When I was about six or seven, I remember thinking the Three Stooges were very funny … about 20 minutes at a time. Time passed, and the Stooges became an affectionate memory. I took a trip down ...
The Holy Trinity of knockabout numbskull comedy—fritz-haloed Larry, yipping lummox Curly, and bowl-cut fascist Moe—are introduced as they’re ditched on the steps of an orphanage. Twenty-five years ...
The Farrelly brothers return to the vacuously silly style of Dumb and Dumber for this gently idiotic comedy that recreates the iconic knucklehead trio that epitomised movie slapstick from the 1930s to ...
The Three Stooges have always, and forever will be, the kings of slapstick comedy. Originally comprised of Moe Howard, Larry Fine, and Shemp Howard, the trio started as a vaudeville comedy act in the ...
Bobby Farrelly and his brother Peter Farrelly made a name for themselves in Hollywood with comedy classics Dumb & Dumber and There's Something About Mary, and now they're reviving Moe, Larry and Curly ...
Sean Hayes has insisted that the big screen adaptation of The Three Stooges remains faithful to the original TV series. The former Will & Grace star said that the cast and crew of the remake were ...
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Maybe it was just a matter of time before Peter and Bobby Farrelly, the brothers who wrote and directed the comedy "Dumb & Dumber," made a movie about their original dimwitted ...
The Three Stooges boast a legacy as one of the most influential comedy acts ever, but the changes to their lineup breed some confusion. Its hard to overstate the importance of the Three Stooges to ...
If Thanksgiving Week is powered by deviled eggs and green bean casserole, and Christmas Week finds its glittery get-up-and-go in ugly sweaters, hot cocoa, and sappy movies, then the start of the busy ...
There's no doubt about it: casting choices for the Three Stooges remake have definitely gone downhill. In retrospect, the project was nuts from the start. Why would two different studios--Warner Bros.
The Three Stooges didn’t invent physical farce and extreme slapstick. But they were the best at it. What began as a Vaudeville act in the 1920s made the leap to television and film, keeping audiences ...
600,000 square miles. Nowhere to hide.