The Three Stooges -2012- Dual Audio Eng-hindi [WORKING]

When the Farrelly brothers (Dumb and Dumber, There’s Something About Mary) announced a modern take on The Three Stooges, purists cringed, and casual fans raised an eyebrow. The 2012 film isn’t a reboot but a loving, time-warp homage to the original 1930s-50s shorts. And watching it in Dual Audio (English + Hindi) adds a surprisingly fun layer for Indian audiences. Here’s everything you need to know.

Upon release, The Three Stooges 2012 confused critics. However, the Dual Audio Hindi version found a second life in India.

Yes—if you love physical comedy, enjoy remakes that play as affectionate homages, or want a quick, silly escape. It’s not high cinema, but it’s a solid, fun tribute that introduces the Stooges to new audiences while giving longtime fans a few affectionate winks. The Three Stooges -2012- Dual Audio Eng-hindi

Unlike a standard reboot, the 2012 film, directed by the Farrelly brothers (known for Dumb and Dumber), ingeniously splits itself into three distinct acts.

Act 1: The Orphanage The film opens in 1975. The Stooges—Moe (Chris Diamantopoulos), Larry (Sean Hayes), and Curly (Will Sasso)—are abandoned at an orphanage run by the kind Sister Mary-Mengele (Larry David in a hilarious cameo). As children, they cause chaos but form an unbreakable bond. Fast forward 25 years: the orphanage is about to be shut down unless they raise $830,000. When the Farrelly brothers ( Dumb and Dumber

Act 2: The Reality TV Scam The Stooges venture into the modern world. They stumble upon a murder plot by a femme fatale (Sofia Vergara) who plans to kill her wealthy husband. The Stooges accidentally get hired as her personal "entourage." They are sent on a reality TV show (similar to Jackass) to earn the money. The gags are ferocious—from falling off construction sites to the classic "eye poke."

Act 3: The Redemption Eventually, the Stooges realize they are pawns in a crime. In a twist ending worthy of the original shorts, they save the orphanage, return the money, and end with a freeze-frame slap fight. If you hate eye-pokes, head-bonks, ladder falls, and

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.


If you hate eye-pokes, head-bonks, ladder falls, and seltzer water, stay away. The Farrellys understood that Stooges comedy is physical, loud, and silly. There’s no irony, no meta-jokes—just three guys hitting each other with pipes. Surprisingly, it works. A 20-minute sequence where Curly tries to fix a plumbing pipe and floods a mansion is a masterclass in Chaplin-esque chaos.

Downside: The movie drags in the middle when it tries to have a “plot.” Also, some jokes (like a prolonged scene involving a baby and a woodchipper) feel cruel rather than funny.

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.