THREE MEN & A LITTLE LADY (PG)
D: Emile Ardolino
Touchstone/Interscope (Ted Field & Robert W.
Cort)
US 1990
100 mins
Comedy
W: Charlie Peters, Sara Parriott & Josann McGibbon
[based on characters from "Three Men & A Baby"]
DP: Adam Greenberg
Mus: James Newton Howard
Tom Selleck (Peter Mitchell), Steve Guttenberg (Michael
Kellam), Ted Danson (Jack Holden), Nancy Travis (Sylvia), Christopher Cazenove (Edward Hargreave), Fiona Shaw (Elspeth Lomax)
Fans of the original film will see this as a guilty
pleasure even though the story is basically a pantomime. The three bachelors from the first film set off for England to prevent the mother of their "adopted" from marrying a man who doesn't
like children.
The film is rather slapdash in its treatment and isn't
quite sure what kind of comedy it's trying to be, veering from tawdry sex comedy to crude slapstick before ending in farce.
It has its heart in the right place and plays on the "cute
strings", but the story wouldn't have seen the light of day had the first film not made the production company an absolute fortune. The main trio of male stars are completely upstaged by
Fiona Shaw's uppity schoolteacher who takes a shine to Tom Selleck's character.
A good conclusion to a much-loved comedy double
bill.
6/10