Fans of the classic series The Three Stooges were at once surprised and amused to see their favorite characters return under new names, appearances, and comedic talent. The reboot of this timeless classic brings new stooges that are more sophisticated, gender-inclusive, and racially diverse.
Over the weekend, MAGA 2.0 Films, in collaboration with Deep State Productions, released the reboot of The Three Stooges under the title The Invisible List. While many viewers were alarmed at the unusual collaboration between the two traditional opponents, the movie’s engaging plot and entertaining characters soon took their breath away.
The Invisible List is a mock mystery about a list of child abusers that a child trafficker kept with him until he was arrested and prosecuted one day. For some time, the law enforcement appears uninterested in talking about the list. But when the convicted trafficker suspiciously dies in his prison cell, questions start arising about his actual cause of death and the whereabouts of the list. Will someone get the list and find out what really happened to the high-profile criminal?
Enter our three stooges – Blondi the Doll, Kash the Eye Pumper, and Dan the Trickster. The trio assumes the charge of the mission impossible – retrieving the most guarded list and revealing the hidden cause of the trafficker’s death. Their collective venture to the center of the swamp to achieve these targets staggers, stumbles, and comes tumbling down to crash land on the expectations of the viewers in due time.
Each character stuns the audience with his/her special talent that has great comic value. Blondi, for example, retrieves the list at first and assures it’ll be made public once she goes through it. But in a shocking twist, she makes it disappear magically right off her desk. On top of it, she even says there was no such list and she never promised to show it. Viewers begin to suspect whether it is kept in her own basement along with the list of cosmetic surgeries she has been secretly undergoing to appear young and attractive enough to be on Fox News at least once a week.
Kash brings both diversity and a goofy look to the show. With his eyes bulging half a foot outside their sockets, the ethnic Indian (of the dotted ones, not the feathered), Kash excels in flip-flopping and denialism. He goes on select shows and podcasts to tell viewers that the mystery of the trafficker’s death in the prison cell is no mystery because they should believe him when he says the death was not suspicious. When reminded of his own former position that foul play was involved, Kash’s eyes bulge another half feet out of their sockets, making the audience freak out and scream.
Dan, the third member of this incredible team, has the distinguishing talent of confessional comedy – the art of confessing that he previously believed otherwise but now he has seen the lack of evidence and so he tries to assure the viewers that their suspicions about the case are unfounded. To trick the audience into believing his shifted position, Dan presents edited videos while declaring that these are edited and may not show the proof they are supposed to show.
A special appearance in The Invisible List is that of Hush Daddy, the boss of the Three Stooges, who wonders why reporters in the story ask questions about a dead man. While some find it funny since Hush Daddy used to talk about the dead man after he was “deaded,” others in the audience have complained about his approach and weird attitude.
The initial release of The Invisible List has set the social media and critics on fire. The production has received many positive and mixed reviews. Critics have praised the sense of humor of the producers for waking up the slumbering critical thinkers in the MAGA 2.0 crowd. But many have also complained to the producers against lack of justice and fairness in the plot and asked whether this was a show of mocking the audience for being naïve enough to expect visibility and transparency in a clown show in the first place.
If you have seen the show, feel free to share in the comments how you like and rate it.
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Author: Ernest Dempsey
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