The critic on the radio station I Iisten to gave the movie 4 stars.  I'm really 
surprised how well this movie is being reviewed. 
 
Now if I could just get my wife to go with me to see it.
 
N'yuk, n'yuk, n'yuk!
 
JW
 
 
From: David Kusumoto <[email protected]>
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Friday, April 13, 2012 8:51 PM
Subject: [MOPO] OT: Soitanly! 3 Stooges Film Gets a Rave - from a WOMAN - in 
today's Times.


I did a double-take when I saw this.  Manohla Dargis has tagged the new "Three 
Stooges" movie as a "NY Times' Critic's Pick."  I've never met a woman who 
likes the Stooges, so to see one in print is surprising.  (Full review below.)  
The actor who plays Curly also got special raves.  The film, coming from the 
increasingly tame Farrelly Brothers, is also rated PG.  -d.



THURSDAY, APRIL 12, 2012 - MOVIE REVIEW
A NYT Critics' Pick
Wry and Subtle Jesting? Not Here, Knucklehead
"The Three Stooges,"
By MANOHLA DARGIS

     Every straight man has a stooge — Abbott had Costello, Crosby had Hope — 
the foil, the fool, the flunky, the goat. 
     But for much of their career, after splitting from a famous straight man, 
the Three Stooges had only one another to kick and slap around. 
     Beginning in the 1930s these immortal three ran amok for decades in some 
200 short films, busting guts and raking in cash. 
     Now, with stupidity a proud national pastime on the boob tube and off, the 
moment is ripe for a nyuk-nyuk revival, starting with "The Three Stooges: The 
Movie," Peter and Bobby Farrelly's thoroughly enjoyable paean to Moe, Larry and 
Curly and the art of the eye poke.
     Set in the present, the movie is a fictionalized origin story about three 
sort-of-lovable fools who could be known as Dumb, Dumber and Dumbest, as Peter 
Farrelly originally pitched the movie. 
     It's a perfect fit for the Farrellys, who have made a career out of idiocy 
in comedies like "Kingpin" and have recently stumbled with duds like "The 
Heartbreak Kid." 
     Written by the Farrellys and Mike Cerrone, "The Three Stooges" imagines a 
once-upon-an-orphanage time when three babies are tossed out of a speeding car 
at the feet of a nun whose name, Sister Mary-Mengele (Larry David in a habit 
and snarl), announces that the filmmakers won't be soft-pedaling their shtick.
     The nun's name proves something of a bait and switch because Sister 
Mary-Mengele turns out to be the most gleefully offensive jape in a movie 
that's more sweet than sour. That's par for the course for the Farrellys, whose 
vulgarity has always been leavened by their sense of decency and too frequently 
undermined by their sentimentalism. 
     Even so, while "The Three Stooges" has a few aww moments, as might be 
expected given that it's partly set in an orphanage, and although the Farrellys 
go soft on the Stooges' relationships, the filmmakers never lose sight of the 
crude comedy that inspired them. The Stooges' bonds of brotherhood may be 
strong, but they're ties forged by a choreographed roundelay of resonant whacks 
and other instances of extreme discipline and punishment.
     The unabashedly creaky story, divided into "episodes," follows the Stooges 
from infancy through childhood to nominal adulthood. By the time they're grown, 
physically if not in any other way, Moe (Chris Diamantopoulos), Larry (Sean 
Hayes) and Curly (Will Sasso) are forced to try and save the orphanage from the 
bad economy and other calamities. 
     Sent out into the world by the Mother Superior (Jane Lynch) with some cash 
and no worldly experience, the Stooges land first in an anonymous city and then 
in a noir intrigue with a femme fatale, Lydia (Sofia Vergara), and her lover, 
Mac (Craig Bierko). Trouble ensues along with a lion, a bear (oh my), the 
handsome guy from the Old Spice commercials (Isaiah Mustafa) and, in a sharp, 
funny stroke, some of the cast from "Jersey Shore."
     The Farrellys don't overtly mock the "Shore" personalities; there's no 
need for them to work that hard. Like some other reality TV stars (the Bravo 
housewives come to mind), characters like Snooki have assumed the function of a 
new kind of stooge. 
     In vaudeville the stooge's traditional role was to give the comic 
something to work off of, a straight line or a bit of business. The stooge 
tripped, acted silly, feigned being foolish. 
     The new stooge does pretty much the same thing, the difference being that 
reality-television celebrities have turned their lives (or some weird 
approximation of life) into vaudeville. Of course there's stupid and there's 
stupid, and the real Stooges, like the actors playing them in this movie, were 
performing dumbness, which pretty much seems the point here.
     And the three leads in "The Three Stooges" play dumb very well, 
particularly Mr. Sasso. 
     He beautifully captures Curly's facial contortions and vocalizations — 
woo-woo-woo — and, as important, the delicate physicality, the fluttering 
fingers and flapping feet. 
     Topped with Moe's bowl cut, Mr. Diamantopoulos bunches his face into a 
fist and hits his lines like a speed bag ("whatsthemattawithyou?"), while Mr. 
Hayes, crowned with Larry's tragically balding Afro and at times sounding like 
Bert Lahr's Cowardly Lion, seems to have more to do than the original Stooge 
ever did. 
     As usual the Farrellys give this movie about as much visual style as you'd 
find in a Stooges two-reeler, but, as with the original films, you may be too 
busy watching and laughing at Moe, Larry and Curly to care.
     At their best the Farrellys' movies exult in the stupid and the profane as 
a means of liberation, including from good taste, even if their characters tend 
to put away their freak flags at the end, often in the interest of a 
normalizing romance. 
     Much of the pleasure in "The Three Stooges" comes from watching and 
hearing (the boings and thumps are terrific) grown men smack each other silly 
in Rube Goldberg-like formations and without suffering so much as a single 
black eye, enduring psychological damage or, as bad, being forced to change. 
     Like Wile E. Coyote and those inflatable clowns that bounce back after 
every punch, the Three Stooges take plenty of hits but keep on coming. 
     They are, as the Farrellys understand, testaments to human resilience, one 
slap and tickle at a time.
     
"The Three Stooges" is rated PG. (Parental guidance suggested) but unwarranted.

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