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Following the death of Alan (Zach Galifianakis)'s father, he and his best mates Phil (Bradley Cooper) and Stu (Ed Helms), aka the Wolfpack, head out on a road trip on which they get caught up in another misadventure, encountering a number of eccentric characters on the way and ending up back in Las Vegas. Justin Bartha, Ken Jeong, Heather Graham and John Goodman co-star, with Mike Tyson also making an appearance. (Warner Bros. Home Entertainment)

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Reviews (7)

POMO 

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English Part III is a great ending of the series, though it lacks a more interesting climax. However, the bonus in the end credits almost completely makes up for it. Great cadence and originality of the jokes. Zach Galifianakis and Ken Jeong dominate the film, as Bradley Cooper and Ed Helms are only their sidekicks. John Goodman is a breath of fresh air. Though I found the first instalment strange, while watching the second part I began to understand the essence of “WolfPack humor”, and the third Hangover made me roll on the floor with laughter. ()

lamps 

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English Unfortunately, the quality has decreased from episode to episode and in the future we can only hope that Tod Phillips will never party again. This third instalment is more refreshing and straightforward than the second, and the filmmakers' efforts at inventive twists must be appreciated, but this crazy road movie has so little in common with the legendary first movie that perhaps it should have a completely different title. Anyway, there is plenty of fun and the cadence of the jokes is greater than ever, but the action story intertwined with gangsters and stolen gold rather buries the film this time and by the end it seems completely unnecessary and contrived in places, as if it actually only served as a mandatory conclusion to a promising trilogy. And all that has been transferred to the actors, who in most cases have nothing to play with and the viewer retains some sympathy for them only through nostalgic memories of the good old days. Galifianakis and Jeong were the only ones up to the task, but that just wasn't enough in this case. 65% ()

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Pethushka 

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English Where'd the Hangover go? If it weren't for Alan my rating would be very, very poor. Thanks to the few light moments that you could count on one hand, I'll try to forget this "fun" and remember the wolf pack as I know them from the first two installments. It's like the boys have grown out of puberty... A weak 3 stars. ()

Malarkey 

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English The actors Zach Galifianakis and Ken Jeong steal the spotlight during the whole third instalment of The Hangover for themselves. It stands and falls by them. And it does not really matter that after the original first instalment and the second one, which was basically just Asian version of the first one, there is finally some new premise. Zach and Ken simply belong into this story. It is all clear after the first scene, where you see Ben in a prison, and the second one, showing Zach with a giraffe. This is their world and this is where they belong. However, they are not in all the scenes and it is not always as great as at the beginning. Still…  it was funny. Not hilarious, but it upheld the standard of the previous instalments. ()

wooozie 

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English The second part was already a disappointment of the year and a lazy, carbon-copy of the first installment. But the third part is simply redundant, and that’s putting it nicely. It's not all pathetic, but good jokes are few and far between. It's obvious that if Phillips had filmed it the same way for the third time, that is, a party and the subsequent recollection, it probably wouldn't have been much better, but it didn’t make much of a difference in the end anyway. The actors have run out of ideas what to change to make it different from the previous parts. Only Jeong is enjoying the character of a dumb Asian, as always, you might add. Another disappointment was the soundtrack, legendary in part one, decent in part two, a total disaster here. All in all, it is a flop just as I expected, the only highlight for me being “Your name was Carlos once. Did you know that?” ()

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