Best Mongolian comedy movies
A curated collection of popular comedy movies from Mongolia.

They Sing Up On The Hill (2019)
They Sing Up On The Hill (2019)
Any number of superlatives describe Mongolia's capital; most remote, fastest growing, coldest and hippest. Ulaanbaatar is the loudest city you've never heard. Two young Mongolian musicians discover identity, purpose and love whilst creating the music of the city.

Harmonica (1963)
Harmonica (1963)
The capital city of Mongolia, Ulaanbaatar, is increasing with new buildings day by day. Dari insists on not leaving her home, built by her father, and tries to keep her old home by using the construction guy whom Dari’s daughter is in love with.

Wish I Had a Horse (1959)
Wish I Had a Horse (1959)
Dondog, a young man who grew up on a horse mane, becomes a cowherd after being reprimanded by the management for killing his horse in a race with a car. On this occasion, the relationship between Yanjmaa, a driver who came to the collective, Gonchig, who comes to trade for personal gain, and Dondog, a horseman, was shown in light comedy.

Harvest Moon (2023)
Harvest Moon (2023)
Tulgaa returns to his native village to care for his dying stepfather, honouring his remaining commitments by offering to lend a hand with the summer harvest. But upon witnessing Tulgaa’s clumsy first attempts, Tuntuulei, a sassy 10-year-old boy, takes it upon himself to school the city slicker on the grassland ways. Despite getting off on the wrong foot, the two soon find common ground and form a delicate bond that will transform their lives.

Khukhuu Almost Gets Married (1962)
Khukhuu Almost Gets Married (1962)
The work tells about the difficulties encountered in the lives of young people who went on a campaign to acquire vast land, and how they overcome them in an exaggerated comic tone. The plot of the film is highlighted by the fact that the empty dreamer and pride of the main character Cuckoo leads him to funny events.

What Obsticles Are Becoming for Us? (1956)
What Obsticles Are Becoming for Us? (1956)
In the middle of the 1950s, the harmful effects of the old social customs, rigidity, and bureaucracy in the forward development of social life were shown in a comical tone in connection with the incident where an old man with a dam entered the city to look for parts for a haymaking machine.

Ah, These Girls! (1963)
Ah, These Girls! (1963)
After hearing that Jamts, the head of the union, is reluctant to hire women, his son's fiancee Dulamsuren disguises herself as a man and shows how she overcomes those who underestimate the power of women in an exaggerated comical tone.

The Taste of the Wind (1960)
The Taste of the Wind (1960)
This film is intended to promote the mass movement of physical education to the masses. Choijil, a boastful young man with a tendency to ignore everything, meets Densmaa at a party and dreams of her. On the weekend, Densmaa and Yanjmaa suggested to Choijil that they go skiing on the mountain, but he agreed, even though he had never put a ski on his feet, and told the two girls how he was having fun.

Rising Through the Ranks (1965)
Rising Through the Ranks (1965)
On the way to Taij Miji's capital city, where Bogd made a big offering, was given a rank, and received honors, two servants named Boroldoi and Doldoi always overcome him with eloquent tricks.

New Year (1954)
New Year (1954)
When the young man foreman fulfilled his plan ahead of time and told his mother that he had celebrated the New Year in advance with his friends, the young man's mother mistakenly thought that he and the lady from the neighboring family were going to get married. works are reflected.