart of the entire ridiculous thing, and she walks the perfect line between wide-eyed innocence and absolute comedic insanity. This was her breakout role, and it’s no accident. Faris has this rare ability to play the dumbest situations completely straight, with just enough cluelessness to sell it but never so much that you stop rooting for her. She’s all in—whether she’s tripping over her own legs, dodging a killer, or getting sucked into an absolutely deranged bedroom scene that no human should survive. She’s *fearless* in this role, and the entire movie leans on her to make the slapstick and stupidity land with charm instead of just gross-out noise. Then there’s **Dave Sheridan as Doofy**—a performance so committed to its own bit that it should have been illegal. Doofy is a walking, talking parody of every slasher movie’s “bumbling deputy,” but Sheridan pushes it so far into cartoon territory that he somehow steals the movie. From the way he delivers lines like his brain is loading one word at a time to the absolute *unhinged* reveal in the final scene, he’s unforgettable. That vacuum cleaner gag? Legendary. And the best part? Sheridan plays Doofy like he’s the star of his own weird little movie, completely separate from everyone else. He’s doing something so strange, so over-the-top, and so fully committed that it somehow becomes iconic. The rest of the cast—including the Wayans brothers, Shannon Elizabeth, Lochlyn Munro, and Cheri Oteri —are all in on the joke and clearly having a blast, but Faris and Sheridan are the glue that holds the whole chaotic mess together. Faris gives the movie a lovable core, and Sheridan sneaks up from the sidelines with one of the best “What the hell just happened?” twists in parody history, and let’s not forget Regina Hall as Brenda, who straight-up steals every scene she’s in. She’s the friend who says exactly what you’re thinking, no filter, no fear, and absolutely no chance of surviving the movie—but you love her for it. Her movie theater meltdown is pure gold and instantly became one of the most quotable moments in comedy. Hall brings that chaotic, tell-it-like-it-is energy that the film desperately needed, and honestly? Brenda deserved to make it to the sequel just so we could watch her roast more people to their faces. **Scary Movie** works because its cast goes *all in* without looking for the off-ramp. It’s loud, crude, and ridiculous—but you can’t fake that kind of comedic commitment. Faris and Sheridan aren’t just along for the ride—they *drive* the insanity.