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Wayans isn't done making fun of scary movies

The BET comedy series “Second Generation Wayans” begs the question: Have there been only two generations of the professionally funny family that gave us “In Living Color,” the “Scary Movie” franchise and “White Chicks”?

Published: Jan. 11, 2013 at 12:05 a.m. PST
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The BET comedy series “Second Generation Wayans” begs the question: Have there been only two generations of the professionally funny family that gave us “In Living Color,” the “Scary Movie” franchise and “White Chicks”?

“I’m pretty sure there were some really entertaining Wayans before us,” says Marlon Wayans. “You know, some hilarious slave Wayans. They could’ve been in (Quentin) Tarantino’s movie (“Django Unchained”). Pickin’ cotton, and tellin’ jokes. That’s us.”

At 40, Marlon is part of the same generation of Wayans that produced Damon, Keenan Ivory, Kim and Shawn. He has “always been the most talented” of the clan, says George Thomas, film critic for the Cleveland Examiner — capable of low comedy, but also of stealing a film from the likes of Tom Hanks (“The Ladykillers”).

Wayans’ latest production in the funny family enterprise is “A Haunted House,” an attempt to move on from the “Scary Movies” that he helped launch but which the family is no longer a part of. With the “Scary Movie” installments — begun as a response to the “Scream” and “Nightmare on Elm Street” franchises — growing more watered down each year, Wayans saw an opening for another parody. “A Haunted House” opens today, but was not previewed for critics.

“There’s a fine line between that moment when you’re a fan of the movie, the first movie in a series maybe, or you’re a fan of a genre — and the first films in it are the good ones — and then the bad ones start coming along and you hate them,” Wayans says. “When I see common denominators, common situations, common characters — a genre of films or a series of films becomes all the same movie — that’s when I go ‘That sucks. But it’s funny that it sucks.’”

Next up for Wayans is the comedy “The Heat,” with Sandra Bullock and Melissa McCarthy. He plays Bullock’s character’s love interest.

“We don’t have any love scenes. Or any chemistry, really. But I’m pretty sure that in my mind, they do the nasty. A man’s got to have hope.”

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