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The Three Stooges Go Around the World in a Daze
stoogesdaze.jpg
Film poster
Directed byNorman Maurer
Produced byNorman Maurer
Written byNorman Maurer
Based onTemplate:Based on
StarringMoe Howard
Larry Fine
Joe DeRita
Jay Sheffield
Joan Freeman
Music byPaul Dunlap
CinematographyIrving Lippman
Editing byEdwin H. Bryant
Distributed byColumbia Pictures
Release date(s)
  • August 21, 1963 (1963-08-21) (U.S.)
Running time93:01
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Box office$1,000,000[1]

The Three Stooges Go Around the World in a Daze is the fifth feature film made by The Three Stooges after their 1959 resurgence in popularity. By this time, the trio consisted of Moe Howard, Larry Fine, and Joe DeRita (dubbed "Curly Joe"). Directed by Moe Howard's son-in-law Norman Maurer, the film was loosely based on the Jules Verne classic Around the World in Eighty Days.

Plot[]

Phileas Fogg III (Jay Sheffield), great-grandson of the original Phileas Fogg, accepts a bet to duplicate his great-grandfather's famous trip around the world in response to a challenge made by Randolph Stuart III, the descendant of the original Fogg's nemesis. He was to do this without any money, otherwise speedy modern travel would make it too easy to replicate the feat. Unbeknownst to anyone, however, "Stuart" is the infamous con man Vicker Cavendish (Peter Forster) who made the bet in order to cover up his robbing the bank of England by framing Fogg for the crime.

With him in this plot is his weaselly Cockney co-conspirator Filch (Walter Burke). This makes for a dangerous journey for Fogg and his servants (the Stooges) and Amelia Carter (Joan Freeman), whom they rescue from thugs during a train ride. On the way, they also: try to steal a cream pie from the galley of a Turkey-bound British cargo ship (and poke the cook in his fat behind with a fishing gaff in the process); watch an elaborate Indian dance at a maharajah's palace, where blind-as-a-bat Curly Joe also regales the maharajah and the viceroy with knife throwing—until his disguise falls off; get captured in China by the Chinese Army, and survive Communist brainwashing in Shanghai with their interrogators turning into Chinese Stooge clones (Moe tells the Chinese general, "No brainee to washee!").

The disgusted Chinese set them adrift in a small boat; use Curly Joe's music-provoked strength to cadge food, clothes, and a trip to San Francisco from the manager of the monstrous sumo Itchy Kitchy (Iau Kea) after a demonstration in a park in Tokyo; stow away in a moving van, supposedly headed for New York City. Of course, they are caught, and arrested in Canada by the British inspector (the Stooges and Amelia fake British accents so the inspector will arrest them too).

Back in London, they cross paths again with the two conspirators, again disguised as police—and armed. Of course, the Stooges win out, and, as with the original Phileas Fogg, his descendant miscalculated by one day and still has a chance. Curly Joe gets behind the wheel of the Bobby paddy wagon and speeds across London, and young Fogg wins the bet—crashing into the Reformer's Club with two seconds to spare.

Cast[]

  • Moe Howard as Moe
  • Larry Fine as Larry
  • Joe DeRita as Curly Joe
  • Jay Sheffield as Phileas Fogg III
  • Joan Freeman as Amelia Carter
  • Walter Burke as Lory Filch
  • Peter Forster as Vickers Cavendish/"Stuart"
  • Maurice Dallimore as Inspector J. B. Crotchet
  • Richard Devon as Maharajah
  • Anthony Eustrel as Kandu
  • Iau Kea as Itchi Kitchi
  • Robert Kino as Charlie Okuma
  • Phil Arnold as Referee
  • Emil Sitka as Butler at Reformer's Club
  • Laurie Main as a member of the Reformer's Club

Production[]

A number of Three Stooges scenarios are on display in this feature. Among them:

  • The Stooges working as domestic servants (and proving barely competent to do the job), while a number of people get cakes, pies, and other foodstuffs in the face as a consequence of Stooge mishaps, again as in An Ache in Every Stake (1941).
  • The Stooges – and, in this instance, their companion also - stowing away aboard a ship and having to scrounge for food, as in Dunked in the Deep (1949).
  • The third stooge, in this case Curly-Joe, acquiring uncontrollable berserker strength as a consequence of hearing “Pop Goes the Weasel”, then getting clobbered and almost losing a fight in the ring to a stronger opponent because Larry doesn’t have immediate access to a musical instrument on which to play “Pop Goes the Weasel”, again as in Punch Drunks (1934).
  • The maharajah routine (“Ma-ha.” “Ah-ha?” “Rajah!”) with Larry being used as a reluctant human target for a knife-throwing act, as in Three Little Pirates (1946).
  • The Stooges – and, in this case, their companions also – being captured by a military enemy, but not letting that stop them from bopping their interrogator, as in Boobs in Arms (1940).
  • The fight-in-the-room-with-the-lights-turned-out routine, as in Who Done It? (1949).
  • The Stooges – or in this instance an associate – being accused of a robbery, but ultimately capturing the crooks, recovering the loot, and clearing his name, as in Of Cash and Hash (1955).
  • The Stooges helping a colleague win the hand of the girl of his dreams, as in Knutzy Knights (1954).

Reception[]

Moe Howard expressed his fondness for The Three Stooges Go Around the World in a Daze in 1973, stating "that was a real smart film."[2]

See also[]

  • List of American films of 1963

References[]

External links[]



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