- Studio: New Line Cinema
- Release Date: Jul 26, 2002
- Critic Score
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90Mike Myers is like a rich 12-year-old who rents out F.A.O. Schwartz, upends every toy in under two hours, and brings in strippers. He can get away with this privileged romp because he grooves on what he does in a way that none of his contemporaries -- can comprehend.
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90Puerile, pitiful, grotesque, offensive, immature, repulsive and, of course, extremely funny.
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90Mike Myers unleashes (or seems to unleash) the entire contents of his comic mind.
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88The funniest, crassest, wildest, most musical, most satirical and most scatological of the Powers trilogy. And you get to watch Britney Spears' head explode. What more could you want?
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83You go into an Austin Powers movie with a big grin on -- or at least you should. The charm of this one is that you leave smiling even more broadly.
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80It's a mess, and a ridiculous golden shower of toilet humor. But Mike Myers' superspy spoof still provides the summer's purest movie delight.
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80Like a giant balloon painted with Day-Glo colors, however, the whole gaudy mess wouldn't inflate without the force of Mr. Myers's comic genius. It's his baby, baby. And after three editions, it's still flying high.
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75The best way to look at this installment, however, is as musical theater of the absurd. The song-and-dance set pieces are brilliant, including a rap-style "It's a Hard Knock Life" in a prison.
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75This summer's comic gem.
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75The most consistently funny of the ''Austin Powers'' films.
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75Myers's sheer fertility of invention is of a different order, and even if he misses as often as he hits, he's definitely a swinger.
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75Mike Myers and Austin Powers may stick to their old Beatle boots, but they've both come a long way, luvvy. For proof, just look at all the A-list celebrities-I-won't-mention happy to crash the party.
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70Not since the heyday of Fellini, I dare say, has there been such a merrygoround of a movie.
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70Caine is burlesquing his own iconography and enjoying every minute of it. He hasn't lost his dignity, though; it takes a lot of self-possession to act this blissfully silly. He even looks good with bad teeth.
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70Nothing to write home about, though nothing to stay home about either, especially if you're a dyed-in-the-polyester Powers fan.
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70The movie will leave you smiling forgetfully on the way out, and Myers will have done his job.
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67The latest installment in the Austin Powers series has stopped making much sense at all, but it sure gets its giggle on, and good.
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67It's often quite funny (when it's not spinning its wheels in rehashed skits and recycled gags), but when Myers gets his mojo working and his mind out of the toilet, he's capable of better.
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63It's a shapeless, derivative-but-funny show with another loony parody plot about super-villain Dr. Evil.
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63Uneven, self-conscious but often hilarious spoof.
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63In all fairness to the film, it is superior to the disappointing second movie in the series. The comedy is about as low-brow as it can get (at least without treading into R-rated territory).
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63Austin does have a psychedelic buoyancy and Dr. Evil an addle-pated sadistic goofiness that are original and engaging, but Myers doesn't build on their best stuff. That's where a real plot would help.
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60A picture that, even more than the previous two, feels like a bunch of gags tossed together. The laughs are here, to be sure, although even some of the best of them are retreads and the Swinging '60s recycling act is now feeling a bit past its zeitgeist prime.
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With the jokes coming about one per second, you're bound to find something to laugh at. I found myself laughing a lot--even as I began to feel the whole thing wearing thin.
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50A step or two down from the first and second, but it has some very funny moments, and maybe that is all we hope for.
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50The uneven Goldmember seems to take a big step toward the extremely juvenile, with more scatological and fewer sex jokes
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50Casting Caine as Austin's father is a stroke of pure genius.
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50The laugh always comes first, and Myers' puppy-dog tenacity to that cast-iron tenet of low comedy, disarming and even somewhat charming in the first film, now has an air of careerist desperation about it.
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50The gifted Myers lets his once and (I hope) future shag king get lost in an elephantine Hollywood franchise. The first time was the charm, baby.
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50The only thing that won't make you laugh, unless you've got a 12-year-old's sense of humor, is the film's tireless parade of gross-out gags and scatological verbal jests. Myers gets a charge out of this material--it wouldn't be here if he didn't--but so much of it is so tedious it's difficult to believe an adult actually sat down and wrote it.
User score distribution:
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Positive: 56 out of 89
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Mixed: 19 out of 89
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Negative: 14 out of 89
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It's pointless to make such a inane sequel from a unorganized franchise. Yes, i'm talking about Austin Powers.
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AnnaR.10
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10Austin Powers Goldmember is one of the funniest f- - -ing movies of all time. And is the best James Bond parody to date.