19 out of 28 people found the following review useful:
Classic comedy, but not for all tastes., 5 February 2003
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Author:
Michael DeZubiria (miked32@hotmail.com) from Luoyang, China
The Three Amigos is one of those movies that can be hugely entertaining and
amusing but only if you keep in mind that it is not a serious film. Chevy
Chase, Martin Short, and Steve Martin, some of the funniest men ever to work
in comedy, all team up here as The Three Amigos, a group of out of work
actors in early Hollywood cinema. The unfortunate thing is that this is not
a movie that is greater than the sum of its parts, since I would expect more
from actors with the caliber of Martin, Chase, and Short, even working
individually, but even the fact that they are all not used to their full
potential is not enough to bring down the rest of the comedy
here.
The story involves the three out of work silent film actors, who suddenly
find themselves unemployed and broke when they receive a telegram from a
small village in Mexico desperately asking their assistance. I liked how
clever the ploy was where the woman who sent the message was so poor that
she could not afford enough words to make her desires clear, so the Amigos
read the message and think that they are about to be paid a fortune just to
make an appearance in this village. Naturally they jump at the chance since
they have nothing better to do.
Most of the rest of the film deals with their adventures in this village,
which they are supposed to be protecting from an evil villain but do not
realize that this is real life until one of them gets shot. You would think
that they would have caught on sooner, but on the other hand, they DID
happen to stumble into the only tiny village in Mexico where no one speaks
Spanish, so it's not hard to understand why they thought the whole thing was
a set up. If I went to Mexico and was walking around a dusty village with
nothing but endless desert on every side and every single person was
speaking only English, I would also wonder what movie set I had just
wandered onto.
There is some interesting biblical content, which is made interesting really
only because of the great satire. As the Amigos are walking through the
valley in the shadow of death, they come upon not the talking bush or the
burning bush, but the SINGING bush, and can't seem to get it to stop singing
long enough to answer their question. `Will you please stop singing and tell
us if you are the singing bush!' There's a hilarious sequence right after
this about the invisible horseman, and just before was one of my favorite
moments in the entire film, when Chase attempts to get off his horse but
only succeeds in getting onto the horse next to him facing backwards and
seems to be unsure about what just happened.
A lot of this movie is made up of funny skits which are strung along a thin
and less than convincing clothesline of a plot, but even though the plot
itself is not very believable the movie is still very entertaining. There
are a lot of scenes that seem to go too far or just don't really seem to fit
with the rest of the film (such as the campfire scene where all the animals
join in to the campfire singing), but for the most part the comedy is very
good and there are a lot of memorable scenes (the canteen scene in the
desert for example, is one to remember!). Not a film that was meant to win
any Oscars, but there is definitely some great comic entertainment to be had
with The Three Amigos.
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