Their An exemplary amount of research and rehearsing went into constructing this film. In The Final Episode No Moe Mister Nice Guy, the knuckle headed ternion get to the bottom of a plot to mercy kill Lydia's (Sofia Vergara) husband Teddy (Kirby Heyborne), an old friend of the stooges. Episode The Bananas Split finds the pure of heart, dim of wit triumvirate all grown up and off into the real world where they desperately try to earn the $830,000 needed to save the orphanage from bankruptcy.
In Episode More Orphan Than Not, they subject the nuns who raise them to all sorts of mischievous torment (most notably Sister Mary Mengele, played by Larry David). Moe, Larry, and Curly are menaces as young children, but equally inseparable. Who will pay to see this? Will longtime fans of The Three Stooges embrace a one note homage that spans the course of a feature length film (if they wanted to revisit the characters doing the same shtick, wouldn't they just watch the originals?
Will the 18-25 year old demographic dash to see a black and white act from the '30s and '40s revived in 2012? But turning this into a theatrical release begs many questions namely, Why? Who exactly is this supposed to appeal to? If this weren't a movie, they'd certainly make a striking Vegas show. Their mannerisms, voices, and acting are sensationally accurate even their physical features are surprisingly close. Chris Diamantopoulos, Sean Hayes, and Will Sasso do an outstanding job imitating the most famous grouping of The Three Stooges (Moe Howard, Larry Fine, and Curly Howard, respectively).
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