Scary Movie 3 Movie Review
Scary Movie 3 Review

"Scary Movie 3" Overview

Rating: R
2003
Cast and Crew
Director : David ZuckerProducer : Robert K. Weiss,David Zucker
Screenwiter : Craig Mazin,Pat Proft,Brian Lynch,Kevin Smith,David Zucker
Starring Anna Faris, Charlie Sheen, Simon Rex, Anthony Anderson, Regina Hall, Camryn Manheim, Leslie Nielsen, Jenny Mccarthy, Pamela Anderson, Eddie Griffin, Queen Latifah, Dl Hughley, Ja Rule, George Carlin
There are lots of ways to churn out sequels, particularly comedies. You can
speed along like a runaway train to capitalize on a surprise hit -- Miramax
rushed Scary Movie 2 into theaters one year after the original's release -- or
you can reset and go for broke. The latter approach seems to be the Scary Movie
3 motive, with new writers and veteran parody director David Zucker (Airplane!,
The Naked Gun) joining the fray. For its efforts, Miramax gets a perfectly
average movie, with fresh moments, lame retreads, and more opportunity for big
box office.
Scary Movie 3 sticks with the program: mind-bogglingly dumb characters hustle
their way through spoofs of the industry's most popular recent films. It's no
mistake that the roasted movies -- in this case: Signs, The Ring, and 8 Mile --
all pull in huge money and attract a young audience.
That demographic gets plenty to laugh at during the film's winking intro. Jenny
McCarthy and Pamela Anderson play two blond dimwits, mocking the open to The
Ring while joking about their real-life infamy, and um, enormous boobs. In true
Airplane! style, Zucker gives us a long look at Pam's ample set, giving Russ
Meyer a run for his D-cup-per-minute money.
The goofy playfulness continues as Charlie Sheen and Simon Rex take a stab at
Signs, playing a familiar pair of farmer brothers. When the pair admits that
their dogs are "acting strange," Zucker gives us the single funniest visual of
the movie, a throwback to some of the most absurd and creative moments of his
memorable parodies. While Scary Movie 3 has its amusing moments, the movie
never nails it that well again.
Zucker and the writing team (including Kevin Smith and the prolific Pat Proft)
do their best to balance the giggles between dialogue and slapstick, with both
used to fine effect during a rap showdown sequence. Too often, though, the
movie leans on the physical stuff too hard -- so hard that fighting becomes the
mode of humor. Queen Latifah gets into it with the spooky chick from the The
Ring, as do a few other stars in the film's incredibly thin 78 minutes. It gets
a little old. Zucker may be a semi-legend, but he hasn't directed a parody in
12 years, and he gave us My Boss's Daughter.
Scary Movie 3 does push through, and often succeeds, thanks to the silly energy
of its cast. Anna Faris leads the charge (she's been in all three movies) as
the perfectly ditzy know-nothing, Simon Rex is a charming numbskull, and
dependable Leslie Nielsen shows up to play the President. Zucker even throws
him a famous line from Airplane!, pleasing those of us that have seen that
classic too many times.
Months (weeks?) from now, Scary Movie 3 will make for great group viewing at
home, but considering it worthy of a full-price ticket may be a stretch. You
may, instead, want to bone up on other films in order to get all the jokes in
Scary Movie 4. Or you can enjoy what you get, knowing that many of us laugh
every time some poor idiot gets kicked in the nuts.
On the (3.0) DVD you get an alternate ending (let's just say it involves Simon
Rex and an overgrown green guy), half an hour of deleted scenes, outtakes, and
a handful of making-of bits. A feature-length commentary from Zucker and crew
rounds out an excellent disc. The 3.5 DVD offers more of the same, only
raunchier.
Babysitting rocks.
Reviewer: Norm Schrager





