We Hot American Summer does this as well.
Bad Guy trapped atop the Chicago skyscraper that has the tilted rhombus top.
It was actually added after the credits to the film later in its release, as part of 20th Century Fox’s campaign to create buzz for the film, which also involved giving out goodies at screenings (something they also did at screenings of Juno, I believe).
Idiocracy
Dodgeball has a nice long post-credit scene with the blond obnoxious gym-owner character gone to fat and gorging himself in despair; he looks at us and berates us for being such losers that we’re waiting around past the credits, and gets more and more deliberately pathetic, ending with him jiggling his now-giant manboobs at us <barf>.
The opening scene of “Plains, Trains and Automobiles” shows Neal Paige (Steve Martin) stuck in a long meeting that runs over due to the advertising executive’s indecision over the layout of some ad copy he’s been examining. It’s two days before Thanksgiving and Mr. Paige wants to get out of the meeting and go home to his family.
At the end of the movie after the credits have finished there is a scene of the same executive in the board room alone, still looking over the ad copy. On his desk are turkey bones and other entrails that suggest that he stayed at the office all this time to work over Thanksgiving.
Yes, I know it’s “Planes, Trains and Automobiles.” My mind is just not with it today for some reason. :smack:
I’ve always wondered if you can legitimately call them outtakes, when they make them intentionally.
There’s Something about Mary.
Various outtakes, bloopers and deleted scenes as I recall.
I was sad when Passion of the Christ didn’t have any outtakes or bloopers during the credits. And I sat through the whole thing!
South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut.