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The Three Stooges

  • Téléfilm
  • 2000
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 28min
NOTE IMDb
6,9/10
2,2 k
MA NOTE
Michael Chiklis, Paul Ben-Victor, and Evan Handler in The Three Stooges (2000)
BurlesqueBiographieComédieDrame

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA biography of the Three Stooges, in which their careers and rise to fame is shown throughout the eyes of their leader, Moe Howard.A biography of the Three Stooges, in which their careers and rise to fame is shown throughout the eyes of their leader, Moe Howard.A biography of the Three Stooges, in which their careers and rise to fame is shown throughout the eyes of their leader, Moe Howard.

  • Réalisation
    • James Frawley
  • Scénario
    • Michael Fleming
    • Janet Roach
    • Kirk Ellis
  • Casting principal
    • Paul Ben-Victor
    • Evan Handler
    • John Kassir
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,9/10
    2,2 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • James Frawley
    • Scénario
      • Michael Fleming
      • Janet Roach
      • Kirk Ellis
    • Casting principal
      • Paul Ben-Victor
      • Evan Handler
      • John Kassir
    • 63avis d'utilisateurs
    • 6avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 2 victoires et 1 nomination au total

    Photos14

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    Rôles principaux51

    Modifier
    Paul Ben-Victor
    Paul Ben-Victor
    • Moe Howard
    Evan Handler
    Evan Handler
    • Larry Fine
    John Kassir
    John Kassir
    • Shemp Howard
    Michael Chiklis
    Michael Chiklis
    • Jerome 'Curly' Howard
    Rachael Blake
    Rachael Blake
    • Helen Howard
    Anna Lise Phillips
    Anna Lise Phillips
    • Mabel Fine
    • (as Anna-Lise Phillips)
    Jeanette Cronin
    Jeanette Cronin
    • Gertrude Howard
    Joel Edgerton
    Joel Edgerton
    • Tom Cosgrove
    Marton Csokas
    Marton Csokas
    • Ted Healy
    Linal Haft
    Linal Haft
    • Harry Cohn
    Brandon Burke
    Brandon Burke
    • Harry Romm
    Lewis Fitz-Gerald
    Lewis Fitz-Gerald
    • Jules White
    • (as Lewis Fitzgerald)
    Peter Callan
    Peter Callan
    • Joe DeRita
    Laurence Coy
    • Joe Besser
    Phillip Hinton
    • Judge
    Peter Whitford
    Peter Whitford
    • Administrator
    David Whitford
    David Whitford
    • Bailiff
    Harry Weiss
    • Solomon Horwitz
    • Réalisation
      • James Frawley
    • Scénario
      • Michael Fleming
      • Janet Roach
      • Kirk Ellis
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs63

    6,92.2K
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    tostinati

    All the problems of a typical film biography

    The surprise is, or should have been, anyway, that a film about comedy legends is as morose and depressing as this one. Maybe given the usual pandering level of made for TV biographies, this isn't that surprising. After all, everyone 'knows' that every comedian is a noble, weeping clown. Right? --Or if not, it's just the sort of juicy, clichéd skew the makers of biographies can't resist.

    I would classify the entire film biography form as one of the last bastions of detectably (not delectably, unless you're John Waters) unselfconscious, pre-ironic Corn. As such, it is an area riper than most for satire and parody. To much of the modern audience, this will pose obvious problems. So I wondered, as I caught more than enough of this film, who can be the typical viewer for this kind of thing. You don't go to film biographies for the truth, the inside scoop, and you don't go there (and certainly not in the case of this film) for a feel-good wallow. Why DO you go there?

    This film highlights two critical problems faced by all makers of film biographies, those for the cheap screen (TV) and those for the too-expensive screen (aka The Big Screen). One is finding an apt impersonator for a high profile person whose mug, body language and delivery are seared into the brain of several generations by high level exposure to their shtick. Those casting these films (like the recent Lucille Ball/Desi Arnaz TV flick) can cleave two distinct ways: Accommodate the literal-minded by casting physical dead ringers (the trade-off being that they may not project the subject very well at all) OR pick someone who is not a physical match, but seems to capture the essence (the obvious problem there is how someone who looks nothing like you captures your essence; not out of the question, but seldom pulled off). The casting here is only serviceable. The way you know this is about the Three Stooges is because of their hair. Period. (One is reminded of the Stooges short wherein Moe, playing Hitler, shouts at the guy who swipes his mustache "You've stolen my personality!")

