Best Food Fight Scenes in Movie History

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By John Harrington Published
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Best Food Fight Scenes in Movie History

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There is something titillatingly wrong about watching a food fight in the movies, whether the ammunition is spaghetti, French fries, pizza, or, of course, pies and cakes.  

Food fights were common during the silent-movie era, with pies the weapon of choice. Invariably these custard-filled dust-ups, featuring such stars of the era as Ben Turpin, Mack Sennett and the Keystone Kops, and Charlie Chaplin, involved authority figures or those to the manner born who are humiliated with a cream cobbler to the kisser. (If you’re a fan, these are Charlie Chaplin’s best and worst movies.)

Laurel & Hardy’s “The Battle of the Century” contains an epic six-minute street battle of airborne tarts. The Three Stooges made a career out of pie fights from the end of the silent period in the 1930s through the early 1960s.

To compile a list of the best movie food fights of all time, 24/7 Tempo consulted the page headed “Most Popular Movies and TV Shows tagged with keyword ‘food-fight’” on IMDb, an online movie and TV database owned by Amazon, then watched clips of the food fights on YouTube and other sites, using editorial discretion to make our final choice. Because pie-throwing was ubiquitous in early movie-making, silent film food fights are not included here.

Click here to see the best food fight scenes in movie history

Some of the movies on our list – “Whip It,” “Nanny McPhee,” “Little Darlings,” and “Valley Girl” – focus on children or teenagers engaging in food fights at diners, summer camps, school cafeterias, proms, or restaurants. (These are the best movies about food, restaurants, and chefs.)

Of course, this list wouldn’t be complete without such classic cinematic food fights as the continuous food-throwing scene in “Blazing Saddles” in which actors playing characters from various movie genres battle tourists in a pie toss; the John Belushi-provoked cafeteria free-for-all in “National Lampoon’s Animal House;” and perhaps the greatest pie fight of all time (and one of the last to appear in movies) from “The Great Race.”

Courtesy of Warner Bros.

The Great Race (1965)
> Two competitors get caught in a massive pie fight in a bakery

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Courtesy of United Artists

Sleeper (1973)
> Woody Allen’s character hits a foe with a giant strawberry

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Courtesy of Warner Bros.

Blazing Saddles (1974)
> A brawl in a Western town improbably segues into a modern-day studio commissary where the pies start flying

Courtesy of Universal Pictures

National Lampoon’s Animal House (1978)
> Bluto (John Belushi) initiates an epic food fight by spewing mashed potatoes

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Courtesy of Paramount Pictures

Little Darlings (1980)
> Two rivals “accidentally” start a food fight with each other at the camp breakfast table and all join in

Courtesy of Atlantic Releasing

Valley Girl (1983)
> The arrogant prom king takes a pie in the face, and a food-fueled melee ensues

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Courtesy of Universal Pictures

Fried Green Tomatoes (1991)
> The two main characters cover each other with pie fixings while cooking at their café

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Courtesy of TriStar Pictures

Hook (1991)
> A tableful of boys “eating” imaginary food start an imaginary food fight that turns real

Courtesy of Universal Pictures

Problem Child 2 (1991)
> The kids start a pizza-and-pasta-hurling fight at a pizzeria

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Courtesy of Twentieth Century Fox

PCU (1994)
> Non-PC students rain raw beef on an anti-red meat protest

Courtesy of Warner Bros.

It Takes Two (1995)
> Mac and cheese, sloppy Joes, and more fly in a summer camp cafeteria

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Courtesy of Sony Pictures Entertainment

Matilda (1996)
> Matilda uses her telekinetic powers to hurl food at the evil headmistress

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Courtesy of Universal Pictures

Nanny McPhee (2005)
> Children ruin an ill-advised wedding by screaming about bees and throwing wedding pastries at the guests.

Courtesy of Lionsgate

Bratz: The Movie (2007)
> A mischievous dog accidentally sets off a spaghetti-fueled food fight

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Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures

Whip It (2009)
> A French fry in the face ignites a food fight among roller derby skaters in a dingy diner

Photo of John Harrington
About the Author John Harrington →

I'm a journalist who started my career as a sportswriter, covering professional, college, and high school sports. I pivoted into business news, working for the biggest newspapers in New Jersey, including The Record, Star-Ledger and Asbury Park Press. I was an editor at the weekly publication Crain’s New York Business and served on several editorial teams at Bloomberg News. I’ve been a part of 24/7 Wall St. since 2017, writing about politics, history, sports, health, the environment, finance, culture, breaking news, and current events. I'm a graduate of Rutgers University with a Bachelor of Arts degree in History.

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