The Three Stooges -2012- Dual Audio - Eng-hindi
Remember the glorious whack, the wild eyes, the pie-to-the-face perfection? The Three Stooges (2012) revives those instincts for a new generation—complete with modern touches, celebrity cameos, and a surprising amount of heart beneath the custard. If you value physical comedy and unapologetic silliness, this remake is a nostalgic sugar rush.
The film re‑imagines the classic comedy trio—Larry, Curly, and Moe—in a modern, action‑driven setting. The three bumbling heroes, now adult men living in a cramped New York apartment, are recruited by a secret government agency to infiltrate a high‑tech crime syndicate led by the villainous Mack. The mission forces the Stooges to juggle their trademark slap‑stick antics with high‑stakes espionage, culminating in a chaotic showdown atop a skyscraper construction site. The story balances nostalgic physical comedy (pie‑throwing, eye‑poke gags) with contemporary set‑pieces (laser grids, car chases) and includes several homages to the original 1930s–1950s shorts.
The story follows the trio from their infancy, where they are dumped on the doorstep of an orphanage, to their adulthood.
The film follows Moe, Larry, and Curly (played brilliantly by Chris Diamantopoulos, Sean Hayes, and Will Sasso) as orphans who grow up at a Catholic abbey. To save their childhood home from foreclosure, they venture into the modern world—only to stumble into a murder plot, a reality TV show, and a shady couple (Sofia Vergara and Craig Bierko). The story is just a clothesline to hang gags on, and that’s exactly how a Stooges movie should be.
The Three Stooges (2012) is a modern revival of the iconic American vaudeville and comedy trio. Directed by the Farrelly brothers, the film attempts to translate the frenetic, physical comedy of the 1930s and 40s into a contemporary setting. This report analyzes the film's narrative structure, performance, and the specific utility of the "Dual Audio" format for diverse audiences. The Three Stooges -2012- Dual Audio Eng-hindi
| Aspect | English Version | Hindi Version | |--------|----------------|---------------| | Voice Casting | Original actors (Diamantopoulos, Hayes, Sasso) | Prominent Indian dubbing artists: Rajendra S (Larry), Amitabh S (Moe), Rajesh K (Curly). Female lead voiced by Neha Kakkar (pop singer turned voice actor). | | Cultural Adaptation | Retains classic 1930s‑style slap‑stick jokes. | Added a few Hindi idioms, Bollywood references (e.g., “jaisa Bollywood ka hero”). These additions were vetted by a script‑localization team to avoid breaking the timing of visual gags. | | Technical Implementation | 5.1 Dolby Digital; default English track on most releases. | Parallel 5.1 track; selectable via audio menu; subtitle options for both languages. | | Distribution Channels | Theatrical (US/Europe), DVD/Blu‑ray, Netflix, Amazon Prime (English). | DVD/Blu‑ray (dual‑audio), Indian streaming platforms (Hotstar, JioCinema), regional TV broadcast (dubbed version). | | Marketing | Trailer focused on “the Stooges return” with classic slap‑stick clips. | Trailer dubbed in Hindi, featuring the Hindi voice cast and a tagline: “तीन मूर्खों की नई दहलीज – अब हिंदी में!” (“A new level of three fools – now in Hindi!”). |
| Aspect | Rating (out of 5) | |------------|------------------------| | Physical Comedy | 4.0 | | Story | 2.5 | | Lead Performances | 4.5 | | Hindi Dubbing Quality | 4.0 | | Rewatch Value | 3.5 |
Overall: 3.7/5
The Three Stooges (2012) is not a great movie—it’s a great Stooges movie. It understands that some humor is timelessly dumb. The Dual Audio (Eng+Hindi) version makes it accessible to a wider Indian audience, turning a nostalgic American slapstick into a cross-cultural laugh riot. Grab some popcorn, gather your friends (or your noisy nephews), and prepare for 90 minutes of harmless, brain-off entertainment. Just don’t try the eye-poke at home. Remember the glorious whack, the wild eyes, the
Watch it for: Will Sasso’s Curly falling into a fountain.
Skip it if: You expect character development.
Best enjoyed in: Hindi dub for family viewing; English original for purists.
Review by a comedy enthusiast who still thinks a pie in the face is peak cinema.
The 2012 film The Three Stooges is a modern-day slapstick comedy directed by the Farrelly brothers, designed to honor the classic 1925–1970 comedy trio. While originally released in English, the film is widely available in dual-audio formats (English and Hindi) on various digital platforms. Film Overview
Plot: The story follows the "knuckleheaded" trio—Moe, Larry, and Curly—as they venture out of their childhood orphanage to raise $830,000 to save it from foreclosure. Along the way, they accidentally stumble into a murder plot and a reality TV show. The story follows the trio from their infancy,
Structure: Unique for a feature film, it is divided into three distinct segments, each roughly 27 minutes long, mimicking the format of the original theatrical shorts. Lead Cast: Chris Diamantopoulos as Moe. Sean Hayes as Larry. Will Sasso as Curly.
Supporting Cast: Includes Jane Lynch, Sofía Vergara, Jennifer Hudson, and Larry David. Technical Specifications
The 2012 reimagining of The Three Stooges , directed by Peter and Bobby Farrelly, serves as both a modern comedy and a meticulous tribute to the legendary vaudeville trio. While the film faced the monumental task of updating a comedic style nearly a century old, it succeeded primarily through the transformative performances of its leads and its dedication to the spirit of the original shorts. A Loyal Re-Enactment
The film’s greatest strength lies in its central casting. Chris Diamantopoulos (Moe), Sean Hayes (Larry), and Will Sasso (Curly) do more than just imitate; they inhabit the physical language of the original Stooges. Every eye-poke, double-slap, and "nyuck-nyuck" is executed with the precise timing and sound effects that defined the 1930s era. The Farrelly brothers even structured the movie into three "episodes," a direct nod to the short-film format that made the original trio household names. Modernizing a Classic Premise
The plot updates the Stooges by placing them in a 21st-century setting, following the trio as they leave their childhood orphanage to raise $830,000 to save it from foreclosure. This journey forces their dated, slapstick sensibilities to clash with modern pop culture, most notably during a subplot involving the cast of Jersey Shore
. While some critics found the modern references—such as reality TV fame and smartphone gags—to be anachronistic, others argued it was exactly how the original Stooges would have interacted with the world today.