    The other big problem is the telescoping or condensing of what may have happened over days or weeks into one impossibly pregnant instant. These instants (which seem to happen only in film bios and really bad drama TV series and made-for-TV movies) always remind me of the moment in those late 30s musicals when Mickey Rooney rallies the kids with "C'mon kids, let's put on a show!" and on the spot everyone agrees, and everything falls right into place. --Where in real life a muddled period of investigating options and making plans would lead more or less ploddingly to a breakthrough.

    These films cheat NOT by cutting to the chase, which is always necessary in film, but in the WAY they cut to it. Highly condensed moments never happen this way in real life. It's just bad writing. I know art is not real life, but really good film manages to convey the feel of the way things happen in life. Sometimes total fiction films do it. That's part of the art of film. (Really good comics manage to do it too, even if you can count on the fingers of one hand the strips or books that have managed to rise to that level.) The trite stuff, the rubbish, always rings false, usually comically so. An example: '1955' the screen says. Two of the Stooges are obviously at a funeral. Larry asides to Moe "Shemp always gave his best; he really put his heart into everything he did." Moe back to Larry, with a sanctimonious smirk: "Yes, but he was always overshadowed by Curly." Fade out. That's the entire funeral scene.

    Now hold on there. I realize some condensation has to take place if you are showing entire lives in a couple of hours. That isn't my complaint. It is the unlikeliness and poor positioning of dialog such as this one that undercut the entire form. If Larry and Moe sat and reflected half an hour a day for two weeks after Shemp's funeral, a fly on the wall might digest what they were saying into "Yes, but he was always overshadowed by Curly." But who can believe for an instant that anyone would speak those words over a coffin? And when Moe pretends to two-finger poke a new manager in the eye, he immediately takes a moment out to explain to the manager --but, duh, really to us-- that "That's how we do it, make contact with the brow bone, not the eyes; looks real on film though." Hoo-boy.

    Even big films like Pollack have had the same sort of problem. When art phonies corner Pollack between benders and affairs, and simper on about how he is creating "the only meaningful painting these days", you don't believe it for a second. In real life, Pollack would have dismissed these knuckleheads who talk like they write, rolled out the yard goods, uncapped the paint and called up a liquor store that delivers. Not in film bio land, though: When fools talk, mouthing the most absurd dialog ever, everyone listens with a straight face. All film biographies, even the big ones, seem to exist in an abstract never never land that feels like a gloss and collage of newspaper clippings. They are uninspired highlight reels.
    JohnnyReb

    A LABOR OF LOVE FOR MEL GIBSON

    In all the comments I have read before this one, not one mention of the man responsible for the production was Australian actor, Mel Gibson. Gibson, a life-long fan of the Stooges, was the executive Producer of the Film and put up most of the money for the production.(He even did a Stooges routine in the opening scene of Lethal Weapon). And it was filmed entirely in Australia. It is a shame that no American Studio thought enough of them to make the film.

    The film was a wonderful tribute to the Stooges and the portrayals were magnificent. Here it is two years later and the movie is still not available on Video. How fortunate I was to tape the movie (less commercials), so that I have enjoyed it time and again since I first saw it. I do hope ABC will repeat it or Cable will pick it up to screen on the TRUE Channel.

    JohnnyReb
    10Brent457

    Excellent

    I did like the fact that the film didn't dwell so much on the comedy part of the Stooges.. although the re-creation of some of their classic routines was excellent.. The film was entertaining because it was a story about the Howard brothers.. Not to forget Larry.

    I was fortunate to meet Larry when I was a child. He was doing a personal appearance at Hess's Department store .. and as a 7 year old who loved seeing the Stooges on TV.. he was a very nice and also a very gracious man.

    I do think that it could have been a bit longer .. the film seemed to rush from Curly's stroke in 1947.. right to 1955 with very little about Shemp.. Also there was very little about Joe DeRita..

    However all in all .. a very enjoyable film.. even for the non-stooges fan.. whoever you are :)
    yenlo

    Behind the antics were professionals.

