A lot of these are pretty tangential, but it's kind of a thin genre. Please look all of these up before watching. A lot of them are old movies that have a lot of bad jokes and upsetting things mixed in with the good jokes.
Blazing saddles is about racism and to an extent capitalism
Clerks is kind of about bullshit jobs, with two gen x slackers doing everything but their non-jobs as they muse about life and star wars. Check the content warnings first, it's got some jokes that aren't great mixed in with the fun stuff.
Trading places is interesting from a historical perspective, in that some normal people pull one over on rich people, but the prestige has them becoming rich people instead of changing anything. Again, lots of bad jokes so check a content warning first.
The blues brothers touches on the carceral state. The plot is that the catholic orphanage that where the blues brothers were raised is at risk of being foreclosed by the bank, so they go on a holy mission to raise enough money to save the orphanage by assembling a bunch of great musicians to form a power band. Along they way they fight nazis, racists, cops, the illinois national guard, and Carrie Fisher armed with a flame througher. Again, old movie, check the content warnings, there are some gross bits.
Actually the 80s were full of "plucky kids try to stop crooked developers from bulldozing the library/community center/old folks home to build a mall" plots.
Iirc o brother where art thou features a bunch of stuff about depression era economic violence as a background theme.
American Psycho is a horror/comedy in the starkest, most pitch black way, that is a scathing condemnation of the failsons that rule the world. It's extremely violent and horrible, please look up some content warnings before going in.
Goodbye, Lenin's premise is that a woman in the gdr falls in to a coma in 1989 and wakes up after reunificationer. Her child tries to shield her from what happened after the fall of communism. Unfortunately it's a twenty year old movie and i don't remember what it's take on capital is. Hmm. Reading the plot description on the wiki it sounds pretty brainworms. Might be worth looking at as a historical document.
Wristcutters (cw: suicide) has some simle critiques about the meaninglessness and alienation of capitalist labor. I cannot stress enough that while this is a funny, charming, lighthearted, and very humane movie the characters are in an afterlife for people who died of suicide and that is a constant theme.
Charlie Chaplin's Modern Times is worth a look. One of the classics of cinema, and a great example of Charlie's sublime skill as an entertainer.
The keystone kops comedies from the early 20th might be worth a look, too.
Robocop is a very smart skewering of the corporate brutality of the 80s and of police violence masquerading as a copaganda crime exploitation movie. It's very over-the-top violent, as it is satirizing contemporary police crime movies and middle class panic over urban crime.check the content warnings, it's very violent. It's Verhoeven to give you an idea of what you're getting in to.
Total Recall is another Verhoeven movie with some anti-capitalist themes. A core plot point is the corporate dictator of mars using his control over oxygen to discipline the working class. As with everything in the 80s, content warnings abound.
Fifth Element is an action comedy where the plot is driven by a CEO's insatiable greed. It's very horny, has some bad depictions of indigenous liberation movements, and a lot of shooting. Check the content warnings.
Newsies is a musical about the 1899 newsboys strike, from disney of all companies. Capitalist recuperation in action.
The men who stare at goats is tangentially related to capitalism as a satire of the absurdity and weirdness of the mic
The pentagon wars is an old classic about mic corruption and America's inability to make a tank that isn't an embarassment
Thank you for smoking is a black comedy about the tobacco industry, lobbyists, and propaganda
Reading the plot description on the wiki it sounds pretty brainworms.
Yeah, Goodbye Lenin is definitely that. It's been a while since I've seen it, but iirc at the end of the movie, the mom goes on a rant about how she used to believe in socialism until she realized how terrible it was
IDK I think this is wrong comrade. The mother may have expressed criticisms of GDR at some point, I don't quite remember but I think that's ultimately fair. Generally she missed the GDR dearly. The entire plot of the movie is about a young man who was apolitical-to-reactionary learning there was something of serious value lost when the wall fell.
That resembled my interpretation as well. MC goes from typical youthful rebelliousness against authority aimed at the DDR (the strongest authority available to him) to fascination with West Germany to slow disillusionment with West Germany to recognition of the DDR's flaws but overall sadness at its loss, and coping with the meaning of its loss.
There's multiple stories told together though including family drama (and possibly some symbolic parallels between the mother and DDR itself) and coming of age moments, along with a lot of really dry/sarcastic humor. I personally recommend it. There's also some very subtle digs at capitalism like how after the wall falls he's often exhausted from working late (something that didn't happen under the DDR), which at one point results him falling asleep while he's supposed to be babysitting.
It's been over a decade since I've seen it, so you're probably right. I should probably just rewatch it at some point, since back then I had no idea what East Germany went through after reunification (Europe Since 1989: A History by Philipp Ther is a -ass book, but has some good parts in it about the former DDR).
Actually the 80s were full of "plucky kids try to stop crooked developers from bulldozing the library/community center/old folks home to build a mall" plots.
The Dirt Bike Kid : When his mother sends Jack off with money to buy groceries, he comes home with a magic supercharged dirt bike instead. His mother is furious, but when Jack uses the magic bike to save the local hot dog stand from the clutches of corrupt big business, he becomes the town hero.
Batteries Not Included : Aliens help a feisty old New York couple in their battle against the ruthless land developer who's out to evict them.
The more accurate genre description: "people unable to stop developers from bulldozing the library/community center/old folks home/etc inexplicably are rescued by some magic/aliens/Deus ExMachina/belief in the supernatural/etc"
It's very Capitalist Realism with a dubiously resolved happy ending tacked on. The 80s are so weird.