No knuckleheads harmed, but two made this train wreck.
THE THREE STOOGES (2012)
Directed
by Bobby and Peter Farrelly
Fox
Searchlight, 92 mins. PG (for Pretty God-awful)
No
Stars
When you review things one is often
approached by others to opine on the best this, or the worst that. I often
dissemble in such situations. I recall the wisdom of the Dalai Lama. When asked
what the best religion is he replied, “It’s like asking, ‘What is the best
medicine?’ I say to you, that depends on what is wrong with you!”
Having just dissembled, I am now
prepared to say three things. First, this is probably the only time you will
ever hear the Dalai Lama invoked in any context involving the Farrelly
brothers. Second, viewing this piece of detritus is my own damn fault. I
usually avoid the Farrellys the way a teenager avoids a chastity sermon, but I
was told that The Three Stooges was
different and that I would be surprised. Third, I was surprised. I am prepared
to say that the Farrelly brothers’ take on The
Three Stooges wins an award. It is the single most inane, inept, and pathetic
effort at movie-making of the decade. The only—and
I mean only—thing that’s the slightest bit intriguing about this film is that
the three principals—Chris Diamantopoulous, Will Saso, and Sean Hayes—look a
lot like Moe, Curly, and Larry. As for the rest, what it lacks is everything.
That starts with the script.
Bobby Farrell and Mike Cerrone gave
the lads a biographical creation story–orphans tossed onto the steps of a
Catholic orphanage. The pratfall and violence-prone trio are, of course,
completely unadoptable and come of age (and beyond) under the tutelage of nuns,
half of whom love the lads and half of whom consider alternative vocations every
time they’re in their presence. For the record, the actual Three Stooges grew
up in lower middle-class New York City Jewish
families, not a Catholic orphanage. If this were the only thing wrong with the
script, it would only be a small scrap, not the complete landfill that it is. I
will concede that the material of the original act wasn’t exactly written by
Talmudic scholars, but Farrell and Cerrone have plumbed new depths of stupidity
in a story arc that involves, among things, a nun played an actor in drag
(Larry David), an effort to save the orphanage, nuns in thongs, and close encounters of the
worst kind with the cast of Jersey Shore.
Stop, you guys are killing me!
The actors look the part, but they
lack the timing of the original Stooges, the special effects are more
ham-handed than those of the 1930s and 40s, and the saccharine sentimentality
of the story robs the Stooges of one of the things that made them “funny” (for
those who thought they were): their meanness. Let’s face it, true comedy is
mean; there is always a butt of every joke and the Three Stooges often cast
themselves as both punch lines and punching bags. When the Stooges took on outsiders, it was generally those
in positions of authority (like nuns, for instance). In most episodes, the boys
(sort of) bonded, but each was a walking id—no filters, no grand plans, and
“soitantly” no sentimentality.
Leave it to the Farrelly brothers to
be even more base and stupid than Moe, Curly, and Larry. Compared to Bobby and
Peter, the Three Stooges have the wisdom and intellectual heft of, well, the
Dalai Lama.
Very well written review! I agree with you on what the ‘PG’ rating stands for for The Three Stooges, but I think this movie stayed true to the annoying comedy of the originals. I’m not sure why I wanted to see this movie, or why I stopped my girlfriend from shutting it off halfway through, but I watched it in full just as I have in the past when I ran across an episode on TV. I thought we would spend the night watching good comedy through my Hopper’s Blockbuster @Home app with no worries of having to leave the house to do so. I’m so glad that I didn’t waste gas or the time to actually GO see this movie. I definitely shouldn’t have listened to one of the security guards who works at the same DISH call center as I do, who raved that The Three Stooges is great for all ages. I seriously need to admit to my self that I don’t like slapstick comedy, and I need to quit trying.
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