    A fairly decent made for TV movie, which depicts the beginnings and rise to fame of The Three Stooges. The film concentrates mainly on the behind the scene part of the Stooges lives and career. From their early days with Ted Healy who is portrayed as a somewhat tyrannical figure. The discovery of Larry Fine, the departure of Shemp and the addition of Moes younger brother Curly to the act. Their signing with Columbia Pictures to make the now classic shorts. The sad loss of Curly which led to the return of Shemp to the trio. The lean years before a return to a new generation of fans. The film covers several years and is compressed well for a two-hour movie.

    It also shows that behind the zany antics the Stooges were known for it wasn't nearly all fun and games. They were entertainers who paid their dues, encountered ruthless studio bosses and even at times the general public who could confuse what they saw on the screen with reality. After seeing this made for TV picture you'll still laugh when you watch the old Columbia shorts and films the Stooges appeared in. You may however find yourself having a greater appreciation for these entertainers whose profession was comedy and took as much pride in what they did as any other professional in the world of show business.
    CurtisG-3

    A touching look at the men behind the nyuks.

    It's a fact of life: Men think the Three Stooges are hilarious, and most women just don't get them. But women might want to give them a second chance after seeing this touching biography.

    The thing that struck me most about the Three Stooges movie was its tone. This was a film made by people who genuinely cared about the Three Stooges, people who wanted to express their appreciation by giving the world a glimpse of the men behind the laughs. The Stooges were comic geniuses, but they were human and fragile, just like the rest of us. Sure it was sappy at times, and sometimes seemed to gloss over or omit certain events, but hey--you can't show thirty years in two hours without missing something. Especially poignant was the relationship between Moe and his "little" brother Curly.

    Told mostly in flashbacks, The Three Stooges follows the boys from their Vaudeville days with Ted Healy to their triumphant return to the stage after the first TV showing of their two-reel shorts. The reality was that Columbia pictures was making a mint off the Stooges films, but their contract cut them out of any profit-sharing. Anxious to get back to the stage and enjoy some of the fame they've earned, Moe, Larry, and Joe "Curly Joe" DeRita agree to make the first of many personal appearances at a TV station. The final scene has Moe, Larry, and Curly Joe taking the stage for the first time in years.

    I'm not ashamed to admit it: When the curtain went up and the surviving Stooges looked out at the packed house, I cried. Maybe because the Stooges are a part of my history--a good and happy part--the way they're a part of the history of every kid who grew up watching their antics.

    It's not perfect, but it's the best there is. At the very least, it's a good Stooges primer and a stepping stone to further Stooge research. The Stooges will never go away, because let's face it: As long as men are men, the Three Stooges will be their comic heroes.

    Histoire

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    Le saviez-vous

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    • Anecdotes
      Epilogue: "Following their triumphant return to the stage, The Three Stooges became one of the most popular--and best paid--live comedy acts in America. Joe DeRita died in 1993. He always said that his years with The Stooges were the best of his life. Larry Fine suffered a stroke in 1970. He died in January 1975 at the age of 72. He remained a free spender up until the end. Moe Howard followed his lifelong friend and partner four months later. His passing marked the end of one of the most durable acts in comic history. In their 24-year career their slapstick escapades, televised around the world, have inspired a generation of comedians. They remain a favorite of all ages."
    • Gaffes
      Curly Howard did not suffer his career ending stroke during the filming of a scene of Half-Wits Holiday (1947). It happened while he was offstage waiting for the scene to begin. He didn't respond when called, and Moe found him with his head slumped to his chest, unable to speak.
    • Citations

      [from Ants in the Pantry]

      Larry Fine: Oooh, I can't see, I can't see!

      Moe Howard: What's the matter?

      Larry Fine: I've got my eyes closed.

      [Moe eye pokes Larry again]

    • Connexions
      Edited into Hey Moe, Hey Dad!: A Stooge Is Born (2015)

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    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 24 avril 2000 (États-Unis)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Site officiel
      • YouTube - Video
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Los tres chiflados
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Sydney, Nouvelle-Galles du Sud, Australie
    • Sociétés de production
      • Comedy III Productions Inc.
      • C3 Entertainment Inc.
      • Columbia TriStar Television
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 28min(88 min)
    • Couleur
      • Color
      • Black and White
    • Mixage
      • Stereo
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.78 : 1

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