If an above average original film surprises audiences and
scoops up plentiful box office treasures you can be assured to see the film
stem sequels hoping to replicate the originals success. Seen in 2009 after ‘The
Hangover’ thrilled audiences with its sudden surprising success and low budget,
a sequel was released two years later to worse reactions helming a plot
identical to that of its predecessor. Completing the franchise is this year’s ‘Hangover
part 3’ which instead boasts a different plot with the ‘wolf pack’ back to
handle the totally hilarious issue of Alan’s mental illness, and this time fails to include
an actual hangover as well as any elements of surprise and also any genuine humour.
Alan (Zach
Galifianakis), the staple character of the previous two films is the initial centrepiece
of this films narrative, being taken by the loveable group of friends to a
mental home in order to recover. Being boasted in the films vast advertising campaign
‘This time, there's no wedding. No bachelor party.’ Instead we begin with an undoubtedly
bleak funeral which certainly sets the tone for the film which proves to be
just as unenjoyable. Being a camp, fun loving comedy necessity in the previous
two films, Alan seemingly transforms over a short period of time into an immensely
irritating man with the presence of an annoying ten year old child reluctantly being
towed along by friends Phil (Bradley Cooper) and Stu (Ed Helms). This leaves Mr
Chow ( Kim Jeong) in the comedic driving seat, used only sparingly in the
previous films but now used and abused until his brutishly insulting humour
smothers every corner of the screen, only occasionally to good comic effect.
This leaves nothing but the non-existent humour of Cooper and Helms to
entertain the audience, consistently resulting in overwhelming auditorium silence
due to the films poor screenplay.
So with the lack of
jokes what better to fill the film with obnoxious action scenes and totally irrelevant
and uninteresting scenes of drama between characters we don't even cared about?
Believing it’s something much bigger and better than it clearly is ‘The
Hangover part 3’ consistently delves into the deeper lives of characters we do
not wish to know about resulting in awkward scenes of drama which lead to
nothing and hold no comedic value or even dramatic impact. The lack of effort
here is blatantly obvious being arrogant and in your face, with the opportunity
to mix up the series and put a fresh spin on the franchise we thought we knew,
director Todd Phillips instead prefers to stick to linear guidelines creating
no comedic opportunities.
Disappointing is an
obvious word to use to describe this film however this is almost expected of
Hollywood that simply solely care about box-office intake rather than audience
satisfaction. The fact is that ‘the Hangover part 3’ is a very boring and
dislikeable film that holds very few redeeming qualities. It’s very rarely
funny, rarely thrilling, and in no way surprising. It’s just depressingly
unfunny.
3/10- As much fun as a hangover.
Calum Russell