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Three Stooges - G.I. Stooge by Del Lord, Jules White
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DVD Cover InformationActor: Curly Howard, Evelyn Young, Larry Fine, Moe Howard, Richard Fiske Director: Del Lord, Jules White Brand: Sony Producer: Jules White Writer: Clyde Bruckman Writer: Ewart Adamson Writer: Felix Adler Writer: Jack White Writer: Searle Kramer DVD: Region Code 99 Audio: English (Unknown); English (Original Language) Format: Black & White, Closed-captioned, DVD, NTSC, Subtitled Picture Format: 1.33:1 Running Time: 123 minutes DVD Release Date: 2002-10-08 Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated) Studio: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
Movie Reviews of Three Stooges - G.I. StoogeMovie Review: WOW!!!!!!! Summary: 5 Stars
This DVD is amazing. I'm serious!! Columbia actually put a lot of effort into making this DVD. The quality is astounding. It looks like Columbia finally opened the doors to the room where they keep the original 35mm prints. All shorts look really good. On the VHS, Columbia used bad prints for "Back From The Front" and "No Dough Boys", but not here. Columbia used the best prints out there. I guess Columbia read all of the complaints people wrote here and they finally got the message. Out of all The Three Stooges DVDs that were made, this one looks the best. So, go ahead and buy it. You won't believe that it was Columbia who made this DVD.
Summary of Three Stooges - G.I. StoogeFun with The Three Stooges in six zany episodes: Boobs in Arms (1940): The troops on both sides are in real trouble when Moe, Larry and Curly are enlisted by a jealous husband who also happens to be a sergeant. "Friendly fire" takes on a whole new meaning as they attempt to defend themselves with a canister of laughing gas and their plan backfires. Back From the Front (1943): After merchant mariners Moe, Larry and Curly mistake a torpedo for a whale and accidentally cause it to explode, they find themselves cast away at sea in a lifeboat...until they board a Nazi warship and make an even bigger mistake. G.I. Wanna Go Home (1946): When Moe, Larry and Curly are dis-charged, they go from bunkers to bunk beds upon learning that they now have no home and there are no vacancies to be had anywhere. With their fiancees, they move into a vacant lot and make the most of it, until a farmer forces them to move on. Wee Wee Monsieur (1938): They?ll always have Paris...even if Paris wouldn?t have them! Moe, Larry and Curly are having a hard time making it as artists, which means they have no means to pay for rent or food. An assignment with the French Foreign Legion might be just the solution. No Dough Boys (1944): Mistaken for Japanese saboteurs after posing in make up to look like Japanese soldiers for a magazine ad, Moe, Larry and Curly decide to stay undercover and fight the high-ranking German spies into whose hideout they?ve stumbled. Dizzy Pilots (1943): It seems nothing goes right when Moe, Larry and Curly attempt to prove to the military that they can fly their airplane, the Buzzard. But it?s not only their egos that are inflated, and Moe appears headed for a crash landing.
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