5/10
Weak late-curly film, but Larry shines
17 June 2003
The Stooges, in flashback, tell their son how he came to be adopted by them. In the flashback, they are pressured by a protection racket to come up with protection money -- or else. In the usual Stooge chaos and confusion that follows, Larry is left to care for the gun moll's baby! What will the Stooges do?

"Three Loan Wolves" is among the dozen Stooges films from 1945-46 that clearly shows Curly Howard was not a well man. During this time he had some highs where he seemed like the old Curly ("Micro-Phonies") and lows where his strength was at a low ebb. "Three Loan Wolves" falls into the "low ebb" category. Curly's voice croaks and crumbles; listen to how muffled and congested his voice sounds when he says "Watch me!" as he uses the punching bag.

Due to Curly's illness, Larry gets most of the screen time, and to his credit, he shines. Larry's comedic talents are put to the test in his first featured Stooge role, and he comes through admirably. It is obvious that Larry's role was written for Curly, but Larry is able to handle it with his own distinct panache.

There is a disturbing scene in the film where Curly allows the baby to teethe on a loaded pistol. Clearly these Stooges are not capable of raising a child!

An interesting short, notable only for Curly's illness and Larry's featured role. 5 out of 10.
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