Written by: Jon Guzik
The third movie of a trilogy is a tough nut to
crack, since movie franchises run out of steam by a third film. The Hangover Part III, while it falls into
this category of threequels, it's ultimately a funny, intense, and satisfying end
to the “Wolf-Pack Saga”. Following 2009’s
freshly hilarious original and 2011’s copycat abysmal sequel, this third entry
mixes up the formula of the first 2 for a much more original idea. At certain times throughout the movie I was
wondering if I was watching an action thriller or a comedy. The opening sequence in particular feels
somewhat out of place amongst some of the more childish antics witnessed over
the past 2 films. The focus also has been
moved more to Alan (Zach Galifianakis), in which it is up to Stu (Ed Helms),
Phil (Bradley Cooper), and Doug (Justin Bartha) to bring him to rehab because
he’s acting even more ridiculous than normal being off his medication for 6
months.
That’s when things get a little crazy, and instead
of a hangover to deal with, the Wolf Pack must deal with a gangster named Marshall
(John Goodman, channeling his best Walter Sobchak here). He stops them on their way to drop Alan off
at rehab, when Marshall explains that Black Doug (Mike Epps) works for him, and
that Chow (Ken Jeong) stole over $20 million in gold from him, both of which
set in motion the story that started all the way back in The Hangover. Marshall then kidnaps White Doug and threatens
that if Chow isn’t delivered to him, Doug will die. That sets in motion the traveling the three
of them do just to look for Chow. Now
although Galifianakis and Jeong can be very funny at times, putting their
characters as the main focus of this movie seems a little much, leaving
characters like Stu and Phil with not much to do, therefore giving the cast a very unbalanced feel. It’s still fun to see these characters
interact again-especially now that Alan has a love/hate relationship with the
wolf pack (loves Phil and his shirts, hates Stu).
"You think I'm fucking around here? Mark it zero!"
Taking the gang to Mexico seemed like an obvious
choice, and giving a sense of closure by bringing us back to Vegas was a nice
touch. We even get some fun cameos,
including Carlos from the first movie, and Melissa McCarthy playing a pawn shop
owner with the hots for Alan. Not every
character has good moments, Doug is as useless as ever just being a plot point
for the kidnapping, and Marshall played by Goodman is pretty menacing at times,
but ultimately is only in a few scenes and the character was basically a throw
away. That being said, I found myself
laughing throughout most of the film, which is certainly more than I can say
for Part II.
Mixing up the formula from the first/second films,
Hangover Part III is a pretty uneven movie.
It almost seems like an action thriller with funny scenes, rather than
the other way around. Most of the
characters are very funny to watch, and have some great lines (“I’ve got a
pretty dope sense of humor, brah”). Not
as funny and refreshing as the original, but light-years better than the
sequel, Hangover Part III has some genuinely laugh-out loud moments and is a
fitting end to the Wolf Pack Trilogy, just don’t get this film confused with
Bad Boys.
Grade:
B