I'm not exactly big on The Three Stooges, but I do like them well enough. I liked them a lot more when I was in middle school, but even then didn't watch much of their shorts. I had one VHS release, Simply Hilarious, which had four shorts, and I mainly only remember the first two (Disorder in the Court and Brideless Groom) as well as some coming attractions at the end of the tape. For my 15th birthday, I got a VHS boxed set of Three Stooges videos (including a rerelease of the Simply Hilarious video), and have only watched a handful of videos in that box set (including one with a lot of rare Three Stooges stuff, like the pilot for an unproduced series).
I used to think that all of the shorts were in the public domain. I think it was Yesterdayland that mistakenly gave me that info. But then I learned that only four of their shorts (the four included in Simply Hilarious) are in the public domain.
I watched the 2012 movie (not in theaters), and I don't think it's terrible, more-or-less "so okay it's average". There's so many times when we're tricked into thinking it'll go in one direction before it goes in another, which isn't exactly a bad thing, but I feel I was able to predict some of that before it happen. For example, in the opening scene where a father has to choose between adopting the Stooges and Teddy, we think he's going to adopt Teddy before he decides on Moe, only for Moe to be sent back in exchange for Teddy (and not because Moe caused trouble, but because he wanted the father to adopt Larry and Curly as well). And then at the end, when after saving his life the Stooges ask Teddy to give them the money needed to save the orphanage, only for Teddy to refuse because they let him be adopted by the man who just tried to kill him.... But then the orphanage not only ends up being saved but Teddy decides to adopt a kid from there.
Wait, so this is an official thread for the "old" Three Stooges... Is there a thread for the 2012 movie?
A few years ago, I read that the actors didn't realize how successful their shorts were until after they were canceled, as the studio convinced them that although they were selling well live-action shorts were on the verge of becoming unprofitable (I remember in the made-for-TV biopic a scene where an executive tells them that as long as he's in charge they'll always be employed... although I taped the biopic I only watched it once, I wonder if that line was in response to convincing them that shorts weren't selling too well), so that they wouldn't ask for raises or better contracts, while in actuality, the shorts were in such demand that Columbia threatened theaters that they would not send the shorts unless the theaters agreed to also show the studios B-movies. Considering that, were the actors playing them really as stupid as their characters? Considering they made shorts for nearly two full decades, I would have thought they'd figure out how successful they were much sooner.