Three Men and a Little Lady

Three Men and a Little Lady

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Emile Ardolino
Produced by Ted Field
Robert W. Cort
Screenplay by Charlie Peters
Story by Sara Parriott
Josann McGibbon
Starring Tom Selleck
Steve Guttenberg
Ted Danson
Nancy Travis
Christopher Cazenove
Robin Weisman
Fiona Shaw
Music by James Newton Howard
Cinematography Adam Greenberg
Edited by Michael A. Stevenson
Production
company
Distributed by Buena Vista Pictures
Release dates
  • November 21, 1990 (1990-11-21)
Running time
105 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Box office $71.6 million

Three Men and a Little Lady is a 1990 American comedy film, and the sequel to the 1987 film Three Men and a Baby. Tom Selleck, Steve Guttenberg, and Ted Danson reprise the leading roles.

Plot

The three men--Peter, Michael, and Jack--are living with Mary, who is now five, and her mother, Sylvia. The group is split up when Sylvia announces that she is marrying an Englishman and that they intend to move to England after the wedding, taking Mary with them.

Peter and Michael (joined later by Jack) travel to England, where Peter realizes that Sylvia's fiancé, Edward, intends to pack Mary off to a boarding school (Pileforth Academy) as he has no real interest in her. He denies everything and Sylvia refuses to believe Peter, knowing he has disliked Edward from the beginning.

An attraction between Peter and Sylvia is nevertheless growing, something he refuses to acknowledge. He breaks into Pileforth in an attempt to get proof of Edward's scheme to send Mary there. He is discovered by the headmistress, Miss Elspeth Lomax, who says she has been told by Edward that Peter is in love with her. She begins to take her clothes off and tries to have sex with him, but he manages to get away and later explains to her that Edward made up the fact that he had feelings for her, but apologizes for the misunderstanding.

Peter, with help from Miss Lomax, heads off to stop the wedding. To cause a delay, Michael has kidnapped the vicar and Jack disguises himself as an elderly replacement one.

Peter and Miss Lomax arrive at the church after numerous delays. He confronts Sylvia with the truth, Miss Lomax herself confirming that Edward has been lying. Sylvia confronts him and he admits the truth but it is too late--they are already married. Or so it would seems...until Jack reveals himself to everyone. Not only has he finally proved his acting skills, but the marriage is null and void. Edward is finally revealed to be the jerk he really is when he calls Mary a "little bitch" to her face and Peter in turn punches him for insulting her.

Sylvia declares her intention to go home, but Peter stops her and declares his love. They wed with Mary as their bridesmaid.

Cast

Production

Filmed on location in New York and the United Kingdom, the scenes in the latter location were primarily shot in Banbury in north Oxfordshire. Particular use is made of Broughton Castle. The scenes where the car broke down and Peter makes a call from a phone box are shot at Burton Dassett Country Park, in south Warwickshire. The school which Mary was to attend (Pileforth Academy) was shot at two locations. The external shot of the school is the Jesuit boarding school Stonyhurst College in the Ribble Valley, Lancashire. The internal scenes of the school were shot at the (former) Benedictine boarding school Douai School near Thatcham, West Berkshire.

Reception

Critical reaction to the film was mostly mixed to negative.

Critic Paul Brenner of Rotten Tomatoes.com cited the film as "treacly," whilst many others on the site have stated that a sequel was not necessary.[1]

Andy Webb of The Movie Scene.com cited enjoyable parts of the movie, viewing the unusual family life of having three fathers as a main entertainment factor.[2] Critics Rita Kempley and Desson Howe of the Washington Post also spoke positively of the film, citing the three main characters' comical rap, the race for Peter to stop the wedding, and the relationship between him and Miss Lomax as the movie's most enjoyable scenes. However, Howe also criticized it, claiming Ted Danson and Steve Guttenburg were overshadowed for the remainder of the film.[3][4]

NeedACoffee.com has criticized the DVD for not having any special features or so much as a trailer.[5] Although Emile Ardolino's death in 1993 prevented him from providing any form of director's commentary, with no commentary provided by the actors or the crew, the site stated that overall, purchasing the DVD if one already owned a VHS copy of the movie was unnecessary.

The film currently holds a rating of 29% based on 14 reviews on Rotten Tomatoes.com,[1] and holds a rating of 5.1 stars out of ten on IMDB.com based on 13 critic reviews.[6]

Box office

The film grossed USD$72 million.[7]

Soundtrack

One of the most widely recognized tracks from the film is Waiting For a Star to Fall by Boy Meets Girl, which featured during the final wedding scene and end credits.

Sequel

In June 2010 it was announced that Disney was interested in filming a third film, tentatively titled Three Men and a Bride.[8] As of 2013, the film is still listed as being in development.[9]

In popular culture

Early TV comedy sketch parodies of Three Men and a Baby included a famous sketch on In Living Color where Muhammed Ali, Mike Tyson and Sugar Ray Leonard is played by David Alan Grier, Keenen Ivory Wayans and Tommy Davidson.

References

External links

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