
EARTH ISN'T FUNNY 2026
"comedians kill aliens"
Lukas Silva's ultra-short 2026 mockumentary EARTH ISN'T FUNNY plunges a subway talk-show host and a grizzled homeless raconteur into a spiraling vortex of interstellar paranoia, psychedelic plant folklore, and off-the-cuff stand-up gold.
Director: Lukas Silva
Cast

Frequently Asked Questions
What is EARTH ISN'T FUNNY (2026) about?
A late-night subway talk-show host interviews a street philosopher whose ramblings pull them both into a vertiginous spiral of alien sightings, trippy anecdotes, and unplanned comedy sets. What begins as routine banter quickly curdles into a paranoid masterclass in cosmic absurdity.
Who directed EARTH ISN'T FUNNY?
Lukas Silva, who also stars as the talk-show host, guides the eight-minute odyssey with a director's eye for chaotic authenticity.
Who stars in EARTH ISN'T FUNNY?
The film features Lukas Silva, Liam McLeod, and Andrew Mulligan navigating the shifting sands between interview and interstellar hijinks.
Is EARTH ISN'T FUNNY (2026) worth watching?
At eight razor-sharp minutes, this micro-doc packs more laughs and existential wonder per frame than most features manage in two hours. Comedy fans and quick-bite viewers will relish its off-kilter charm and breakneck pacing.
How long is EARTH ISN'T FUNNY?
The film runs exactly eight minutes, perfect for a swift, mind-bending break between subway stops.
About EARTH ISN'T FUNNY (2026) — A madcap micro-doc where aliens, salvia, and stand-up collide
Lukas Silva's ultra-short 2026 mockumentary EARTH ISN'T FUNNY plunges a subway talk-show host and a grizzled homeless raconteur into a spiraling vortex of interstellar paranoia, psychedelic plant folklore, and off-the-cuff stand-up gold. Shot in eight brisk minutes yet packed with absurdist energy, the film stitches alien abduction lore onto the rawest nerves of modern urban life, turning a late-night subway ride into an impromptu rocket to the lunatic fringe. Expect rapid-fire jokes, sudden trips through wormholes of the imagination, and the uneasy realization that the weirdest creatures might already be sharing our subway cars.
Under Silva's wry direction and with Liam McLeod and Andrew Mulligan trading improvisational barbs, EARTH ISN'T FUNNY gleefully collapses genres—documentary grit meets surreal comedy—to ask whether the most alien encounter is simply another human voice shouting at 2 a.m. The result is a bite-size fever dream that leaves you questioning every stranger on the platform and giggling at the cosmic joke.